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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Humourous Story of Farmer Bumpkin's
+Lawsuit, by Richard Harris
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Humourous Story of Farmer Bumpkin's Lawsuit
+
+
+Author: Richard Harris
+
+
+
+Release Date: November 27, 2009 [eBook #30551]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HUMOUROUS STORY OF FARMER
+BUMPKIN'S LAWSUIT***
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1883 Stevens and Sons edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ HUMOUROUS STORY
+ OF
+ FARMER BUMPKIN’S LAWSUIT:
+
+
+ BY
+ RICHARD HARRIS,
+
+ BARRISTER-AT-LAW,
+ AUTHOR OF “HINTS ON ADVOCACY,” ETC., ETC.
+
+ SECOND EDITION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LONDON:
+ STEVENS AND SONS, 119, CHANCERY LANE,
+ Law Publishers and Booksellers.
+ 1883.
+
+ LONDON:
+ BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
+
+
+Considering the enormous interest which the Public have in “a more
+efficient and speedy administration of justice,” I am not surprised that
+a Second Edition of “Mr. Bumpkin’s Lawsuit” should be called for so soon
+after the publication of the first. If any proof were wanting that I had
+not overstated the evils attendant on the present system, it would be
+found in the case of _Smitherman_ v. _The South Eastern Railway Company_,
+which came before the House of Lords recently; and judgment in which was
+delivered on the 16th of July, 1883. The facts of the case were
+extremely simple, and were as follow:—A man of the name of Smitherman was
+killed on a level crossing of the South Eastern Railway Company at East
+Farleigh, in December, 1878. His widow, on behalf of herself and four
+children, brought an action against the Company on the ground of
+negligence on the part of the defendants. The case in due course was
+tried at the Maidstone Assizes, and the plaintiff obtained a verdict for
+£400 for herself and £125 for each of the children. A rule for a new
+trial was granted by the Divisional Court: the rule for the new trial was
+discharged by the Court of Appeal. The Lords reversed the decision of
+the Court of Appeal, and ordered a new trial. New trial took place at
+Guildhall, City of London, before Mr. Baron Pollock; jury again found for
+the plaintiff, with £700 _agreed_ damages: Company thereby saving £200.
+Once more rule for new trial granted by Divisional Court: once more rule
+discharged by Court of Appeal: once more House of Lords reverse decision
+of Court of Appeal, and order _second new trial_. So that after more
+than four years of harassing litigation, this poor widow and her children
+are left in the same position that they were in immediately after the
+accident—except that they are so much the worse as being liable for an
+amount of costs which need not be calculated. The case was tried by
+competent judges and special juries; and yet, by the subtleties of the
+doctrine of contributory negligence, questions of such extreme nicety are
+raised that a third jury are required to give an opinion _upon the same
+state of facts_ upon which two juries have already decided in favour of
+the plaintiff and her children.
+
+Such is the power placed by our complicated, bewildering, and inartistic
+mode of procedure, in the hands of a rich Company.
+
+No one can call in question the wisdom or the learning of the House of
+Lords: it is above criticism, and beyond censure; but the House of Lords
+itself works upon the basis of our system of Procedure, and as that is
+neither beyond criticism nor censure, I unhesitatingly ask, _Can Old
+Fogeyism and Pettifoggism further go_?
+
+ RICHARD HARRIS.
+
+LAMB BUILDING, TEMPLE,
+ _October_, 1883.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION.
+
+
+When Old Fogeyism is being lowered to his last resting place,
+Pettifoggism, being his chief mourner, will be so overwhelmed with grief
+that he will tumble into the same grave. How then to hasten the demise
+of this venerable Humbug is the question. Some are for letting him die a
+natural death, others for reducing him gradually by a system of slow
+starvation: for myself, I confess, I am for knocking him on the head at
+once. Until this event, so long wished for by all the friends of
+Enlightenment and Progress, shall have happened, there will be no
+possibility of a Reform which will lessen the needless expense and
+shorten the unjustifiable delay which our present system of legal
+procedure occasions; a system which gives to the rich immeasurable
+advantages over poor litigants; and amounts in many cases not only to a
+perversion of justice but to a denial of it altogether.
+
+Old Fogeyism only tinkers at reform, and is so nervous and incompetent
+that in attempting to mend one hole he almost invariably makes two. The
+Public, doubtless, will, before long, undertake the much needed reform
+and abolish some of the unnecessary business of “judges’ chambers,” where
+the ingenuity of the Pettifogging Pleader is so marvellously displayed.
+How many righteous claims are smothered in their infancy at this stage of
+their existence!
+
+I have endeavoured to bring the evils of our system before the Public in
+the story of Mr. Bumpkin. The solicitors, equally with their clients, as
+a body, would welcome a change which would enable actions to be carried
+to a legitimate conclusion instead of being stifled by the “Priggs” and
+“Locusts” who will crawl into an honorable profession. It is impossible
+to keep them out, but it is not impossible to prevent their using the
+profession to the injury of their clients. All respectable solicitors
+would be glad to see the powers of these unscrupulous gentlemen
+curtailed.
+
+The verses at the end of the story have been so often favourably received
+at the Circuit Mess, that I thought an amplified version of them in prose
+would not be unacceptable to the general reader, and might ultimately
+awaken in the public mind a desire for the long-needed reform of our
+legal procedure.
+
+ RICHARD HARRIS.
+
+LAMB BUILDING, TEMPLE,
+ _July_, 1883.
+
+
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT.
+
+
+On the 4th of December, 1882, Our Gracious Queen, on the occasion of the
+opening of the Royal Courts of Justice, said:—
+
+ “I trust that the uniting together in one place of the various
+ branches of Judicature in this my Supreme Court, will conduce to the
+ _more efficient_ and _speedy_ administration of justice to my
+ subjects.”
+
+On April 20th, 1883, in the House of Commons, Mr. H. H. Fowler asked the
+Attorney-General whether he was aware of the large number of causes
+waiting for trial in the Chancery Division of the High Court, and in the
+Court of Appeal; and whether the Government proposed to take any steps to
+remedy the delay and increased cost occasioned to the suitors by the
+present administration of the Judicature Acts.
+
+The Attorney-General said the number of cases of all descriptions then
+waiting for trial in the Chancery Division was 848, and in the Court of
+Appeal 270. The House would be aware that a committee of Judges had been
+engaged for some time in framing rules in the hope of getting rid of some
+of the delay that now existed in the hearing of cases; and until those
+rules were prepared, which would be shortly, the Government were not
+desirous of interfering with a matter over which the Judges had
+jurisdiction. The Government were now considering the introduction of a
+short Judicature Act for the purpose of lessening the delay.—_Morning
+Post_.
+
+[No rules or short Judicature Act at present!] {0a}
+
+On the 13th April, 1883, Mr. Glasse, Q.C., thus referred to a statement
+made by Mr. Justice Pearson of the Chancery Division: “The citizens of
+this great country, of which your Lordship is one of the representatives,
+will look at the statement you have made with respectful amazement.” The
+statement appears to have been, that his Lordship had intended to
+continue the business of the Court in exactly the same way in which it
+had been conducted by Mr. Justice Fry; but he had been informed that he
+would have to take the interlocutory business of Mr. Justice Kay’s Court
+whilst his Lordship _was on Circuit_; and, as it was requisite that he
+should take his own interlocutory business _before the causes set down
+for hearing_, “ALL THE CAUSES IN THE TWO COURTS MUST GO TO THE WALL”!!!
+His Lordship added, that it would be necessary for him to rise at 3
+o’clock every day (not at 3 o’clock in the _morning_, gentle reader),
+because he understood he should have to conduct the business of Mr.
+Justice Kay’s Chambers as well as his own.—_Morning Post_.
+
+On the 16th April, 1883, Mr. Justice Day, in charging the Grand Jury at
+the Manchester Spring Assizes, expressed his disagreement with the
+opinion of the other Judges in favour of the Commission being so altered
+that the Judge would have to “_deliver all the prisoners detained in
+gaol_,” and regarded it as “a waste of the Judge’s time that he should
+have to try a case in which a woman was indicted for _stealing a shawl
+worth_ 3_s._ 9_d._; or a prisoner charged with stealing _two mutton pies_
+and _two ounces of bacon_.”—_Evening Standard_.
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+Shows the Beauty of a Farm Yard on a Sabbath-Day, and what a 1
+difference a single letter will sometimes make in the legal
+signification of a Sentence
+ CHAPTER II.
+The Simplicity and Enjoyments of a Country life depicted 11
+ CHAPTER III.
+Showing how true it is that it takes at least Two to make a 17
+Bargain or a Quarrel
+ CHAPTER IV.
+On the extreme Simplicity of Going to Law 27
+ CHAPTER V.
+In which it appears that the Sting of Slander is not always 35
+in the Head
+ CHAPTER VI.
+Showing how the greatest Wisdom of Parliament may be thrown 45
+away on Ungrateful People
+ CHAPTER VII.
+Showing that Appropriateness of Time and Place should be 55
+studied in our Pastimes
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+The Pleasure of a Country Drive on a Summer Evening described 63
+as enhanced by a Pious Mind
+ CHAPTER IX.
+A Farm-house Winter Fire-side—A morning Drive and a mutual 71
+interchange of Ideas between Town and Country, showing how we
+may all learn something from one another
+ CHAPTER X.
+The last Night before the first London Expedition, which 87
+gives occasion to recall pleasant reminiscences
+ CHAPTER XI.
+Commencement of London Life and Adventures 97
+ CHAPTER XII.
+How the great Don O’Rapley became an Usher of the Court of 105
+Queen’s Bench, and explained the Ingenious Invention of the
+Round Square—How Mr. Bumpkin took the water and studied
+Character from a Penny Steamboat
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+An interesting Gentleman—showing how true it is that one half 111
+the World does not know how the other half lives
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+The Old Bailey—Advantages of the New System illustrated 119
+ CHAPTER XV.
+Mr. Bumpkin’s Experience of London Life enlarged 133
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+The coarse mode of Procedure in Ahab _versus_ Naboth 143
+ruthlessly exposed and carefully contrasted with the humane
+and enlightened form of the Present Day
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+Showing that Lay Tribunals are not exactly Punch and Judy 151
+Shows where the Puppet is moved by the Man underneath
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+A comfortable Evening at the “Goose” 165
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+The Subject continued 175
+ CHAPTER XX.
+Mr. Bumpkin sings a good old Song—The Sergeant becomes quite 179
+a convivial Companion and plays Dominoes
+ CHAPTER XXI.
+Joe electrifies the Company and surprises the Reader 191
+ CHAPTER XXII.
+The Sergeant makes a loyal Speech and sings a Song, both of 203
+which are well received by the Company
+ CHAPTER XXIII.
+The famous Don O’Rapley and Mr. Bumpkin spend a social 213
+Evening at the “Goose”
+ CHAPTER XXIV.
+Don O’Rapley expresses his views of the Policy of the 221
+Legislature in not permitting Dominoes to be played in
+Public-houses
+ CHAPTER XXV.
+In spite of all warnings, Joe takes his own part, not to be 227
+persuaded on one side or the other—Affecting Scene between
+Mr. Bumpkin and his old Servant
+ CHAPTER XXVI.
+Morning Reflections—Mrs. Oldtimes proves herself to be a 239
+great Philosopher—The Departure of the Recruits to be sworn
+in
+ CHAPTER XXVII.
+A Letter from Home 245
+ CHAPTER XXVIII.
+Mr. Bumpkin determines to maintain a discreet silence about 255
+his Case at the Old Bailey—Mr. Prigg confers with him thereon
+ CHAPTER XXIX.
+The Trial at the Old Bailey of Mr. Simple Simonman for 261
+Highway Robbery with violence—Mr. Alibi introduces himself to
+Mr. Bumpkin
+ CHAPTER XXX.
+Mr. Alibi is stricken with a Thunderbolt—Interview with 283
+Horatio and Mr. Prigg
+ CHAPTER XXXI.
+Mr. Bumpkin at Home again 295
+ CHAPTER XXXII.
+Joe’s Return to Southwood—An Invitation from the Vicar—What 303
+the Old Oak saw
+ CHAPTER XXXIII.
+A Consultation as to new Lodgings—Also a Consultation with 317
+Counsel
+ CHAPTER XXXIV.
+Mr. Bumpkin receives Compliments from distinguished Persons 325
+ CHAPTER XXXV.
+The Trial 335
+ CHAPTER XXXVI.
+Motion for Rule _Nisi_, in which is displayed much Learning, 351
+Ancient and Modern
+ CHAPTER XXXVII.
+Mr. Bumpkin is congratulated by his Neighbours and Friends in 359
+the Market Place and sells his Corn
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+Farewell 375
+THE LAWSUIT 381
+
+ “_He never suffered his private partiality to intrude into the
+ conduct of publick business_. _Nor in appointing to employments did
+ he permit solicitation to supply the place of merit_; _wisely
+ sensible_, _that a proper choice of officers is almost the whole of
+ Government_.”—BURKE.
+
+_Extract from Notice of the Work in_ THE SATURDAY REVIEW, _September_
+15_th_, 1883:—
+
+ “He was obviously quite as eager for a good battle in Court as ever
+ was Dandy Dinmont.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+The beauty of a farm yard on a Sabbath day, and what a difference a
+single letter will sometimes make in the legal signification of a
+sentence.
+
+It was during the Long Vacation—that period which is Paradise to the Rich
+and Purgatory to the Poor Lawyer—to say nothing of the client, who simply
+exists as a necessary evil in the economy of our enlightened system of
+Legal Procedure: it was during this delightful or dismal period that I
+returned one day to my old Farm-house in Devonshire, from a long and
+interesting ramble. My excellent thirst and appetite having been
+temperately appeased, I seated myself cosily by the huge chimney, where
+the log was always burning; and, having lighted my pipe, surrendered my
+whole being to the luxurious enjoyment of so charming a situation. I had
+scarcely finished smoking, when I fell into a sound and delicious sleep.
+And behold! I dreamed a dream; and methought:
+
+It was a beautiful Sabbath morning, in the early part of May, 18--, when
+two men might have been seen leaning over a pigstye. The pigstye was
+situated in a farm-yard in the lovely village of Yokelton, in the county
+of Somerset. Both men had evidently passed what is called the “prime of
+life,” as was manifest from their white hair, wrinkled brows, and
+stooping shoulders. It was obvious that they were contemplating some
+object with great interest and thoughtful attention.
+
+And I perceived that in quiet and respectful conversation with them was a
+fine, well-formed, well-educated sow of the Chichester breed. It was
+plain from the number of her rings that she was a sow of great
+distinction, and, indeed, as I afterwards learned, was the most famous
+for miles around: her progeny (all of whom I suppose were honourables)
+were esteemed and sought by squire and farmer. How that sow was bred up
+to become so polite a creature, was a mystery to all; because there were
+gentlemen’s homesteads all around, where no such thoroughbred could be
+found. But I suppose it’s the same with pigs as it is with men: a
+well-bred gentleman may work in the fields for his living, and a cad may
+occupy the manor-house or the nobleman’s hall.
+
+The Chichester sow looked up with an air of easy nonchalance into the
+faces of the two men who smoked their short pipes, and uttered ever and
+anon some short ejaculation, such as, “Hem!” “Ah!” “Zounds!” and so
+forth, while the sow exhibited a familiarity with her superiors only to
+be acquired by mixing in the best society. There was a respectful
+deference which, while it betrayed no sign of servility, was in pleasing
+contrast with the boisterous and somewhat unbecoming levity of the other
+inhabitants of the stye. These people were the last progeny of this
+illustrious Chichester, and numbered in all eleven—seven sons and four
+daughters—honourables all. It was impossible not to admire the high
+spirit of this well-descended family. That they had as yet received no
+education was due to the fact that their existence dated only from the
+21st of January last. Hence their somewhat erratic conduct, such as
+jumping, running, diving into the straw, boring their heads into one
+another’s sides, and other unceremonious proceedings in the presence of
+the two gentlemen whom it is necessary now more particularly to describe.
+
+Mr. Thomas Bumpkin, the elder of the two, was a man of about seventy
+summers, as tall and stalwart a specimen of Anglo-Saxon peasantry as you
+could wish to behold. And while I use the word “peasantry” let it be
+clearly understood that I do so in no sense as expressing Mr. Bumpkin’s
+present condition. He had risen from the English peasantry, and was what
+is usually termed a “self-made man.” He was born in a little hut
+consisting of “wattle and dab,” and as soon as he could make himself
+heard was sent into the fields to “mind the birds.” Early in the
+November mornings, immediately after the winter sowings, he would be seen
+with his little bag of brown bread round his neck, trudging along with a
+merry whistle, as happy as if he had been going home to a bright fire and
+a plentiful breakfast of ham, eggs, and coffee. By degrees he had raised
+himself to the position of ploughman, and never ploughman drove a
+straighter or leveller furrow. He had won prizes at the annual ploughing
+and harrowing matches: and upon the strength of ten and sixpence a week
+had married Nancy Tugby, to whom he had been engaged off and on for
+eleven years. Nancy was a frugal housewife, and worked hard, morning,
+noon and night. She was quite a treasure to Bumpkin; and, what with
+taking in a little washing, and what with going out to do a little
+charing, and what with Tom’s skill in mending cart-harness (nearly all
+the cart-harness in the neighbourhood was in a perpetual state of
+“mendin’”), they had managed to put together in a year or two enough
+money to buy a sow. This, Tom always said, was “his first start.” And
+mighty proud they both were as they stood together of a Sunday morning
+looking at this wonderful treasure. The sow soon had pigs, and the pigs
+got on and were sold, and then the money was expended in other things,
+which in their turn proved equally remunerative. Then Tom got a piece of
+land, and next a pet ewe-lamb, and so on, until little by little wealth
+accumulated, and he rented at last, after a long course of laborious
+years, from the Squire, a small homestead called “Southwood Farm,”
+consisting of some fifty acres. Let it not be supposed that the
+accession of an extra head of live stock was a small matter. Everything
+is great or little by relation. I believe the statesman himself knows no
+greater pleasure when he first obtains admission to the Cabinet, than Tom
+did when he took possession of his little farm. And he certainly
+experienced as great a joy when he got a fresh pig as any young barrister
+does when he secures a new client.
+
+Southwood Farm was a lovely homestead, situated near a very pretty river,
+and in the midst of the most picturesque scenery. The little rivulet
+(for it was scarcely more) twisted about in the quaintest conceivable
+manner, almost encircling the cosy farm; while on the further side rose
+abruptly from the water’s edge high embankments studded thickly with oak,
+ash, and an undergrowth of saplings of almost every variety. The old
+house was spacious for the size of the farm, and consisted of a large
+living-room, ceiled with massive oak beams and oak boards, which were
+duly whitewashed, and looked as white as the sugar on a wedding cake.
+The fireplace was a huge space with seats on either side cut in the wall;
+while from one corner rose a rude ladder leading to a bacon loft.
+Dog-irons of at least a century old graced the brick hearth, while the
+chimney-back was adorned with a huge slab of iron wrought with divers
+quaint designs, and supposed to have been in some way or other connected
+with the Roman invasion, as it had been dug up somewhere in the
+neighbourhood, by whom or when no one ever knew. There was an inner
+chamber besides the one we are now in, which was used as a kitchen; while
+on the opposite side was a little parlour with red-tiled floor and a
+comparatively modern grate. This was the reception room, used chiefly
+when any of the ladies from “t’Squoire’s” did Mrs. Bumpkin the honour to
+call and taste her tea-cakes or her gooseberry wine. The thatched roof
+was gabled, and the four low-ceiled bedrooms had each of them a window in
+a gable. The house stood in a well-stocked garden, beyond which was a
+lovely green meadow sloping to the river side. In front was the little
+farm-yard, with its double-bayed barn, its lean-to cow-houses, its
+stables for five horses, and its cosy loft. Then there were the pigstyes
+and the henhouses: all forming together a very convenient and compact
+homestead. Adjoining the home meadow was a pretty orchard, full of
+apple, pear, cherry and plum trees; and if any one could imagine that Mr.
+and Mrs. Bumpkin had no eye or taste for the beautiful, I would have
+advised that ill-conditioned person to visit those good people of a
+Sunday morning after “brakfast” when the orchard was in full blossom.
+This beautiful picture it was not only Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin’s special joy
+to behold, but their great and proud delight to show; and if they had
+painted the blossoms themselves they could not have felt more intense
+enjoyment and satisfaction.
+
+There was one other feature about the little farm which I must mention,
+because it is one of the grandest and most beautiful things in nature,
+and that is the magnificent “Old Oak” that stood in the corner of one of
+the home fields, and marked the boundary of the farm in that direction.
+If the measure of its girth would be interesting to the reader to know,
+it was just twenty-seven feet: not the largest in England certainly,
+notwithstanding which the tree was one of the grandest and most
+beautiful. It towered high into the air and spread its stalwart branches
+like giant trees in all directions. It was said to be a thousand years
+old, and to be inhabited by owls and ghosts. Whether the ghosts lived
+there or not I am unable to say, but from generation to generation the
+tradition was handed down and believed to be true. Such was Mr.
+Bumpkin’s home, in my dream: the home of Peace and Plenty, Happiness and
+Love.
+
+The man who was contemplating Mr. Bumpkin’s pigs on this same Sunday
+morning was also a “self-made man,” whose name was Josiah SNOOKS. He was
+not made so well as Bumpkin, I should say, by a great deal, but
+nevertheless was a man who, as things go, was tolerably well put
+together. He was the village coal-merchant, not a Cockerell by any
+means, but a merchant who would have a couple of trucks of “Derby
+Brights” down at a time, and sell them round the village by the
+hundredweight. No doubt he was a very thrifty man, and to the extent, so
+some people said, of nipping the poor in their weight. And once he
+nearly lost the contract for supplying the coal-gifts at Christmas on
+that account. But he made it a rule to attend church very regularly as
+the season came round, and so did Mrs. Josiah Snooks; and it will require
+a great deal of “nipping” to get over that in a country village, I
+promise you. I did not think Snooks a nice looking man, by any means;
+for he had a low forehead, a scowling brow, a nobbly fat nose, small
+eyes, one of which had a cast, a large mouth always awry and distorted
+with a sneer, straight hair that hung over his forehead, and a large scar
+on his right cheek. His teeth were large and yellow, and the top ones
+protruded more, I thought, than was at all necessary. Nor was he
+generally beliked. In fact, so unpopular was this man with the poor,
+that it was a common thing for mothers to say to their children when they
+could not get them in of a summer’s evening, “You, Betsy,” or “You, Jane,
+come in directly, or old Snooks will have you!” A warning which always
+produced the desired effect.
+
+No one could actually tell whether Snooks had made money or merely
+pretended to possess it. Some said they knew he had, for he lived so
+niggardly; others said the coal trade was not what it was; and there were
+not wanting people who hinted that old Betty Bodger’s house and
+garden—which had been given to her years ago by the old squire, what for,
+nobody knew—had been first mortgaged to Josiah and then sold to him and
+“taken out in coals.” A very cunning man was Snooks; kept his own
+counsel—I don’t mean a barrister in wig and gown on his premises—but in
+the sense of never divulging what was in his sagacious mind. He was
+known as a universal buyer of everything that he could turn a penny out
+of; and he sold everybody whenever he got the chance. Such was the
+character of old Snooks.
+
+How then came our good guileless friend Bumpkin to be associated with
+such a man on this beautiful Sunday morning? I can only answer: there
+are things in this world which admit of no explanation. This, so far as
+I am concerned, was one.
+
+“They be pooty pork,” said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“Middlin’,” rejoined the artful Snooks.
+
+“They be a mighty dale more an middlin’, if you come to thic,” said the
+farmer.
+
+“I’ve seen a good deal better,” remarked Snooks. This was always his
+line of bargaining.
+
+“Well, I aint,” returned Bumpkin, emphatically. “Look at that un—why, he
+be fit for anything—a regler pictur.”
+
+“What’s he worth?” said Snooks. “Three arf crowns?” That was Snooks’
+way of dealing.
+
+“Whisht!” exclaimed Bumpkin; “and four arf-crowns wouldn’t buy un.” That
+was Bumpkin’s way.
+
+Snooks expectorated and gave a roar, which he intended for a laugh, but
+which made every pig jump off its feet and dive into the straw.
+
+“I tell ’ee what, maister Bumpkin, I doant want un”—that was his way
+again; “but I doant mind giving o’ thee nine shillings for that un.”
+
+“Thee wunt ’ave un—not a farden less nor ten if I knows it; ye doant ’ave
+we loike that, nuther—ye beant sellin’ coals, maister Snooks—no, nor
+buyin’ pigs if I knows un.”
+
+How far this conversation would have proceeded, and whether any serious
+altercation would have arisen, I know not; but at this moment a
+combination of circumstances occurred to interrupt the would-be
+contracting parties. First, Mrs. Bumpkin, who had been preparing the
+Sunday dinner, came across the yard with her apron full of cabbage-leaves
+and potato-peelings, followed by an immense number of chickens, while the
+ducks in the pond clapped their wings, and flew and ran with as much
+eagerness as though they were so many lawyers seeking some judicial
+appointment, and Mrs. Bumpkin were Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain;
+and they made as much row as a flock of Chancery Barristers arguing about
+costs. Then came along, with many a grunt and squeak, a pig or two, who
+seemed to be enjoying a Sunday holiday in their best clothes, for they
+had just come out of a puddle of mud; then came slouching along, a young
+man whose name was Joe (or, more correctly speaking, Joseph Wurzel), a
+young man of about seventeen, well built, tall and straight, with a
+pleasant country farm-house face, a roguish black eye, even teeth, and a
+head of brown straight hair, that looked as if the only attention it ever
+received was an occasional trimming with a reap-hook, and a brush with a
+bush-harrow.
+
+It was just feeding time; that was why Joe came up at this moment; and in
+addition to all these circumstances, there came faintly booming through
+the trees the ding of the old church bell, reminding Mr. Bumpkin that he
+must “goo and smarten oop a bit” for church. He already had on his
+purple cord trousers, and, as Joe termed it, his hell-fire waistcoat with
+the flames coming out of it in all directions; but he had to put on his
+drab “cooat” and white smock-frock, and then walk half a mile before
+service commenced. He always liked to be there before the Squire, and
+see him and his daughters, Miss Judith and Miss Mary, come in.
+
+So he had to leave the question of the “walley” of the pig and attend to
+the more important interests of his immortal soul. But now as he was
+going comes the point to which the reader’s special attention is
+directed. He had got about six yards from the stye, or it may have been
+a little more, when Snooks cried out:
+
+“I’ve bought un for nine and six.”
+
+To which Mr. Bumpkin replied, without so much as turning his head—
+
+“’Ave ur.”
+
+Now this expression, according to Chitty on Contracts, would mean, “Have
+you, indeed? Mr. Snooks.” But the extreme cunning of Josiah converted it
+into “’Ave un,” which, by the same learned authority would signify, “Very
+well, Mr. Snooks, you can have him.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+The simplicity and enjoyments of a country life depicted.
+
+A quiet day was Sunday on Southwood Farm. Joe used to slumber in the
+meadows among the buttercups, or in the loft, or near the kitchen-fire,
+as the season and weather invited. That is to say, until such time as,
+coming out of Sunday School (for to Sunday School he sometimes went) he
+saw one of the fairest creatures he had ever read about either in the
+Bible or elsewhere! It was a very strange thing she should be so
+different from everybody else: not even the clergyman’s daughters—no, nor
+the Squire’s daughters, for the matter of that—looked half so nice as
+pretty Polly Sweetlove, the housemaid at the Vicar’s.
+
+“Now look at that,” said Joe, as he went along the lane on that Sunday
+when he first beheld this divine creature. “I’m danged if she beant
+about the smartest lookin o’ any on ’em. Miss Mary beant nothing to her:
+it’s a dandelion to a toolup.”
+
+So ever since that time Joe had slept less frequently in the hay-loft on
+a Sunday afternoon; and, be it said to his credit, had attended his
+church with greater punctuality. The vicar took great notice of the
+lad’s religious tendencies, and had him to his night-school at the
+vicarage, in consequence; and certainly no vicar ever knew a boy more
+regular in his attendance. He was there waiting to go in ever so long
+before the school began, and was always the very last to leave the
+premises.
+
+Often he would peep over the quick-set hedge into the kitchen-window,
+just to catch a glance of this lovely angel. And yet, so far as he could
+tell, she had never looked at him. When she opened the door, Joe always
+felt a thrill run through him as if some extraordinary thing had
+happened. It was a kind of jump; and yet he had jumped many times before
+that: “it wasn’t the sort of jump,” he said, “as a chap gits either from
+bein’ frit or bein’ pleased.” And what to make of it he didn’t know.
+Then Polly’s cap was about the loveliest thing, next to Polly herself, he
+had ever seen. It was more like a May blossom than anything else, or a
+beautiful butterfly on the top of a water-lily. In fact, all the rural
+images of a rude but not inartistic mind came and went as this country
+boy thought of his beautiful Polly. As he ploughed the field, if he saw
+a May-blossom in the hedgerow, it reminded him of Polly’s cap; and even
+the little gentle daisy was like Polly herself. Pretty Polly was
+everywhere!
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin, on a fine Sabbath afternoon, would take their
+pastime in the open air. First Mr. Bumpkin would take down his long
+churchwarden pipe from its rack on the ceiling, where it lay in close
+companionship with an ancient flint-gun; then he would fill it tightly,
+so as to make it last the longer, with tobacco from his leaden jar; and
+then, having lighted it, he and his wife would go out of the back door,
+through the garden and the orchard, and along by the side of the quiet
+river. By their side, as a matter of course, came Tim the Collie (named
+after Mrs. Bumpkin’s grandfather Timothy), who knew as well as possible
+every word that was being said. If Mrs. Bumpkin only asked, “Where is
+Betsy?” (that was the head Alderney cow) Tim would bark and fly across to
+the meadow where she was; and then, having said to her and to the five
+other Alderney cows and four heifers, “Why, here’s master and missus
+coming round to look at you, why on earth don’t you come and see them?”
+up the whole herd would come, straggling one after the other, to the
+meadow where Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin were waiting for them; and all would
+look over the hedge, as much as to say, “How d’ye do, master, and how
+d’ye do, missus; what a nice day, isn’t it?” exactly in the same manner
+as men and women greet one another as often as they meet. And then there
+was the old donkey, Jack, whom Tim would chaff no matter when or where he
+saw him. I believe if Tim had got him in church, he would have chaffed
+him. It was very amusing to see Jack duck his head and describe a circle
+as Tim swept round him, barking with all his might, and yet only laughing
+all the while. Sometimes Jack, miscalculating distances—he wasn’t very
+great at mathematics—and having no eye for situations, would kick out
+vigorously with his hind legs, thinking Tim was in close proximity to his
+heels; whereas the sagacious and jocular Tim was leaning on his
+outstretched fore-feet immediately in front of Jack’s head.
+
+Then there was another sight, not the least interesting on these
+afternoon rambles: in the far meadow, right under “the lids,” as they
+were called, lived the famous Bull of Southwood Farm. He was Mrs.
+Bumpkin’s pet. She had had him from a baby, and used to feed him in his
+infant days from a bottle by the kitchen fire. And so docile was he
+that, although few strangers would be safe in intruding into his
+presence, he would follow Mrs. Bumpkin about, as she said, “just like a
+Christian.” The merits of this bull were the theme, on all appropriate
+occasions, of Mrs. Bumpkin’s unqualified praise. If the Vicar’s wife
+called, as she sometimes did, to see how Mrs. Bumpkin was getting on,
+Mrs. Bumpkin’s “baby” (that is the bull) was sure to be brought up—I
+don’t mean by the nurse, but in conversation. No matter how long she
+waited her opportunity, Mrs. Goodheart never left without hearing
+something of the exploits of this remarkable bull. In truth, he was a
+handsome, well-bred fellow. He had come from the Squire’s—so you may be
+sure his breed was gentlemanly in the extreme; and his grandmother, on
+the maternal side, had belonged to the Bishop of Winchester; so you have
+a sufficient guarantee, I hope, for his moral character and orthodox
+principles. Indeed, it had been said that no dissenter dared pass
+through the meadow where he was, in consequence of his connection with
+the Establishment. Now, on the occasions when Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin took
+their walks abroad through the meadows to see their lambkins and their
+bull skip, this is what would invariably happen. First, Mrs. Bumpkin
+would go through the little cosy-looking gate in the corner of the
+meadow, right down by the side of the old boat-house; then Mr. Bumpkin
+would follow, holding his long pipe in one hand and his ash-stick in the
+other. Then, away in the long distance, at the far end of the meadow (he
+was always up there on these occasions), stood “Sampson” (that was the
+bull), with his head turned right round towards his master and mistress,
+as if he were having his photograph taken. Thus he stood for a moment;
+then down went his huge forehead to the ground; up went his tail to the
+sky; then he sent a bellow along the earth which would have frightened
+anybody but his “mother,” and started off towards his master and mistress
+like a ship in a heavy sea; sometimes with his keel up in the air, and
+sometimes with his prow under water: it not only was playful, it was
+magnificent, and anybody unaccustomed to oxen might have been a little
+terrified by the furious glare of his eyes and the terrible snort of his
+nostrils as he approached.
+
+Not so Mrs. Bumpkin, who held out her hand, and ejaculated,
+
+“My pretty baby; my sweet pet; good Sampson!” and many other expressions
+of an endearing character.
+
+“Good Sampson” looked, snorted, danced, plunged and careered; and then
+came up and let Mrs. Bumpkin stroke and pat him; while Bumpkin looked on,
+smoking his pipe peacefully, and thinking what a fine fellow he, the
+bull, was, and what a great man he, Bumpkin, must be to be the possessor
+of “sich!”
+
+Thus the peaceful afternoon would glide quietly and sweetly away, and so
+would the bull, after the interesting interview was over.
+
+They always returned in time for tea, and then Mrs. Bumpkin would go to
+evening service, while Mr. Bumpkin would wait for her on the little piece
+of green near the church, where neighbours used to meet and chat of a
+Sunday evening; such as old Mr. Gosling, the market gardener, and old
+Master Mott, the head gardener to the Squire, and Master Cole, the
+farmer, and various others, the original inhabitants of Yokelton;
+discussing the weather and the crops, the probability of Mr. Tomson
+getting in again at the vestry as waywarden; what kind of a highway rate
+there would be for the coming year; how that horse got on that Mr. Sooby
+bought at the fair; and various other matters of importance to a village
+community. They would also pass remarks upon any striking personage who
+passed them on his way to church. Mr. Prigg, for instance, the village
+lawyer, who, they said, was a remarkably upright and down-straight sort
+of man; although his wife, they thought, was “a little bit stuck up like”
+and gave herself airs a little different from Mrs. Goodheart, who would
+“always talk to ’em jist the same as if she was one o’ th’ people.” So
+that, on the whole, they entertained themselves very amicably until such
+time as the “organ played the people out of church.” Then every one
+looked for his wife or daughter, as the case might be, and wished one
+another good night: most of them having been to church in the morning,
+they did not think it necessary to repeat the performance in the evening.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+Showing how true it is that it takes at least two to make a bargain or a
+quarrel.
+
+The day after the events which I have recorded, while the good farmer and
+his wife were at breakfast, which was about seven o’clock, Joe presented
+himself in the sitting-room, and said:
+
+“Plase, maister, here be t’ money for t’ pig.”
+
+“Money for t’ pig,” exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin; “what’s thee mean, lad? what
+pig?”
+
+“Maister Snooks!” said Joe, “there ur be, gwine wi’ t’ pig in t’ barrer.”
+
+Nothing shall induce me to repeat the language of Mr. Bumpkin, as he
+jumped up from the table, and without hat or cap rushed out of the room,
+followed by Joe, and watched by Mrs. Bumpkin from the door. Just as he
+got to the farmyard by one gate, there was Snooks leaving it by another
+with Mr. Bumpkin’s pig in a sack in the box barrow which he was wheeling.
+
+“Hulloa!” shouted the farmer; “hulloa here! Thee put un down—dang thee,
+what be this? I said thee shouldn’t ave un, no more thee sha’n’t. I
+beant gwine to breed Chichster pigs for such as thee at thy own price,
+nuther.” Snooks grinned and went on his way, saying;
+
+“I bought un and I’ll ’ave un.”
+
+“An I’ll ’ave thee, dang’d if I doant, afore jussices; t’ Squoire’ll tell
+thee.”
+
+“I doant keer for t’ Squire no more nor I do for thee, old Bumpkin; thee
+be a cunnin’ man, but thee sold I t’ pig and I’ll ’ave un, and I got un
+too: haw! haw! haw! an thee got t’ money—nine-and-six—haw! haw! haw!”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin by this time came up to him, but was so much out of breath,
+or “winded,” that he was unable to carry on the conversation, so he just
+tapped the bag with his stick as if to be certain the pig was there, and
+sure enough it was, if you might judge by the extraordinary wriggling
+that went on inside the bag.
+
+The indomitable Snooks, however, with the largest and most hideous grin I
+ever saw, pushed on with his barrow, and Mr. Bumpkin having now
+sufficiently recovered his breath, said,
+
+“Thee see ur tak un, didn’t thee, Joe?”
+
+“Sure did ur,” answered the lad. “I seed un took un clane out o’ the
+stye, and put un in the sack, and wheeled un away.”
+
+“Ha! so ur did, Joe; stick to that, lad—stick to un.”
+
+“And thee seed I pay th’ money for un, Joe, didn’t thee?” laughed Snooks.
+“Seed I put un on t’ poast, and thee took un oop—haw! haw! haw! I got t’
+pig and thee got t’ money—haw! haw! haw! Thee thowt thee’d done I, and I
+done thee—haw! haw! haw!”
+
+And away went Snooks and away went pig; but Snooks’ laugh remained, and
+every now and then Snooks turned his head and showed his large yellow
+teeth and roared again.
+
+The rage of Mr. Bumpkin knew no bounds. There are some things in life
+which are utterly unendurable; and one is the having your pig taken from
+you against your will and without your consent—an act which would be
+described legally as _the rape of the pig_. This offence, in Mr.
+Bumpkin’s judgment, Snooks was guilty of; and therefore he resolved to do
+that which is considered usually a wise thing, namely, to consult a
+solicitor.
+
+Now, if I were giving advice—which I do not presume to do—I should say
+that in all matters of difficulty a man should consult his wife, his
+priest, or his solicitor, and in the order in which I have named them.
+In the event of consulting a solicitor the next important question
+arises, “What solicitor?” I could write a book on this subject. There
+are numerous solicitors, within my acquaintance, to whom I would entrust
+my life and my character; there are some, not of my acquaintance, but of
+my knowledge, into whose hands, if I had one spark of Christian feeling
+left, I would not see my enemy delivered. There is little difference
+between one class of men and another as to natural disposition; and
+whether you take one or another, you must find the shady character. But
+where the opportunities for mischief are so great as they are in the
+practice of the Law, it is necessary that the utmost care should be
+exercised in committing one’s interests to the keeping of another. Had
+Mr. Bumpkin been a man of the world he would have suspected that under
+the most ostentatious piety very often lurked the most subtle fraud.
+Good easy man, had he been going to buy a hay-stack, he would not have
+judged by the outside but have put his “iron” into it; he could not put
+his iron into Mr. Prigg, I know, but he need not have taken him by his
+appearance alone. I may observe that if Mr. Bumpkin had consulted his
+sensible and affectionate spouse, or a really respectable solicitor, this
+book would not have been written. If he had consulted the Vicar,
+possibly another book might have been written; but, as it was, he
+resolved to consult Mr. Prigg in the first instance. Now Mrs. Bumpkin,
+except as the mother of the illustrious Bull, has very little to do with
+this story. Mr. Prigg is one of its leading characters; but in my
+description of that gentleman I am obliged to be concise: I must minimize
+Prigg, great as he is, and I trust that in doing so I shall prospectively
+minimize all future Priggs that may ever appear on the world’s stage. I
+do not attempt to pulverize him, that would require the crushing pestle
+of the legislature; but merely to make him as little as I can, with due
+consideration for the requirements of my story.
+
+I should be thought premature in mentioning Prigg, but that he was a
+gentleman of great pretensions in the little village of Yokelton.
+Gentleman by Act of Parliament, and in his own estimation, you may be
+sure he was respected by all around him. That was not many, it is true,
+for his house was the last of the straggling village. He was a man of
+great piety and an extremely white neck-cloth; attended the parish church
+regularly, and kept his white hair well brushed upwards—as though, like
+the church steeple, it was to point the way at all times. He was the
+most amiable of persons in regard to the distribution of the parish
+gifts; and, being a lawyer it was not considered by the churchwardens, a
+blacksmith and a builder, safe to refuse his kind and generous
+assistance. He involved the parish in a law-suit once, in a question
+relating to the duty to repair the parish pump; and since that time
+everyone knew better than to ignore Mr. Prigg. I have heard that the
+money spent in that action would have repaired all the parish pumps in
+England for a century, but have no means of ascertaining the truth of
+this statement.
+
+Mr. Prigg was a man whose merits were not appreciated by the local
+gentry, who never asked him to dinner. Virtue is thus sometimes
+ill-rewarded in this world. And Mrs. Prigg’s virtue had also been
+equally ignored when she had sought, almost with tears, to obtain tickets
+for the County Ball.
+
+Mr. Prigg was about sixty years old, methodical in his habits,
+punctilious in his dress, polite in his demeanour, and precise in his
+language. He wore a high collar of such remarkable stiffness that his
+shoulders had to turn with his head whenever it was necessary to alter
+his position. This gave an appearance of respectability to the head, not
+to be acquired by any other means. It was, indeed, the most respectable
+head I ever saw either in the flesh or in marble.
+
+Mr. Prigg had descended from the well-known family of Prigg, and he
+prided himself on the circumstance. How often was he seen in the little
+churchyard of Yokelton of a Sunday morning, both before and after
+service, pointing with family pride to the tombstone of a relative which
+bore this beautiful and touching inscription:—
+
+ HERE
+ LIE THE ASHES OF
+ MR. JOHN PRIGG,
+ OF SMITH STREET, BRISTOL,
+ ORIGINALLY OF DUCK GREEN, YOKELTON,
+ WHO UNDER PECULIAR DISADVANTAGES
+ WHICH TO COMMON MINDS
+ WOULD HAVE BEEN A BAR TO ANY EXERTIONS
+ RAISED HIMSELF FROM ALL OBSCURE SITUATIONS
+ OF BIRTH AND FORTUNE
+ BY HIS OWN INDUSTRY AND FRUGALITY
+ TO THE ENJOYMENT OF A _MODERATE COMPETENCY_.
+ HE ATTAINED A PECULIAR EXCELLENCE
+ IN PENMANSHIP AND DRAWING
+ WITHOUT THE INSTRUCTIONS OF A MASTER,
+ AND TO EMINENCE IN ARITHMETIC,
+ THE USEFUL AND THE HIGHER BRANCHES OF
+ THE MATHEMATICS,
+ BY GOING TO SCHOOL ONLY A YEAR AND EIGHT MONTHS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ HE
+ DIED A BACHELOR
+ ON THE 24TH DAY OF OCTOBER, 1807,
+ IN THE 55TH YEAR OF HIS AGE;
+ AND WITHOUT FORGETTING
+ RELATIONS FRIENDS AND ACQUAINTANCES
+ BEQUEATHED ONE FIFTH OF HIS PROPERTY
+ TO PUBLIC CHARITY.
+
+ READER
+ THE WORLD IS OPEN TO THEE.
+ “GO THOU AND DO LIKEWISE.” {22}
+
+It was generally supposed that this beautiful composition was from the
+pen of Mr. Prigg himself, who, sitting as he did so high on his branch of
+the Family Tree,
+
+ COULD LOOK
+ WITH PRIDE AND SYMPATHY
+ ON
+ THE MANLY STRUGGLES
+ OF A HUMBLER MEMBER
+ LOWER DOWN!
+
+High Birth, like Great Wealth, can afford to condescend!
+
+Mrs. Prigg was worthy of her illustrious consort. She was of the noble
+family of the Snobs, and in every way did honour to her progenitors. As
+the reader is aware, there is what is known as a “cultivated voice,” the
+result of education—it is absolutely without affectation: there is also
+the voice which, in imitation of the well-trained one, is little more
+than a burlesque, and is affected in the highest degree: this was the
+only fault in Mrs. Prigg’s voice.
+
+Mr. Prigg’s home was charmingly small, but had all the pretensions of a
+stately country house—its conservatory, its drawing-room, its study, and
+a dining-room which told you as plainly as any dining-room could speak,
+“I am related to Donkey Hall, where the Squire lives: I belong to the
+same aristocratic family.”
+
+Then there was the great heavy-headed clock in the passage. He did not
+appear at all to know that he had come down in the world through being
+sold by auction for two pounds ten. He said with great plausibility, “My
+worth is not to be measured by the amount of money I can command; I am
+the same personage as before.” And I thought it a very true observation,
+but the philosophy thereof was a little discounted by his haughty
+demeanour, which had certainly gone up as he himself had come down; and
+that is a reason why I don’t as a rule like people who have come down in
+the world—they are sure to be so stuck up. But I do like a person who
+has come down in the world and doesn’t at all mind it—much better than
+any man who has got up in the world from the half-crown, and does mind it
+upon all occasions.
+
+Mrs. Prigg, apart from her high descent, was a very aristocratic person:
+as the presence of the grand piano in the drawing-room would testify.
+She could no more live without a grand piano than ordinary people could
+exist without food: the grand piano, albeit a very dilapidated one, was a
+necessity of her well-descended condition. It was no matter that it
+displaced more useful furniture; in that it only imitated a good many
+other persons, and it told you whenever you entered the room: “You see me
+here in a comparatively small way, but understand, I have been in far
+different circumstances: I have been courted by the great, and listened
+to by the aristocracy of England. I follow Mrs. Prigg wherever she goes:
+she is a lady; her connections are high, and she never yet associated
+with any but the best families. You could not diminish from her very
+high breeding: put her in the workhouse, and with me to accompany her, it
+would be transformed into a palace.”
+
+Mr. Prigg was by no means a rich man as the world counts richness. No
+one ever heard of his having a “_practice_,” although it was believed he
+did a great deal in the way of “lending his name” _and profession_ to
+impecunious and uneducated men; who could turn many a six-and-eightpence
+under its prestige. So great is the moral “power of attorney,” as
+contradistinguished from the legal “power of attorney.”
+
+But Prigg, as I have hinted, was not only respectable, he was _good_: he
+was more than that even, he was _notoriously_ good: so much so, that he
+was called, in contradistinction to all other lawyers, “_Honest Lawyer
+Prigg_”; and he had further acquired, almost as a universal title, the
+sobriquet of “Nice.” Everybody said, “What a very nice man Mr. Prigg
+is!” Then, in addition to all this, he was considered _clever_—why, I do
+not know; but I have often observed that men can obtain the reputation of
+being clever at very little cost, and without the least foundation. The
+cheapest of all ways is to abuse men who really are clever, and if your
+abuse be pungently and not too coarsely worded, it will be accepted by
+the ignorant as _criticism_. Nothing goes down with shallow minds like
+criticism, and the severest criticism is generally based on envy and
+jealousy.
+
+Mr. Prigg, then, was clever, respectable, good, and nice, remarkably
+potent qualities for success in this world.
+
+So I saw in my dream that Mr. Bumpkin, whose feelings were duly aroused,
+turned his eye upon Honest Lawyer Prigg, and resolved to consult him upon
+the grievous outrage to which he had been subjected at the hands of the
+cunning Snooks: and without more ado he resolved to call on that very
+worthy and extremely nice gentleman.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+On the extreme simplicity of going to law.
+
+With his right leg resting on his left, with his two thumbs nicely
+adjusted, and with the four points of his right fingers in delicate
+contact with the fingers of his left hand, sat Honest Lawyer Prigg,
+listening to the tale of unutterable woe, as recounted by Farmer Bumpkin.
+
+Sometimes the good man’s eyes looked keenly at the farmer, and sometimes
+they scanned vacantly the ceiling, where a wandering fly seemed, like Mr.
+Bumpkin, in search of consolation or redress. Sometimes Mr. Prigg nodded
+his respectable head and shoulders in token of his comprehension of Mr.
+Bumpkin’s lucid statement: then he nodded two or three times in
+succession, implying that the Court was with Mr. Bumpkin, and
+occasionally he would utter with a soft soothing voice,
+
+“Quite so!”
+
+When he said “quite so,” he parted his fingers, and reunited them with
+great precision; then he softly tapped them together, closed his eyes,
+and seemed lost in profound meditation.
+
+Here Mr. Bumpkin paused and stared. Was Mr. Prigg listening?
+
+“Pray proceed,” said the lawyer, “I quite follow you;—never mind about
+what anybody else had offered you for the pig—the question really is
+whether you actually sold this pig to Snooks or not—whether the bargain
+was complete or inchoate.”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin stared again. “I beant much of a scollard, sir,” he
+observed; “but I’ll take my oath I never sold un t’pig.”
+
+“That is the question,” remarked the lawyer. “You say you did not?
+Quite so; had this Joe of yours any authority to receive money on your
+behalf?”
+
+“Devil a bit,” answered Bumpkin.
+
+“Excuse me,” said Mr. Prigg, “I have to put these questions: it is
+necessary that I should understand where we are: of course, if you did
+not sell the pig, he had no right whatever to come and take it out of the
+sty—it was a trespass?”
+
+“That’s what I says,” said Bumpkin; and down went his fist on Mr. Prigg’s
+table with such vehemence that the solicitor started as though aroused by
+a shock of dynamite.
+
+“Let us be calm,” said the lawyer, taking some paper from his desk, and
+carefully examining the nib of a quill pen, “Let me see, I think you said
+your name was Thomas?”
+
+“That’s it, sir; and so was my father’s afore me.”
+
+“Thomas Bumpkin?”
+
+“I beant ashamed on him.”
+
+And then Mr. Prigg wrote out a document and read it aloud; and Mr.
+Bumpkin agreeing with it, scratched his name at the bottom—very badly
+scratched it was, but well enough for Mr. Prigg. This was simply to
+retain Mr. Prigg as his solicitor in the cause of _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_.
+
+“Quite so, quite so; now let me see; be calm, Mr. Bumpkin, be calm; in
+all these matters we must never lose our self-possession. You see, I am
+not excited.”
+
+“Noa,” said Bumpkin; “but then ur dint tak thy pig.”
+
+“Quite true, I can appreciate the position, it was no doubt a gross
+outrage. Now tell me—this Snooks, as I understand, is the coal-merchant
+down the village?”
+
+“That’s ur,” said Bumpkin.
+
+“I suppose he’s a man of some property, eh?”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin looked for a few moments without speaking, and then said:
+
+“He wur allays a close-fisted un, and I should reckon have a goodish bit
+o’ property.”
+
+“Because you know,” remarked the solicitor, “it is highly important, when
+one wins a case and obtains damages, that the defendant should be in a
+position to pay them.”
+
+This was the first time that ever the flavour of damages had got into
+Bumpkin’s mouth; and a very nice flavour it was. To beat Snooks was one
+thing, a satisfaction; to make him pay was another, a luxury.
+
+“Yes, sir,” he repeated; “I bleeve he ave, I bleeve he ave.”
+
+“What makes you think so?”
+
+“Wull, fust and foremust, I knows he lent a party a matter of a hundred
+pound, for I witnessed un.”
+
+“Then he hasn’t got that,” said the lawyer.
+
+“Yes ur ave, sir, or how so be as good; for it wur a morgage like, and
+since then he’ve got the house.”
+
+Mr. Prigg made a note, and asked where the house was.
+
+“It be widder Jackson’s.”
+
+“Indeed; very well.”
+
+“An then there be the bisness.”
+
+“Exactly,” said the lawyer, “horses and carts, weighing machines, and so
+on?”
+
+“And the house he live in,” said Bumpkin, “I know as ow that longs to
+him.”
+
+“Very well; I think that will be enough to start with.” Now, Mr. Prigg
+knew pretty well the position of the respective parties himself; so it
+was not so much for his own information that he made these inquiries as
+to infuse into Bumpkin’s mind a notion of the importance of the case.
+
+“Now,” said he, throwing down the pen, “this is a very serious matter,
+Mr. Bumpkin.”
+
+This was a comfort, and Bumpkin looked agreeably surprised and vastly
+important.
+
+“A very serious case,” and again the tips of the fingers were brought in
+contact.
+
+“I spoase we can’t bring un afore jusseses, sir?”
+
+“Well, you see the criminal law is dangerous; you can’t get damages, and
+you may get an action for malicious prosecution.”
+
+“I think we ought to mak un pay for ’t.”
+
+“That is precisely my own view, but I am totally at a loss to understand
+the reason of such outrageous conduct on the part of this Snooks. Now
+don’t be offended, Mr. Bumpkin, if I put a question to you. You know, we
+lawyers like to search to the bottom of things. I can understand, if you
+had owed him any money—”
+
+“Owe un money!” exclaimed Bumpkin contemptuously; “why I could buy un out
+and out.”
+
+“Ah, quite so, quite so; so I should have supposed from what I know of
+you, Mr. Bumpkin.”
+
+“Lookee ere, sir,” said the farmer; “I bin a ard workin man all my life,
+paid my way, twenty shillins in the pound, and doant owe a penny as fur
+as I knows.”
+
+“And if you did, Mr. Bumpkin,” said the lawyer with a good-natured laugh,
+“I dare say you could pay.”
+
+“Wull, I bleeve there’s no man can axe me for nothing; and thank God,
+what I’ve got’s my own; and there aint many as got pootier stock nor
+mine—all good bred uns, Mr. Prigg.”
+
+“Yes, I’ve often heard your cattle praised.”
+
+“He be a blagard if ur says I owed un money.”
+
+“O, dear, Mr. Bumpkin, pray don’t misunderstand me; he did not, that I am
+aware, allege that he took the pig because you owed him money; and even
+if you did, he could not legally have done so. Now this is not a mere
+matter of debt; it’s a very serious case of trespass.”
+
+“Ay; zo ’t be sir; that was my bleef, might jist as wull a tooked baacon
+out o’ baacon loft.”
+
+“Just the same. Quite so—quite so!”
+
+“And I want thee, Mr. Prigg, to mak un pay for’t—mak un pay, sir; it
+beant so much th’ pig.”
+
+“Quite so: quite so: that were a very trifling affair, and might be
+settled in the County Court; but, in fact, it’s not the pig at all, it’s
+trespass, and you want to make him answerable in damages.”
+
+“That’s it, sir; you’ve got un.”
+
+“I suppose an apology and a return of the pig would not be enough.”
+
+“I’ll make un know he beant everybody,” said Bumpkin.
+
+“Quite so; now what shall we lay the damages at?”
+
+“Wull, sir, as for that, I doant rightly know; if so be he’d pay down,
+that’s one thing, but it’s my bleef as you might jist as wull try to dror
+blood out of a stoane as git thic feller to do what’s right.”
+
+“Shall we say a hundred pounds and costs?”
+
+Never did man look more astonished than Bumpkin. A hundred pounds! What
+a capital thing going to law must be! But, as the reader knows, he was a
+remarkably discreet man, and never in the course of his dealing committed
+himself till the final moment. Whenever anybody made him a “bid,” he
+invariably met the offer with one form of refusal. “Nay, nay; it beant
+good enough: I bin offered moore.” And this had answered so well, that
+it came natural to Bumpkin to refuse on all occasions the first offer.
+It was not to be wondered at then that the question should be regarded in
+the light of an offer from Snooks himself. Now he could hardly say “I
+bin _bid moore_ money,” because the case wasn’t in the market; but he
+could and did say the next best thing to it, namely:—
+
+“I wunt let un goo for that—’t be wuth moore!”
+
+“Very well,” observed Prigg; “so long as we know: we can lay our damages
+at what we please.”
+
+Now there was great consolation in that. The plaintiff paused and rubbed
+his chin. “What do thee think, sir?”
+
+“I think if he pays something handsome, and gives us an apology, and pays
+the costs, I should advise you to take it.”
+
+“As you please, sir; I leaves it to you; I beant a hard man, I hope.”
+
+“Very good; we will see what can be done. I shall bring this action in
+the Chancery Division.”
+
+“Hem! I’ve eerd tell, sir, that if ever a case gets into that ere Coourt
+he niver comes out agin.”
+
+“O, that’s all nonsense; there used to be a good deal of truth in that;
+but the procedure is now so altered that you can do pretty much what you
+like: this is an age of despatch; you bring your action, and your writ is
+almost like a cheque payable on demand!”
+
+“Wull, I beant no lawyer, never had nothing to do wi un in my life; but I
+should like to axe, sir, why thee’ll bring this ere case in Chancery?”
+
+“Good; well, come now, I like to be frank; we shall get more costs?”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin again rubbed his chin. “And do I get em?” he asked.
+
+“Well, they go towards expenses; the other side always pays.”
+
+This was a stroke of reasoning not to be gainsaid. But Mr. Prigg had a
+further observation to make on the subject, and it was this:
+
+“After the case has gone on up to being ready for trial, and the Judges
+find that it is a case more fitting to be tried in the Common Law Courts,
+then an order is made transferring it, that is, sending it out of
+Chancery to be tried by one of the other Judges.”
+
+“Can’t see un,” said Bumpkin, “I beant much of a scollard, but I tak it
+thee knows best.”
+
+Mr. Prigg smiled: a beneficent, sympathizing smile.
+
+“I dare say,” he said, “it looks a little mysterious, but we lawyers
+understand it; so, if you don’t mind, I shall bring it in the Chancery
+Division in the first instance; and nice and wild the other side will be.
+I fancy I see the countenance of Snooks’ lawyer.”
+
+This was a good argument, and perfectly satisfactory to the
+unsophisticated mind of Bumpkin.
+
+“And when,” he asked, “will ur come on, think’ee?”
+
+“O, in due time; everything is done very quickly now—not like it used to
+be—you’d be surprised, we used to have to wait years—yes, years, sir,
+before an action could be tried; and now, why bless my soul, you get
+judgment before you know where you are.”
+
+How true this turned out to be may hereafter appear; but in a dream you
+never anticipate.
+
+“I shall write at once,” said “Honest Prigg,” “for compensation and an
+apology; I think I would have an apology.”
+
+“Make un pay—I doant so much keer for the t’other thing; that beant much
+quonsequence.”
+
+“Quite so—quite so.” And with this observation Mr. Prigg escorted his
+client to the door.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+In which it appears that the sting of slander is not always in the head.
+
+Mr. Prigg lost no time in addressing a letter to the ill-advised Josiah
+Snooks with the familiar and affectionate commencement of “Dear Sir,’”
+asking for compensation for the “gross outrage” he had committed upon
+“his client;” and an apology to be printed in such papers as he, the
+client, should select.
+
+The “Dear Sir” replied, not in writing, for he was too artful for that,
+but by returning, as became his vulgar nature, Mr. Prigg’s letter in a
+very torn and disgusting condition.
+
+To a gentleman of cultivated mind and sensitive nature, this was
+intolerable; and Mr. Prigg knew that even the golden bridge of compromise
+was now destroyed. He no longer felt as a mere lawyer, anxious in the
+interests of his client, which was a sufficient number of horse-power for
+anything, but like an outraged and insulted gentleman, which was more
+after the force of hydraulic pressure than any calculable amount of
+horse-power. It was clear to his upright and sensitive mind that Snooks
+was a low creature. Consequently all professional courtesies were at an
+end: the writ was issued and duly served upon the uncompromising Snooks.
+Now a writ is not a matter to grin at and to treat with contempt or
+levity. Mr. Snooks could not return that document to Mr. Prigg, so he
+had to consider. And first he consulted his wife: this consultation led
+to a domestic brawl and then to his kicking one of his horses in the
+stomach. Then he threw a shovel at his dog, and next the thought
+occurred to him that he had better go and see Mr. Locust. This gentleman
+was a solicitor who practised at petty sessions. He did not practise
+much, but that was, perhaps, his misfortune rather than his fault. He
+was a small, fiery haired man, with a close cut tuft of beard; small
+eyes, and a pimply nose, which showed an ostentatious disdain for
+everything beneath it.
+
+Mr. Locust was not at home, but would return about nine. At nine,
+therefore, the impatient Snooks appeared.
+
+“Yes,” said Mr. Locust, as he looked at the writ, “I see this writ is
+issued by Mr. Prigg.”
+
+“Yes, sir.”
+
+“Did he not write to you before issuing it?—dear me, this is very sharp
+practice—very sharp practice: the sharpest thing I ever heard of in all
+my life.”
+
+“Wull, he did write, but I giv un as good as he sent.”
+
+“Dear me!” exclaimed Mr. Locust; “I am afraid you have committed
+yourself.”
+
+“No I beant, sir,” said the cunning Snooks, with a grin, “no I beant.”
+
+“You should never write without consulting a solicitor—bear that in mind,
+Mr. Snooks; it will be an invaluable lesson—hem!”
+
+“I never writ, sir—I ony sent un his letter back.”
+
+“Ah!” said Locust, “come now, that is better; but still you should have
+consulted me. I see this claim is for three hundred and fifty
+pounds—it’s for trespass. Now sit down quietly and calmly, and tell me
+the facts.” And then he took pen and paper and placed himself in
+position to take his retainer and instructions.
+
+“Wull, sir, it is as this: a Sunday mornin—no, a Sunday mornin week—I
+won’t tell no lie if I knows it—a Sunday mornin week—”
+
+“Sunday morning week,” writes Locust.
+
+“I buyd a pig off this ere man for nine and six: well, o’ the Monday
+mornin I goes with my barrer and a sack and I fetches the pig and gies
+the money to his man Joe Wurzel; leastways I puts it on the poast and he
+takes it up. Then out comes Bumpkin and swears I never bought un at all,
+gets in a rage and hits the bag wi’ a stick—”
+
+“Now stop,” said the Lawyer; “are you quite sure he did not strike _you_?
+That’s the point.”
+
+“Well, sir, he would a’ done if I adn’t a bobbed.”
+
+“Good: that’s an assault in law. You are sure he would have struck you
+if you hadn’t ducked or bobbed your head?”
+
+“In course it would, else why should I bob?”
+
+“Just so—just so. Now then, we’ve got him there—we’ve got him nicely.”
+
+Snooks’ eyes gleamed.
+
+“Next I want to know: I suppose you didn’t owe him anything?”
+
+“No, nor no other man,” said Snooks, with an air of triumph. “I worked
+hard for what I got, and no man can’t ax me for a farden. I allays paid
+twenty shillings in the pound.”
+
+The reader will observe how virtuous both parties were on this point.
+
+“So!” said Locust. “Now you haven’t told me all that took place.”
+
+“That be about all, sir.”
+
+“Yes, yes; but I suppose there was something said between you—did you
+have any words—was he angry—did he call you any names or say anything in
+an angry way?”
+
+“Well, not partickler—”
+
+“Not particular: I will judge of that. Just tell me what was said.”
+
+“When, sir?”
+
+“Well, begin on the Sunday morning. What was first said?”
+
+Then Snooks told the Solicitor all that took place, with sundry additions
+which his imagination supplied when his memory failed.
+
+“And I member the price wull, becos he said ‘You beant sellin coals,
+recollect, so you doant ave me.”
+
+“Ho! ho!” exclaimed Locust rubbing his hands, “You are sure he said
+that?” writing down the words carefully.
+
+“I be.”
+
+“That will do, we’ve got him: we’ve got him nicely. Was anybody present
+when he said this?”
+
+“Yes, sir. Joe were there, and t’ best o’ my belief, Mrs. Bumpkin.”
+
+“Never mind Mrs. Bumpkin. I don’t suppose she was there, if you come to
+recollect; it’s quite enough if Joe was present and could hear what was
+said. I suppose he could hear it?”
+
+“Stood cloase by.”
+
+“Very well—that is slander—and slander of a very gross kind. We’ve got
+him.”
+
+“Be it?” said Snooks.
+
+“I’ll show you,” said Locust; “in law a man slanders you if he insinuates
+that you are dishonest; now what does this Bumpkin do? he says ‘you don’t
+have me,’ meaning thereby that you don’t trick him out of his pig; and,
+‘you are not selling coals,’ meaning that when you do sell coals you do
+trick people. Do you see?—that you cheat them, in fact rob them.”
+
+Snooks thought Mr. Locust the most wonderful man he had ever come across.
+This was quite a new way of putting it.
+
+“But ur didn’t say as much,” he said, wondering whether that made any
+difference.
+
+“Perfectly immaterial in law,” said Mr. Locust: “it isn’t what a man
+says, it’s what he _means_: you put that in by an innuendo—”
+
+“A what, sir? begging pardon—”
+
+“It’s what we lawyers call an innuendo: that is to say, making out that a
+man says so and so when he doesn’t.”
+
+“I zee,” said the artful Snooks, quick at apprehending every point.
+“Then if he called a chap a devilish honest man and the innu—what d’ye
+call it, meant he were a thief, you got him?”
+
+“Well,” said Mr. Locust, smiling, “that is going rather far, Mr. Snooks,
+but I see you understand what I mean.”
+
+“I thinks so, sir. I thinks I has your meanin.”
+
+“It’s a very gross slander,” observed Mr. Locust, “and especially upon a
+tradesman in your position. I suppose now you have lived in the
+neighbourhood a considerable time?”
+
+“All my life, sir.”
+
+“Ah! just so, just so—now let me see; and, if I remember rightly, you
+have a vote for the County.”
+
+“I ave, sir, and allus votes blue, and that’s moore.”
+
+“Then you’re on our side. I’m very glad indeed to hear that; a vote’s a
+vote, you know, now-a-days.”
+
+Any one would have thought, to hear Mr. Locust, that votes were scarce
+commodities, whereas we know that they are among the most plentiful
+articles of commerce as well as the cheapest.
+
+“And you have, I think, a family, Mr. Snooks.”
+
+“Four on em, sir.”
+
+“Ah! how very nice, how laudable to make a little provision for them: as
+I often say, if a man can only leave his children a few hundreds apiece,
+it’s something.”
+
+The solicitor watched his client’s face as he uttered this profound
+truism, and the face being as open and genuine as was Snooks’ character,
+it said plainly enough “Yes, I have a few hundreds.”
+
+“Well then,” continued Mr. Locust, “having been in business all these
+years, and being, as times go, tolerably successful, being a careful man,
+and having got together by honest industry a nice little independency—”
+
+Here the learned gentleman paused, and here, unfortunately, Snooks’ open
+and candid heart revealed itself through his open and candid countenance.
+
+“I _believe_,” said Mr. Locust, “I am right?”
+
+“You’re about right, sir.”
+
+“Very charming, very gratifying to one’s feelings,” continued Mr. Locust;
+“and then, just as you are beginning to get comfortable and getting your
+family placed in the world, here comes this what shall I call him, I
+never like to use strong language, this intolerable blackguard, and calls
+you a thief—a detestable thief.”
+
+“Well, he didn’t use that air word, sir—I wool say that,” said Mr.
+Snooks.
+
+“In law he did, my good man—he meant it and said it—he insinuated that
+you cheated the poor—you serve a good many of the poor, I think?”
+
+“I do, sir.”
+
+“Well, he insinuated that you cheated them by giving short weight and bad
+coals—that is worse than being a thief, to my mind—such a man deserves
+hanging.”
+
+“Damn him,” said Snooks, “that’s it, is it?”
+
+“That’s it, my dear sir, smooth it over as you will. I don’t want to
+make more of it than necessary, but we must look at it fairly and study
+the consequences. Now I want to ask you particularly, because we must
+claim special damage for this, if possible—have you lost any customers
+through this outrageous slander?”
+
+“Can’t say I have, rightly, sir.”
+
+“No, but you will—mark my words, as soon as people hear of this they will
+cease to deal with you. They can’t deal with you.”
+
+“I hope not, sir.”
+
+“So do I; but let me tell Mr. Bumpkin” (here the learned man shook his
+forefinger as though it had been the often quoted finger of scorn) “that
+for every customer you lose we’ll make him answerable in damages. He’ll
+repeat this slander: take my advice and get some one to look out, and
+make a note of it—be on your guard!”
+
+Snooks wiped the perspiration from his forehead and then threw his large
+coloured handkerchief into his hat, which he held by both hands between
+his knees,
+
+“It be a bad case then, sir?”
+
+“A very bad case for Bumpkin!” replied Mr. Locust; “let me have a list of
+your customers as soon as you can, and we shall see who leaves you in
+consequence of this slander. Does my friend, Mr. Overrighteous, deal
+with you? I think he does?”
+
+“He do, sir, and have for five or six years—and a good customer he be.”
+
+“Ah! now, there’s a man! Whatever you do don’t let Mr. Overrighteous
+know of it: he would leave you directly: a more particular man than that
+can’t be. Then again, there is my friend Flythekite, does he deal with
+you? Of course he does!”
+
+“Yes, sir.”
+
+“And you’ll lose him—sure to lose him.”
+
+Judging from Mr. Snooks’ countenance it would have been small damage if
+he did.
+
+“Ve-ry well,” continued Locust, after a pause, “ve-ry well—just so.”
+Then he looked at the copy of the writ and perceived that it was dated
+eighteen hundred and ninety something instead of eighteen hundred and
+seventy something. So he said that the writ was wrong and they ought not
+to appear; “by which means,” said he, “we shall let them in at the start
+for a lot of costs—we shall let them in.”
+
+“And will that stash the action?” asked Snooks.
+
+“It will not stash ours,” said Locust. “I suppose you mean to go on
+whether he does or not? Your claim is for assault and slander.”
+
+“As you please, sir.”
+
+“No, no, as you please. I have not been called a thief—they haven’t said
+that I sell short weight and cheat and defraud the poor: _my_ business
+will not be ruined—_my_ character is not at stake.”
+
+“Let un have it, sir; he be a bad un,” and here he rose to depart. Mr.
+Locust gave him a professional shake of the hand and wished him good day.
+But as the door was just about to be closed on his client, he remembered
+something which he desired to ask, so he called, “Mr. Snooks!”
+
+“Sir,” said the client.
+
+“Is there any truth in the statement that this Bumpkin beats his wife?”
+
+“I doant rightly know,” said Snooks, in a hesitating voice; “it may be
+true. I shouldn’t wonder—he’s just the sort o’ man.”
+
+“Just enquire about that, will you?”
+
+“I wool, sir,” said Snooks; and thus his interview with his Solicitor
+terminated.
+
+Now the result of the enquiries as to the domestic happiness of Bumpkin
+was this; first, the question floated about in a vague sort of form,
+“_Does Bumpkin beat his wife_?” then it grew into “_Have you heard that
+Bumpkin beats his wife_?” and lastly, it was affirmed that Bumpkin
+“_really did beat his wife_.” And the scandal spread so rapidly that it
+soon reached the ears of plaintiff himself, who would have treated it
+with the contempt it deserved, knowing the quarter whence it came, but
+that it was so gross a calumny that he determined to give the lying
+Snooks no quarter, and to press his action with all the energy at his
+command.
+
+After this there could be no compromise.
+
+“I wish,” said Snooks to himself, as he smoked his pipe that evening, “I
+could a worked one o’ them there innerenders in my trade—I could a made
+summut on him.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+Showing how the greatest wisdom of Parliament may be thrown away on
+ungrateful people.
+
+The first skirmish between the two doughty champions of the hostile
+forces took place over the misdated writ. Judgment was signed for want
+of appearance; and then came a summons to set it aside. The Judge set it
+aside, and the Divisional Court set aside the Judge, and the Court of
+Appeal set aside the Divisional Court upon the terms of the defendant
+paying the costs, and the writ being amended, &c. &c. And I saw that
+when the Judge in Chambers had hesitatingly and “not without grave doubt”
+set aside the judgment, Mr. Prigg said to Mr. Locust, “What a very nice
+point!” And Mr. Locust replied:
+
+“A very nice point, indeed! Of course you’ll appeal?” And Mr. Quibbler,
+Mr. Locust’s pleader, said, “A very neat point!”
+
+“Oh dear, yes,” answered Mr. Prigg.
+
+And then Mr. Prigg’s clerk said to Mr. Locust’s clerk—“What a very nice
+point!” And Mr. Locust’s clerk rejoined that it was indeed a very nice
+point! And then Mr. Locust’s boy in the office said to Mr. Prigg’s boy
+in the office, “What a very nice point!” And Mr. Prigg’s boy, a pale
+tall lad of about five feet six, and of remarkably quiet demeanour,
+replied—
+
+“A dam nice point!”
+
+Next came letters from the respective Solicitors, suggesting a compromise
+in such terms that compromise became impossible; each affirming that he
+was so averse from litigation that almost any amicable arrangement that
+could be come to would be most welcome. Each required a sum of two
+hundred pounds and an apology in six morning papers. And I saw at the
+foot of one of Mr. Prigg’s letters, when the hope of compromise was
+nearly at an end, these touching words:
+
+“Bumpkin’s blood’s up!”
+
+And at the end of the answer thereto, this very expressive retort:
+
+“You say Bumpkin’s blood is up; so is Snooks’—do your worst!”
+
+As I desire to inform the lay reader as to the interesting course an
+action may take under the present expeditious mode of procedure, I must
+now state what I saw in my dream. The course is sinuosity itself in
+appearance, but that only renders it the more beautiful. The reader will
+be able to judge for himself of the simple method by which we try actions
+nowadays, and how very delightful the procedure is. The first skirmish
+cost Snooks seventeen pounds six shillings and eight-pence. It cost
+Bumpkin only three pounds seventeen shillings, or _one heifer_. Now
+commenced that wonderful process called “Pleading,” which has been the
+delight and the pride of so many ages; developing gradually century by
+century, until at last it has perfected itself into the most beautiful
+system of evasion and duplicity that the world has ever seen. It ranks
+as one of the fine Arts with Poetry and Painting. A great Pleader is
+truly a great Artist, and more imaginative than any other. The number of
+summonses at Chambers is only limited by his capacity to invent them.
+Ask any respectable solicitor how many honest claims are stifled by
+proceedings at Chambers. And if I may digress in all sincerity for the
+purpose of usefulness, I may state that while recording my dream for the
+Press, Solicitors have begged of me to bring this matter forward, so that
+the Public may know how their interests are played with, and their rights
+stifled by the iniquitous system of proceedings at Chambers.
+
+The Victorian age will be surely known as the Age of Pleading, Poetry,
+and Painting.
+
+First, the Statement of Claim. Summons at Chambers to plead and demur;
+summons to strike out; summons to let in; summons to answer, summons not
+to answer; summonses for all sorts of conceivable and inconceivable
+objects; summonses for no objects at all except costs. And let me here
+say Mr. Prigg and Mr. Locust are not alone blameable for this: Mr.
+Quibbler, Mr. Locust’s Pleader, had more to do with this than the
+Solicitor himself. And so had Mr. Wrangler, the Pleader of Mr. Prigg.
+But without repeating what I saw, let the reader take this as the line of
+proceeding throughout, repeated in at least a dozen instances:—
+
+ The Judge at Chambers reversed the Master;
+
+ The Divisional Court reversed the Judge;
+
+ And the Court of Appeal reversed the Divisional Court.
+
+And let this be the chorus:—
+
+ “What a very nice point!” said Prigg;
+
+ “What a very nice point!” said Locust;
+
+ “What a very nice point!” said Gride (Prigg’s clerk);
+
+ “What a d--- nice point!” said Horatio! (the pale boy).
+
+ Summons for particulars.—Chorus.
+
+ Further and better particulars.—Chorus.
+
+ Interrogatories—Summons to strike out.—Chorus.
+
+ Summons for further and better answers.—Chorus.
+
+ More summonses for more, further, better, and all sorts of
+ things.—Chorus.
+
+All this repeated by the other side, of course; because each has his
+proper innings. There is great fairness and impartiality in the game.
+Something was always going up from the foot of this Jacob’s ladder called
+“the Master” to the higher regions called the Court of Appeal. The
+simplest possible matter, which any old laundress of the Temple ought to
+have been competent to decide by giving both the parties a box on the
+ear, was taken before the Master, from the Master to the Judge, from the
+Judge to the Divisional Court, and from the Divisional Court to the Court
+of Appeal, at the expense of the unfortunate litigants; while Judges, who
+ought to have been engaged in disposing of the business of the country,
+were occupied in deciding legal quibbles and miserable technicalities.
+All this I saw in my dream. Up and down this ladder Bumpkin and Snooks
+were driven—one going up the front while the other was coming down the
+back. And I heard Bumpkin ask if he wasn’t entitled to the costs which
+the Court gave when he won. But the answer of Mr. Prigg was, “No, my
+dear sir, the labourer is worthy of his hire.” And I saw a great many
+more ups and downs on the ladder which I should weary the reader by
+repeating: they are all alike equally useless and equally contemptible.
+Then I thought that poor Bumpkin went up the ladder with a great bundle
+on his back; and his face seemed quite changed, so that I hardly knew
+him, and I said to Horatio, the pale boy—
+
+“Who is that going up now? It looks like Christian in the Pilgrim’s
+Progress.”
+
+“Oh, no,” said Horatio, “that’s old Bumpkin—it’s a regler sweater for
+him, ain’t it?”
+
+I said, “Whatever can it be? will he ever reach the top?”
+
+Here Bumpkin seemed to slip, and it almost took my breath away; whereat
+the pale boy laughed, stooping down as he laughed, and thrusting his
+hands into his breeches pockets,
+
+“By George!” he exclaimed, “what a jolly lark!”
+
+“I hope he won’t fall,” I exclaimed. “What has he got on his back?”
+
+“A DEMURRER,” said Horatio, laughing. “Look at him! That there ladder’s
+the Judicatur Act: don’t it reach a height? There’s as many rounds in
+that there ladder as would take a man a lifetime to go up if it was all
+spread out; it’s just like them fire escapes in reaching up, but nobody
+ever escapes by it.”
+
+“It will break the poor man’s back,” said I, as he was a few feet from
+the top. And then in my dream I thought he fell; and the fright was so
+great that I awoke, and found I was sitting in my easy chair by the fire,
+and the pipe I had been smoking had fallen out of my hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“You’ve been dreaming,” said my wife; “and I fear have had a nightmare.”
+When I was thoroughly aroused, and had refilled my pipe, I told her all
+my dream.
+
+Then cried she, “I hope good Mr. Bumpkin will get up safely with that
+great bundle.”
+
+“It doesn’t matter,” said I, “whether he do or not; he will have to bear
+its burden, whether he take it up or bring it back. He will have to
+bring it down again after showing it to the gentlemen at the top.”
+
+“What do they want to see it for?” cried she.
+
+“They have no wish to see it,” I replied; “on the contrary, they would
+rather not. They will simply say he is a very foolish man for his pains
+to clamber up so high with so useless a burden.”
+
+“But why don’t they check him?”
+
+“Because they have no power; they look and wonder at the folly of
+mankind, who can devise no better scheme of amusement for getting rid of
+their money.”
+
+“But the lawyers are wise people, and they should know better.”
+
+“The lawyers,” said I, “do know better; and all respectable lawyers
+detest the complicated system which brings them more abuse than fees.
+They see men, permitted by the law, without character and conscience,
+bring disgrace on an honourable body of practitioners.”
+
+“But do they not remonstrate?”
+
+“They do, but with little effect; no one knows who is responsible for the
+mischief or how to cure it.”
+
+“That is strange.”
+
+“Yes, but the time will come when the people will insist on a cheaper and
+more expeditious system. Half-a-dozen solicitors and members of the
+junior bar could devise such a system in a week.”
+
+“Then why are they not permitted to take it in hand?”
+
+“Because,” said I, “Old Fogeyism has, at present, only got the gout in
+one leg; wait till he has it in both, and then Common Sense will rise to
+the occasion.”
+
+“But what,” quoth she, “is this fine art you spoke of?”
+
+“Pleading!”
+
+“Yes; in what consists its great art?”
+
+“In artfulness,” quoth I.
+
+Then there was a pause, and at length I said, “I will endeavour to give
+you an illustration of the process of pleading from ancient history: you
+have heard, I doubt not, of Joseph and his Brethren.”
+
+“O, to be sure,” cried she; “did they not put him in the pit?”
+
+“Well, I believe they put him in the pit, but I am not referring to that.
+The corn in Egypt is what I mean.”
+
+“When they found all their money in their sacks’ mouths?”
+
+“Exactly. Now if Joseph had prosecuted those men for stealing the money,
+they would simply have pleaded not guilty, and the case would have been
+tried without any bother, and the defendants have been acquitted or
+convicted according to the wisdom of the judge, the skill of the counsel,
+and the common sense of the jury. But now suppose instead thereof,
+Joseph had brought an action for the price of the corn.”
+
+“Would it not have been as simple?”
+
+“You shall see. The facts would have been stated with some accuracy and
+a good deal of inaccuracy, and a good many things which were not facts
+would have been introduced. Then the defendants in their statement of
+defence would have denied that there was any such place as Egypt as
+alleged; {52} denied that Pharaoh was King thereof; denied that he had
+any corn to sell; denied that the said Joseph had any authority to sell;
+denied that they or any of them went into Egypt; denied that they ever
+saw the said Joseph or had any communication with him whatever, either by
+means of an interpreter or otherwise; denied, in fact, everything except
+their own existence; but in the alternative they would go on to say, if
+it should be proved that there was a place called Egypt, a man called
+Pharaoh, an agent of his called Joseph, and that the defendants actually
+did go to Egypt, all of which they one and all absolutely deny (as
+becomes men of honour), then they say, that being large corn-merchants
+and well known to the said Joseph, the factor of the said Pharaoh, as
+purchasers only of corn for domestic purposes, and requiring therefore a
+good sound merchantable article, the said Joseph, by falsely and
+fraudulently representing that certain corn of which he, the said Joseph,
+was possessed, was at that time of a good sound and merchantable quality
+and fit for seed and domestic purposes, by the said false and fraudulent
+representations he, the said Joseph, induced the defendants to purchase a
+large quantity thereof, to wit, five thousand sacks; whereas the said
+corn was not of a good sound and merchantable quality and fit for seed
+and domestic purposes, but was maggoty from damp, and infected with smut
+and altogether worthless, as he, the said Joseph, well knew at the time
+he made the said false representations. The defendants would also
+further allege that, relying on the said Joseph’s word, they took away
+the said corn, but having occasion at the inn to look into the said
+sacks, they found that the said wheat was worthless, and immediately
+communicated with the said Joseph by sending their younger brother Simeon
+down to demand a return of the price of the said corn. But when the said
+Simeon came to the said Joseph the said Joseph caught him, and kicked
+him, and beat him with a great stick, and had him to prison, and would
+not restore him to his brethren, the defendants. Whereupon the
+defendants sent other messengers, and at length, after being detained a
+long time at the said inn, the said Joseph came down, and on being shown
+the said corn, admitted that it was in bad condition. Whereupon the
+defendants, fearing to trust the said Joseph with the said sacks until
+they had got a return of their said money, demanded that he, the said
+Joseph, should put the full tale of every man’s money in the sack of the
+said man; which thing the said Joseph agreed to, and placed every man’s
+money in the mouth of his said sack. And when the said man was about to
+reach forth his hand to take his said money, the said Joseph seized the
+said hand and held him fast—.”
+
+“Stop, stop!” cried my wife; “the said Joseph had not ten hands. You
+must surely draw the line somewhere.”
+
+“No, no,” said I, “that is good pleading; if the other side should omit
+to deny it, it will be taken by the rules of pleading to be admitted.”
+
+“But surely you can’t admit impossibilities!”
+
+“Can’t you, though!” cried I. “You can do almost anything in pleading.”
+
+“Except, it seems to me, tell the truth.”
+
+“You mustn’t be too hard upon us poor juniors,” cried I. “I haven’t come
+to the Counterclaim yet.”
+
+“O don’t let us have Counterclaims,” quoth she; “they can have no claim
+against Joseph?”
+
+“What, not for selling them smutty wheat?”
+
+“Nonsense.”
+
+“I say yes; and he’ll have to call a number of witnesses to prove the
+contrary—nor do I think he will be able to do it.”
+
+“I fail now,” said my wife, “to see how this pleading is a fine art.
+Really, without joking, what is the art?”
+
+“The art of pleading,” said I, “consists in denying what is, and inducing
+your adversary to admit what isn’t.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+Showing that appropriateness of time and place should be studied in our
+pastimes.
+
+The next night, sitting over the cheerful fire and comfortably resting
+after the labours of the day, I dreamed again, and I saw that Horatio
+Snigger was “the Office Boy” of Mr. Prigg. He had been in the employment
+of that gentleman about two years. He was tall for his money, standing,
+in his shoes, at least five feet six, and receiving for his services,
+five shillings and sixpence a week, (that is, a shilling for every foot
+and a penny for every odd inch), his last rise (I mean in money,) having
+taken place about a month ago.
+
+Horatio was a lad of as much spirit as any boy I ever saw. I do not
+believe he had any liking for the profession, but had entered it simply
+as his first step in life, utterly in the dark as to whither it would
+lead him. It was, I believe, some disappointment to his father that on
+no occasion when he interrogated him as to his “getting on,” could he
+elicit any more cheering reply than “very well.” And yet Horatio, during
+the time he had been with Mr. Prigg, had had opportunities of studying
+character in its ever-varying phases as presented by Courts of Justice
+and kindred places.
+
+“Kindred places!” Yes, I mean “Judges’ Chambers,” where any boy may
+speedily be impressed with the dignity and simplicity of the practice of
+the Law, especially since the passing of the Judicature Act. To my lay
+readers who may wish to know what “Judges’ Chambers” means, I may observe
+that it is a place where innumerable proceedings may be taken for
+lengthening a case, embarrassing the clients, and spending money. It is,
+to put it in another form, a sort of Grands Mulets in the Mont Blanc of
+litigation, whence, if by the time you get there you are not thoroughly
+“pumped out,” you may go on farther and in due time reach the top,
+whence, I am told, there is a most magnificent view.
+
+But even the beauty of the proceedings at Judges’ Chambers failed to
+impress Horatio with the dignity of the profession. He lounged among the
+crowds of chattering boys and youths who “cheeked” one another before
+that august personage “the Master,” declaring that “Master” couldn’t do
+this and “Master” couldn’t do that; that the other side was too late or
+too soon; that his particulars were too meagre or too full; or his
+answers to interrogatories too evasive or not sufficiently diffuse, and
+went on generally as if the whole object of the law were to raise as many
+difficulties as possible in the way of its application. As if, in fact,
+it had fenced itself in with such an undergrowth of brambles that no
+amount of ability and perseverance could arrive at it.
+
+From what I perceived of the character of Horatio, I should say that he
+was a scoffer. He was a mild, good-tempered, well-behaved boy enough,
+but ridiculed many proceedings which he ought to have reverenced. He was
+a great favourite with Mr. Prigg, because, if anything in the world
+attracted the boy’s admiration, it was that gentleman’s pious demeanour
+and profound knowledge. But the exuberance of the lad’s spirits when
+away from his employer was in exact proportion to the moral pressure
+brought to bear upon him while in that gentleman’s presence. As an
+illustration of this remark and proof of the twofold character of
+Horatio, I will relate what I saw after the “Master” had determined that
+the tail of the 9 was a very nice point, but that there was nothing in
+it. They had all waited a long time at Judge’s Chambers, and their
+spirits were, no doubt, somewhat elated by at last getting the matter
+disposed of.
+
+Horatio heard Mr. Prigg say to Mr. Locust, “What a very nice point!” and
+had heard Mr. Locust reply, “A very nice point, indeed!” And Mr. Gride,
+the clerk, say, “What, a very nice point!” and somebody else’s clerk say,
+“What a very nice point!” And Horatio felt, as a humble member of the
+profession, he must chime in with the rest of the firm. So, having said
+to Locust’s boy, “What a dam nice point!” he went back to his lonely den
+in Bedford Row and then, as he termed it, “let himself out.” He
+accomplished this proceeding by first taking off his coat and throwing it
+on to a chair; he next threw but his arms, with his fists firmly
+clenched, as though he had hardly yet to its fullest extent realized the
+“_niceness_” of the point which the Master had determined. The next step
+which Horatio took was what is called “The double shuffle,” which, I may
+inform my readers, is the step usually practised by the gentleman who
+imitates the sailor in the hornpipe on the stage. Being a slim and agile
+youth, Horatio’s performance was by no means contemptible, except that it
+was no part of his professional duty to dance a Hornpipe. Then I saw
+that this young gentleman in the exuberance of his youthful spirits
+prepared for another exhibition of his talent. He cleared his throat,
+once more threw out his arms, stamped his right foot loudly on the floor,
+after the manner of the Ethiopian dancer with the long shoe, and then to
+my astonishment poured forth the following words in a very agreeable,
+and, as it seemed to me, melodious voice,—
+
+ “What a very nice point, said Prigg.”
+
+Then came what I suppose would be called a few bars of the hornpipe; then
+he gave another line,—
+
+ “What a very nice point, said Gride.”
+
+(Another part of the hornpipe.) Then he sang the third and fourth lines,
+dancing vigorously the while:
+
+ “It will take a dozen lawyers with their everlasting jaw:
+ It will take a dozen judges with their ever changing law”—
+
+(Vigorous dancing for some moments), and then a pause, during which
+Horatio, slightly stooping, placed two fingers of his left hand to the
+side of his nose, and turning his eyes to the right, sang—
+
+ “And”—
+
+Paused again, and finished vehemently as follows:
+
+ “Twenty golden guineas to decide!”
+
+Then came the most enthusiastic hornpipe that ever was seen, and Horatio
+was in the seventh Heaven of delight, when the door suddenly opened, and
+Mr. Prigg entered!
+
+It was unfortunate for Horatio that his back being towards the door he
+could not see his master enter; and it need scarcely be said that the
+noise produced by the dance prevented him from hearing his approach.
+
+Mr. Prigg looked astounded at the sight that presented itself. The whole
+verse was repeated, and the whole dance gone through again in the sight
+and hearing of that gentleman. Was the boy mad? Had the strain of
+business been too much for him?
+
+As if by instinct Horatio at last became aware of his master’s presence.
+A change more rapid, transformation more complete I never saw. The lad
+hung his head, and wandered to the chair where his coat was lying. It
+took him some time to put it on, for the sleeves seemed somehow to be
+twisted; at length, once more arrayed, and apparently in his right mind,
+he stood with three-quarter face towards his astonished master.
+
+Mr. Prigg did not turn his head even on this occasion. He preserved a
+dignified silence for some time, and then spoke in a deep tragic tone:
+
+“Horatio!”
+
+Horatio did hot answer.
+
+“What is the meaning of this exhibition, Horatio?”
+
+“I was only having a little fun, sir,” said the youthful clerk.
+
+“I am not averse to youth enjoying itself,” said Mr. Prigg; “but it must
+be at proper seasons, and in appropriate places; there is also to be
+exercised a certain discretion in the choice of those amusements in which
+youth should indulge. I am not aware what category of recreation your
+present exhibition may belong to, but I may inform you that in my humble
+judgment—I may be mistaken, and you may know far better than I—but as at
+present advised, I do not see that your late performance is consistent
+with the duties of a solicitor’s clerk.” And then he muttered to
+himself, “Quite so.”
+
+After this magnificent rebuke, Mr. Prigg drew out his cambric
+handkerchief, and most gently applied it to his stately nose.
+
+“Again,” said Mr. Prigg, “I heard language, or thought I heard language,
+which I should construe as decidedly derogatory to the Profession which
+you serve and to which I have the honour to belong.”
+
+“I was only in fun, sir,” said Horatio, gathering confidence as Mr. Prigg
+proceeded.
+
+“Quite so, quite so; that may be, I sincerely hope you were; but never
+make fun of that by which you live; you derive what I may call a very
+competent, not to say handsome, salary from the proceedings which you
+make fun of. This is sad, and manifests a spirit of levity.”
+
+“I didn’t mean it like that, sir.”
+
+“Very well,” said the good man, “I am glad to perceive that you are
+brought to a proper sense of the impropriety of your conduct. I will not
+discharge you on this occasion, for the sake of your father, whom I have
+known for so many years: but never let this occur again. Dancing is at
+all times, to my mind, a very questionable amusement; but when it is
+accompanied, as I perceived it was on this occasion, with gestures which
+I cannot characterize by any other term than disgusting; and when further
+you take the liberty of using my name in what I presume you intended for
+a comic song, I must confess that I can hardly repress my feelings of
+indignation. I hope you are penitent.”
+
+Horatio hung down his head, and said he was very sorry Mr. Prigg had
+heard it, for he only intended it for his own amusement.
+
+“I shall take care,” said Mr. Prigg, “that you have less opportunity for
+such exercises as I have unfortunately witnessed.” And having thus
+admonished the repentant youth, Mr. Prigg left him to his reflections. I
+am glad Mr. Prigg did not return while the pale boy was reflecting.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+The pleasure of a country drive on a summer evening described as enhanced
+by a pious mind.
+
+It is only fair to the very able solicitors on both sides in the
+memorable case of _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_ to state that the greatest
+possible despatch was exercised on all occasions. Scarcely a day passed
+without something being done, as Prigg expressed it, “to expedite
+matters.” Month after month may have passed away without any apparent
+advance; but this in reality was not the case. Many appeals on what
+seemed trifling matters had been heard; so many indeed that _Bumpkin_ v.
+_Snooks_ had become a household word with the Court of Appeal, and a
+bye-word among the innumerable loafers about Judge’s Chambers.
+
+“What! _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_ again!” the President would say. “What is
+it now? It’s a pity the parties to this case can’t agree: it seems a
+very trifling matter.”
+
+“Not so, my lord, as your lordship will quickly apprehend when the new
+point is brought before your notice. A question of principle is here
+which may form a precedent for the guidance of future Judges, as did the
+famous case of _Perryman_ v. _Lister_, which went to the House of Lords
+about prosecuting a man for stealing a gun. This is about a pig, my
+lord—a little pig, no doubt, and although there is not much in the pig,
+there is a good deal outside it.”
+
+And often did Prigg say to Locust:
+
+“I say, Locust, whenever _shall_ we be ready to set this case down for
+trial?”
+
+“Really, my dear Prigg,” Locust would reply, “it seems interminable—come
+and dine with me.” So the gentle and innocent reader will at once
+perceive that there was great impatience on all sides to get this case
+ready for trial. Meanwhile it may not be uninteresting to describe
+shortly some of the many changes that had taken place in the few short
+months since the action commenced.
+
+First it was clearly observable by the inhabitants of Yokelton that Mr.
+Prigg’s position had considerably improved. I say nothing of his new
+hat; that was a small matter, but not so his style of living—so great an
+advance had that made that it attracted the attention of the neighbours,
+who often remarked that Mr. Prigg seemed to be getting a large practice.
+He was often seen with his lady on a summer afternoon taking the air in a
+nice open carriage—hired, it is true, for the occasion. And everybody
+remarked how uncommonly ladylike Mrs. Prigg lay back in the vehicle, and
+how very gracefully she held her new æsthetic parasol. And what a proud
+moment it was for Bumpkin, when he saw this good and respectable
+gentleman pass with the ladylike creature beside him; and Mr. Bumpkin
+would say to his neighbours, lifting his hat at the same moment,
+
+“That be my loryer, that air be!”
+
+And then Mr. Prigg would gracefully raise his hat, and Mrs. Prigg would
+lie back perfectly motionless as became a very languid lady of her
+exalted position. And when Mr. Prigg said to Mrs. Prigg, “My dear, that
+is our new client;” Mrs. Prigg would elevate her arched eyebrows and
+expand her delicate nostrils as she answered,—
+
+“Really, my love, what a very vulgar-looking creechar!”
+
+“Not nearly so vulgar as Locust’s client,” rejoined her husband. “You
+should see him.”
+
+“Thank you, my love, it is quite enough to catch a glimpse of the
+superior person of the two.”
+
+Mr. Prigg seemed to think it a qualifying circumstance that Snooks was a
+more vulgar-looking man than Bumpkin, whereas a moment’s consideration
+showed Mrs. Prigg how illogical that was. It is the intrinsic and
+personal value that one has to measure things by. This value could not
+be heightened by contrast. Mrs. Prigg’s curiosity, however, naturally
+led her to inquire who the other creechar was? As if she had never heard
+of _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_, although she had actually got the case on four
+wheels and was riding in it at that very moment; as if in fact she was
+not practically all Bumpkin, as a silkworm may be said to be all mulberry
+leaves. As if she knew nothing of her husband’s business! Her ideas
+were not of this world. Give her a church to build, she’d harass people
+for subscriptions; or let it be a meeting to clothe the naked savage,
+Mrs. Prigg would be there. She knew nothing of clothing Bumpkin! But
+she did interest herself sufficiently in her husband’s conversation to
+ask, in answer to his reference to Locust’s disreputable client,
+
+“And who is he, pray?”
+
+“My darling,” said Prigg, “you must have heard of Snooks?”
+
+“Oh,” drawled Mrs. Prigg, “do you mean the creechar who sells coals?”
+
+“The same, my dear.”
+
+“And are you engaged against _that_ man? How very dreadful!”
+
+“My darling,” observed Mr. Prigg, “it is not for us to choose our
+opponents; nor indeed, for the matter of that, our clients.”
+
+“I can quite perceive that,” returned the lady, “or you would never have
+chosen such men—dear me!”
+
+“We are like physicians,” returned Mr. Prigg, “called in in case of
+need.”
+
+“And the healing virtues of your profession must not be confined to rich
+patients,” said Mrs. Prigg, in her jocular manner.
+
+“By no means,” was the good man’s reply; “justice is as much the right of
+the poor as the rich—so is the air we breathe—so is everything.” And he
+put his fingers together again, as was his wont whenever he uttered a
+philosophical or moral platitude.
+
+So I saw in my dream that the good man and his ladylike wife rode through
+the beautiful lanes, and over the breezy common on that lovely summer
+afternoon, and as they drew up on the summit of a hill which gave a view
+of the distant landscape, there was a serenity in the scene which could
+only be compared to the serenity of Mr. Prigg’s benevolent countenance;
+and there was a calm, deeply, sweetly impressive, which could only be
+appreciated by a mind at peace with itself in particular, and with the
+world in general. Then came from a neighbouring wood the clear voice of
+the cuckoo. It seemed to sing purposely in honour of the good man; and I
+fancied I could see a ravenous hawk upon a tree, abashed at Mr. Prigg’s
+presence and superior ability; and a fluttering timid lark seemed to
+shriek, “Wicked bird, live and let live;” but it was the last word the
+silly lark uttered, for the hawk was upon him in a moment, and the little
+innocent songster was crushed in its ravenous beak. Still the cuckoo
+sang on in praise of Mr. Prigg, with now and then a little note for Mrs.
+Prigg; for the cuckoo is a very gallant little bird, and Mrs. Prigg was
+such a heavenly creature that no cuckoo could be conscious of her
+presence without hymning her praise.
+
+“Listen,” said Mrs. Prigg, “isn’t it beautiful? I wonder where cuckoos
+go to?”
+
+“Ah, my dear!” said Prigg, enraptured with the clear notes and the
+beautiful scene; but neither of them seemed to wonder where hawks go to.
+
+“Do you hear the echo, love? Isn’t it beautiful?”
+
+O, yes, it was beautiful! Nature does indeed lift the soul on a quiet
+evening from the grovelling occupations of earth to bask in the genial
+sunshine of a more spiritual existence. What was Bumpkin? What was
+Snooks to a scene like this? Suddenly the cuckoo ceased. Wonderful
+bird! I don’t know whether it was the presence of the hawk that hushed
+its voice or the sight of Mr. Prigg as he stood up in the carriage to
+take a more extended view of the prospect; but the familiar note was
+hushed, and the evening hymn in praise of the Priggs was over.
+
+So the journey was continued by the beautiful wood of oaks and chestnuts,
+along by the hillside from which you could perceive in the far distance
+the little stream as it wound along by meadow and wood and then lost
+itself beneath the hill that rose abruptly on the left.
+
+The stream was the symbol of life—probably Bumpkin’s life; all nature
+presents similes to a religious mind. And so the evening journey was
+continued with ever awakening feelings of delight and gratitude until
+they once more entered their peaceful home. And this brings me to
+another consideration which ought not to be passed over with
+indifference.
+
+I saw in my dream that a great change had taken place in the home of the
+Priggs. The furniture had undergone a metamorphosis almost so striking
+that I thought Mr. Prigg must be a wizard. The gentle reader knows all
+about Cinderella; but here was a transformation more surprising. I saw
+that one of Mr. Bumpkin’s pigs had been turned into a very pretty
+walnut-wood whatnot, and stood in the drawing-room, and on it stood
+several of the ducks and geese that used to swim in the pond of Southwood
+farm. They were not ducks and geese now, but pretty silent ornaments.
+An old rough-looking stack of oats had been turned into a very nice
+Turkey carpet for the dining-room. Poor old Jack the donkey had been
+changed into a musical box that stood on a little table made out of a
+calf. One day Mr. Bumpkin called to see how his case was going on, and
+by mistake got into this room among his cows and pigs; but not one of
+them did the farmer know, and when the maid invited him to sit down he
+was afraid of spoiling something.
+
+Now summonses at Chambers, and appeals, and demurrers, are not at all bad
+conjuring wands, if you only know how to use them. Two clever men like
+Prigg and Locust, not only surprise the profession, but alarm the public,
+since no one knows what will take place next, and Justice herself is
+startled from her propriety. Let no clamorous law reformer say that
+interrogatories or any other multitudinous proceedings at Judge’s
+Chambers are useless. It is astonishing how many changes you can ring
+upon them with a little ingenuity, and a very little scrupulosity. Mr.
+Prigg turned two sides of bacon into an Indian vase, and performed many
+other feats truly astonishing to persons who look on as mere spectators,
+and wonder how it is done. Wave your magic wand, good Prigg, and you
+shall see a hayrick turn into a chestnut mare; and a four-wheeled waggon
+into a Victoria.
+
+But the greatest change he had effected was in Mr. Bumpkin himself, who
+loved to hear his wife read the interrogatories and answers. The almanac
+was nothing to this. He had no idea law was so interesting. I dare say
+there were two guiding influences working within him, in addition to the
+many influences working without; one being that inherent British pluck,
+which once aroused, “doesn’t care, sir, if it costs me a thousand pound,
+I’ll have it out wi’ un;” the other was the delicious thought that all
+his present outlay would be repaid by the cunning and covetous Snooks.
+So much was Bumpkin’s heart in the work of crushing his opponent, that
+expense was treated with ridicule. I heard him one day say jocularly to
+Mr. Prigg, who had come for an affidavit:
+
+“Be it a pig, sir, or a heifer?”
+
+“O,” said the worthy Prigg, “we want a pretty good one; I think it must
+be a heifer.”
+
+All this was very pleasant, and made the business, dull and prosaic in
+itself, a cheerful recreation.
+
+Then, again, there was a feeling of self-importance whenever these
+affidavits came to be sworn. Mr. Bumpkin would put down his ash-stick by
+the side of the fireplace, and bidding his visitor be seated, would
+compose himself with satisfaction to listen to the oft-repeated words:
+
+“I, Thomas Bumpkin, make oath, and say—”
+
+Fancy, “_I_, _Bumpkin_!” Just let the reader pause over that for a
+moment! What must “I, Bumpkin,” be whose statement is required on oath
+before my Lord Judge?
+
+Always, at these words, he would shout. “That be it—now then, sir, would
+you please begin that agin?”—while, if Mrs. Bumpkin were not too busy, he
+would call her in to hear them too.
+
+So there was no wonder that the action went merrily along. Once get up
+enthusiasm in a cause, and it is half won. Without enthusiasm, few
+causes can succeed against opposition. Then, again, the affidavit
+described Bumpkin as a Yeoman. What, I wonder, would Snooks the
+coal-merchant think of that?
+
+So everything proceeded satisfactorily, and the months rolled away; the
+seasons came in their turn, so did the crops, so did the farrows of pigs,
+so did the spring chickens, and young ducks (prettiest little golden
+things in the world, on the water); so did Mr. Prigg, and so did a
+gentleman (hereafter to be called “the man,”) with whom a very convenient
+arrangement was made, by which Mr. Bumpkin preserved the whole of his
+remaining stock intact; had not in fact to advance a single penny piece
+more; all advances necessary for the prosecution of the action being made
+by the strange gentleman (whose name I did not catch) under that most
+convenient of all legal forms, “a Bill of Sale.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+A farmhouse winter fireside—a morning drive and a mutual interchange of
+ideas between town and country: showing how we may all learn something
+from one another.
+
+I never saw the home of Farmer Bumpkin without thinking what a happy and
+comfortable home it was. The old elm tree that waved over the thatched
+roof, seemed to bless and protect it. On a winter’s evening, when
+Bumpkin was sitting in one corner smoking his long pipe, Mrs. Bumpkin
+darning her stockings, and Joe on the other side looking into the blazing
+fire, while the old Collie stretched himself in a snug corner beside his
+master, it represented a scene of comfort almost as perfect as rustic
+human nature was capable of enjoying. And when the wind blew through the
+branches of the elm over the roof, it was like music, played on purpose
+to heighten the enjoyment. Comfort, thou art at the evening fireside of
+a farm-house, if anywhere!
+
+You should have seen Tim, when an unusual sound disturbed the harmony of
+this peaceful fireside. He growled first as he lay with his head resting
+between his paws, and just turned up his eyes to his master for approval.
+Then, if that warning was not sufficient, he rose and barked
+vociferously. Possessed, I believe, of more insight than Bumpkin, he got
+into the most tremendous state of excitement whensoever anyone came from
+Prigg’s, and he cordially hated Prigg. But most of all was he angry when
+“the man” came. There was no keeping him quiet. I wonder if dogs know
+more about Bills of Sale than farmers. I am aware that some farmers know
+a good deal about them; and when they read this story, many of them will
+accuse me of being too personal; but Tim was a dog of strong prejudices,
+and I am sure he had a prejudice against money-lenders.
+
+As the persons I have mentioned were thus sitting on this dreary evening
+in the month of November, suddenly, Tim sprang from his recumbent
+position, and barked furiously.
+
+“Down, Tim! down, Tim!” said the farmer; “what be this, I wonder!”
+
+“Tim, Tim,” said Mrs. Bumpkin, “down, Tim! hold thee noise, I tell ee.”
+
+“Good Tim!” said Joe; he also had an instinct.
+
+“I’ll goo and see what it be,” said Mrs. Bumpkin; “whoever can come here
+at this time o’ night! it be summat, Tom.” And she put down her
+stockings, and lighting a candle went to the front door, whereat there
+was a loud knocking. Tim jumped and flew and thrust his nose down to the
+bottom of the door long before Mrs. Bumpkin could get there.
+
+“Quiet, Tim! I tell thee; who be there?”
+
+“From Mr. Prigg’s,” answered a voice.
+
+This was enough for Tim; the name of Prigg made him furious.
+
+“Somebody from Mr. Prigg, Tom.”
+
+“Wull, let un in, Nance; bless thee soul, let un in; may be the case be
+settled. I hope they ain’t took less nor a hundred pound. I told un not
+to.” The door was unbolted and unbarred, and a long time it took, and
+then stood before Mrs. Bumpkin a tall pale youth.
+
+“I’ve come from Mr. Prigg.”
+
+“Will er plase to walk in, sir?” said Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+By this time the master had got up from his seat, and advancing towards
+the youth said:—
+
+“How do, sir; how do, sir; wark in, wark in, tak a seat, I be glad to see
+thee.”
+
+“I come from Mr. Prigg,” said the youth, “and we want another affidavit.”
+
+“Hem!” said Bumpkin, “be it a pig or a eifer, sir?” He couldn’t forget
+the old joke.
+
+“We want an affidavit of documents,” said the youth.
+
+“And what be the manin o’ that?—affiday o’ what?”
+
+“Documents, sir,” said the mild youth; “here it is.”
+
+“Oh,” said Bumpkin, “I got to swear un, I spoase, that’s all.”
+
+“That’s it, sir,” said Horatio.
+
+“Well, thee can’t take oaths, I spoase.”
+
+“No, sir, not exactly.”
+
+“Wull then I spoase I must goo to --- in the marnin. And thee’ll stop
+here the night and mak thyself comfortable. We can gie un a bed, can’t
+us, Nancy?”
+
+“Two, if ur wishes it,” answered Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+“Devil’s in it, ur doan’t want two beds, I’ll warrant? Now then, sir,
+sitten doon and mak theeself comfortable. What’ll thee drink?”
+
+“I’m too young to drink,” said Horatio, with a smile.
+
+Bumpkin smiled too. “I’ll warrant thee be.”
+
+“I’m always too young,” said Horatio, “for every thing that’s nice. Mr.
+Prigg says I’m too young to enjoy myself; but if you don’t mind, sir, I’m
+not too young to be hungry. I’ve walked a long distance.”
+
+“Have ur now?” said Mrs. Bumpkin. “We ain’t got anything wery grand,
+sir; but there be a nice piece o’ pickle pork and pease-puddin, if thee
+doan’t mind thic.”
+
+“Bring un out,” said Bumpkin; and accordingly a nice clean cloth was soon
+spread, and the table was groaning (as the saying is), with a large leg
+of pork and pease-pudding and home-made bread; to which Horatio did ample
+justice.
+
+“Bain’t bad pooark,” said Bumpkin.
+
+“Best I ever tasted,” replied Horatio; “we don’t get this sort of pork in
+London—pork there doesn’t seem like pork.”
+
+“Now look at that,” said Joe; “I fed that air pig.”
+
+“So ur did, Joe,” said the farmer; “I’ll gie thee credit, Joe, thee fed
+un well.”
+
+“Ah!” said Joe; “and that air pig knowed I as well as I knows thee.”
+
+When Horatio had supped, and the things were removed, Mr. Bumpkin assured
+the youth that a little drop of gin-and-water would not hurt him after
+his journey; and accordingly mixed him a tumbler. “Thee doan’t smoke, I
+spoase?” he said; to which Mrs. Bumpkin added that she “spoased he wur
+too young like.”
+
+“I’ll try,” answered the courageous youth, nothing daunted by his
+youngness.
+
+“So thee shall—dang if thee shan’t,” rejoined Mr. Bumpkin; and produced a
+long churchwarden pipe, and a big leaden jar of tobacco of a very dark
+character, called “shag.”
+
+Horatio filled his pipe, and puffed away as if he had been a veteran
+smoker; cloud after cloud came forth, and when Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin and
+Joe looked, expecting that the boy should be ill, there was not the least
+sign; so Joe observed with great sagacity:
+
+“Look at that now, maister; I bleeve he’ve smoked afoore.”
+
+“Have ur, sir?” asked Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“A little,” said Horatio.
+
+“Why, I never smoked afoore I wur turned twenty,” said the farmer.
+
+“I believe the right time now is fourteen,” observed the youth; “it used
+to be twenty, I have heard father say; but everything has been altered by
+the Judicature Act.”
+
+“Look at that air,” said Joe, “he’ve eeard father say. You knows a thing
+or two, I’ll warrant, Mr. —.”
+
+Here Joe was baffled, and coming so abruptly to an end of his address,
+Mr. Bumpkin took the matter up, and asked, if he might make so bold, what
+the youth’s name might be.
+
+“Horatio Snigger,” answered that gentleman.
+
+“When will this ere case be on, think’ee, sir?” inquired Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“We expect it to be in the paper every day now,” said the youth; “they’ve
+tried to dodge us a good deal, but they can’t dodge us much longer—we’re
+a little too downy for em.”
+
+“It have been a mighty long time about, surely,” said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“O, that’s nothing,” said Horatio; “time’s nothing in Law! Why, a suit
+to administer a Will sometimes takes ’ears; and Bankruptcy, O my eye,
+ain’t there dodging about that, and jockeying too, eh! Crikey!”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin here winked at his wife, as much as to say, “Now you hold
+your tongue, and see me dror un out. I’ll have un.”
+
+“Will ee tak a little more gin-and-water, sir?”
+
+“No, thankee,” said the youth.
+
+“A little more won’t hurt ee—it’ll do thee good.” And again he filled
+the tumbler; while the pale boy refilled his pipe.
+
+“Now, who’s my counsellor gwine to be?” asked the farmer.
+
+“Oh,” said Horatio, “a regular cruncher—Mr. Catapult.”
+
+“He be a cruncher, be he?”
+
+“I believe you; he turned a man inside out the other day; a money-lender
+he was.”
+
+“Did ur now?”
+
+“Look at that,” said Joe.
+
+“And we’re going to have Mr. Dynamite for junior; my eye, don’t he make a
+row!”
+
+“Two an em!” exclaimed Bumpkin.
+
+“Must have two for the plaintiff,” said Horatio; “that’s the law. Why, a
+Queen’s Counsel ain’t allowed to open a case without a junior starts
+him—it’s jist like the engine-driver and the guard. You have the junior
+to shove the leader.”
+
+“Look at that,” said Joe; expectorating into the fire.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin looked again at Nancy, and gave another wink that you might
+have heard.
+
+“And the tother side?” he asked.
+
+“Ah! I don’t know about them,” said the boy. “They’re artful dodgers,
+they are.”
+
+“Is ’em now? but artfulness don’t allays win, do ur?”
+
+“No,” said Horatio; “but it goes a long way, and sometimes when it’s gone
+a long way it beats itself.”
+
+“Look at that,” said Joe; “that’s like that ere—”
+
+“Be quiet, Joe,” said Bumpkin; “let I talk, will ur? You said it beats
+itself, sir?”
+
+“If the judge gets ’old of him, it’s sure to,” said Horatio. “There
+ain’t no judge on the Bench as will let artfulness win if he knows it.
+I’ve sin em watchin like a cat watches a mouse; and directly it comes out
+o’ the ’ole, down he is on em—like that:” and he slapped his hand on the
+table with startling effect.
+
+“Good!” said Bumpkin.
+
+“And don’t they know who the solicitor is, eh—that’s all! My word, if
+he’s a shady one—the judge is down on the case like winkin.”
+
+“And be this ere Locust a shady un?” (Another wink at Mrs. Bumpkin.)
+
+“Ah! I’m too young to know.”
+
+“Thee beest too old, thee meanest,” said Mrs. Bumpkin, laughing.
+
+“Now hold thee tongue, Nancy; I wur gwine to say that myself—dang if I
+warnt!”
+
+“Now look at thic,” said Joe; “maister were gwine to say thic.”
+
+“So I wur,” repeated Bumpkin. “Jist got the word o’ th’ tip o’ th’
+tongue.”
+
+“And be these Queen’s Counsellors,” he asked, “summat grand?”
+
+“I believe you,” said Horatio; “they wears silk gowns.”
+
+“Do em?” said Mrs. Bumpkin, laughing. “Silk gowns—and what kind o’
+petticoats?”
+
+“Shut up,” said Bumpkin; “thee be as igorant as a donkey; these Queen’s
+Counsellors be made for their larnin and cleverness, beant em, sir?”
+
+“Well,” said Horatio, “nobody ever could make out—some of em are pretty
+good, and some of em ain’t much—not near so good as the others.”
+
+“But this ere Mr. Catapult be a good un, bean’t he—a regler crunsher?”
+
+“O, I believe you, my boy: his look’s enough for some of em.”
+
+“I spoase he be dear?” (Another wink at Mrs. Bumpkin.)
+
+“They’re all dear,” said Horatio; “some of em are dear because their fees
+are high; and some of em would be dear at a gift, but I’m too young to
+know much about it.”
+
+“Now hark at that,” said Joe; “like that air old horse o’ Morris’.”
+
+“Hold thee tongue, Joe, I tell ee, putten thy spoke in; does thee think
+the Queen ’as old ’orses in her stable? It’s merit, I tell ee—ain’t it,
+Mr. Jigger?”
+
+“Merit, sir; I believe it’s merit.” And thus in pleasant conversation
+the evening passed merrily away, until the clock striking nine warned the
+company that it was time to retire.
+
+A bright, brisk frosty morning succeeded, and a substantial breakfast of
+bacon, eggs, fresh butter, and home-made bread, at seven o’clock,
+somewhat astonished and delighted the youthful Horatio; and then the old
+horse, with plenty of hair about his heels, was brought round with the
+gig. And Mr. Bumpkin and his guest got up and took their seats. The old
+Market Town was about seven miles off, and the road lay through the most
+picturesque scenery of the county. To ride on such a pleasant morning
+through such a country almost made one think that swearing affidavits was
+the most pleasing occupation of life. It was the first time Horatio had
+ever ridden in a gig: the horse went a good old market pace, and the
+beautiful sunshine, lovely scenery, and crisp air produced in his
+youthful bosom a peculiarly charming and delightful sense of
+exhilaration. He praised the country and the weather and the horse, and
+asked if it was what they called a thoroughbred.
+
+“Chit!” said Bumpkin, “thoroughbred! So be I thoroughbred—did thee ever
+see thoroughbred wi’ ’air on his ’eels?’
+
+“Well, he goes well,” said Horatio.
+
+“Gooes well enough for I,” said Bumpkin.
+
+This answer somewhat abashed Horatio, who was unlearned in horses; for
+some time he remained silent. Then it became Mr. Bumpkin’s turn to renew
+the conversation:
+
+“I spoase,” said he, “thee be gwine to be a loryer?”
+
+“Not if I know it,” answered Horatio.
+
+“Why not, then?”
+
+“Don’t care for it; I like the country.”
+
+“What wouldst thee like to be then, a farmer?”
+
+“I should—that’s the life for me!”
+
+“Thee likes plenty o’ fresh air?” said the farmer.
+
+“Yes,” answered Horatio, “and fresh butter and fresh eggs.”
+
+“I’ll go to ---, if thee doen’t know what’s good for thee, anyhow.
+Thee’d ha’ to work ’ard to keep straaight, I can tell thee; thee’d had to
+plough, and danged if I believe thee could hold plough! What’s thee say
+to that, lad?”
+
+“I think I could.”
+
+“Devil a bit! now spoase thee’st got plough-handles under thy arms, and
+the cord in the ’ands, and thee wanted to keep t’colter from jibbin into
+t’ soil, wouldst thee press down wi’ might and main, or how?”
+
+“Press down with might and main,” said Horatio.
+
+“Right!” exclaimed Bumpkin; “danged if I doant think thee’d make a
+ploughman now. Dost know what th’ manin o’ mither woiy be?”
+
+This was rather a startling question for the unsophisticated London
+youth. He had never heard such an expression in his life; and although
+he might have puzzled his agricultural interrogator by a good many
+questions in return, yet that possibility was no answer to “mither woiy.”
+
+“I don’t know that, Mr. Bumpkin,” he ingenuously replied.
+
+“No? well, there ain’t a commoner word down ere nor ‘mither woiy,’ and
+there ain’t a boy arf your age as doan’t know the manin o’t, so thee see
+thee got summat to larn. Now it mane this—spoase thee got a team o’
+horses at dung cart or gravel cart, and thee wants em to come to ee; thee
+jest holds whip up over to the ed o’ th’ leadin orse like this ere, and
+says ‘mither woiy,’ and round er comes as natteral as possible.”
+
+“O, that’s it!” said Horatio; “I see.”
+
+“Ah!” said Bumpkin, “I can teach ee summat, can’t I, though thee comes
+from town, and I be only a country clown farmer?”
+
+“I should just like to come down a month on trial, that’s all, when I
+have my holiday,” said the youth; “I think it would do me good: ‘mither
+woiy,’” he said, mimicking his instructor.
+
+“Thee shall come if thee likes,” replied the good-natured Bumpkin;
+“Nancy’ll be proud to see thee—thee’s got ‘mither woiy’ to rights.”
+
+“What a very nice public-house!” exclaimed Horatio, as they approached a
+village green where an old Inn that had flourished in the coaching days
+still stood, the decaying monument of a past age, and an almost forgotten
+style of locomotion.
+
+“Be a good house. I often pulls up there on way from market.”
+
+“Did you ever try rum and milk for your cough?” inquired the pale youth.
+
+“Never had no cough,” said Bumpkin.
+
+“What a good thing! But it’s capital, they say, in case you should have
+one; they say there’s nothing beats rum and milk.”
+
+“Hem!” muttered Bumpkin, giving his horse a tremendous jerk with the
+reins. “I spoase thee’d like a glass, Mr. Jigger.”
+
+“I don’t care about it for myself,” answered the youth; “but if you like
+to have one I’ll join you with pleasure.”
+
+“So us wool then;” and up they pulled at the sign of the “Merry-go-round”
+on Addlehead Green.
+
+“Bain’t bad tackle!” said Mr. Bumpkin, tossing off his glass.
+
+“No,” responded Horatio, “I’ve tasted worse medicine. I quite enjoy my
+ride, Mr. Bumpkin; I wish we had a dozen more affidavits to swear.”
+
+“I doan’t,” said the client; “I sworn a goodish many on em as it be. I
+doan’t think that air Snooks can bate un.”
+
+“I don’t think he can,” said Horatio, as they once more climbed into the
+old-fashioned gig; “but talk about paper, you should see your brief:
+that’s a caution and no mistake!”
+
+“Is ur now? In what way, sir?”
+
+“Lor, how I should like a cigar, Mr. Bumpkin, if I’d only got my case
+with me, but unfortunately—”
+
+“Would ur—then thee shall ’ave one; here, Mr. Ostler, jest goo and fetch
+one o’ them there what d’ye call ems.”
+
+“O, do they sell them down here? Cigars—cigars,” said Horatio, “I wasn’t
+aware of that.”
+
+“Now then, sir; what about this ere what d’ye call un—beef?”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin, being a very artful man, was inwardly chuckling at the
+successful manœuvring by which he was drawing out this pale
+unsophisticated London youth, and hoped by dint of a little strategy to
+learn a good deal before they parted company.
+
+“Brief! brief!” said Horatio, laughing.
+
+“Ah! so it wur; thee said he wur a hell of a big un.”
+
+“Yes, and I wrote him myself.”
+
+“Did ur now; then thee knows all about un?”
+
+“From beginning to end—he is a clipper, I can tell you; a regular
+whacker.”
+
+“I hope he’ll whack thic Snooks then.”
+
+“He’s a beauty!” rejoined Horatio, much to his companion’s surprise; for
+here was this young man speaking of a brief in the same terms that he
+(Bumpkin) would use with reference to a prize wurzel or swede. A brief
+being a _beauty_ sounded somewhat strange in the ears of a farmer who
+could associate the term with nothing that didn’t grow on the farm.
+
+“I dare say you’ve heard of Macaulay’s England?” asked the lad.
+
+“Whose England?”
+
+“Macaulay’s.”
+
+“I’ve eerd o’ England, if you mean this ere country, sartainly.”
+
+“You’ve heard of Macaulay’s History, I mean?”
+
+“Can’t say as ever I eerd tell on un.”
+
+“Well, there’s as much in your brief as there is in that book, and that’s
+saying something, ain’t it?”
+
+“Zo’t be; but what th’ devil be ’t all about?”
+
+“Well, I’ll tell you,” said Horatio, holding out his hands and putting
+the point of his right forefinger on to the point of the forefinger of
+his left hand. “First: biography of the plaintiff.”
+
+“There now,” said Bumpkin, shaking the reins; “thee med jist as well talk
+Greek—it’s the same wally (value) to me, for I doan’t understan’ a
+word—bography, indade!”
+
+“Well then, Mr. Bumpkin, there is first a history of your life.”
+
+“Good lord, what be that for?”
+
+“I’ll tell you presently—then there’s the history of Mrs. Bumpkin from
+the cradle.” (Mr. Bumpkin uttered an exclamation which nothing shall
+induce me to put on paper.) “Then”—and here the young man had reached
+the third finger of the left hand—“then comes a history of the defendant
+Snooks.”
+
+“Ah!” said Bumpkin, as though they were getting nearer the mark; “that be
+summut like—that’ll do un—have you put in about the gal?”
+
+“What’s that?” asked the youth.
+
+“Oh! didn’t thee ’ear? Why, thee ’st left out the best part o’ Snooks’
+life; he were keepin company wi’ a gal and left her in t’ lurch: but I
+’ope thee ’st shown up ur carater well in other ways—he be the worst man
+as ever lived in this ’ere country.”
+
+“Well,” said Horatio, travelling towards his little finger; “then there’s
+the history of the pig.”
+
+“Zounds!” laughed the farmer, “if ever I eerd tell o’ such a thing in my
+bornd days. What the devil be the good o’ thic?”
+
+“O, a good deal; the longer you make the brief the more money you get—you
+are paid by the yard. They don’t pay lawyers accordin’ to the value of
+their services, but the length of ’em.”
+
+“Well, look ee ’ere, if I sells a pig it ain’t wallied by its length, but
+by its weight.”
+
+“It ain’t so with lawyers then,” rejoined Horatio; “the taxing master
+takes the length of the pig, and his tail counts, and the longer the tail
+the better the taxing master likes it; then comes,”—(as the young lad had
+only four fingers he was obliged to have recourse to his thumb, placing
+his forefinger thereon)—“then comes about ten pages on the immortality of
+the soul.”
+
+“That be the tail, I spoase.”
+
+“You got it,” said Horatio, laughing. “O, he’s a stunner on the
+immortality of the soul.”
+
+“Who be?—Snooks?”
+
+“No—Prigg—he goes into it like winkin’.”
+
+“But what be it to do with thic case?”
+
+“Well, if you only put in a brief what had got to do with the case it
+would be a poor thing.”
+
+And I saw in my dream that the young man was speaking truthfully: it was
+a beautifully drawn essay on the immortality of the soul, especially
+Bumpkin’s.
+
+“By George!” continued the youth, “it’ll cost something—that brief.”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin twitched as if he had touched with ice a nerve of his hollow
+tooth.
+
+“If I had the money that case’ll cost I wouldn’t do any more work,” said
+the youth.
+
+“What would’st thee be then?”
+
+“Well, I should try and get an Associate’s place in one of the Courts.”
+
+“Hem! but this ere Snooks ull have to pay, won’t he?”
+
+“Ah!” said Horatio, breathing deeply and indignantly, “I hope so; he’s a
+mean cuss—what d’ye think? never give Locust’s boy so much as a
+half-sovereign! Now don’t such a feller deserve to lose? And do you
+think Locust’s boy will interest himself in his behalf?”
+
+Bumpkin looked slily out of the corners of his eyes at the young man, but
+the young man was impassive as stone, and pale as if made of the best
+Carrara marble.
+
+“But tell I, sir—for here we be at the plaace of Mr. Commissioner to take
+oaths—what need be there o’ this ere thing I be gwine to swear, for I’ll
+be danged if I understand a word of un, so I tell ee.”
+
+“Costs, my dear sir, costs!”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And I heard Bumpkin mutter to himself that “he’d he danged if this ’ere
+feller wur so young as he made out—his ’ead wur a mighty dale older nor
+his body.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+The last night before the first London expedition, which gives occasion
+to recall pleasant reminiscences.
+
+“I, Bumpkin, make oath and say,” having been duly presented, and the
+Commissioner having duly placed the Testament in Mr. Bumpkin’s hands, and
+said to him that to the best of his knowledge and belief the contents of
+the “I Bumpkin” paper were true, the matter was over, and Mr. Snigger,
+with the valuable document in his possession, might have returned to
+London by the next train. But as Horatio afterwards observed to a
+friend, he “was not quite so green.” It was market day; Mr. Bumpkin was
+a genial companion, and had asked him to partake of the Market Ordinary.
+So thither at one o’clock they repaired, and a very fine dinner the pale
+youth disposed of. It seemed in proportion to the wonderful brief whose
+merits they had previously discussed. More and more did Horatio think
+that a farmer’s life was the life for him. He had never seen such
+“feeding;” more and more would he like that month on trial in the
+country; more and more inclined was he to throw up the whole blessed law
+at once and for ever. This partly-formed resolution he communicated to
+Mr. Bumpkin, and assured him that, but for the case of _Bumpkin_ v.
+_Snooks_, he would do so on that very afternoon, and wash his hands of
+it.
+
+“I don’t want,” said he, “to leave you in the lurch, Mr. Bumpkin, or else
+I’d cut it at once, and throw this affidavit into the fire.”
+
+“Come, come,” said the farmer, “thee beest a young man, don’t do nowt
+that be wrong—stick to thy employer like a man, and when thee leaves,
+leave like a man.”
+
+“As soon as your case is over, I shall hook it, Mr. Bumpkin. And now let
+me see—you’ll have to come to London in a week or two, for I am pretty
+nigh sure we shall be in the paper by that time. I shall see you when
+you come up—where shall you stay?”
+
+“Danged if I know; I be a straanger in Lunnun.”
+
+“Well, now, look ’ere, Mr. Bumpkin, I can tell you of a very nice quiet
+public-house in Westminster where you’ll be at home; the woman, I
+believe, comes from your part of the country, and so does the landlord.”
+
+“What be the naame o’ the public ’ouse?” asked Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“It’s the sign of the ‘Goose,’ and stands just a little way off from the
+water-side.”
+
+“The Goose” sounded countryfied and homelike, and being near the water
+would be pleasant, and the landlord and landlady being Somersetshire
+people would also be pleasant.
+
+“Be it a dear plaace?” he inquired.
+
+“Oh, no; dirt cheap.”
+
+“Ah, that air _dirt_ cheap I doan’t like—I likes it a bit clean like.”
+
+“Oh, yes, clean as a smelt—clean as ever it can be; and I’ll bespeak your
+lodgings for you if you like, and all.”
+
+“Well, thankee, sir, thankee,” said the farmer, shaking hands with the
+youth, and giving him a half-sovereign. “I be proud to know thee.” And
+thus they parted: Horatio returning to his office, and Mr. Bumpkin
+driving home at what is called a “shig-shog” pace, reflecting upon all
+the events that had transpired during that memorable day.
+
+Pretty much the same as ever went on the things at the farm, and the
+weeks passed by, and the autumn was over, and Christmas Day came and
+went, and the Assizes came and went, and _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_ alone in
+all the world seemed to stand still. One day in the autumn a friend of
+Mr. Prigg’s came and asked the favour of a day’s fishing, which was
+granted with Mr. Bumpkin’s usual cordiality. He was not only to fish on
+that day, but to come whenever he liked, and make the house his “hoame,
+like.” So he came and fished, and partook of the hospitality of the
+homely but plentiful table, and enjoyed himself as often as he pleased.
+He was a most agreeable man, and knew how to talk. Understood a good
+deal about agriculture and sheep breeding, and quite enjoyed a walk with
+Mr. Bumpkin round the farm. This happened five or six times during the
+autumn. He was reticent when Mr. Bumpkin mentioned the lawsuit, because
+he knew so little about legal proceedings. Nor could Mr. Bumpkin “draw
+him out” on any point. Nothing could be ascertained concerning him
+except that he had a place in Yorkshire, and was in London on a visit;
+that he had known Mr. Prigg for a good many years, and always “found him
+the same.” At last, the month of February came, and the long expected
+letter from Mr. Prigg. Bumpkin and Joe were to be in London on the
+following day, for it was expected they would be in the paper. What a
+flutter of preparation there was at the farm! Bumpkin was eager, Mrs.
+Bumpkin anxious. She had never liked the lawsuit, but had never once
+murmured; now she seemed to have a presentiment which she was too wise to
+express. And she went about her preparations for her husband’s leaving
+with all the courage she could command. It was, however, impossible
+entirely to repress her feelings, and now and again as she was packing
+the flannels and worsted stockings, a tear would force its way in spite
+of all she could do.
+
+Night came, and the fireside was as cosy as ever. But there was a sense
+of sadness nevertheless. Tim seemed to understand that something was not
+quite as it should be, for he was restless, and looked up plaintively in
+his master’s face, and went to Joe and put his head in his lap; then
+turned away and stretched himself out on the hearth, winking his eyes at
+the fire.
+
+It is always a melancholy effort to “keep up the spirits” when the moment
+of separation is at hand. One longs for the last shake of the hand and
+the final good-bye. This was the case at Southwood Farm on this
+memorable evening. Nothing in the room looked as usual. The pewter
+plates on the shelf shone indeed, but it was like the smile of a winter
+sun; it lacked the usual cheery warmth. Even the old clock seemed to
+feel sad as he ticked out with melancholy monotony the parting moments;
+and the wind, as it came in heavy gusts and howled round the old chimney,
+seemed more melancholy than need be under the circumstances.
+
+“Thee must be careful, Tom,” said Mrs. Bumpkin; “that Lunnun, as I hear,
+be a terrible plaace.”
+
+“How be un a terrible plaace?” said Bumpkin, sarcastically. “I bean’t a
+child, Nancy.”
+
+“No, thee bean’t a child, Tom; but thee bean’t up to Lunnun ways: there
+be thieves and murderers, and what not.”
+
+“Thieves and murderers!”
+
+“And Joe, doan’t ee git out o’ nights; if anything ’appened to thee, thy
+old mother ’ud brak her ’art.”
+
+“Look ee ’ere,” said Joe, “I bean’t got nuthin’ to lose, so I bean’t
+afeared o’ thieves.”
+
+“No, but thee might git into trouble, thee might be led away.”
+
+“So might thic bull,” said Joe; “but I’d like to zee what ’ud become o’
+the chap as led un.”
+
+“Chap as led un!” said Mrs. Bumpkin, laughing.
+
+“I’d gie un a crack o’ the canister,” said Joe.
+
+“Don’t thee git knockin’ down, Joe, unless thee be ’bliged,” said Mrs.
+Bumpkin; “keep out o’ bad company, and don’t stay out o’ nights.”
+
+“And lookee ’ere, Joe,” said Bumpkin, “when thee comes afore th’
+Counsellor wi’ wig on, hold up thee head; look un straight in t’ face and
+spak oop. Thee needn’t be afeared t’ spak t’ truth.”
+
+“I bean’t afeard,” said Joe; “I mind me when old Morris wur at plough,
+and I was leadin’ th’ ’orses, Morris says, says he, ‘Now then, cock,
+let’s see if we can’t git a eend this time;’ so on we goes, and jist
+afore I gits the ’orses to eend o’ t’ field, Dobbin turns, and then, dash
+my bootons, the tother turns after un, and me tryin’ to keep em oop,
+Dobbin gits his legs over the trace. Well, Morris wur that wild, he
+says, says he, ‘Damme, if yer doan’t look sharp, I’ll gie thee a crack o’
+t’ canister wi’ this ’ere whippense presny’” (presently).
+
+“Crack o’ the canister!” laughed Mrs. Bumpkin, “and that’s what Morris
+called thy head, eh?”
+
+This was a capital hit on Joe’s part, for it set them thinking of the
+events of old times, and Joe, seeing the effect of it, ventured upon
+another anecdote relating to the old carter.
+
+“Thee recollect, master, when that there Mr. Gearns come down to shoot;
+lor, lor, what a queer un he wur, surely!”
+
+“Couldn’t shoot a hit,” said Bumpkin.
+
+“Not he. Wall, we was carrying wheat, and Morris wur loadin, and jest as
+we gits the last pitch on t’ load, right through th’ ’orses legs runds a
+rat. Gearns wi’out more ado oops wi’ his loaded gun and bangs her off
+right under t’ ’orses legs; up jumps th’ ’orse, and Morris wur wery nigh
+tossed head fust into th’ yard. Wall, he makes no moore ado, for he
+didn’t keer, gemman or no gemman—didn’t Morris—”
+
+“No more ur didn’t, Joe,” said Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+“He makes no moore ado, but he up and said, ‘damme,’ he says, ‘sir, you
+might as well a said you was gwine to shoot; you might a had me off and
+broked my neck.’”
+
+“Haw! haw! haw!” laughed Mr. Bumpkin, and “Well done, Morris,” said Mrs.
+Bumpkin.
+
+“Wall,” said Joe, “this ere gemman says, ‘It wouldn’t er bin much loss,’
+he says, ‘if he had!’ ‘Damme,’ roars Morris, ‘it had a bin as much wally
+to me as yourn, anyhow.’”
+
+They all remembered the story, and even Tim seemed to remember it too,
+for when they laughed he wagged his tail and laughed with them.
+
+And thus the evening dragged along and bed time came.
+
+In the morning all was in readiness, and the plaintiff with his witness
+drove away in the gig to the station, where Morris waited to bring the
+old horse back.
+
+And as the train came into the little country station I awoke.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“I hope,” cried my wife, “that Mr. Prigg is a respectable man.”
+
+“Respectable,” I answered, “I know he is; but whether he is honest is
+another matter.”
+
+“But don’t you know?”
+
+“I only know what I dream.”
+
+“I have no opinion of him,” said she; “nor of that Locust; I believe they
+are a couple of rogues.”
+
+“I should be very sorry to suggest such a thing as that,” I answered,
+“without some proof. Everybody should give credit for the best of
+motives.”
+
+“But what are all these summonses you speak of?”
+
+“O, they are summonses in the action. You may have as many of them as
+you can invent occasion for. You may go up to the Court of Appeal about
+twenty times before you try the action, which means about eighty
+different hearings before Master and Judges.”
+
+“But how can a poor man endure that? It’s a great shame.”
+
+“He can’t—he may have a perfectly good cause of action against a rich man
+or a rich company, and they can utterly ruin him before ever his case can
+come into Court.”
+
+“But will no solicitor take it up for the poor man?”
+
+“Yes, some will, and the only reward they usually get for their pains is
+to be stigmatized as having brought a speculative action—accused of doing
+it for the sake of costs; although I have known the most honourable men
+do it out of pure sympathy for the poor man.”
+
+“And so they ought,” cried she.
+
+“And I trust,” said I, “that hereafter it will be considered honourable
+to do so. It is quite as honourable, in my judgment, to bring an action
+when you may never be paid as to bring it when you know you will be.”
+
+“Who was the person referred to as ‘the man?’”
+
+“I don’t know,” said I, “but I strongly suspect he is, in reality, a
+nominee of Prigg’s.”
+
+“That is exactly my opinion,” said my wife. “And if so, between them,
+they will ruin that poor man.”
+
+“I can’t tell,” said I, lighting my pipe. “I know no more about the
+future of my dream than you do; maybe when I sleep again something else
+will transpire.”
+
+“But can no one do anything to alter this state of things? I plainly
+perceive that they are all against this poor Bumpkin.”
+
+“Well, you see, in a tinkering sort of way, a good many try their hands
+at reforming the law; but it’s to no one’s interest, that I can see, to
+reform it.”
+
+“I hope you’ll write this dream and publish it, so that someone’s eyes
+may be opened.”
+
+“It may make me enemies.”
+
+“Not among honest people; they will all be on your side, and the
+dishonest ones, who seem to me to be the only persons benefited by such a
+dilatory and shocking mode of procedure, are the very persons whose
+enmity you need not fear. But can the Judges do nothing?”
+
+“No; their duty is merely to administer the law, not to change it. But
+if the people would only give them full power and fair play, Old Fogeyism
+would be buried to-morrow. They struggle might and main to break through
+the fetters, but to no purpose while they are hampered by musty old
+precedents, ridiculous forms and bad statutes. They are not masters of
+the situation. I wish they were for the sake of suitors. I would only
+make one condition with regard to them. If they were to set about the
+task of reform, I would not let the Equity Judges reform the Common Law
+nor the Common Law Judges the Equity.”
+
+“I thought they were fused.”
+
+“No, only transposed.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+Commencement of London life and adventures.
+
+And I dreamt again, and methought there were three things with reference
+to London that Joe had learnt at school. First, that there was a Bridge,
+chiefly remarkable for the fact that Captain Cook, the Navigator, shot
+his servant because he said he was under London Bridge when he was in the
+South Pacific Ocean; secondly, that there was a famous Tower, where the
+Queen’s Crown was kept; thirdly, that there was a Monument built to show
+where the Great Fire began, and intimately connected in its cause with
+Guy Faux, whom Joe had helped to carry on the Fifth of November. Now
+when the young man woke in the morning at “The Goose,” in Millbank
+Street, Westminster, his attention was immediately attracted by these
+three historic objects; and it was not till after he had made inquiries
+that he found that it was not London Bridge that crossed the water in a
+line with the Horseferry Road, but a very inferior structure called
+Lambeth Suspension Bridge. Nor was the Tower on the left the Tower of
+London, but the Lollards’ tower of Lambeth Palace; while the supposed
+Monument was only the handsome column of Messrs. Doulton’s Pottery.
+
+But they were all interesting objects nevertheless; and so were the huge
+cranes that were at work opposite the house lifting the most tremendous
+loads of goods from the lighters to the wharves. The “Shipping,” too,
+with its black and copper-coloured sails, gave some idea of the extent of
+England’s mercantile marine. At all events, it excited the country lad’s
+wonder and astonishment. But there was another matter that gave quite an
+agricultural and countrified look to the busy scene, and that was the
+prodigious quantity of straw that was being unloaded from the barges
+alongside. While Mr. Bumpkin went to see his solicitor at Westminster
+Hall, Joe wandered about the wharves looking at the boats and barges, the
+cranes and busy workmen who drove their barrows from barge to wharf, and
+ran along with loads on their backs over narrow planks, in the most
+lively manner. But looking on, even at sights like these, day by day,
+becomes a wearisome task, and Joe, being by no means an idle lad,
+occasionally “lent a hand” where he saw an opportunity. London, no
+doubt, was a very interesting place, but when he had seen Page Street,
+and Wood Street, and Church Street, and Abingdon Street, and Millbank
+Prison, and the other interesting objects referred to, his curiosity was
+gratified, and he began to grow tired of the sameness of the place.
+Occasionally he saw a soldier or two and the military sight fired his
+rustic imagination. Not that Joe had the remotest intention of entering
+the army; it was the last thing he would ever dream of; but, in common
+with all mankind he liked to look at the smart bearing and brilliant
+uniform of the sergeant, who seemed to have little else to do than walk
+about with his cane under his arm, or tap the stone parapet with it as he
+looked carelessly at some interesting object on the river.
+
+The evenings in the taproom at “The Goose” were among the most enjoyable
+periods of the lad’s London existence. A select party usually gathered
+there, consisting chiefly of a young man who never apparently had had
+anything to do in his life. His name was Harry Highlow, a clever sort of
+wild young scapegrace who played well at “shove-ha’penny,” and sang a
+good comic song. Another of the party was a youth who earned a
+precarious livelihood by carrying two boards on his shoulders advertising
+a great pickle, or a great singer, as the case might be. Another of the
+company was a young man who was either a discharged or a retired groom; I
+should presume the former, as he complained bitterly that the authorities
+at Scotland Yard would not grant him a licence to drive a cab. He
+appeared to be a striking instance of how every kind of patronage in this
+country is distributed by favouritism. There were several others, all
+equally candidates for remunerative situations, but equally unfortunate
+in obtaining them: proving conclusively that life is indeed a lottery in
+which there may be a few prizes, usually going, by the caprice of
+Fortune, to the undeserving, while the blanks went indiscriminately to
+all the rest.
+
+Bound together by the sympathy which a common misfortune engenders, these
+young men were happy in the pursuit of their innocent amusements at “The
+Goose.” And while, at first, they were a little inclined to chaff the
+rustic youth on account of his apparent simplicity, they soon learned to
+respect him on account of his exceedingly good temper and his willingness
+to fall in with the general views of the company on all occasions. They
+learnt all about Joe’s business in London, and it was a common greeting
+when they met in the evening to ask “how the pig was?” And they would
+enquire what the Lord Chancellor thought about the case, and whether it
+wouldn’t be as well to grease the pig’s tail and have a pig-hunt. To all
+which jocular observations Joe would reply with excellent temper and
+sometimes with no inappropriate wit. And then they said they would like
+to see Joe tackle Mr. Orkins, and believed he would shut him up. But
+chaff never roused his temper, and he laughed at the case as much as any
+man there. Fine tales he would have to tell when he got back to
+Yokelton; and pleasant, no doubt, would be in after-life, his
+recollections of the evenings at “The Goose.”
+
+As a great general surveys the field where the intended action is to be
+fought, so Mr. Bumpkin was conducted by Horatio to Westminster Hall, and
+shown the various Courts of Justice, and some of the judges.
+
+“Be this Chancery?” he enquired.
+
+“O my eye, no!” said Horatio; “the cause has been transferred from
+Chancery to these ’ere Common Law Courts. It was only brought in
+Chancery because the costs there are upon a higher scale; we didn’t mean
+to try her there.”
+
+“Where will she be tried then?”
+
+“In one of these Courts.”
+
+“Who be the judge?” whispered Bumpkin.
+
+At this moment there was a loud shout of “Silence!” and although Mr.
+Bumpkin was making no noise whatever, a gentleman approached him, looking
+very angry, and enquired if Mr. Bumpkin desired to be committed for
+contempt of Court.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin thought the most prudent answer was silence; so he remained
+speechless, looking the gentleman full in the face; while the gentleman
+looked him full in the face for at least a minute and a half, as if he
+were wondering whether he should take him off to prison there and then,
+or give him another chance, as the judge sometimes does a prisoner when
+he sentences him to two years imprisonment with hard labour.
+
+Now the gentleman was a very amiable man of about forty, with large brown
+mutton-chop whiskers, and a very well trained moustache; good-looking
+and, I should think, with some humour, that is for a person connected
+with the Courts. He was something about the Court, but in what capacity
+he held up his official head, I am unable to say. He was evidently
+regarded with great respect by the crowd of visitors. It was some time
+before he took his gaze off Mr. Bumpkin; even when he had taken his eyes
+off, he seemed looking at him as if he feared that the moment he went
+away Bumpkin would do it again.
+
+And then methought I heard someone whisper near me: “His lordship is
+going to give judgment in the case of _Starling_ v. _Nightingale_,” and
+all at once there was a great peace. I lost sight of Bumpkin, I lost
+sight of the gentleman, I lost sight of the crowd; an indefinable
+sensation of delight overpowered my senses. Where was I? I had but a
+moment before been in a Court of Justice, with crowds of gaping idlers;
+with prosaic-looking gentlemen in horsehair wigs; with gentlemen in a pew
+with papers before them ready to take down the proceedings. Now it
+seemed as if I must be far away in the distant country, where all was
+calm and heavenly peace.
+
+Surely I must be among the water-lilies! What a lullaby sound as of
+rippling waters and of distant music in the evening air; of the eddying
+and swirl of the mingling currents; of the chime of bells on the evening
+breeze; of the zephyrs through fir-tops; of woodland whispers; of the
+cadence of the cathedral organ; of the soft sweet melody of the maiden’s
+laugh; of her gentlest accents in her sweetest mood; of—but similitudes
+fail me. In this delicious retreat, which may be compared to the Garden
+of Eden before the tempter entered, are the choicest flowers of rhetoric.
+I hear a voice as from the far-off past, and I wonder will that be the
+voice which will utter the “last syllable of recorded time?”
+
+Then methought the scene changed, and I heard the question—
+
+“Do you move, Mr. Jones?”
+
+O the prosaic Jones!—“don’t you move?”
+
+Yes, he does; he partly rises, ducks his head, and elevates the hinder
+portion of his person, and his movement ceases. And the question is
+repeated to Mr. Quick. “Do you move, Mr. Quick?”
+
+Then I saw Mr. Bumpkin again, just as Mr. Quick ducked his head and
+elevated his back.
+
+And then some gentleman actually moved in real earnest upon these
+interesting facts:—A farmer’s bull—just the very case for Mr. Bumpkin—had
+strayed from the road and gone into another man’s yard, and upset a tub
+of meal; was then driven into a shed and locked up. The owner of the
+bull came up and demanded that the animal should be released. “Not
+without paying two pounds,” said the meal-owner. The bull owner paid it
+under protest, and summoned the meal-owner to the County Court for one
+pound seventeen shillings and sixpence, the difference between the damage
+done (which was really about twopence) and the money paid to redeem the
+bull. Judgment for the plaintiff. Motion for new trial, or to enter
+verdict for the defendant, on the ground that the meal man could charge
+what he liked.
+
+One of the learned Judges asked:
+
+“Do you mean to tell me, Mr. Smiles, that if a man has a bull, and that
+bull goes into a yard and eats some meal out of a meal-tub, and the
+damage amounts to twopence, and the owner of the bull says ‘here’s your
+twopence,’ that the owner of the meal can say, “No, I want a hundred
+pounds, and shall take your bull damage feasant,” and then takes him and
+locks him up, and the owner of the bull pays the hundred pounds, he
+cannot afterwards get the money back?”
+
+“That is so,” says the learned counsel, “such is the law.” And then he
+cited cases innumerable to prove that it was the law.
+
+“Well,” said the Judge, “unless you show me a case of a bull and a
+meal-tub, I shall not pay attention to any case—must be a meal-tub.”
+
+Second Judge: “It is extortion, and done for the purpose of extortion;
+and I should say he could be indicted for obtaining money by false
+pretences.”
+
+“I am not sure he could not, my lord,” said the counsel; “but he can’t
+recover the money back.”
+
+“Then,” said the Judge, “if he obtains money by an indictable fraud
+cannot he get it back?”
+
+“Well,” said Bumpkin, “that be rum law; if it had bin my bull, he’d a gin
+’em summat afore they runned him in.”
+
+It was interesting to see how the judges struggled against this
+ridiculous law; and it was manifest even to the unlettered Bumpkin, that
+a good deal of old law is very much like old clothes, the worse for wear,
+and totally inapplicable to the present day. A struggle against old
+authorities is often a struggle of Judges to free themselves from the
+fetters of antiquated dicta and decisions no longer appropriate to or
+necessary for the modern requirements of civilisation.
+
+In this case precedents running over _one hundred and eight years_ were
+quoted, and so far from impressing the Court with respect, they simply
+evoked a smile of contempt.
+
+The learned Judges, after patiently listening to the arguments, decided
+that extortion and fraud give no title, and thus were the mists and
+vapours that arose from the accumulated mudbanks of centuries dispelled
+by the clear shining of common sense. In spite of arguments by the hour,
+and the pettifogging of one hundred and eight years, justice prevailed,
+and the amazed appellant was far more damaged by his legal proceedings
+than he was by the bull. The moral surely is, that however wise ancient
+judges were in their day, their wisdom ought not to be allowed to work
+injustice. He may be a wise Judge who makes a precedent, but he is often
+a much wiser who sweeps it away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+How the great Don O’Rapley became an usher of the Court of Queen’s Bench
+and explained the ingenious invention of the round square—how Mr. Bumpkin
+took the water and studied character from a penny steamboat.
+
+Some years ago there lived in a little village near Bridgewater a young
+man who was the bowler of his village eleven—one of the first roundhand
+bowlers in point of time, and by no means the last in point of merit.
+Indeed, so great was the local fame of this young man that it produced a
+sensation for miles around when it was announced that Don O’Rapley (such
+was his name) was going to bowl. All the boys of the village where the
+match was to take place were in a state of the utmost excitement to see
+the Don. At times it was even suggested that he was unfairly “smugged
+in” to play for a village to which he had no pretensions to belong. In
+process of time the youth became a man, and by virtue of his cricket
+reputation he obtained a post in the Court of Queen’s Bench. The
+gentleman whom I have referred to as looking with such austerity at Mr.
+Bumpkin is that very Don O’Rapley; the requirements of a large family
+necessitated his abandonment of a profession which, although more to his
+taste, was not sufficiently remunerative to admit of his indulging it
+after the birth of his sixth child. But it was certain that he never
+lost his love for the relinquished pursuit, as was manifest from his
+habit when alone of frequently going through a kind of dumb motion with
+his arm as if he were delivering one of his celebrated “twisters.” He
+had even been seen in a quiet corner of the Court to go through the same
+performance in a somewhat modified form. He was once caught by the Judge
+in the very act of delivering a ball, but found a ready apology in the
+explanation that he had a touch of “rheumatiz” in his right shoulder.
+
+Now I saw in my dream that Don O’Rapley was in earnest conversation with
+Horatio, and it was clear Mr. Bumpkin was the subject of it, from the
+very marked manner in which the Don and the youth turned occasionally to
+look at him. It may be stated that Horatio was the nephew of Don
+O’Rapley, and, perhaps, it was partly in consequence of this
+relationship, and partly in consequence of what Horatio told him, that
+the latter gentleman rose from his seat under the witness-box and came
+towards Mr. Bumpkin, shouting as he did so in a very solemn and prolonged
+tone, “Si-lence!”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin saw him, and, conscious that he was innocent this time of any
+offence for which he could be committed, stood his ground with a bold
+front, and firmly held his white beaver with both hands. O’Rapley
+contemplated him for a few minutes with an almost affectionate interest.
+Bumpkin felt much as a pigeon would under the gaze of an admiring owl.
+
+At last O’Rapley spoke:—
+
+“Why, it’s never Mr. Bumpkin, is it?”
+
+“It be a good imitation, sir,” said Bumpkin, “and I bean’t asheamed of
+un.”
+
+“Silence!” cried the Don. “You don’t remember me, I s’pose?”
+
+“Wall, not rightly, I doan’t.”
+
+“I dissay you recollect Don O’Rapley, the demon bowler of Bridgewater?”
+
+“I’ve ’eered tell on ’im,” said Bumpkin.
+
+“I’m that man!” said the Don, “and this is my nephew, Mr. Snigger. He
+tells me you’ve got a case comin’ on?”
+
+“I be.”
+
+“Just step outside,” said the Don, “we mustn’t talk ’ere.” So they went
+into Westminster Hall, and the good-natured O’Rapley asked if Mr. Bumpkin
+would like to look round, and if so he said he would be happy to show
+him, for he was very pleased to see anyone from the scene of his youthful
+exploits.
+
+“Thankee, sir—thankee, sir,” answered Bumpkin, delighted to find another
+“native” among “furriners.” “And this ’ere genleman be thy nevvy, sir?”
+
+“He is, and very proud of him I am; he’s my sister’s son.”
+
+“Seems a nice quiet boy,” said Mr. Bumpkin. “Now how old might he be?”
+
+“Old,” said Mr. O’Rapley, looking deedily at the floor and pressing his
+hand to his forehead, “why he’ll be seventeen come March.”
+
+“Hem! his ’ed be a good deal older nor thic: his ’ed be forty—it’s my way
+o’ thinkin’.”
+
+The Don laughed.
+
+“Yes, he has his head screwed on the right way, I think.”
+
+“Why that air lad,” said Bumpkin, “might make a judge.”
+
+O’Rapley laughed and shook his head.
+
+“In old times,” said he, “he might ha’ made a Lord Chancellor; a man as
+was clever had a chance then, but lor’ blesh you, Mr. Bumpkin, now-a-days
+it’s so very different; the raw material is that plentiful in the law
+that you can find fifty men as would make rattlin good Lord Chancellors
+for one as you could pick out to make a rattlin’ good bowler. But come,
+we’ll have a look round.”
+
+So round they looked again, and Mr. Bumpkin was duly impressed with the
+array of wigs and the number of books and the solemnity of the judges and
+the arguments of counsel, not one word of which was intelligible to him.
+Mr. O’Rapley explained everything and pointed out where a judge and jury
+tried a case, and then took him into another court where two judges tried
+the judge and jury, and very often set them both aside and gave new
+trials and altered verdicts and judgments or refused to do so
+notwithstanding the elaborate arguments of the most eloquent and
+long-winded of learned counsel.
+
+Then the Don asked if Mr. Bumpkin would like to see the Chancery
+Judges—to which Mr. Bumpkin answered that “he hadn’t much opinion o’
+Chancery from all he’d ’eeard, and that when a man got into them there
+Cooarts maybe he’d never coome out agin, but he shouldn’t mind seein’ a
+Chancery Judge.”
+
+“Well, then,” said the distinguished bowler, “now-a-days we needn’t go to
+Chancery, for they’ve invented the ‘Round Square.’”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin stared. Could so great a man as the O’Rapley be joking? No;
+the Don seldom laughed. He was a great admirer of everything relating to
+the law, but had a marked prejudice against the new system; and when he
+spoke of the “Round Square” he meant, as he afterwards explained, that
+confusion of Law and Equity which consists in putting Chancery Judges to
+try common law cases and Common Law Judges to unravel the nice twistings
+of the elaborate system of Equity; “as though,” said he, “you should fuse
+the butcher and the baker by getting the former to make bread and the
+latter to dress a calf.”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin could only stare by way of reply.
+
+“If you want to see Chancery Judges,” added the Don, “come to the Old
+Bailey!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+An interesting gentleman—showing how true it is that one half the world
+does not know how the other half lives.
+
+“The Old Bailey,” said Mr. Bumpkin, as they crossed Palace Yard on their
+way to the steamboat pier, “bean’t that where all these ’ere chaps be
+tried for ship stealin’?” (sheep stealing).
+
+“I don’t know about ship stealing,” said O’Rapley, “but it’s a place
+where they can cure all sorts of diseases.”
+
+“Zounds!” exclaimed Bumpkin, “I’ve ’eeard tell of un. A horsepital you
+means—dooan’t want to goo there.”
+
+“Horse or donkey, it don’t matter what,” said Don O’Rapley. “They’ve got
+a stuff that’s so strong a single drop will cure any disease you’ve got.”
+
+“I wonder if it ’ud cure my old ’ooman’s roomatiz. It ’ud be wuth
+tryin’, maybe.”
+
+“I’ll warrant it,” replied the Don. “She’d never feel ’em after takin’
+one drop,” and he drew his hand across his mouth and coughed.
+
+“I’d like to try un,” said the farmer, “for she be a terrible suffrer in
+these ’ere east winds. ’As ’em like all up the grine.”
+
+“Ah,” said the Don, “it don’t matter where she ’as ’em, it will cure
+her.”
+
+“How do ’em sell it—in bottles?”
+
+“No, it isn’t in bottles—you take it by the foot; about nine feet’s
+considered a goodish dose.”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin looked straight before him, somewhat puzzled at this
+extraordinary description of a medicine. At length he got a glimmering
+of the Don’s meaning, and, looking towards, but not quite at him, said:—
+
+“I be up to ’ee, sir!” and the Don laughed, and asked whether his
+description wasn’t right?
+
+“That be right enough. Zounds! it be right enough. Haw! haw! haw!”
+
+“You never want a second dose,” said the Don, “do you?”
+
+“No, sir—never wants moore ’an one dose; but ’ow comes it, if you please,
+sir, that these ’ere Chancery chaps have changed their tack; be it
+they’ve tried ’onest men so long that they be gwine to ’ave a slap at the
+thieves for a change?”
+
+“Look ’ere,” said the worthy O’Rapley, “you will certainly see the inside
+of a jail before you set eyes on the outside of a haystack, if you go on
+like that. It’s contempt of court to speak of Her Majesty’s Judges as
+‘chaps’.”
+
+“Beg pardon, sir,” said Bumpkin, “but we must all ’ave a larnin’. I
+didn’t mane no disruspect to the Lord Judge; but I wur only a axin’ jist
+the same as you might ax me about anythink on my farm.”
+
+And I saw that they proceeded thus in edifying conversation until they
+came to the Thames embankment. It was somewhat difficult to preserve his
+presence of mind as Mr. Bumpkin descended the gangway and stepped on
+board the boat, which was belching forth its volumes of black smoke and
+rocking under the influence of the wash of a steamer that had just left
+the pier.
+
+“I doant much like these ’ere booats,” said he. “Doant mind my old punt,
+but dang these ’ere ships.”
+
+“There’s no danger,” said the O’Rapley, springing on board as though he
+had been a pilot: and then making a motion with his arm as if he was
+delivering a regular “length ball,” his fist unfortunately came down on
+Mr. Bumpkin’s white hat, in consequence of a sudden jerk of the vessel; a
+rocking boat not being the best of places for the delivery of length
+balls.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin looked round quite in the wrong direction for ascertaining
+what was the cause of the sudden shock to his nervous system and his hat.
+
+“Zounds!” said he, “what were thic?”
+
+“What was what?” asked O’Rapley.
+
+“Summut gie me a crack o’ the top o’ my ’ead like a thunderbolt.”
+
+“I didn’t see anything fall,” said the Don.
+
+“Noa; but I felt un, which I allows wur more’n seein’—lookee ’ere.”
+
+And taking off his huge beaver he showed the dent of Mr. O’Rapley’s fist.
+
+“Bless me,” said the roundhand bowler, “it’s like a crack with a cricket
+ball.”
+
+But there was no time for further examination of the extraordinary
+circumstance, for the crowd of passengers poured along and pushed this
+way and that, so that the two friends were fairly driven to the fore part
+of the boat, where they took their seats. It was quite a new world to
+Mr. Bumpkin, and more like a dream than a reality. As he stared at the
+different buildings he was too much amazed even to enquire what was this
+or what was that. But when they passed under the Suspension Bridge, and
+the chimney ducked her head and the smoke came out of the “stump,” as Mr.
+Bumpkin termed it, he thought she had struck and broken short off. Mr.
+O’Rapley explained this phenomenon, as he did many others on their route;
+and when they came to Cleopatra’s Needle he gave such information as he
+possessed concerning that ancient work. Mr. Bumpkin looked as though he
+were not to be taken in.
+
+“I be up to ’ee, sir,” said he. “I s’pose that air thing the t’other
+side were the needle-case?”
+
+The O’Rapley informed him that it was a shot tower where they made shot.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin laughed heartily at this; he was not to be taken in by any
+manner of means; was far too sharp for that.
+
+“And I spoase,” said he, “they makes the guns—”
+
+“In Gunnersbury,” said Mr. O’Rapley; it was no use to be serious.
+
+“I thought thee were gwine to say in a gun pit, but I don’t mind thy
+chaff, Master Rapley, and shall be mighty proud to see thee down at
+Southood for a day’s shoot-in’: and mind thee bring some o’ these ere
+shot with thee that be made at yon tower, haw! haw! haw! Thee’ll kill a
+white-tailed crow then, I shouldn’t wonder; thee knows a white-tailed
+crow, doan’t thee, Master Rapley, when thee sees un—and danged if I
+doan’t gie thee a quart bottle o’ pigeon’s milk to tak’ wi’ thee; haw!
+haw! haw!”
+
+The O’Rapley laughed heartily at these witty sallies, for Bumpkin was so
+jolly, and took everything in such good part, that he could not but enjoy
+his somewhat misplaced sarcasms.
+
+“Now you’ve heard of Waterloo, I dare say,” said Mr. O’Rapley.
+
+“Yes, I’ve ’eeard tell on un, and furder, my grand-feather wur out
+theer.”
+
+“Well, this that we are coming to is Waterloo Bridge.”
+
+“Yes,” said Bumpkin, “it be a bridge, but it bean’t Worterloo more ’an I
+be my grandfearther—what de think o’ that—haw! haw! haw!”
+
+“Good,” said O’Rapley; “that’s quite right, but this is the bridge named
+after the battle.”
+
+“Zo’t be neamed artur un because it worn’t named afore un, haw! haw! haw!
+Good agin, Maister Rapley, thee got it.”
+
+Mr. O’Rapley found that any attempt to convey instruction was useless, so
+he said:—
+
+“Joking apart, Mr. Bumpkin, you see that man sitting over there with the
+wideawake hat?”
+
+“D’ye mane near the noase o’ the ship?”
+
+“Well, the nose if you like.”
+
+“I zee un—chap wi’ red faace, blue ’ankercher, and white spots?”
+
+“That’s the man. Well, now, you’d never guess who he is?”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin certainly would have been a sharp man if he could.
+
+“Well,” continued the Don, “that man gets his living by bringing actions.
+No matter who it is or what, out comes the writ and down he comes for
+damages.”
+
+“Hem! that be rum, too, bean’t it?”
+
+“Yes, he’s always looking out for accidents; if he hears o’ one, down he
+comes with his pocket-book, gets ’old o’ some chap that’s injured, or
+thinks he is, and out comes the writ.”
+
+“What be he then?”
+
+“A scamp—works in the name of some broken-down attorney, and pays him for
+the use of it.”
+
+“So he can work the lor like wirout being a loryer?”
+
+“That’s it—and, lor’ bless you, he’s got such a way with him that if he
+was to come and talk to you for five minutes, he’d have a writ out
+against you in the morning.”
+
+“Ain’t it rayther cold at this eend o’ the booat,” asked Mr. Bumpkin, “I
+feel a little chilly loike.”
+
+“No,” said the Don, “we just caught the wind at that corner, that was
+all.”
+
+But Mr. Bumpkin kept his eye on the artful man, with a full determination
+to “have no truck wi’ un.”
+
+“As I was saying, this Ananias never misses a chance: he’s on the
+look-out at this moment; if they was to push that gangway against his
+toe, down he’d go and be laid up with an injured spine and concussion of
+the brain, till he got damages from the company.”
+
+“Must be a reg’ler rogue, I allows; I should like to push un overboard.”
+
+“Just what he would like; he isn’t born to be drowned, that man; he’d
+soon have a writ out against you. There was a railway accident once
+miles away in the country; ever so many people were injured and some of
+’em killed. Well, down he goes to see if he could get hold of
+anybody—no, nobody would have him—so what does he do but bring an action
+himself.”
+
+“What for?”
+
+“Why, just the same as if he’d been in the accident.”
+
+“Ought to be hanged.”
+
+“Well, the doctors were very pleased to find that no bones were broken,
+and, although there were no bruises, they discovered that there were
+internal injuries: the spine was wrong, and there was concussion of the
+brain, and so on.”
+
+“If ever I ’eerd tell o’ sich a thing in my borned days.”
+
+“No, but it’s true. Well, he was laid up a long time under medical
+treatment, and it was months before he could get about, and then he
+brings his action: but before it came on he prosecutes his servant for
+stealing some trumpery thing or other—a very pretty girl she was too—and
+the trial came on at Quarter Sessions.”
+
+“Where Squoire Stooky sits.”
+
+“I never laughed so in all my life; there was the railway company with
+the red light, and there was Fireaway, the counsel for the girl, and then
+in hobbled the prosecutor, with a great white bandage round his head. He
+was so feeble through the injuries he had received that he could hardly
+walk. ‘Now then,’ says the counsel, ‘is he sworn?’ ‘Yes,’ says the
+crier.
+
+“‘He must be sworn on the Koran,’ says Fireaway; ‘he’s a Mommadon.’
+
+“‘Where’s the Jorum?’ says the crier. ‘Must be swore on the Jorum.’
+
+“O dear, dear, you should ha’ heard ’em laugh—it was more like a theayter
+than a court. It was not only roars, but continnerus roars for several
+minutes. And all the time the larfter was going on there was this man
+throwin’ out his arms over the witness-box at the counsel like a madman;
+and the more he raved the more they laughed. He was changed from a
+hobblin’ invalid, as the counsel said, into a hathletic pugilist.”
+
+“I ’ope she got off.”
+
+“Got off with flying colours—we’re magnanimous said the jury, ‘not
+guilty.’”
+
+“Well, I likes upright and down-straight,” said Bumpkin, “it’ll goo
+furdest in th’ long run.”
+
+“Yes,” said O’Rapley, “and the longer the run the furder it’ll go.”
+
+“So ’t wool; but if you doan’t mind, sir, I’d like to get nearer that
+’ere fireplace.”
+
+“The funnel—very well.” And as they moved Mr. O’Rapley, in the
+exuberance of his spirits, delivered another ball at the chimney, which
+apparently took the middle stump, for the chimney again broke in half.
+
+“Got him!” said he. “I quite agree, and I’ll tell you for why. You can
+play a straight ball if you mind what you are about—just take your bat
+so, and bring your left elbow well round so, and keep your bat, as you
+say, upright and down-straight, so—and there you are. And there, indeed,
+Mr. Bumpkin was, on his back, for the boat at that moment bumped so
+violently against the side of the pier that many persons were staggering
+about as if they were in a storm.
+
+“Zounds!” said the farmer, as he was being picked up—“these ’ere booats,
+I doan’t like ’em—gie me the ole-fashioned uns.”
+
+Now came the usual hullabaloo, “Stand back!—pass on!—out of the way! now,
+then, look sharp there!” and the pushing of the gangway against people’s
+shins as though they were so many skittles to be knocked over, and then
+came the slow process of “passing out.”
+
+“There’s one thing,” whispered O’Rapley, “if you do break your leg the
+company’s liable—that’s one comfort.”
+
+“Thankee, sir,” answered Bumpkin, “but I bean’t a gwine to break my leg
+for the sake o’ a haction—and mebbee ha’ to pay the costs.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+THE OLD BAILEY—ADVANTAGES OF THE NEW SYSTEM ILLUSTRATED.
+
+And I saw in my dream that Don O’Rapley and worthy Master Bumpkin
+proceeded together until they came to the Old Bailey; that delightful
+place which will ever impress me with the belief that the Satanic
+Personage is not a homeless wanderer. As they journeyed together
+O’Rapley asked whether there was any particular kind of case which he
+would prefer—much the same as he would enquire what he would like for
+lunch.
+
+“Well, thankee, sir,” said Bumpkin, “what he there?”—just the same as a
+hungry guest would ask the waiter for the bill of fare.
+
+“Well,” said Mr. O’Rapley, “there’s no murder to-day, but there’s sure to
+be highway robberies, burglaries, rapes, and so on.”
+
+“Wall, I thinks one o’ them air as good as anything,” said Bumpkin. “I
+wur on the jury once when a chap were tried.”
+
+“Did he get off?”
+
+“Got off as clane as a whusle. Not guilty, we all said: sarved her
+right.”
+
+“It’s rather early in the morning, p’r’aps,” said O’Rapley; “but there’s
+sure to be something interesting before lunch—crimes are very pop’lar,
+and for my own part, I think they’re as nice as anything: divorces,
+p’r’aps, are as good, and the female intellect prefers ’em as a more
+digestable food for their minds.”
+
+“As a what, sir!”
+
+“Well, since they did away with _crim. cons_, there’s nothing left for
+females but murders and divorces, worth speaking of.”
+
+“Why, how’s that, then?”
+
+“O, they’re not considered sufficiently moral, that’s all. You see,
+Master Bumpkin, we’re getting to be a very moral and good people.
+They’re doin’ away with all that’s naughty, such as music and dancing,
+peep-shows and country fairs. This is a religious age. No pictur
+galleries on a Sunday, but as many public-houses as you like; it’s wicked
+to look at picturs on a Sunday. And now I’ll tell you another thing,
+Master Bumpkin, although p’r’aps I ought to keep my mouth closed; but
+’ere you’ll see a Chancery Judge as knows everything about land and
+titles to property, and all that, and never had any training in Criminal
+Courts, and may be never been inside of one before, you’ll see ’im down
+’ere tryin’ burglaries and robberies, and down at the Assizes you’ll see
+’im tryin’ men and women for stealing mutton pies and a couple of ounces
+of bacon; that’s the way the Round Square’s worked, Master Bumpkin; and
+very well it acts. There’s a moral atmosphere, too, about the Courts
+which is very curious. It seems to make every crime look bigger than it
+really is. But as I say, where’s the human natur of a Chancery
+barrister? How can you get it in Chancery? They only sees human natur
+in a haffidavit, and although I don’t say you can’t put a lot of it into
+a haffidavit, such as perjury and such like, yet it’s so done up by the
+skill of the profession that you can hardly see it. Learning from
+haffidavits isn’t like learning from the witness-box, mark my words, Mr.
+Bumpkin; and so you’ll find when you come to hear a case or two.”
+
+Having thus eloquently delivered himself, Mr. O’Rapley paused to see its
+effect: but there was no answer. There was no doubt the Don could talk
+a-bit, and took especial pride in expressing his views on law reform,
+which, to his idea, would best be effected by returning to the “old
+style.”
+
+And I saw that they pushed their way through a crowd of people of all
+sorts and degrees of unwashedness and crime, and proceeded up a winding
+stair, through other crowds of the most evil-looking indictable persons
+you could meet with out of the Bottomless Pit.
+
+And amongst them were pushing, with eager, hungry, dirty faces, men who
+called themselves clerks, evil-disposed persons who traded under such
+names as their owners could use no longer on their own account. These
+prowlers amongst thieves, under the protection of the Law, were permitted
+to extort what they could from the friends of miserable prisoners under
+pretence of engaging counsel to defend them. Counsel they would engage
+after a fashion—sometimes: but not unfrequently they cheated counsel,
+client and the law at the same time, which is rather better than killing
+two birds with one stone.
+
+And the two friends, after threading their way through the obnoxious
+crowd, came to the principal Court of the Old Bailey, called the “Old
+Court,” and a very evil-looking place it was. All the ghosts of past
+criminals seemed floating in the dingy atmosphere. Crowds of men, women
+and children were heaped together in all directions, except on the bench
+and in a kind of pew which was reserved for such ladies as desired to
+witness the last degradation of human nature.
+
+Presently came in, announced with a loud cry of “Silence!” and “Be
+uncovered in Court!” a gorgeous array of stout and berobed gentlemen,
+with massive chains and purple faces. These, I learned, were the noble
+Aldermen of the Corporation. What a contrast to the meagre wretches who
+composed the crowd! Here was a picture of what well-fed honesty and
+virtue could accomplish for human nature on the one part, as opposed to
+what hungry crime could effect, on the other. Blessings, say I, on good
+victuals! It is a great promoter of innocence. And I thought how many
+of the poor, half-starved, cadaverous wretches who crowded into the dock
+in all their emaciated wretchedness and rags would, under other
+conditions, have become as portly and rubicund and as moral as the row of
+worthy aldermen who sat looking at them with contempt from their exalted
+position.
+
+The rich man doesn’t steal a loaf of bread; he has no temptation to do
+so: the uneducated thief doesn’t get up sham companies, because _he_ has
+no temptation to do so. Temptation and Opportunity have much to answer
+for in the destinies of men. Honesty is the best policy, but it is not
+always the most expedient or practicable.
+
+Now there was much arraignment of prisoners, and much swearing of
+jurymen, and proclamations about “informing my Lords Justices and the
+Queen’s Attorney-General of any crimes, misdemeanours, felonies, &c.,
+committed by any of the prisoners,” and “if anybody could so inform my
+Lords Justices,” &c, he was to come forward and do so, and he would be
+heard. And then the crowd of prisoners, except the one about to be
+tried, were told to stand down. And down they all swarmed, some laughing
+and some crying, to the depths below. And the stout warders took their
+stand beside the remaining prisoner.
+
+“Now,” said Mr. O’Rapley, “this Judge is quite fresh to the work, and
+I’ll warrant he’ll take a moral view of the law, which is about the worst
+view a Judge _can_ take.”
+
+The man left in the dock was a singular specimen of humanity: he was a
+thin, wizen-looking man of about seventy, with a wooden leg: and as he
+stood up to plead, leant on two crutches, while his head shook a good
+deal, as if he had got the palsy. A smile went round the bar, and in
+some places broke out into a laugh: the situation was, indeed,
+ridiculous; and before any but a Chancery Judge, methought, there must be
+an acquittal on the view. However, I saw that the man pleaded not
+guilty, and then Mr. Makebelieve opened the case for the Crown. He put
+it very clearly, and, as he said, fairly before the jury; and then called
+a tall, large-boned woman of about forty into the witness-box. This was
+the “afflicted widow,” as Makebelieve had called her; and the way she
+gave her evidence made a visible impression on the mind of the learned
+Judge. His Lordship looked up occasionally from his note-book and fixed
+his eyes on the prisoner, whose appearance was that of one trembling with
+a consciousness of guilt—that is, to one not versed in human nature
+outside an affidavit.
+
+Mr. Nimble, the prisoner’s counsel, asked if the prisoner might sit down
+as he was very “infirm.”
+
+“Have you an affidavit of that fact, Mr. Nimble?” asked the Judge.
+
+“No, my lord; it is not usual on such an application to have an
+affidavit.”
+
+“It is not usual,” said his lordship, “to take notice of any fact not
+upon affidavit; but in this case the prisoner may sit down.”
+
+The prosecutrix gave her evidence very flippantly, and did not seem in
+the least concerned that her virtue had had so narrow an escape.
+
+“Now,” asked Mr. Nimble, “what are you?”
+
+The learned Judge said he could not see what that had to do with the
+question. Could Mr. Nimble resist the facts?
+
+“Yes, my lord,” answered the learned counsel; “and I intend, in the first
+place, to resist them by showing that this woman is entirely unworthy of
+credit.”
+
+“Are you really going to suggest perjury, Mr. Nimble?”
+
+“Assuredly, my lord! I am going to show that there is not a word of
+truth in this woman’s statement. I have a right to cross-examine as to
+her credit. If your lordship will allow me, I will—”
+
+“Cross-examination, Mr. Nimble, cannot be allowed, in order to make a
+witness contradict all that she has said in her examination-in-chief; it
+would be a strange state of the law, if it could.”
+
+Mr. Nimble looked about the desk, and then under it, and felt in his bag,
+and at last exclaimed in a somewhat petulant tone:
+
+“Where’s my Taylor?”
+
+“What do you want your tailor for?” asked the Judge.
+
+“I wish to point out to your lordship that my proposition is correct, and
+that I can cross-examine to the credit of a witness.”
+
+Here the clerk of arraigns, who sat just under the learned Judge, and was
+always consulted on matters of practice when there was any difficulty,
+was seen whispering to his lordship: after which his lordship looked very
+blank and red.
+
+“We always consult him, my lord,” said Mr. Nimble, with a smile, “in
+suits at Common Law.”
+
+Everybody tried not to laugh, and everybody failed. Even the Judge,
+being a very good-tempered man, laughed too, and said:
+
+“O yes, Taylor on Evidence, Mr. Nimble.”
+
+At last the book, about the size of a London Directory, was handed up by
+a tall man who was Mr. Nimble’s clerk.
+
+“Now, my lord, at page nineteen hundred and seventy-two your lordship
+will find that when the credibility of a witness is attacked—”
+
+Judge: “That will be near the end of the book.”
+
+Mr. Nimble: “No, my lord, near the beginning.”
+
+“I shall not stop you,” said the learned Judge; “your question may be put
+for what it is worth: but now, suppose in answer to your question she
+says she is an ironer, what then?”
+
+“That’s what I am, my lordship,” said the woman, with an obsequious
+curtsey.
+
+“There, now you have it,” said the Judge, “she is an ironer; stop, let me
+take that down, ‘I am an ironer.’”
+
+The cross-examination continued, somewhat in an angry tone no doubt, and
+amid frequent interruptions; but Mr. Nimble always thumped down the
+ponderous Taylor upon any objection of the learned Judge, and crushed it
+as though it were a butterfly.
+
+Next the policeman gave his evidence, and was duly cross-examined. Mr.
+Nimble called no witnesses; there were none to call: but addressed the
+jury in a forcible and eloquent speech, stigmatizing the charge as an
+utterly preposterous one, and dealing with every fact in a
+straightforward and manly manner. After he had finished, the jury would
+undoubtedly have acquitted; but the learned Judge had to sum up, which in
+this, as in many cases at Quarter Sessions, was no more a summing up than
+counting ten on your fingers is a summing up. It was a desultory speech,
+and if made by the counsel for the prosecution, would have been a most
+unfair one for the Crown: totally ignoring the fact that human nature was
+subject to frailties, and testimony liable to be tainted with perjury.
+It made so great an impression upon me in my dream that I transcribed it
+when I awoke; and this is the manner in which it dealt with the main
+points:—
+
+“GENTLEMEN OF THE JURY,
+
+“This is a case of a very serious character (the nature of the offence
+was then read from Roscoe), and I am bound to tell you that the evidence
+is all one way: namely, on the side of the prosecution. There is not a
+single affidavit to the contrary. Now what are the facts?”
+
+Mr. Nimble: “Would your lordship pardon me—whether they are facts or not
+is for the jury.”
+
+“I am coming to that, Mr. Nimble; unless contradicted they are facts, or,
+at least, if you believe them, gentlemen. If the evidence is
+uncontradicted, what is the inference? The inference is for you, not for
+me; I have simply to state the law: it is for you to find the facts. You
+must exercise your common sense: if the prisoner could have contradicted
+this evidence, is it reasonable to suppose he would not have done so with
+so serious a charge hanging over his head?”
+
+“My lord, may I ask how could the prisoner have called evidence? there
+was no one present.”
+
+“Mr. Nimble,” said his Lordship solemnly, “he might have shown he was
+elsewhere.”
+
+“Yes, my lord; but the prisoner admits being present: he doesn’t set up
+an _alibi_.”
+
+“Gentlemen, you hear what the learned counsel says: he admits that the
+prisoner was present; that is corroborative of the story told by the
+prosecutrix. Now, if you find a witness speaking truthfully about one
+part of a transaction, what are you to infer with regard to the rest?
+Gentlemen, the case is for you, and not for me: happily I have not to
+find the facts: they are for you—and what are they? This woman, who is
+an ironer, was going along a lonely lane, proceeding to her home, as she
+states—and again I say there is no contradiction—and she meets this man;
+he accosts her, and then, according to her account, assaults her, and in
+a manner which I think leaves no doubt of his intention—but that is for
+you. I say he assaults her, if you believe her story: of course, if you
+do not believe her story, then in the absence of corroboration there
+would be an end of the case. But is there an absence of corroboration?
+What do we find, gentlemen? Now let me read to you the evidence of
+Police Constable Swearhard. What does he say? ‘I was coming along the
+Lover’s Lane at nine twenty-five, and I saw two persons, whom I
+afterwards found to be the prosecutrix and the prisoner.’ ‘You will
+mark that, gentlemen, the prisoner himself does not suggest an _alibi_,
+that is to say, that he was elsewhere, when this event occurred. Then he
+was upon the spot: and the policeman tells you—it is for you to say
+whether you believe the policeman or not; there is no suggestion that he
+is not a witness of truth—and he says that he heard a scream, and caught
+the defendant in the act. Now, from whom did that scream proceed? Not
+from the prisoner, for it was the scream of a woman. From whom then
+could it proceed but from the prosecutrix? Now, in all cases of this
+kind, one very material point has always been relied on by the Judges,
+and that point is this: What was the conduct of the woman? Did she go
+about her ordinary business as usual, or did she make a complaint? If
+she made no complaint, or made it a long time after, it is some
+evidence—not conclusive by any means—but it is some evidence against the
+truth of her story. Let us test this case by that theory. What is the
+evidence of the policeman? I will read his words: ‘The moment I got up,’
+he says, now mark that, gentlemen, ‘the woman complained of the conduct
+of the prisoner: she screamed and threw herself in my arms and then
+nearly fainted.’ Gentlemen, what does all that mean? You will say by
+your verdict.”
+
+“Consider your verdict,” said the Clerk of Arraigns, and almost
+immediately the Jury said: “Guilty of attempt.”
+
+“Call upon him,” said the Judge: and he was called upon accordingly, but
+only said “the prosecutrix was a well-known bad woman.”
+
+Then the Judge said very solemnly:—
+
+“Prisoner at the bar, you have been convicted upon the clearest possible
+evidence of this crime: what you say about the character of the
+prosecutrix the more convinces me that you are a very bad man. You not
+only assail the virtue of this woman, but, happily prevented in your
+design, you endeavour to destroy it afterwards in this Court. No one who
+has heard this case can doubt that you have been guilty of this very
+grave offence; and in my judgment that offence is aggravated by the fact
+that you committed it against her will and without her consent. The
+sentence is that you be sent to prison for eighteen calendar months.”
+
+“Rather warm,” said Mr. O’Rapley.
+
+“Never heeard such a thing in my life,” said Master Bumpkin, “she wur a
+consentin’ party if ever there wur one.”
+
+“But that makes no difference now-a-days,” said Mr. O’Rapley. “Chancery
+Judges studies the equity of the thing more. But perhaps, Mr. Bumpkin,
+you don’t know what that means?”
+
+“No,” said Bumpkin, “I doan’t.”
+
+“You must be quiet,” said Mr. O’Rapley; “recollect you are in a Court of
+Justice.”
+
+“Be I! It ’ud take moore un thic case to make I believe it; but lookee
+here: I be hanged if there ain’t that Snooks feller down along there.”
+
+“Who?” enquired O’Rapley.
+
+“That there feller,” said Bumpkin, “be sure to find his way where there’s
+anything gooin on o’ this ere natur.”
+
+Next an undefended prisoner was placed on trial, and as he was supposed
+to know all the law of England, he was treated as if he did.
+
+“You can’t put that question, you know,” said the learned Judge; “and now
+you are making a statement; it is not time to make your statement yet;
+you will have ample opportunity by-and-by in your speech to the jury.”
+And afterwards, when the Judge was summing up, the unhappy prisoner
+called his lordship’s attention to a mistake; but he was told that he had
+had his turn and had made his speech to the jury, and must not now
+interrupt the Court. So he had to be quite silent until he was
+convicted. Then the two companions went into another court, where a very
+stern-looking Common Law Judge was trying a ferocious-looking prisoner.
+And Mr. O’Rapley was delighted to explain that now his friend would see
+the difference. They had entered the court just as the learned Judge had
+begun to address the jury; and very careful his lordship was to explain
+(not in technical language), but in homely, common-place and common-sense
+English, the nature of the crime with which the prisoner was charged. He
+was very careful in explaining this, for fear the jury should improperly
+come to the conclusion that, because they might believe the prisoner had
+in fact committed the act, he must necessarily be guilty. And they were
+told that the act was in that case only one element of the crime, and
+that they must ascertain whether there was the guilty intent or no. Now
+this old Mr. Justice Common Sense, I thought, was very well worth
+listening to, and I heartily wished Mr. Justice Technical from the Old
+Court had been there to take a lesson; and I take the liberty of setting
+down what I heard in my dream for the benefit of future Justices
+Technical.
+
+His lordship directed the jury’s attention to the evidence, which he
+carefully avoided calling facts: not to the verbatim report of it on his
+note-book as some Recorders do, and think when they are reading it over
+they are summing it up; but pointing out statements which, if believed,
+become facts and if facts, lead to certain _inferences_ of guilt or
+innocence.
+
+It was while the learned Mr. Justice Common Sense was thus engaged, that
+the warder in the dock suddenly checked the prisoner with these words:
+
+“You mustn’t interrupt.”
+
+“Why may he not interrupt?” asks Mr. Justice Common Sense. “What do you
+want to say, prisoner?”
+
+“My lord,” answered the prisoner, “I wanted to say as how that there
+witness as your lordship speaks on didn’t say as he seen me there.”
+
+“O, didn’t he?” said the Judge. “I thought he did—now let us see,”
+turning over his notes. “No, you are quite right, prisoner, he did not
+see you at the spot but immediately after.”
+
+Then his lordship proceeded until there was another interruption of the
+same character, and the foolish warder again told the prisoner to be
+quiet. This brought down Mr. Justice Common Sense with a vengeance:
+
+“Warder! how dare you stop the prisoner? he is on his trial and is
+undefended. Who is to check me if I am misstating the evidence if he
+does not? If you dare to speak like that to him again I will commit you.
+Prisoner, interrupt me as often as you think I am not correctly stating
+the evidence.”
+
+“Thankee, my lord.”
+
+“That be the sort o’ Judge for me,” said Bumpkin; “but I’ve ’ad enough on
+it, Maister O’Rapley, so if you please, I’ll get back t’ the ‘Goose.’
+Why didn’t that air Judge try t’other case, I wonder?”
+
+“Because,” replied the Don, “the new system is to work the ‘Round
+Square’.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+Mr. Bumpkin’s experience of London life, enlarged.
+
+On leaving the Old Bailey the two friends proceeded to a neighbouring
+public-house and partook of some light refreshment at the counter. Now
+Mr. Bumpkin had never yet examined the viands displayed on a counter.
+His idea of refreshment, when from home, had always been a huge round of
+beef smoking at one end of the table and a large leg of mutton smoking at
+the other, with sundry dishes of similar pretensions between, and an
+immense quantity of vegetables. When, therefore he saw some
+stale-looking sandwiches under the ordinary glass cover, he exclaimed:
+“Wittals must be mighty scarce to clap ’em under a glass case.”
+
+“It’s to keep the flies off;” said his companion.
+
+“They need well keep un off, for there bean’t enough for a couple if they
+was ony wise ongry like.”
+
+However, our friends made the best of what there was, and Mr. O’Rapley,
+wishing success to his companion, enquired who was to be his counsel.
+
+“I doan’t rightly know, but I’ll warrant Mr. Prigg’ll have a good un—he
+knows what he be about; and all I hopes is, he’ll rattle it into that
+there Snooks, for if ever there wur a bad un it be him.”
+
+“He looks a bad un,” replied O’Rapley. “When do you think the case is
+likely to come on?”
+
+“Well, it is supposed as it ull be on to-morrer; but I bleeve there’s no
+sartinty about thic. Now then, just give us a little moore, will ’ee
+sir?” (this to the waiter).
+
+“I’ll pay for the next,” said O’Rapley, feeling in his pocket.
+
+“Noa, noa, I’ll pay; and thankee, sir, for comin’.”
+
+And then O’Rapley drank his friend’s health again, and wished further
+success to the case, and hoped Mr. Bumpkin would be sure to come to him
+when he was at Westminster; and expressed himself desirous to assist his
+friend in every way that lay in his power—declaring that he really must
+be going for he didn’t know what would happen if the Judge should find he
+was away; and was not at all certain it would not lead to some officious
+member of the House of Commons asking a question of the Prime Minister
+about it.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin drank his good health, again and again, declaring he was
+“mighty proud to have met with un;” and that when the case was over and
+he had returned to his farm, he should be pleased if Mr. O’Rapley would
+come down and spend a few days with him. “Nancy,” he said, “’ll be rare
+and pleased to see thee. I got as nice a little farm as any in the
+county, and as pooty pigs as thee ever clapped eyes on.”
+
+Mr. O’Rapley, without being too condescending, expressed himself highly
+gratified with making Mr. Bumpkin’s acquaintance, and observed that the
+finest pigs ever he saw were those of the Lord Chief Justice.
+
+“Dade, sir, now what sort be they?” Mr. O’Rapley was not learned in
+pigs, and not knowing the name of any breed whatever, was at a loss how
+to describe them. Mr. Bumpkin came to his assistance.
+
+“Be they smooth like and slim?”
+
+“Yes,” said the Don.
+
+“Hardly any hair?”
+
+“Scarce a bit.”
+
+“They be Chichesters then—the werry best breed as a man ever had in his
+stye.”
+
+“I never see anything so pretty,” replied Mr. O’Rapley.
+
+“Ah! and they be the smallest-boned pigs as ever could be—they bean’t got
+a bone bigger nor your little finger.”
+
+“Ha!” said the Don, finishing his glass, “the smaller the bone the more
+the meat, that’s what I always say; and the Lord Chief Justice don’t care
+for bone, he likes meat.”
+
+“An’ so do I—the Lud Judge be right, and if he tries my case he’ll know
+the difference betwixt thic pig as Snooks tooked away and one o’ them
+there—”
+
+“Jackass-looking pigs,” said O’Rapley, seeing that his friend paused. “I
+hate them jackass pigs.”
+
+“So do I—they never puts on fat.”
+
+“I must go, really,” said O’Rapley. “What do you make the right time?”
+
+Master Bumpkin pulled out his watch with great effort, and said it was
+just a quarter past four by Yokelton time.
+
+“Here’s your good health again, Mr. Bumpkin.”
+
+“And yours, sir; and now I think on it, if it’s a fair question Mr.
+O’Rapley, and I med ax un wirout contempt, when do you think this ’ere
+case o’ mine be likely to come on, for you ought to know summut about
+un?”
+
+“Ha!” said the Don, partially closing one eye, and looking profoundly
+into the glass as though he were divining the future, “law, sir, is a
+mystery and judges is a mystery; masters is a mystery and ’sociates is a
+mystery; ushers is a mystery and counsel is a mystery;—the whole of life
+(here he tipped the contents of the glass down his throat) is a mystery.”
+
+“So it be,” said Mr. Bumpkin, drawing the back of his hand across his
+mouth. “So it be sir, but do ’ee think—”
+
+“Well, really,” answered the Don, “I should say in about a couple of
+years if you ask me.”
+
+“How the h—”
+
+“Excuse me, Master Bumpkin, but contempt follers us like a shadder: if
+you had said that to a Judge it would have been a year at least: it’s
+three months as it is if I liked to go on with the case; but I’m not a
+wicious man, I hope.”
+
+“I didn’t mean no offence,” said the farmer.
+
+“No, no, I dare say not; but still there is a way of doing things. Now
+if you had said to me, ‘Mr. O’Rapley, you are a gentleman moving in
+judicial circles, and are probably acquainted with the windings of the,’
+&c. &c. &c. ‘Can you inform me why my case is being so unduly
+prolonged?’ Now if you had put your question in that form I should in
+all probability have answered: ‘I do not see that it is unduly prolonged,
+Master Bumpkin—you must have patience. Judges are but human and it’s a
+wonder to me they are as much as that, seein’ what they have to go
+through.’”
+
+“But if there be a Court why can’t us get in and try un, Mr. Rapley?”
+
+“Ah, now that is putting it pointedly;” and O’Rapley closed one eye and
+looked into his tumbler with the other before he answered:
+
+“You see this is how it goes under the continerous sittings—off and on we
+sits continerously at Nisy Prisy in London three months in the year. Now
+that ain’t bad for London: but it’s nothing near so much time as they
+gives to places like Aylesbury, Bedford, and many others.”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin looked like a terrier dog watching a hole out of which he
+expected a rat: at present he saw no sign of one.
+
+“Take Aylesbury; well now, if a Judge went there once in seven years he’d
+find about every other assize enough work to last him till lunch. But in
+course two Judges must go to Aylesbury four times a year, to do nothing
+but admire the building where the Courts are held; otherwise you’d soon
+have Aylesbury marching on to London to know the reason why. P’r’aps the
+Judges have left five hundred cases untried in London to go to this
+Aylesbury.”
+
+“Be it a big plaace, sir?”
+
+“Not so big as a good-sized hotel,” said the Don. “Then,” he continued,
+“there’s Bedford ditto again—septennel would do for that; then comes
+Northampton—they don’t want no law there at all.” (I leave the obvious
+pun to anyone who likes to make it). “Then Okeham again—did you ever
+hear of anyone who came from Okeham? I never did.”
+
+The Don paused, as though on the answer to this question depended his
+future course.
+
+“Noa,” said Bumpkin, “can’t rightly say as ever I did.”
+
+“And nobody ever did come from there except the Judges. Well, to Okeham
+they go four times a year, whereas if they was to go about once in every
+hundred years it wouldn’t pay. Why raly, Mr. Bumpkin, the Judges goes
+round like travellers arfter orders, and can’t get none. I’m not
+talkin’, as you are aware, about great centres like Liverpool, where if
+they had about fifty-two assizes in the year it wouldn’t be one too many;
+but I’m talking about circumfrences on the confines of civilization.”
+
+“Oh dear!” sighed Bumpkin. The hole seemed to him too choked up with
+“larnin’” for the rat ever to come out—he could glean nothing from this
+highly wrought and highly polished enthusiasm.
+
+“And, notwithstanding and accordingly,” continued the Don, “they do say,
+goodness knows how true it is, that they’re going to have two more
+assizes in the year. All that I can say is, Mr. Bumpkin—and, mark my
+words, there’ll be no stopping in London at all, but it will be just a
+reg’ler Judge’s merry-go-round.” {138}
+
+Mr. Bumpkin dropped a look into his glass, and the two companions came
+out of the door and proceeded along under the archway until they came to
+the corner of Bridge Street, Blackfriars. Exactly at that point a young
+woman with a baby in her arms came in contact with Mr. Bumpkin, and in a
+very angry tone said,—
+
+“I tell you what it is, don’t you take them liberties with me or I’ll
+give you in charge.”
+
+And the young woman passed on with her baby. Just at that moment, and
+while Master Bumpkin was meditating on this strange conduct of the young
+female, he felt a smart tug at his watch, and, looking down, saw the
+broken chain hanging from his pocket.
+
+“Zounds!” he exclaimed, “I never zeed anything claner than thic; did thee
+zee thic feller?”
+
+“There he goes,” said O’Rapley.
+
+“There ur gooes,” said Mr. Bumpkin, and, as fast as he could, pursued the
+thief.
+
+“Stop un!” he cried. “Stop thic there thief; he got my watch.”
+
+But it was a long time before Master Bumpkin’s mandate was obeyed; the
+value of a policeman, like that of every other commodity, depends upon
+his rarity. There was no policeman to be found. There was a fire escape
+in the middle of the street, but that was of no use to Master Bumpkin.
+Away went thief, and away went Bumpkin, who could “foot it,” as he said,
+“pooty well, old as he wur.” Nor did either the thief or himself stop
+until they got nearly to the bridge, when, to Bumpkin’s great
+astonishment, up came the thief, walking coolly towards him. This was
+another mystery, in addition to those mentioned by Mr. O’Rapley. But the
+fact was, that the hue and cry was now raised, and although Master
+Bumpkin did not perceive it, about a hundred people, men, women, and
+boys, were in full chase; and when that gentleman was, as Bumpkin
+thought, coolly coming towards him, he was simply at bay, run down,
+without hope of escape; and fully determined to face the matter out with
+all the coolness he could command.
+
+“Take un,” said Bumpkin; “take un oop; thee dam scoundrel!”
+
+“Take care what you’re saying,” said the thief. “I’m a respectable man,
+and there’s law in the land.”
+
+“Yes, and thee shall have un, too, thee willin; thee stole my watch, thee
+knows that.”
+
+“You’re a liar,” said the captive.
+
+“Why thee’s got un on, dang if thee bean’t, and a wearin’ on un. Well,
+this bates all; take un oop, pleeceman.”
+
+At this moment, which is always the nick of time chosen by the force,
+that is to say, when everything is done except the handcuffs, a policeman
+with a great deal of authority in his appearance came up, and plunged his
+hands under his heavy coat-tails, as though he were about to deliver them
+of the bower anchor of a ship.
+
+“Do you give him in charge?”
+
+“Sure enough do ur,” said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+So the handcuffs were put on, and the stalwart policeman, like a hero
+with the captive of his bow and spear, marched him along at a great rate,
+Bumpkin striding out manfully at the side, amid a great crowd of small
+boys, with all their heads turned towards the prisoner as they ran, in
+the highest state of delight and excitement. Even Bumpkin looked as if
+he had made a good thing of it, and seemed as pleased as the boys.
+
+As they came again to the corner of Ludgate Hill, there stood Mr.
+O’Rapley, looking very pompous and dignified, as became so great a man.
+
+“You’ve got him then,” said he.
+
+“Ay; come on, Master Rapley, come on.”
+
+“One moment,” said the official; “I must here leave you for the present,
+Mr. Bumpkin; we are not allowed to give evidence in Criminal Courts any
+more than Her Majesty’s Judges themselves; we are a part of the Court.
+But, besides all that, I did not see what happened; what was it?”
+
+“Well,” said Mr. Bumpkin, “that be rum too, sir; thee see thic feller
+steal my watch, surely.”
+
+“Indeed, Mr. Bumpkin, it was so quickly done that I really did _not_ see
+it, if you ask me.”
+
+“Why, he dragged un out o’ thic pocket.”
+
+“No doubt, Master Bumpkin; but it does not follow that I see it.”
+
+“Thee can come and say I wur with thee, anyhow.”
+
+“I can’t give evidence, Mr. Bumpkin, as I told you before; and, besides,
+I must not appear in this matter at all. You know I was absent to oblige
+you, and it’s possible I may be of some further service to you yet; but
+please don’t mention me in this matter. I assure you it will do harm,
+and perhaps I should lose my place.”
+
+“Well, Master Rapley,” said Bumpkin, taking his hand, “I won’t do thee no
+harm if I knows it, and there be plenty of evidence.”
+
+“Evidence! You say you found the watch upon him?”
+
+“Sartinly.”
+
+“The case then is clear. You don’t want any evidence besides that.”
+
+“Well, sir, you’re a man o’ larnin’. I bean’t much of a scollard, I’ll
+tak’ thy advice; but I must get along; they be waitin’ for I.”
+
+“I will see you at Westminster to-morrow, Mr. Bumpkin.”
+
+“All right, zir, all right.”
+
+And with that Mr. O’Rapley proceeded on his way down Fleet Street, and
+Mr. Bumpkin proceeded on his up Ludgate Hill in the midst of an excited
+crowd.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+The coarse mode of procedure in Ahab _v._ Naboth ruthlessly exposed and
+carefully contrasted with the humane and enlightened form of the present
+day.
+
+Here I awoke, and my wife said unto me, “Dear, you have been dreaming and
+talking in your sleep.”
+
+Now fearing for what I may have said, although of a tolerably clear
+conscience, I enquired if she could tell me what words I had uttered.
+She replied that I had mentioned the names of many eminent men: such as
+Mr. Justice Common Sense.
+
+“Indeed,” quoth I; and then I told my dream. Upon which she observed,
+that it seemed there must be much exaggeration. To this I made answer
+that dreams do generally magnify events, and impress them more vividly
+upon the senses, inasmuch as the imagination was like a microscope: it
+enabled you to see many things which would escape the naked eye.
+
+“But,” said my partner, “if they are distorted?”
+
+“If they are distorted, they are not reliable; but a clear imagination,
+like a good lens, faithfully presents its objects, although in a larger
+form, in order that those who have no time for scientific observation,
+may see what the scientist desires to direct their attention to. There
+are creatures almost invisible to the naked eye, which, nevertheless,
+cause great irritation to the nerves. So, also, there are matters
+affecting the body corporate of these kingdoms which the public are blind
+to and suffer from, but which, if thoroughly exposed, they may be
+inclined to take a hand in removing.”
+
+“I don’t believe that Mr. O’Rapley,” said she: “he seems a cantankerous,
+conceited fellow.”
+
+“Why so he is; but cantankerous and conceited fellows sometimes speak the
+truth. They’re like those cobwebbed, unwholesome-looking bottles which
+have lain a long time in cellars. You would hardly like to come in
+contact with them, and yet they often contain a clear and beautiful wine.
+This Mr. O’Rapley is a worthy man who knows a great deal, and although a
+bit of a toady to his superiors, expresses his opinions pretty freely
+behind their backs.”
+
+“And what of this Master Bumpkin—this worthy Master Bumpkin I hear you
+speak of so often?”
+
+“A very shrewd man in some respects and a silly one in others.”
+
+“Not an unusual combination.”
+
+“By no means.”
+
+And then I told her what I have already related; to which she observed it
+was a pity some friend had not interposed and stopped the business. I
+answered, that friends were no doubt useful, but friends or no friends we
+must have law, and whether for sixpence or a shilling it ought to be
+readily attainable: that no one would be satisfied with having no other
+authority than that of friendship to settle our disputes; and besides
+that, friends themselves sometimes fell out and were generally the most
+hard to reconcile without an appeal to our tribunals.
+
+“Well, it does seem a pity,” said she, “that judges cannot sit as they
+did in Moses’ time at all seasons so as to decide expeditiously and
+promptly between the claims of parties.”
+
+“Why so they do sit ‘continuously,’” quoth I, “but the whole difficulty
+consists in getting at them. What is called procedure is so circuitous
+and perplexing, that long before you get to your journey’s end you may
+faint by the way.”
+
+“Is there no one with good sense who will take this matter up and help
+this poor man to come by his rights. It must be very expensive for him
+to be kept away from his business so long, and his poor wife left all
+alone to manage the farm.”
+
+“Why, so it is, but then going to law, which means seeking to maintain
+your rights, is a very expensive thing: a luxury fit only for rich men.”
+
+“Why then do people in moderate circumstances indulge in it?”
+
+“Because they are obliged to defend themselves against oppressive and
+unjust demands; although I think, under the present system, if a man had
+a small estate, say a few acres, and a rich man laid claim to it, it
+would be far better for the small man to give up the land without any
+bother.”
+
+“But no man of spirit would do that?”
+
+“No, that is exactly where it is, it’s the spirit of resistance that
+comes in.”
+
+“Resistance! a man would be a coward to yield without a fight.”
+
+“Why so he would, and that is what makes law such a beautiful science,
+and its administration so costly. Men will fight to the last rather than
+give in. If Naboth had lived in these times there would have been no
+need of his death in order to oust him from his vineyard. Ahab could
+have done a much more sensible thing and walked in by process of law.”
+
+“In what way?”
+
+“In the first place he could have laid claim to a right of way, or
+easement as it is called, of some sort: or could have alleged that Naboth
+had encroached on his land by means of a fence or drain or ditch.”
+
+“Well, but if he hadn’t?”
+
+“If he hadn’t, so much the better for the Plaintiff, and so much the
+worse for Naboth.”
+
+“I don’t understand; if Naboth had done no wrong, surely it would be far
+better for him than if he had.”
+
+“Not in the long run, my dear: and for this reason, if he had encroached
+it would have taken very little trouble to ascertain the fact, and Naboth
+being a just and honest man, would only require to have it pointed out to
+him to remedy the evil. Maps and plans of the estate would doubtless
+have shown him his mistake, and, like a wise man, he would have avoided
+going to law.”
+
+“I see clearly that the good man would have said, ‘Neighbour Ahab, we
+have been on neighbourly terms for a long lime, and I do not wish in any
+way to alter that excellent feeling which has always subsisted between
+us. I see clearly by these maps and plans which worthy Master Metefield
+hath shown me that my hedge hath encroached some six inches upon thy
+domain, wherefore, Neighbour Ahab, take, I pray thee, as much of the land
+as belongeth unto thee, according to just admeasurement.”
+
+“Why certainly, so would the honest Naboth have communed with Ahab, and
+there would have been an end of the business.”
+
+“But show me, darling, how being in the wrong was better for good Naboth
+than being in the right in this business?”
+
+“Most willingly,” said I; “you see, my dear, there was quickly an end of
+the matter by Naboth yielding to the just demands of neighbour Ahab. But
+now let us suppose honest Naboth in the right concerning his vineyard,
+and neighbour Ahab to be making an unjust demand. You have already most
+justly observed that in that case it would be cowardly on the part of
+Naboth to yield without a struggle?”
+
+“Assuredly.”
+
+“Well then, that means a lawsuit.”
+
+“But surely,” said my wife, “it ought to be soon seen who is in the
+wrong. Where is Master Metefield who you said just now was so accurate a
+surveyor, and where are those plans you spoke of which showed the
+situation of the estates?”
+
+“Ah, my dear, I see you know very little of the intricacies of the law;
+that good Master Metefield, instead of being a kind of judge to determine
+quickly as he did for Master Naboth what were the boundaries of the
+vineyard, hath not now so easy a task of it, because Ahab being in the
+wrong he is not accepted by him as his judge.”
+
+“But if the plans are correct, how can he alter them?”
+
+“He cannot alter them, but the question of correctness of boundary as
+shown, is matter of disputation, and will have to be discussed by
+surveyors on both sides, and supported and disputed by witnesses
+innumerable on both sides: old men coming up with ancient memories,
+hedgers and ditchers, farmers and bailiffs and people of all sorts and
+conditions, to prove and disprove where the boundary line really divides
+Neighbour Naboth’s vineyard from Neighbour Ahab’s park.”
+
+“But surely Naboth will win?”
+
+“All that depends upon a variety of things, such as, first, the
+witnesses; secondly, the counsel; thirdly, the judge; fourthly, the
+jury,”
+
+“O,” said my wife, “pray don’t go on to a fifthly—it seems to me poor
+Naboth is like to have a sorry time of it before he establish his
+boundary line.”
+
+“Ay, if he ever do so: but he first is got into the hands of his Lawyers,
+next into the hands of his Counsel, thirdly, into Chancery, fourthly,
+into debt—”
+
+“Pray, do not let us have a fifthly here either; I like not these
+thirdlys and fourthlys, for they seem to bring poor Naboth into bad case;
+but what said you about debt?”
+
+“I say that Naboth, not being a wealthy man, but, as I take it, somewhat
+in the position of neighbour Bumpkin, will soon be forced to part with a
+good deal of his little property in order to carry on the action.”
+
+“But will not the action be tried in a reasonable time, say a week or
+two?”
+
+“I perceive,” cried I, “that you are yet in the very springtide and
+babyhood of innocence in these matters. There must be summonses for time
+and for further time; there must be particulars and interrogatories and
+discoveries and inspections and strikings out and puttings in and appeals
+and demurrers and references and—”
+
+“O, please don’t. I perceive that poor Naboth is already ruined a long
+way back. I think when you came to the interrogatories he was in want of
+funds to carry on the action.”
+
+“A Chancery action sometimes takes years,” said I.
+
+“Years! then shame to our Parliament.”
+
+“I pray you do not take on so,” said I. “Naboth, according to the decree
+of Fate, is to be ruined. Jezebel did it in a wicked, clumsy and brutal
+manner. Anyone could see she was wrong, and her name has been handed
+down to us with infamy and execration. I now desire to show how Ahab
+could have accomplished his purpose in a gentle, manly and scientific
+manner and saved his wife’s reputation. Naboth’s action, carried as it
+would be from Court to Court upon every possible point upon which an
+appeal can go, under our present system, would effectually ruin him ages
+before the boundary line could be settled. It would be all swallowed up
+in costs.”
+
+“Poor Naboth!” said my wife.
+
+“And,” continued I, “the law reports would hand down the _cause celebre_
+of _Ahab_ v. _Naboth_ as a most interesting leading case upon the subject
+of goodness knows what: perhaps as to whether a man, under certain
+circumstances, may not alter his neighbour’s landmark in spite of the
+statute law of Moses.”
+
+“And so you think poor Naboth would be sold up?”
+
+“That were about the only certain event in his case, except that Ahab
+would take possession and so put an end for ever to the question as to
+where the boundary line should run.”
+
+Here again I dozed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+
+Shewing that lay tribunals are not exactly Punch and Judy shows where the
+puppet is moved by the man underneath.
+
+It was particularly fortunate for Mr. Bumpkin that his case was not in
+the list of causes to be tried on the following day. It may seem a
+curious circumstance to the general reader that a great case like
+_Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_, involving so much expense of time, trouble, and
+money should be in the list one day and out the next; should be sometimes
+in the list of one Court and sometimes in the list of another; flying
+about like a butterfly from flower to flower and caught by no one on the
+look-out for it. But this is not a phenomenon in our method of
+procedure, which startles you from time to time with its miraculous
+effects. You can calculate upon nothing in the system but its
+uncertainty. Most gentle and innocent reader, I saw that there was no
+Nisi Prius Court to sit on the following day, so _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_
+could not be taken, list or no list. The lucky Plaintiff therefore found
+himself at liberty to appear before that August Tribunal which sits at
+the Mansion House in the City of London. A palatial and imposing
+building it was on the outside, but within, so far as was apparent to me,
+it was a narrow ill ventilated den, full of all unclean people and
+unpleasant smells. I say full of unclean people, but I allude merely to
+that portion of it which was appropriated to the British Public; for,
+exalted on a high bench and in a huge and ponderous chair or throne sat
+the Prince of Citizens and the King of the Corporation, proud in his
+dignity, grand in his commercial position, and highly esteemed in the
+opinion of the world. There he sat, the representative of the Criminal
+Law, and impartial, as all will allow, in its administration. Wonderful
+being is my Lord Mayor, thought I, he must have the Law at his fingers’
+ends. Yes, there it is sitting under him in the shape and person of his
+truly respectable clerk. The Common Law resides in the breasts of the
+Judges, but it is here at my Lord Mayor’s fingers’ ends. He has to deal
+with gigantic commercial frauds; with petty swindlers, common thieves;
+mighty combinations of conspirators; with extradition laws; with
+elaborate bankruptcy delinquencies; with the niceties of the criminal law
+in every form and shape. Surely, thought I, he should be one of those
+tremendous geniuses who can learn the criminal law before breakfast, or
+at least before dinner! So he was. His lordship seemed to have learned
+it one morning before he was awake. But it is not for me to criticise
+tribunals or men: I have the simple duty to perform of relating the story
+of the renowned Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+After the night charges are disposed of up comes the man through the
+floor, not Mr. Bumpkin, but Mr. Bumpkin’s prisoner. He comes up through
+the floor like the imp in the pantomime: and then the two tall warders
+prevent his going any farther.
+
+He was a pale, intelligent looking creature, fairly dressed in frock
+coat, dark waistcoat and grey trousers, with a glove on his left hand and
+another in his right; looked meekly and modestly round, and then politely
+bowed to the Lord Mayor. The charge was then read to him and with a
+smile he indignantly repudiated the idea of theft.
+
+And I saw in my dream that he was represented by a learned Counsel, who
+at this moment entered the Court, shook hands with the Lord Mayor, and
+saying, “I appear, my lord, for the prisoner,” took his seat upon the
+bench, and entered for a minute or so into some private and apparently
+jocular conversation with his Lordship.
+
+The name of the learned Counsel was Mr. Nimble, whom we have before seen.
+He was a very goodly-shaped man, with a thin face and brown hair. His
+eyes were bright, and always seemed to look into a witness rather than at
+him. His manner was jaunty, good-natured, easy, and gay; not remarkable
+for courtesy, but at the same time, not unpleasantly rude. I thought the
+learned Counsel could be disagreeable if he liked, but might be a very
+pleasant, sociable fellow to spend an hour with—not in the witness-box.
+
+He was certainly a skilful and far-seeing Counsel, if I may make so bold
+as to judge from this case. And methought that nothing he did or said
+was said or done without a purpose. Nor could I help thinking that a
+good many Counsel, young and old, if their minds were free from
+prejudice, might learn many lessons from this case. It is with this
+object that, in my waking moments, I record the impressions of this
+dream. I do not say Mr. Nimble was an example to follow on all points,
+for he had that common failing of humanity, a want of absolute
+perfection. But he was as near to perfection in defending a prisoner as
+any man I ever saw, and the proceedings in this very case, if carefully
+analysed, will go a long way towards proving that assertion.
+
+After the interchange of courtesies between his Lordship and Mr. Nimble,
+the learned Counsel looked down from the Bench on to the top of Mr.
+Keepimstraight’s bald head and nodded as if he were patting it. Mr.
+Keepimstraight was the Lord Mayor’s Clerk. He was very stout and seemed
+puffed up with law: had an immense regard for himself and consequently
+very little for anybody else: but that, so far as I have been able to
+ascertain, is a somewhat common failing among official personages. He
+ordered everybody about except the Lord Mayor, and him he seemed to push
+about as though he were wheeling him in a legal Bath-chair. His Lordship
+was indeed a great invalid in respect to matters of law; I think he had
+overdone it, if I may use the expression; his study must have been
+tremendous to have acquired a knowledge of the laws of England in so
+short a time. But being somewhat feeble, and in his modesty much
+misdoubting his own judgment, he did nothing and said nothing, except it
+was prescribed by his physician, Dr. Keepimstraight. Even the solicitors
+stood in awe of Dr. Keepimstraight.
+
+And now we are all going to begin—Walk up!
+
+The intelligent and decent-looking prisoner having been told what the
+charge against him was, namely, Highway Robbery with violence, declares
+that he is as “innercent as the unborn babe, your lordship:” and then Mr.
+Keepimstraight asks, where the Prosecutor is—“Prosecutor!” shout a dozen
+voices at once—all round, everywhere is the cry of “Prosecutor!” There
+was no answer, but in the midst of the unsavoury crowd there was seen to
+be a severe scuffle—whether it was a fight or a man in a fit could not be
+ascertained for some time; at length Mr. Bumpkin was observed struggling
+and tearing to escape from the throng.
+
+“Why don’t you come when you are called?” asks the Junior Clerk, handing
+him the Testament, as Mr. Bumpkin stood revealed in the witness-box.
+
+And I saw that he was dressed in a light frock, not unlike a pinafore,
+which was tastefully wrought with divers patterns of needlework on the
+front and back thereof; at the openings thus embroidered could be seen a
+waistcoat of many stripes, that crossed and recrossed one another at
+various angles and were formed of several colours. He wore a high calico
+shirt collar, which on either side came close under the ear; and round
+his neck a red handkerchief with yellow ends. His linen certainly did
+credit to Mrs. Bumpkin’s love of “tidiness,” and altogether the
+prosecutor wore a clean and respectable appearance. His face was broad,
+round and red, indicating a jovial disposition and a temperament not
+easily disturbed, except when “whate” was down too low to sell and he
+wanted to buy stock or pay the rent: a state of circumstances which I
+believe has sometimes happened of late years. A white short-clipped
+beard covered his chin, while his cheeks were closely shaven. He had
+twinkling oval eyes, which I should say, he invariably half-closed when
+he was making a bargain. If you offered less than his price the first
+refusal would come from them. His nose was inexpressive and appeared to
+have been a dormant feature for many a year. It said nothing for or
+against any thing or any body, and from its tip sprouted a few white
+hairs. His mouth, without utterance, said plainly enough that he owed
+“nobody nothink” and was a thousand pound man every morning he rose. It
+was a mouth of good bore, and not by any means intended for a silver
+spoon.
+
+Such was the Prosecutor as he stood in the witness-box at the Mansion
+House on this memorable occasion; and no one could doubt that truth and
+justice would prevail.
+
+“Name?” said Mr. Keepimstraight.
+
+“Bumpkin.”
+
+Down it goes.
+
+“Where?”
+
+After a pause, which Mr. Nimble makes a note of.
+
+“Where?” repeats Keepimstraight.
+
+“Westminister.”
+
+“Where there?”
+
+“‘Goose’ publichouse.”
+
+Down it goes.
+
+“Yes?” says Keepimstraight.
+
+Bumpkin stares.
+
+“Yes, go on,” says the clerk.
+
+“Go on,” says the crier; “go on,” say half-a-dozen voices all round.
+
+“Can’t you go on?” says the clerk.
+
+“Tell your story,” says his Lordship, putting his arms on the elbows of
+the huge chair. “Tell it in your own way, my man.”
+
+“I wur gwine down thic place when—” “my man” began.
+
+“What time was this?” asks the clerk.
+
+“Arf arter four, as near as I can tell.”
+
+“How do you know?” asks the clerk.
+
+“I heard—”
+
+“I object,” says the Counsel—“can’t tell us what he heard.”
+
+Then I perceived that the Lord Mayor leant forward towards Mr.
+Keepimstraight, and the latter gentleman turned his head and leaned
+towards the Lord Mayor, so that his Lordship could obtain a full view of
+Mr. Keepimstraight’s eyes.
+
+Then I perceived that Mr. Keepimstraight winked his left eye and
+immediately turned to his work again, and his Lordship said:
+
+“I don’t think what you heard, witness, is evidence.”
+
+“Can’t have that,” said Mr. Keepimstraight, as though he took his
+instructions and the Law from his Lordship.
+
+“You said it was half-past four.”
+
+“Heard the clock strike th’ arf hour.”
+
+Here his Lordship leant again forward and Mr. Keepimstraight turned round
+so as to bring his eyes into the same position as heretofore. And I
+perceived that Mr. Keepimstraight winked his right eye, upon which his
+Lordship said:
+
+“I think that’s evidence.”
+
+Clerk whispered, behind his hand, “Can hardly exclude that.”
+
+“Can hardly exclude that,” repeats his Lordship; then—turning to the
+Learned Counsel—“Can’t shut that out, Mr. Nimble.”
+
+“You seldom can shut a church clock out, my Lord,” replies the Counsel.
+
+At this answer his Lordship smiled and the Court was convulsed with
+laughter for several minutes.
+
+“Now, then,” said Mr. Keepimstraight, “we must have order in Court.”
+
+“We must have order in Court,” says his Lordship.
+
+“Order in Court,” says the Junior Clerk, and “Order!” shouts the
+Policeman on duty.
+
+Then Mr. Bumpkin stated in clear and intelligible language how the man
+came up and took his watch and ran away. Foolishly enough he said
+nothing about the woman with the baby, and wisely enough Mr. Nimble asked
+nothing about it. But what an opportunity this would have been for an
+unskilful Counsel to lay the foundation for a conviction. Knowing, as he
+probably would from the prisoner but from no other possible source about
+the circumstance, he might have shown by a question or two that it was a
+conspiracy between the prisoner and the young woman. Not so Mr. Nimble,
+he knew how to make an investment of this circumstance for future profit:
+indeed Mr. Bumpkin had invested it for him by not mentioning it.
+Beautiful is Advocacy if you do not mar it by unskilful handling.
+
+When, after describing the robbery, the prosecutor continued:
+
+“I ses to my companion, ses I—”
+
+“I object,” says Mr. Nimble.
+
+And I perceived that his Lordship leant forward once more towards Mr.
+Keepimstraight, and Mr. Keepimstraight turned as aforetime towards the
+Lord Mayor, but not quite, I thought, so fully round as heretofore; the
+motion seemed to be performed with less exactness than usual, and that
+probably was why the operation miscarried. Mr. Keepimstraight having
+given the correct signal, as he thought, and the Enginedriver on the
+Bench having misunderstood it, an accident naturally would have taken
+place but for the extreme caution and care of his Lordship, who, if he
+had been a young Enginedriver, would in all probability have dashed on
+neck or nothing through every obstacle. Not so his Lordship. Not being
+sure whether he was on the up or down line, he pulled up.
+
+Mr. Keepimstraight sat pen in hand looking at his paper, and waiting for
+the judicial voice which should convey to his ear the announcement that
+“I ses, ses I,” is evidence or no evidence. Judge then of Mr.
+Keepimstraight’s disappointment when, after waiting in breathless silence
+for some five minutes, he at last looks up and sees his Lordship in deep
+anxiety to catch his eye without the public observing it. His Lordship
+leant forward, blushing with innocence, and whispered something behind
+his hand to Mr. Keepimstraight. And in my dream I heard his Lordship
+ask:
+
+“_Which eye_?”
+
+To which Mr. Keepimstraight as coolly as if nothing had happened,
+whispered behind his hand:
+
+“_Left_!” and then coughed.
+
+“O then,” exclaimed his Lordship, “it is clearly not evidence.”
+
+“It’s not evidence,” repeated the clerk; and then to the discomfiture of
+Mr. Nimble, he went on, “You say you had a companion.”
+
+This was more than the learned Counsel wanted, seeing as he did that
+there was another investment to be made if he could only manage it.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin blushed now, but said nothing.
+
+“Would you excuse me,” said Mr. Nimble; “I shall not cross-examine this
+witness.”
+
+“O, very good,” says Keepimstraight, thinking probably it was to be a
+plea of guilty hereafter; “very good. Then I think that is all—is that
+the watch?”
+
+“It be,” said the witness; “I ken swear to un.”
+
+It certainly would be from no want of metal if Mr. Bumpkin could not
+identify the timepiece, for it was a ponderous-looking watch, nearly as
+large as a tea-saucer.
+
+Then said Mr. Nimble:
+
+“You say that is your watch, do you?”
+
+“It spakes for itself.”
+
+“I don’t think that’s evidence,” says Mr. Keepimstraight, with a smile.
+
+“That’s clearly not evidence,” says the Lord Mayor, gravely. Whereupon
+there was another burst of laughter, in which the clerk seemed to take
+the lead. The remarkable fact, however, was, that his Lordship was
+perfectly at a loss to comprehend the joke. He was “as grave as a
+Judge.”
+
+After the laughter had subsided, the learned Keepimstraight leaned
+backward, and the learned Lord Mayor leaned forward, and it seemed to me
+they were conversing together about the cause of the laughter; for
+suddenly a smile illuminated the rubicund face of the cheery Lord Mayor,
+and at last he had a laugh to himself—a solo, after the band had ceased.
+And then his Lordship spoke:
+
+“What your watch may say is not evidence, because it has not been sworn.”
+
+Then the band struck up again to a lively tune, his Lordship playing the
+first Fiddle; and the whole scene terminated in the most humorous and
+satisfactory manner for all parties—_except_, perhaps, the prisoner—who
+was duly committed for trial to the next sittings of the Central Criminal
+Court, which were to take place in a fortnight.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin naturally asked for his watch, but that request was smilingly
+refused.
+
+“Bin in our famly forty years,” exclaimed the prisoner.
+
+“Will you be quiet?” said Mr. Nimble petulantly, for it was a foolish
+observation for the prisoner to make, inasmuch as, if Mr. Bumpkin had
+been represented by professional skill, the remark would surely be met at
+the trial with abundant evidence to disprove it. Mr. Bumpkin at present,
+however, has no professional skill.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Here something disturbed me, and I awoke. While preparing to enjoy my
+pipe as was my custom in these intervals, my wife remarked:
+
+“I do not approve of that Master O’Rapley by any means, with his
+cynicisms and sarcasms and round squares. Did ever anyone hear of such a
+contradiction?”
+
+“Have patience,” quoth I, “and we shall see how worthy Master O’Rapley
+makes it out. I conjecture that he means the same thing that we hear of
+under the term, ‘putting the round peg into the square hole.’”
+
+“But why should such a thing be done when it is easy surely to find a
+square peg that would fit?”
+
+“Granted; but the master-hand may be under obligations to the round peg;
+or the round peg may be a disagreeable peg, or a hundred things: one
+doesn’t know. I am but a humble observer of human nature, and like not
+these ungracious cavillings at Master O’Rapley. Let us calmly follow
+this dream, and endeavour to profit by its lessons without finding fault
+with its actors.”
+
+“But I would like to have a better explanation of that Round Square,
+nevertheless,” muttered my wife as she went on with her knitting. So to
+appease her I discoursed as follows:—
+
+“The round square,” said I, “means the inappropriate combination of
+opposites.”
+
+“Now, not too long words,” said she, “and not too much philosophy.”
+
+“Very well, my dear,” I continued; “Don O’Rapley is right, not in his
+particular instance, but in the general application of his meaning. Look
+around upon the world, or so much of it as is comprised within our own
+limited vision, and what do you find?”
+
+“I find everything,” said my wife, “beautifully ordered and arranged,
+from the Archbishop of Canterbury to the Parish Beadle.”
+
+“What do you find?” I repeated. “Mark the O’Rapley’s knowledge of human
+nature, you not only find Waterloos won in the Cricket-field of Eton, but
+Bishopricks and Secretaryships and many other glorious victories; so that
+you might—”
+
+“Don’t be foolish; Trafalgar was not won in the Cricket-field.”
+
+“No, but it was fought on the Isis or the Cam, I forget which. But carry
+the O’Rapley’s theory into daily life, and test it by common observation,
+what do you find? Why, that this round square is by no means a modern
+invention. It has been worked in all periods of our history. Here is a
+Vicar with a rich benefice, intended by nature for a Jockey or a
+Whipper-in—”
+
+“What, the benefice?”
+
+“No, the Vicar! Here is a barrister who ought to have been a curate, and
+become enthusiastic over worked slippers: there is another thrust into a
+Government appointment, not out of respect to him, the Minister doesn’t
+know him, but to serve a political friend, or to place an investment in
+the hands of a political rival, who will return it with interest on a
+future day. The gentleman thus provided for at the country’s expense
+would, if left to himself, have probably become an excellent
+billiard-marker or pigeon-shooter. Here is another, who, although a
+member of Parliament, was elected by no constituency under Heaven or
+above it; and it is clear he was intended by Nature for a position where
+obsequiousness and servility meet with their appropriate reward. Another
+fills the post of some awful Commissioner of something, drawing an
+immense salary, and doing an immense amount of mischief for it, intended
+naturally for a secretary to an Autocratic Nobleman, who would trample
+the rights of the people under foot. Here is another—”
+
+“O pray, my dear, do not let us have another—”
+
+“Only one more,” said I; “here is another, thrust into the Cabinet for
+being so disagreeable a fellow, who ought to have been engaged in making
+fireworks for Crystal Palace fêtes.”
+
+“But this is only an opinion of yours; how do you know these gentlemen
+are not fitted for the posts they occupy? surely if they do the work—”
+
+“The public would have no right to grumble.”
+
+“And as for obsequiousness and servility, I am afraid those are epithets
+too often unjustly applied to those gentlemen whose courteous demeanour
+wins them the respect of their superiors.”
+
+“Quite so,” said I; “and I don’t see that it matters what is the
+distinguishing epithet you apply to them: this courteous demeanour or
+obsequiousness is no doubt the very best gift Nature can bestow upon an
+individual as an outfit for the voyage of life.”
+
+“Dear me, you were complaining but just now of its placing men in
+positions for which they were not qualified.”
+
+“Not complaining, my love; only remarking. I go in for obsequiousness,
+and trust I shall never be found wanting in that courteous demeanour
+towards my superiors which shall lead to my future profit.”
+
+“But would you have men only courteous?”
+
+“By no means, I would have them talented also.”
+
+“But in what proportion would you have the one to the other?”
+
+“I would have the same proportion maintained that exists between the
+rudder and the ship: you want just enough tact to steer your
+obsequiousness.”
+
+Here again I dozed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+
+A comfortable evening at the Goose
+
+When Mr. Bumpkin left the Mansion House, he was in a state of great
+triumph not to say ecstasy: for it seemed to him that he had had
+everything his own way. He was not cross-examined; no witnesses were
+called, and it had only been stated by the prisoner himself, not proved,
+although he said he should prove it at the trial, that the watch had been
+in the family for upwards of forty years.
+
+“The biggest lie,” muttered Master Bumpkin, “that ever wur told.” And
+then he reasoned in this wise: “how could it a bin in his family forty
+year when he, Bumpkin, only lost it the day afore in the most barefaced
+manner? He was a pooty feller as couldn’t tell a better story than
+thic.”
+
+And then methought in my dream, “Ah, Bumpkin, thou may’st triumph now,
+but little dreamest thou what is in store for thee at the trial. Wait
+till all those little insignificant points, hardly visible at present,
+shall rise, like spear-heads against thee at the Old Bailey and thrust
+thee through and through and make thee curse the advocate’s skill and the
+thief’s impudence and the inertness of the so-called Public Prosecutor:
+and mayhap, I know not yet, show thee how wrong and robbery may triumph
+over right and innocence. Thou hast raised thyself, good Bumpkin, from
+the humblest poverty to comparative wealth and a lawsuit: but boast not
+overmuch lest thou find Law a taskmaster instead of a Protector!
+
+Thus, moralizing in my dream I perceived that Mr. Bumpkin after talking
+to some men betook himself to a Bus and proceeded on his way to the
+“Goose” at Westminster, whither he arrived in due time and in high
+spirits.
+
+The Goose was a nice cosy public-house, situated, as I before observed,
+near the river side and commanded a beautiful view of the neighbouring
+wharves and the passing craft. It was a favourite resort of waterside
+men, carters, carriers, labourers on the wharf and men out of work. The
+Military also patronized it:—And many were the jovial tales told around
+the taproom hearth by members of Her Majesty’s troops to admiring and
+astonished Ignorance.
+
+It was a particularly cold and bleak day, this ninth of March one
+thousand eight hundred and something. The wind was due East and
+accompanied ever and anon with mighty thick clouds of sleet and snow.
+The fireside therefore was particularly comfortable, and the cheery faces
+around the hearth were pleasant to behold.
+
+Now Mr. Bumpkin, as the reader knows, was not alone in his expedition.
+He had his witness, named Joseph Wurzel: called in the village “Cocky,”
+inasmuch as it was generally considered that he set much by his wisdom:
+and was possessed of considerable attainments. For instance, he could
+snare a hare as well as any man in the county: or whistle down pheasants
+to partake of a Buckwheat refection which he was in the habit of
+spreading for their repast.
+
+A good many fellows who were envious of Joe’s abilities avowed that “he
+was a regler cunnin’ feller, as ud some day find out his mistake;”
+meaning thereby that Joe would inevitably be sent to prison. Others
+affirmed that he was a good deal too cunning for that; that he was a
+regular artful dodger, and knew how to get round the vicar and all in
+authority under him. The reader knows that he was a regular attendant at
+Church, and by that means was in high favour. Nor was his mother behind
+hand in this respect, especially in the weeks before Christmas; and truly
+her religion brought its reward even in this world in the shape of Parish
+Gifts.
+
+No doubt Joe was fond of the chase, but in this respect he but imitated
+his superiors, except that I believe he occasionally went beyond them in
+the means he employed.
+
+Assembled in this common room at the Goose on the night in question, were
+a number of persons of various callings and some of no calling in
+particular. Most of them were acquainted, and apparently regular
+customers. One man in particular became a great favourite with Joe, and
+that was Jacob Wideawake the Birdcatcher; and it was interesting to
+listen to his conversation on the means of catching and transforming the
+London Sparrow into an article of Commerce.
+
+Joe’s dress no doubt attracted the attention of his companions when he
+first made his appearance, for it was something out of the ordinary
+style: and certainly one might say that great care had been bestowed upon
+him to render his personal appearance attractive in the witness-box. He
+wore a wideawake hat thrown back on his head, thus displaying his brown
+country-looking face to full advantage. His coat was a kind of dark
+velveteen which had probably seen better days in the Squire’s family; so
+had the long drab waistcoat. His corduroy trousers, of a light green
+colour, were hitched up at the knees with a couple of straps as though he
+wore his garters outside. His neckerchief was a bright red, tied round
+his neck in a careless but not unpicturesque manner. Take him for all in
+all he was as fine a specimen of a country lad as one could wish to
+meet,—tall, well built, healthy looking, and even handsome.
+
+Now Mr. Bumpkin, being what is called “a close man,” and prone to keep
+his own counsel on all occasions when it was not absolutely necessary to
+reveal it, had said nothing about his case before the Lord Mayor; not
+even Mrs. Oldtimes had he taken into his confidence. It is difficult to
+understand his motive for such secrecy, as it is impossible to trace in
+nine instances out of ten any particular line of human conduct to its
+source.
+
+Acting probably on some vague information that he had received, Mr.
+Bumpkin looked into the room, and told Joe that he thought they should be
+“on” to-morrow. He had learned the use of that legal term from frequent
+intercourse with Mr. Prigg. He thought they should be on but “wur not
+sartin.”
+
+“Well,” said Joe, “the sooner the better. I hates this ere hangin’
+about.” At this Jack Outofwork, Tom Lazyman, and Bill Saunter laughed;
+while Dick Devilmecare said, “He hated hanging about too; it was wus than
+work.”
+
+“And that’s bad enough, Heaven knows,” said Lazyman.
+
+Then I saw that at this moment entered a fine tall handsome soldier, who
+I afterwards learned was Sergeant Goodtale of the One Hundred and
+twenty-fourth Hussars. A smarter or more compact looking fellow it would
+be impossible to find: and he came in with such a genial, good-natured
+smile, that to look at him would almost make you believe there was no
+happiness or glory on this side the grave except in Her Majesty’s
+service—especially the Hussars!
+
+I also perceived that fluttering from the side of Sergeant Goodtale’s
+cap, placed carelessly and jauntily on the side of his head, was a bunch
+of streamers of the most fascinating red white and blue you ever could
+behold. Altogether, Sergeant Goodtale was a splendid sight. Down went
+his cane on the table with a crack, as much as to say “The Queen!” and he
+marched up to the fire and rubbed his hands: apparently taking no heed of
+any human being in the room.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin’s heart leaped when he saw the military sight: his eyes
+opened as if he were waking from a dream out of which he had been
+disturbed by a cry of “fire:” and giving Joe a wink and an obviously
+made-up look, beckoned him out of the room. As they went out they met a
+young man, shabbily clad and apparently poorly fed. He had an
+intelligent face, though somewhat emaciated. He might be, and probably
+was, a clerk out of employment, and he threw himself on the seat in a
+listless manner that plainly said he was tired of everything.
+
+This was Harry Highlow. He had been brought up with ideas beyond his
+means. It was through no fault of his that he had not been taught a
+decent trade: those responsible for his training having been possessed of
+the notion that manual labour lowers one’s respectability: an error and a
+wickedness which has been responsible for the ruin of many a promising
+youth before to-day.
+
+Harry was an intelligent, fairly educated youth, and nothing more. What
+is to be done with raw material so plentiful as that? The cheapest
+marketable commodity is an average education, especially in a country
+where even our Universities can supply you with candidates for employment
+at a cheaper rate than you can obtain the services of a first-class cook.
+This young man had tried everything that was genteel: he had even aspired
+to literature: sought employment on the Press, on the Stage, everywhere
+in fact where gentility seemed to reign. Nor do I think he lacked
+ability for any of these walks; it was not ability but opportunity that
+failed him.
+
+“Lookee ere, Joe,” said Mr. Bumpkin; “harken to me. Don’t thee ’ave nowt
+to say to that there soger.”
+
+“All right, maister,” said Joe, laughing; “thee thinks I be gwine for a
+soger. Now lookee ere, maister, I beant a fool.”
+
+“No, thee beant, Joe. I knowed thee a good while, and thee beant no
+fool.”
+
+Joe laughed. It was a big laugh was Joe’s, for his mouth was somewhat
+large, and a grin always seemed to twist it. On this occasion, so great
+was his surprise that his master should think he would be fool enough to
+enlist for a “soger,” that his mouth assumed the most irregular shape I
+ever saw, and bore a striking resemblance to a hole such as might be made
+in the head of a drum by the heel of a boot.
+
+“I be up to un, maister.”
+
+“Have no truck wi’ un, I tell ee; don’t speak to un. Thee be my head
+witness, and doant dare goo away; no, no more un if—”
+
+“No fear,” said Joe. “’Taint likely I be gwine to listen to ee. I knows
+what he wants; he’s arter listin chaps.”
+
+“Look ee ere, Joe, if ur speaks to thee, jist say I beant sich a fool as
+I looks; that’ll ave un.”
+
+“Right,” says Joe; “I beant sich a fool as I looks; that’ll ave un
+straight.”
+
+“Now, take heed; I’m gwine into the parlour wi’ Landlord.”
+
+Accordingly, into the little quiet snuggery of Mr. Oldtimes, Mr. Bumpkin
+betook himself. And many and many an agreeable evening was passed with
+Mr. and Mrs. Oldtimes during the period when Mr. Bumpkin was waiting for
+his trial. For Mr. and Mrs. Oldtimes being Somersetshire people knew
+many inhabitants of the old days in the village of Yokelton, where Mr.
+Bumpkin “were bred and born’d.”
+
+Meanwhile the “head witness” had returned to the cheerful scene in the
+taproom, and sat leering out of the corners of his eyes upon the
+Sergeant, as though he expected every moment that officer would make a
+spring at him and have him upon the floor. But the Sergeant was not a
+bullying, blustering sort of man at all; his demeanour was quiet in the
+extreme. He scarcely looked at anyone. Simply engaged in warming his
+hands at the cheerful fire, no one had cause to apprehend anything from
+him.
+
+But a man, Sergeant or no Sergeant, must, out of common civility,
+exchange a word now and then, if only about the weather; and so he said,
+carelessly,—
+
+“Sharp weather, lads!”
+
+Now, not even Joe could disagree with this; it was true, and was assented
+to by all; Joe silently acquiescing. After the Sergeant had warmed his
+hands and rubbed them sufficiently, he took off his cap and placed it on
+a little shelf or rack; and then took out a meerschaum pipe, which he
+exhibited without appearing to do so to the whole company. Then he
+filled it from his pouch, and rang the bell; and when the buxom young
+waitress appeared, he said,—
+
+“My dear, I think I’ll have a nice rump steak and some onions, if you
+please.”
+
+“Yes, sir,” said the maid.
+
+Now I observed that two or three matters were noteworthy at this point.
+First, Joe’s mouth so watered that he actually went to the fireplace and
+expectorated. Secondly, he was utterly amazed at the familiar manner in
+which the Sergeant was permitted to address this beautiful young person,
+who seemed to be quite a lady of quality. Thirdly, he was duly impressed
+and astounded with the luxurious appetite of this Sergeant of Hussars!
+
+Then the young woman came back and said,—“Would you like to have it in
+the parlour, sir?”
+
+“O no, my dear,” said the Sergeant; “I would rather have it here. I hate
+being alone.”
+
+As he said this, he slightly glanced at Dick Devilmecare. Dick,
+flattering himself that the observation was addressed particularly to
+him, observed that he also hated being alone.
+
+Then the Sergeant lighted his pipe; and I suppose there was not one in
+the company who did not think that tobacco particularly nice.
+
+Next, the Sergeant rang again, and once more the pretty maid appeared.
+
+“Lucy,” said he, “while my steak is getting ready, I think I’ll have
+three of whiskey hot, with a little lemon in it.”
+
+At this there was an involuntary smacking of lips all round, although no
+one was conscious he had exhibited any emotion. The Sergeant was
+perfectly easy and indifferent to everything. He smoked, looked at the
+fire, sipped his grog, spread out his legs, folded his arms; then rose
+and turned his back to the fire, everyone thinking how thoroughly he
+enjoyed himself.
+
+“That smells very nice, Sergeant,” said Harry.
+
+“Yes, it’s very good,” said the Sergeant; “it’s some I got down at
+Yokelton, Somersetshire.”
+
+Here Joe looked up; he hadn’t been home for a week, and began to feel
+some interest in the old place, and everything belonging to it.
+
+“I comes from that ere place, Mr. Sergeant,” said he.
+
+“Indeed, sir,” said the Sergeant, in an off-hand manner.
+
+“Did thee buy un at a shop by the Pond, sir?”
+
+“That’s it,” replied the Sergeant, pointing with his pipe, “to the
+right.”
+
+“The seame plaace,” exclaimed Joe. “Why my sister lives there sarvant wi
+that ooman as keeps the shop.”
+
+“Indeed!” said Sergeant Goodtale; “how very curious!”
+
+And Jack said, “What a rum thing!”
+
+And Bill said, “That is a rum thing!”
+
+And Harry said it was a strange coincidence. In short, they all agreed
+that it was the most remarkable circumstance that ever was.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+
+The subject continued.
+
+As soon as the conversation on the remarkable circumstance recorded in
+the last chapter had drifted into another subject no less remarkable, and
+the Sergeant had finished his pipe, the beautiful being appeared with the
+rump steak and onions, a snowy white cloth having been previously spread
+at the end of one of the tables. When all was ready, it looked as nice
+and appetizing as could well be conceived. The most indifferent man
+there seemed the Sergeant himself, who, instead of rushing to the chair
+provided for him, walked as coolly up to the table as though he were
+going into action. Then he took the knife, and seeing it had not quite
+so sharp an edge as he liked, gave it a touch or two on the stone hearth.
+
+The smell of that tobacco from Yokelton had been sweet; so had the
+perfume from the whiskey toddy and the lemon; but of all the delicious
+and soul-refreshing odours that ever titilated human nostrils, nothing
+surely could equal that which proceeded from the rump steak and onions.
+The fragrance of new mown hay, which Cowper has so beautifully mentioned,
+had palled on Joe’s senses; but when would the fragrance of that dish
+pall on the hungry soul?
+
+The Sergeant took no notice of the hungry looks of the company; he was a
+soldier, and concentrated his mind upon the duties of the moment.
+Sentimentality was no part of his nature. He was a man, and must eat; he
+was a soldier, and must perform the work as a duty irrespective of
+consequences.
+
+“Do you mind my smoke?” asked Harry.
+
+“Oh dear, no,” said the Sergeant; “I like it.”
+
+Joe stared and watched every bit as the Sergeant cut it. He looked
+admiringly on the soldier and so lovingly at the steak, that it almost
+seemed as if he wished he could be cut into such delicious morsels and
+eaten by so happy a man. What thoughts passed through his mind no one
+but a dreamer could tell; and this is what I saw passing through the mind
+of Wurzel.
+
+“O, what a life! what grub! what jollyness! no turmut oeing; no
+dung-cart; no edgin and ditchin; no five o’clock in the mornin; no
+master; no bein sweared at; no up afore the magistrates; no ungriness;
+rump steaks and inguns; whiskey and water and bacca; if I didn’t like
+that air Polly Sweetlove, danged if I wouldn’t go for a soger to-morrer!”
+
+Then said Joe, very deferentially and as if he were afraid of being up
+afore the magistrate, “If you please, sir, med I have a bit o’ that there
+bacca?”
+
+“Of course,” said the Sergeant, tossing his pouch; “certainly; help
+yourself.”
+
+Joe’s heart was softened more and more towards the military, which he had
+hitherto regarded, from all he could hear, as a devil’s own trap to catch
+Sabbath breakers and disobedient to parents.
+
+And methought, in my dream, I never saw men who were not partakers of a
+feast enjoy it more than the onlookers of that military repast.
+
+Then said Harry,—
+
+“Well, Sergeant, I’m well-nigh tired of my life, and I’ve come here to
+enlist.”
+
+“Just wait a bit,” said the Sergeant; “I’m not a man to do things in a
+hurry. I never allow a man to enlist, if I know it, in Her Majesty’s
+service, honourable and jolly as it is, without asking him to think about
+it.”
+
+“Hear, hear!” said Lazyman; “that’s good, I likes that; don’t be in a
+hurry, lad.”
+
+“Hear, hear!” says Outofwork, “don’t jump into a job too soon, yer medn’t
+like it.”
+
+“Hear, hear!” says the Boardman, “walk round a-bit.”
+
+“But,” said Harry, “I have considered it. I’ve just had education enough
+to prevent my getting a living, and not enough to make a man of me: I’ve
+tried everything and nobody wants me.”
+
+“Then,” said Sergeant Goodtale, “do you think the Queen only wants them
+that nobody else’ll have. I can tell you that ain’t the Queen of
+England’s way. It might do for Rooshia or Germany, or them countries,
+but not for Old England. It’s a free country. I think, lads, I’m
+right—”
+
+Here there was tremendous hammering on the table by way of assent and
+applause; amidst which Joe could be observed thumping his hard fist with
+as much vehemence as if he had got a County Magistrate’s head under it.
+
+“This is a free country, sir,” said the Sergeant, “no man here is
+kidnapped into the Army, which is a profession for men, not slaves.”
+
+“I’m going to join,” said Harry, “say what you like.”
+
+“Wait till the morning;” said the Sergeant, “and meanwhile we’ll have a
+song.”
+
+At this moment Mr. Bumpkin put in an appearance; for although he had been
+enjoying himself with Mr. and Mrs. Oldtimes, he thought it prudent to
+have a peep and see how “thic Joe wur gettin on.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+
+Mr. Bumpkin sings a good old song—the Sergeant becomes quite a convivial
+companion and plays dominoes.
+
+The Sergeant, having finished his repast, again had recourse to his pipe,
+and was proceeding to light it when Mr. Bumpkin appeared in the room.
+
+“We be gwine to have a song, maister,” said Joe.
+
+“Give us a song, governor,” said half-a-dozen voices.
+
+“Ay, do, maister,” says Joe; “thee sings a good un, I knows, for I ha
+eerd thee often enough at arvest oames: gie us a song, maister.”
+
+Now if there was one thing Mr. Bumpkin thought he was really great at
+besides ploughing the straightest and levellest furrow, it was singing
+the longest and levellest song. He had been known to sing one, which,
+with its choruses, had lasted a full half hour, and then had broken down
+for lack of memory.
+
+On the present occasion he would have exhibited no reluctance, having had
+a glass or two in the Bar Parlour had he not possessed those misgivings
+about the Sergeant. He looked furtively at that officer as though it
+were better to give him no chance. Seeing, however, that he was smoking
+quietly, and almost in a forlorn manner by himself, his apprehensions
+became less oppressive.
+
+Invitations were repeated again and again, and with such friendly
+vehemence that resistance at last was out of the question.
+
+“I aint sung for a good while,” said he, “but I wunt be disagreeable
+like, so here goes.”
+
+But before he could start there was such a thundering on the tables that
+several minutes elapsed. At length there was sufficient silence to
+enable him to be heard.
+
+“This is Church and Crown, lads.”
+
+ “Gie me the man as loves the Squire,
+ The Parson, and the Beak;
+ And labours twelve good hours a day
+ For thirteen bob a week!”
+
+“Hooroar! hooroar! hooroar!” shouted Lazyman. “What d’ye think ’o that?”
+
+“O, my eye,” said Outofwork, “aint it jolly?”
+
+“Well done! bravo!” shrieked the Boardman. “I’ll carry that ere man
+through the streets on my shoulders instead o’ the boards, that I will.
+Bravo! he ought to be advertized—this style thirteen bob a week!”
+
+“Thirteen bob a week!” laughed Harry; “who’d go for a soldier with such a
+prospect. Can you give us a job, governor?”
+
+“Wait a bit, lads,” said Mr. Bumpkin, “there be another werse and then a
+chorus.”
+
+“Hooray!” they shouted, “a chorus! let’s have the chorus—there ought to
+be a chorus—thirteen bob a week!”
+
+“Now, gentlemen, the chorus if you please,” said Harry; “give it mouth,
+sir!”
+
+Then sang Bumpkin—
+
+ “O ’edgin, ditchin, that’s the geaam,
+ All in the open air;
+ The poor man’s health is all his wealth,
+ But wealth without a care!
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+ Then shout hurrah for Church and State
+ Though ’eretics may scoff,
+ The devil is our head Constable,
+ To take the willins off.
+
+ Give me the man that’s poor and strong,
+ Hard working and content;
+ Who looks on onger as his lot,
+ In Heaven’s wise purpose sent.
+ Who looks on riches as a snare
+ To ketch the worldly wise;
+ And good roast mutton as a dodge,
+ To blind rich people’s eyes.
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+ Give me the man that labours hard
+ From mornin’ until night,
+ And looks at errins as a treat
+ And bacon a delight.
+ O ’edgin, ditchin, diggin drains,
+ And emptyin pool and dyke,
+ It beats your galloppin to ’ounds,
+ Your ball-rooms and the like.
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+ Gi’ me the man that loves the Squire
+ With all his might and main;
+ And with the taxes and the rates
+ As never racks his brain.
+ Who loves the Parson and the Beak
+ As Heaven born’d and sent,
+ And revels in that blessed balm
+ A hongry sweet content.
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+ Gie me the good Shaksperan man
+ As wants no other books,
+ But them as he no need to spell,
+ The ever runnin brooks:
+ As feeds the pigs and minds the flocks,
+ And rubs the orses down;
+ And like a regler lyal man,
+ Sticks up for Church and Crown.”
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+At the termination of this pastoral song there was such a hullabaloo of
+laughter, such a yelling, thumping, and, I grieve to say, swearing, that
+Mr. Bumpkin wondered what on earth was the occasion of it. At the Rent
+dinner at the Squire’s he had always sung it with great success; and the
+Squire himself had done him the honour to say it was the best song he had
+ever heard, while the Clergyman had assured him that the sentiments were
+so good that it ought to be played upon the organ when the people were
+coming out of church. And Farmer Grinddown, who was the largest
+gentleman farmer for miles around, had declared that if men would only
+act up to that it would be a happy country, and we should soon be able to
+defy America itself.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin, hearing such shouts of laughter, thought perhaps he might
+have a patch of black on his face, and put his hand up to feel. Then he
+looked about him to see if his dress was disarranged; but finding nothing
+amiss, he candidly told them he “couldn’t zee what there wur to laugh at
+thic fashion.”
+
+They all said it was a capital song, and wondered if he had any more of
+the same sort, and hoped he’d leave them a lock of his hair—and otherwise
+manifested tokens of enthusiastic approbation.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin, however, could not quite see their mirth in the same light,
+so he turned on his heel and, beckoning to Joe, left the room in high
+dudgeon, not to say disdain.
+
+“Mind Joe—no truck wi un.”
+
+“Why, maister, he knows my sister.”
+
+“Damn thee sister, Joe; it be a lie.”
+
+“Be it? here’s some o’ the bacca he brought up from Okleton, I tell ee.”
+
+“I tell thee, have nowt to do wi un; we shall be on t’morrer, we be tenth
+in the list.”
+
+“Ay,” said Joe, “we bin igher in list un thic, we bin as near as eight; I
+shall be mighty glad when it be over.”
+
+“An get back to pigs, aye, Joe?”
+
+“Aye, maister.”
+
+“Nothin like oame, Joe, be there?” and Mr. Bumpkin turned away.
+
+“No,” said Joe; “no, maister, if so be” (and this was spoken to himself)
+“if so be you got a oame.”
+
+Then I saw that Joe rejoined his companions, amongst whom a conversation
+was going on as to the merits of the song. Some said one thing and some
+another, but all condemned it as a regular toading to the Parson and the
+Squire: and as for the Beak, how any man could praise him whose only duty
+was to punish the common people, no one could see. The company were
+getting very comfortable. The Sergeant had called for another glass of
+that delectable grog whose very perfume seemed to inspire everyone with
+goodfellowship, and they all appeared to enjoy the Sergeant’s liquor
+without tasting it.
+
+“What do you say to a game of dominoes?” said Harry.
+
+“They won’t allow em ere,” said Lazyman.
+
+“Won’t they,” answered Outofwork. “I’ll warrant if the Sergeant likes to
+play there’s no landlord’ll stop him, ay, Sergeant?”
+
+“Well, I believe,” said the Sergeant, “as one of the Queen’s servants, I
+have the privilege of playing when I like.”
+
+“Good,” said Harry, “and I’ll be a Queen’s man too, so out with the
+shilling, Sergeant.”
+
+“Wait till the morning,” said the Sergeant.
+
+“No,” said Harry. “I’ve had enough waiting. I’m on, give me the
+shilling.”
+
+The Sergeant said, “Well, let me see, what height are you?” and he stood
+up beside him.
+
+“Ah!” he said, “I think I can get you in,” saying which he gave him a
+shilling; such a bright coin, that it seemed to have come fresh from the
+Queen’s hand.
+
+Then the Sergeant took out some beautiful bright ribbons which he was
+understood to say (but did _not_ say) the Queen had given him that
+morning. Then he rang the bell, and the buxom waitress appearing he
+asked for the favour of a needle and thread, which, the radiant damsel
+producing, with her own fair fingers she sewed the ribbons on to Harry’s
+cap, smiling with admiration all the while. Even this little incident
+was not without its effect on the observant “head witness,” and he felt
+an unaccountable fascination to have the same office performed by the
+same fair hands on his own hat.
+
+Then, without saying more, a box of dominoes was produced, and Joe soon
+found himself, he did not know how, the Sergeant’s partner, while Lazyman
+and Outofwork were opposed to them.
+
+“Is it pooty good livin in your trade, Mr. Sergeant?” asked Joe.
+
+“Not bad,” said the Sergeant; “that is five-one, I think”—referring to
+the play.
+
+“Rump steaks and ingons aint bad living,” said Outofwork.
+
+“No,” said the Sergeant, “and there’s nothing I like better than a good
+thick mutton chop for breakfast—let me see, what’s the game?”
+
+“Ah!” said Joe, smacking his lips, “mutton chops is the best thing out; I
+aint had one in my mouth, though, for a doocid long time; I likes em with
+plenty o’ fat an gravy loike.”
+
+“You see,” said the Sergeant, “when you’ve been out for a two or three
+mile ride before breakfast in the fresh country air, a chap wants
+something good for breakfast, and a mutton chop’s none too much for him.”
+
+“No,” answered Joe, “I could tackle three.”
+
+“Yes,” said Sergeant Goodtale, “but some are much larger than others.”
+
+“So em be,” agreed Joe.
+
+“What’s the game,” enquired the Sergeant.
+
+“Two-one,” said Joe.
+
+“One’s all,” said the soldier.
+
+“I tell ee what,” remarked Joe, “if I was going to list, there’s no man
+as I’d liefer list wi than you, Mr. Sergeant.”
+
+“Domino!” said the Sergeant, “that’s one to us, partner!”
+
+Then they shuffled the dominoes and commenced again. But at this moment
+the full figure of Mr. Bumpkin again stood in the doorway.
+
+“Joe!” he exclaimed angrily, “I want thee, come ere thirecly, I tell ee!”
+
+“Yes, maister; I be comin.”
+
+“You stoopid fool!” said Mr. Bumpkin in a whisper, as Joe went up to him,
+“thee be playin with thic feller.”
+
+“Well, maister, if I be; what then?” Joe said this somewhat angrily, and
+Mr. Bumpkin replied:—
+
+“He’ll ha thee, Joe—he’ll ha thee!”
+
+“Nay, nay, maister; I be too old in the tooth for he; but it beant thy
+business, maister.”
+
+“No,” said Bumpkin, as he turned away, “it beant.”
+
+Then Joe resumed his play. Now it happened that as the Sergeant smacked
+his lips when he took his occasional sip of the fragrant grog, expressive
+of the highest relish, it awakened a great curiosity in Wurzel’s mind as
+to its particular flavour. The glass was never far from his nose and he
+had long enjoyed the extremely tempting odour. At last, as he was not
+invited to drink by Sergeant Goodtale, he could contain himself no
+longer, but made so bold as to say:—
+
+“Pardner, med I jist taste this ere? I never did taste sich a thing.”
+
+“Certainly, partner,” said the Sergeant, pushing the tumbler, which was
+about three-parts full. “What’s the game now?”
+
+“Ten-one,” said Outofwork.
+
+“One’s all, then,” said the Sergeant.
+
+Joe took the tumbler, and after looking into it for a second or two as
+though he were mentally apostrophizing it, placed the glass to his lips.
+
+“Don’t be afraid,” said the Sergeant.
+
+No one seemed more courageous than Wurzel, in respect of the act with
+which he was engaged, and before he took the glass from his lips its
+contents had disappeared.
+
+“I’m mighty glad thee spoke, Maister Sergeant, for if thee hadn’t I
+should a drunk un all wirout thy leave. I never tasted sich tackle in my
+life; it’s enough to make a man gie up everything for sogering.”
+
+“Domino!” said the Sergeant. “I think that’s the game!”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“My dear,” said my wife, “you have been talking again in your sleep.”
+
+“Really,” said I, “I hope I have not compromised myself.”
+
+“I do not understand you,” cried she.
+
+“No more do I, for I am hardly awake.”
+
+“You have been talking of Joe Wurzel again.”
+
+“O, to be sure. What about him?”
+
+“Then you mentioned Mr. Outofwork and Mr. Lazyman and Mr. Devilmecare,
+and another whose name I did not catch.”
+
+“Ah,” I asked, “did they go for soldiers?”
+
+“At present, no, except Harry, for whom I was heartily sorry, he seemed
+such a nice disappointed lad. But pray who is this Sergeant Goodtale?”
+
+“He is on recruiting service, a very fine, persuasive fellow.”
+
+“But he didn’t seem to press these people or use any arts to entice them:
+I like him for that. He rather seemed to me to discourage them from
+enlisting. He might have been sure poor Harry meant it, because, as I
+take it, he was half-starved, and yet he desired him to wait till the
+morning.”
+
+“I think,” said I, “his conduct was artful if you examine it with
+reference to its effect on the others; but he is an extraordinary man,
+this Sergeant Goodtale—was never known to persuade any one to enlist, I
+believe.”
+
+“But he seemed to get along very well.”
+
+“Very; I thought he got along very comfortably.”
+
+“Then there was one Lucy Prettyface!”
+
+“Ah, I don’t remember her,” cried I, alarmed lest I might have said
+anything in my dream for which I was not responsible.
+
+“Why she was the girl who sewed the colours on and somebody called ‘my
+dear.’”
+
+“I assure you,” I said, “it was not I: it must have been the Sergeant;
+but I have no recollection—O yes, to be sure, she was the waitress.”
+
+“You remember her now?”
+
+“Well,” said I, determined not to yield if I could possibly help it, “I
+can’t say that I do. I know there was a person who sewed colours on and
+whom the Sergeant called ‘my dear,’ but further than that I should not
+like to pledge myself. Yes—yes—to be sure,” and here I went on talking,
+as it were, to myself, for I find it is much better to talk to yourself
+if you find it difficult to carry on a conversation with other persons.
+
+“She was pretty, wasn’t she?” said my wife with an arch look.
+
+I gave her a look just as arch, as I replied,
+
+“Really I hardly looked at her; but I should say _not_.” I make a point
+of never saying any one is pretty.
+
+“Joe thought her so.”
+
+“Did he? Well she may have been, but I never went in for Beauty myself.”
+
+“You shocking man,” said my wife, “do you perceive what you are saying?”
+
+“Why, of course; but you take me up so sharply: if you had not cut me off
+in the flower of my speech you would have been gratified at the finish of
+my sentence. I was going to say, I never went in for Beauty, but once.
+That, I think, gives the sentence a pretty turn.”
+
+“Well, now, I think these dreams and this talking in your sleep indicate
+that you require a change; what do you say to Bournemouth?”
+
+“You think I shall sleep better there?”
+
+“I think it will do you good.”
+
+“Then we’ll go to Bournemouth,” cried I, “for I understand it’s a very
+dreamy place.”
+
+“But I should like to know what becomes of this action of Mr. Bumpkin,
+and how all his people get on? You may depend upon it that Sergeant will
+enlist those other men.”
+
+“I do not know,” I remarked, “what is in the future.”
+
+“But surely you know what you intend. You can make your characters do
+anything.”
+
+“Indeed not,” I said. “They will have their own way whether I write
+their history or any one else.”
+
+“That Sergeant Goodtale will have every one of them, my dear; you mark my
+words. He’s the most artful man I ever heard of.”
+
+Of course I could offer no contradiction to this statement as I was not
+in the secrets of the future. How the matter will work out depends upon
+a variety of circumstances over which I have not the least control. For
+instance, if Bill were to take the shilling, I believe Dick would follow:
+and if the Sergeant were to sing a good song he might catch the rest.
+But who can tell?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+
+Joe electrifies the company and surprises the reader.
+
+“Suppose we have another song,” said Sergeant Goodtale.
+
+“And spoase we has some moore o’ that there stuff,” answered Joe.
+
+“Aye,” said Harry, “we will too. I’ll spend my shilling like a man.”
+
+Saying which he rang the bell and ordered a glass for himself and one for
+Joe.
+
+“Now, then,” said the latter, “I can’t sing, but I’ll gie thee summut as
+I larned.”
+
+“Hooray!” said Harry, “summut as he larned!”
+
+“Bravo!” said the Boardman, “summut as he larned?”
+
+“Here’s at un,” said Joe.
+
+And then with a mighty provincialism he repeated without a break:—
+
+
+
+DR. BRIMSTONE’S SERMON,
+AS PUT INTO VERSE BY GAFFER DITCHER.
+
+
+ I bin to Church, I ha’, my boy,
+ And now conwarted be;
+ The last time I wur ever there
+ War eighteen farty-three!
+
+ And ’ow I knows it is as this,
+ I didn’t goo to pray,
+ Nor ’ear the Word, but went becorse
+ It wur my weddin day!
+
+ Zounds! wot a blessed sarmon twur
+ I ’eeard the Sabbath morn;
+ ’Ow I a woful sinner wur
+ Or ever I wur born.
+
+ You sees them wilful igorant pigs
+ In mud a wollorin;
+ Well, like them pigs, but ten times wus,
+ We wollers in our sin.
+
+ We’re coated o’er wi’ sinful mud,—
+ A dreadful sight we be;
+ And yet we doant despise ourselves—
+ For why?—We doant zee!
+
+ I thinks I had yer there, my boy,
+ For all your sniggerin’ jeers;
+ Thee’re in t’ mud, I tell ’ee, lad,
+ Rightoover ’ed an’ ears.
+
+ Zounds! what a orful thing it be
+ That love should blind us so!
+ Why, them there bloomin rosy cheeks
+ Be ony masks o’ woe!
+
+ The reddest on ’em thee could kiss
+ Aint ’ardly wuth the pains;
+ At best it’s but the husk o’ bliss,
+ It’s nuther wuts nor banes.
+
+ There aint a pleasure you can name,
+ From coourtin down to skittles,
+ But wot there’s mischief in the same,
+ Like pisen in your wittles.
+
+ The Reverend Brimstone says, “Beloved,
+ Be allays meek an umble;
+ A saint should never ax for moor,
+ An never larn to grumble.”
+
+ We ain’t to tork o’ polleticks
+ An’ things as don’t consarn us,
+ And wot we wornts to know o’ lor
+ The madgistret will larn us.
+
+ We ain’t to drink wi’ Methodists,
+ No, not a friendly soop;
+ We ain’t to tork o’ genteel folks
+ Onless to praise un oop.
+
+ We ain’t to ’ear a blessed word
+ Agin our betters said;
+ We’re got to lay the butter thick
+ Becorse they’re sich ’igh bred!
+
+ We got to say “Ha! look at he!
+ A gemman tooth and nail!”
+ You morn’t say, “What a harse he’d be
+ If he’d a got a tail!”
+
+ For why? becorse these monied gents
+ Ha’ got sich birth an’ breedin’;
+ An’ down we got to ’old our ’eads,
+ Like cattle, when they’re feedin’.
+
+ The parson put it kindly like—
+ He sed, says he, as ’ow
+ We’re bean’t so good as them there grubs
+ We turns up wi’ the plow.
+
+ There’s nowt more wretcheder an we,
+ Or worthier an the rich,
+ I praises ’em for bein’ born,
+ An’ ’eaven for makin’ sich.
+
+ So wile we be, I daily stares
+ That earthquakes doan’t fall,
+ An’ swaller up this unconwinced
+ Owdashus earthly ball!
+
+ An’ wen I thinks of all our sins—
+ Lay down, says I, my boys,
+ We’re fittin’ only for manoor,
+ So don’t let’s make a noise.
+
+ Let’s spred us out upon the ground
+ An’ make the turmuts grow,
+ It’s all we’re good for in this world
+ O’ wickedness an’ woe!
+
+ And yet we’re ’llow’d to brethe the air
+ The same as gents from town;
+ And ’llow’d to black their ’appy boots,
+ And rub their ’orses down!
+
+ To think o’ blessins sich as these,
+ Is like ongrateful lust;
+ It stuffs us oop wi’ worldly pride,
+ As if our ’arts would bust!
+
+ But no, we’re ’umble got to be,
+ Though privileged so ’igh:
+ Why doan’t we feed on grass or grains,
+ Or leastways ’umbly die!
+
+ We got to keep our wicked tongue
+ From disrespeckful speakin’,
+ We han’t a got to eat too much,
+ Nor yet goo pleasure seekin’.
+
+ Nor kitch a rabbit or a aire,
+ Nor call the Bobby names,
+ Nor stand about, but goo to church,
+ And play no idle games:
+
+ To love paroshial orficers,
+ The squire, and all that’s his,
+ And never goo wi’ idle chaps
+ As wants their wages riz.
+
+ So now conwarted I ha’ bin
+ From igorance and wice;
+ It’s only ’appiness that’s sin,
+ And norty things that’s nice!
+
+ Whereas I called them upstart gents
+ The wust o’ low bred snobs,
+ Wi’ contrite ’art I hollers out
+ “My heye, wot bloomin’ nobs!”
+
+ I sees the error o’ my ways,
+ So, lads, this warnin’ take,
+ The Poor Man’s path, the parson says,
+ Winds round the Burnin’ Lake.
+
+ They’ve changed it since the days o’ yore,
+ Them Gospel preachers, drat un;
+ They used to preach it to the poor,
+ An’ now they preach it _at_ un.
+
+Every one was amazed at the astonishing memory of this country lad: and
+the applause that greeted the reciter might well be calculated to awaken
+his latent vanity. It was like being called before the curtain after the
+first act by a young actor on his first appearance. And I believe every
+one understood the meaning of the verses, which seemed to imply that the
+hungry prodigal, famishing for food, was fed with husks instead of grain.
+Contentment with wretchedness is not good preaching, and this was one
+lesson of Dr. Brimstone’s sermon. As soon as Harry could make himself
+heard amidst the general hubbub, which usually follows a great
+performance, he said:—
+
+“Now, look here, lads, it’s all very well to be converted with such
+preaching as that; but it’s my belie it’s more calculated to make
+hypocrites than Christians.”
+
+“Hear! hear!” said Lazyman. “That _is_ right.” Anything but conversion
+for Lazyman.
+
+“Now,” continued Harry, “I’ve heard that kind of preaching a hundred
+times: it’s a regular old-fashioned country sermon; and, as for the poor
+being so near hell, I put it in these four lines.”
+
+“Hear, hear!” cried the company; “order!”
+
+And they prepared themselves for what was to come with as great eagerness
+as, I venture to say, would always be shown to catch the text, if it came
+at the end, instead of the beginning, of a sermon.
+
+“Shut up,” says Lazyman; “let’s ’ear this ’ere. I knows it’s summut good
+by the look an him.”
+
+“Don’t make a row,” retorts the Boardman; “who can hear anything while
+you keeps on like that?”
+
+And there they stood, actually suspending the operation of smoking as
+they waited the summing up of this remarkably orthodox “preaching of the
+word.” The sergeant only was a spectator of the scene, and much amused
+did he seem at the faces that prepared for a grin or a sneer as the
+forthcoming utterance should demand. Then said Harry solemnly and
+dramatically:—
+
+ “In WANT full many a vice is born,
+ And Virtue in a DINNER;
+ A well-spread board makes many a SAINT,
+ And HUNGER many a sinner.”
+
+From the explosion which followed this antidote to Mr. Brimstone’s
+sermon, I should judge that the more part of the company believed that
+Poverty was almost as ample a virtue as Charity itself. They shook their
+heads in token of assent; they thumped the table in recognition of the
+soundness of the teaching; and several uttered an exclamation not to be
+committed to paper, as an earnest of their admiration for the ability of
+Mr. Highlow, who, instead of being a private soldier, ought, in their
+judgment, to be Lord Mayor of London. After this recital every one said
+he thought Mr. Highlow might oblige them.
+
+“Well, I’m no singer,” said Harry.
+
+“Try, Harry!” exclaimed Lazyman: he was a rare one to advise other people
+to try.
+
+“Trying to sing when you can’t,” answered Harry, “I should think is a rum
+sort of business; but I’ll tell you what I’ll do if you like. When I was
+down at Hearne Bay I heard an old fisherman tell a story which—”
+
+“That’s it!” thumped out Joe, “a story. I likes a good story, specially
+if there be a goast in it.”
+
+“I don’t know what there is in it,” said Harry, “I’ll leave you to make
+that out; but I tell you what I did when I heard it, I made a ballad of
+it, and so if you like I’ll try and recollect it.”
+
+“Bravo!” they said, and Harry gave them the following
+
+
+
+SONG OF THE WAVES.
+
+
+ Far away on the pebbly beach
+ That echoes the sound of the surge;
+ As if they were gifted with speech,
+ The breakers will sing you a dirge.
+
+ The fishermen list to it oft,
+ And love the sweet charm of its spell,
+ For sometimes it wispers so soft,
+ It seems but the voice of the shell.
+
+ It tells of a beautiful child
+ That used to come down there and play,
+ And shout to the surges so wild
+ That burst on the brink of the bay.
+
+ She was but a child of the poor,
+ Whose father had perished at sea;
+ ’Twas strange, that sweet psalm of the shore,
+ Whatever the story might be!
+
+ Yes, strange, but so true in its tone
+ That no one could listen and doubt;
+ The heart must be calm and alone
+ To search its deep mystery out.
+
+ She came with a smaller than she
+ That toddled along at her side;
+ Now ran to and fled from the sea,
+ Now paddled its feet in the tide.
+
+ Afar o’er the waters so wild,
+ Grazed Effie with wondering eye;
+ What mystery grew on the child
+ In all that bright circle of sky?
+
+ Her father—how sweet was the thought!
+ Was linked with this childish delight;
+ ’Twas strange what a vision it brought—
+ As though he still lingered in sight.
+
+ Was it Heaven so near, so remote,
+ Across the blue line of the wave?
+ ’Twas thither he sailed in his boat,
+ ’Twas there he went down in his grave!
+
+ So the days and the hours flew along,
+ Like swallows that skim o’er the flood;
+ Like the sound of a beautiful song,
+ That echoes and dies in the wood!
+
+ One day as they strayed on the strand,
+ And played with the shingle and shell,
+ A boat that just touched on the land
+ Was playfully rocked by the swell.
+
+ O childhood, what joy in a ride!
+ What eagerness beams in their eyes!
+ What bliss as they climb o’er the side
+ And shout as they tumble and rise!
+
+ O sea, with thy pitiful dirge,
+ Thou need’st to be mournful and moan!
+ The wrath of thy terrible surge
+ Omnipotence curbs it alone!
+
+ The boat bore away from the shore,
+ The laughter of childhood so glad!
+ And the breakers bring back ever more
+ The dirge with its echo so sad!
+
+ A widow sits mute on the beach,
+ And ever the tides as they flow,
+ As if they were gifted with speech,
+ Repeat the sad tale of her woe!
+
+“That’s werry good,” said the Boardman. “I’m afraid them there children
+was washed away—it’s a terrible dangerous coast that ere Ern Bay. I’ve
+’eeard my father speak on it.”
+
+“Them there werses is rippin’!” said Joe.
+
+“Stunnin’!” exclaimed Bob.
+
+And so they all agreed that it was a pretty song and “well put together.”
+
+“Capital,” said the sergeant, “I never heard anything better, and as for
+Mr. Wurzel, a man with his memory ought to do something better than feed
+pigs.”
+
+“Ay, aye,” said the company to a man.
+
+“Why don’t you follow my example?” said Harry; “it’s the finest life in
+the world for a young fellow.”
+
+“Well,” said the sergeant, “that all depends; its very good for some, for
+others not so good—although there are very few who are not pleased when
+they once join, especially in such a regiment as ours!”
+
+“And would you mind telling me, sir,” asked Outofwork, “what sort of
+chaps it don’t suit?”
+
+“Well, you see, chaps that have been brought up in the country and tied
+to their mothers’ apron strings all their life: they have such soft
+hearts, they are almost sure to cry—and a crying soldier is a poor
+affair. I wouldn’t enlist a chap of that sort, no, not if he gave me ten
+pounds. Now, for instance, if Mr. Wurzel was to ask my advice about
+being a soldier I should say ‘don’t!’”
+
+“Why not, sir?” asked Joe; “how’s that there, then? D’ye think I be
+afeard?”
+
+“I should say, go home first, my boy, and ask your mother!”
+
+“I be d---d if I be sich a molly-coddle as that, nuther; and I’ll prove
+un, Mr. Sergeant; gie me thic bright shillin’ and I be your man.”
+
+“No,” said the sergeant, “think it over, and come to me in a month’s
+time, if your mother will let you. I don’t want men that will let their
+masters buy them off the next day.”
+
+“No; an lookee here, Maister Sergeant; I bean’t to be bought off like
+thic, nuther. If I goes, I goes for good an’ all.”
+
+“Well, then,” said the sergeant, shaking him by the hand, and pressing
+into it the bright shilling, “if you insist on joining, you shall not say
+I prevented you: my business is not to prevent men from entering Her
+Majesty’s service.”
+
+Then the ribbons were brought out, and Joe asked if the young woman might
+sew them on as she had done Harry’s; and when she came in, Joe looked at
+her, and tried to put on a military bearing, in imitation of his great
+prototype; and actually went so far as to address her as “My dear,” for
+which liberty he almost expected a slap in the face. But Lucy only
+smiled graciously, and said: “Bravo, Mr. Wurzel! Bravo, sir; I’ve seen
+many a man inlisted, and sewed the Queen’s colours on for him, but never
+for a smarter or a finer fellow, there!” and she skipped from the room.
+
+“Well done!” said several voices. And the sergeant said:
+
+“What do you think of that, Mr. Wurzel? I’ll back she’s never said that
+to a soldier before.”
+
+Joe turned his hat about and drew the ribbons through his fingers, as
+pleased as a child with a new toy, and as proud as if he had helped to
+win a great battle.
+
+Here I awoke.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+
+The Sergeant makes a loyal speech and sings a song, both of which are
+well received by the company.
+
+And when I got to Bournemouth I dreamed again; and a singular thing
+during this history was, that always in my dream I began where I had left
+off on the previous night. So I saw that there, in the room at “The
+Goose,” were Sergeant Goodtale, and Harry, and Joe, and the rest, just as
+I had left them when I last awoke. But methought there was an air of
+swagger on the part of the head witness which I had not observed
+previously. His hat was placed on one side, in imitation of the
+sergeant’s natty cap, and he seemed already to hold up his head in a
+highly military manner; and when he stooped down to get a light he tried
+to stoop in the same graceful and military style as the sergeant himself;
+and after blowing it out, threw down the spill in the most off-hand
+manner possible, as though he said, “That’s how we chaps do it in the
+Hussars!” Everyone noticed the difference in the manner and bearing of
+the young recruit. There was a certain swagger and boldness of demeanour
+that only comes after you have enlisted. Nor was this change confined to
+outward appearance alone. What now were pigs in the mind of Joe? Merely
+the producers of pork chops for breakfast. What was Dobbin that slowly
+dragged the plough compared to the charger that Joe was destined to
+bestride? And what about Polly Sweetlove and her saucy looks? Perhaps
+she’d be rather sorry now that she did not receive with more favour his
+many attentions. Such were the thoughts that passed through the lad’s
+mind as he gradually awakened to a sense of his new position. One
+thought, however, strange to say, did not occur to him, and that was as
+to what his poor old mother would think. Dutiful son as Joe had always
+been, (though wild in some respects), he had not given her a single
+thought. But his reflections, no doubt, were transient and confused amid
+the companions by whom he was surrounded.
+
+“You’ll make a fine soldier,” said the Boardman, as he saw him swagger
+across to his seat.
+
+“Yes,” said the sergeant, “any man that has got it in him, and is steady,
+and doesn’t eat too much and drink too much, may get on in the army. It
+isn’t like it used to be.”
+
+“I believe that,” said Bob Lazyman.
+
+“The only thing,” continued the sergeant, “is, there is really so little
+to do—there’s not work enough.”
+
+“That ud suit me,” said Bob.
+
+“Ah! but stop,” added the sergeant, “the temptations are great—what with
+the girls—.”
+
+“Hooray!” exclaimed Dick; “that beats all—I likes them better than mutton
+chops.”
+
+“Yes,” replied the sergeant; “they are all very well in their way; but
+you know, if a man wants to rise in the army, he must be steady.”
+
+“Steady, boys! stea—dy!” shouted Dick
+
+I don’t know how far the sergeant was justified, morally, in thus holding
+out the prospect of riotous living to these hungry men, but I think, all
+things considered, it was an improvement on the old system of the
+pressgang, which forced men into the navy. These lads were not bound to
+believe the recruiting sergeant, and were not obliged to enter into a
+contract with Her Majesty. At the same time, the alluring prospects were
+such that if they had been represented as facts in the commercial
+transactions of life, such is the purity of the law that they would have
+given rise to much pleading, multifarious points reserved, innumerable
+summonses at Chambers, and, at least, one new trial.
+
+“Now,” said Jack Outofwork, “I tell yer what it is—I don’t take no
+Queen’s shilling, for why? it ain’t the Queen’s—it belongs to the
+people—I’m for a republic.”
+
+‘“Well,” said the sergeant, “I always like to meet a chap that calls
+himself a republican, and I’ll tell you why. This country is a republic,
+say what you like, and is presided over by our gracious Queen. And I
+should like to ask any man in this country—now, just listen, lads, for
+this is the real question, whether—”
+
+“Now, order,” said Lazyman, “I never ’eerd nothing put better.”
+
+“Let’s have order, gentlemen,” said Harry; “chair! chair!”
+
+“All ’tention, sergeant,” said Dick.
+
+“I say,” continued the sergeant; “let us suppose we got a republic
+to-morrow; well, we should want a head, or as they say, a president.”
+
+“That’s good,” said half-a-dozen voices.
+
+“Well, what then?” said the sergeant; “Who would you choose? Why, the
+Queen, to be sure.”
+
+Everybody said “The Queen!” And there was such a thumping on the table
+that all further discourse was prevented for several minutes. At last
+everyone said it was good, and the sergeant had put it straight.
+
+“Well, look’ee ’ere, lads—I was born among the poor and I don’t owe
+nothing to the upper classes, not even a grudge!”
+
+“Hear! hear! Bravo, Mr. Sergeant!” cried all.
+
+“Well, then; I’ve got on so far as well as I can, and I’m satisfied; but
+I’ll tell you what I believe our Queen to be—a thorough woman, and loves
+her people, especially the poor, so much that d---d if I wouldn’t die for
+her any day—now what d’ye think o’ that?”
+
+Everybody thought he was a capital fellow.
+
+“Look, here,” he continued, “it isn’t because she wears a gold crown, or
+anything of that sort, nor because a word of her’s could make me a field
+marshal, or a duke, or anything o’ that sort, nor because she’s rich, but
+I’ll tell you why it is—and it’s this—when we’re fighting we don’t fight
+for her except as the Queen, and the Queen means the country.”
+
+“Hear! hear! hear! hear!”
+
+“Well, we fight for the country—but she loves the soldiers as though they
+were not the country’s but her own flesh and blood, and comes to see ’em
+in the hospital like a mother, and talks to ’em the same as I do to you,
+and comforts ’em, and prays for ’em, and acts like the real mother of her
+people—that’s why I’d die for her, and not because she’s the Queen of
+England only.”
+
+“Bravo!” said Joe. “Hope I shall soon see her in th’ ’orsepittal. It be
+out ’ere: beant it St. Thomas’s.”
+
+“I hope you won’t, my brave lad,” said the sergeant; “but don’t tell me
+about republicanism when we’ve got such a good Queen; it’s a shame and a
+disgrace to mention it.”
+
+“So it be,” said Joe; “I’m darned if I wouldn’t knock a feller into the
+middle o’ next week as talked like thic. Hooroar for the Queen!”
+
+“And now I’m going to say another thing,” continued the sergeant, who
+really waxed warm with his subject, and struck admiration into his
+audience by his manner of delivery: may I say that to my mind he was even
+eloquent, and ought to have been a sergeant-at-law, only that the country
+would have been the loser by it: and the country, to my mind, has the
+first right to the services of every citizen. “Just look,” said the
+sergeant, “at the kindness of that—what shall I call her? blessed!—yes,
+blessed Princess of Wales! Was there ever such a woman? Talk about Jael
+in the Bible being blessed above women—why I don’t set no value upon her;
+she put a spike through a feller it’s true, but it was precious cowardly;
+but the Princess, she goes here and goes there visiting the sick and poor
+and homeless, not like a princess, but like a real woman, and that’s why
+the people love her. No man despises a toady more than I do—I’d give him
+up to the tender mercies of that wife of Heber the Keenite any day; but
+if the Princess was to say to me, ‘Look ’ere, Sergeant, I feel a little
+low, and should like some nice little excitement just to keep up my
+spirits and cheer me up a bit’” (several of them thought this style of
+conversation was a familiar habit with the Princess and Sergeant
+Goodtale, and that he must be immensely popular with the Royal Family),
+“well, if she was to say, ‘Look here, Sergeant Goodtale, here’s a
+precipice, it ud do me good to see you leap off that,’ I should just take
+off my coat and tuck up my shirt sleeves, and away I should go.”
+
+At such unheard of heroism and loyalty there was a general exclamation of
+enthusiasm, and no one in that company could tell whom he at that moment
+most admired, the Princess or the Sergeant.
+
+“That’s a stunner!” said Joe.
+
+“Princess by name and Princess by nature,” replied the sergeant; “and now
+look’ee here, in proof of what I say, I’m going to give you a toast.”
+
+“Hear, hear,” said everybody.
+
+“But stop a minute,” said the sergeant, “I’m not a man of words without
+deeds. Have we got anything to drink to the toast?”
+
+All looked in their respective cups and every one said, “No, not a drop!”
+
+Then said the sergeant “We’ll have one all rounded for the last. You’ll
+find me as good as my word. What’s it to be before we part?”
+
+“Can’t beat this ’ere,” said Joe, looking into the sergeant’s empty
+glass.
+
+“So say all of us,” exclaimed Harry.
+
+“That’s it,” said all.
+
+“And a song from the sergeant,” added Devilmecare.
+
+“Ay, lads, I’ll give you a song.”
+
+Then came in the pretty maid whom Joe leered at, and the sergeant winked
+at; and then came in tumblers of the military beverage, and then the
+sergeant said:
+
+“In all companies this is drunk upstanding, and with hats off, except
+soldiers, whose privilege it is to keep them on. You need not take yours
+off, Mr. Wurzel; you are one of Her Majesty’s Hussars. Now then all say
+after me: ‘Our gracious Queen; long may she live and blessed be her
+reign—the mother and friend of her people!’”
+
+The enthusiasm was loud and general, and the toast was drunk with as
+hearty a relish as ever it was at Lord Mayor’s Banquet.
+
+“And now,” said the sergeant, “once more before we part—”
+
+“Ah! but the song?” said the Boardman.
+
+“Oh yes, I keep my word. A man, unless he’s a man of his word, ought
+never to wear Her Majesty’s uniform!” And then he said:
+
+“The Prince and Princess of Wales and the rest of the Royal Family.”
+
+This also was responded to in the same unequivocal manner; and then amid
+calls of “the sergeant,” that officer, after getting his voice in tune,
+sang the following song:
+
+
+
+GOD BLESS OUR DEAR PRINCESS.
+
+
+ There’s not a grief the heart can bear
+ But love can soothe its pain;
+ There’s not a sorrow or a care
+ It smiles upon in vain.
+ And _She_ sends forth its brightest rays
+ Where darkest woes depress,
+ Where long wept Suffering silent prays—
+ God save our dear Princess!
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+ She soothes the breaking heart,
+ She comforts in distress;
+ She acts true woman’s noblest part.
+ God save our dear Princess
+ She bringeth hope to weary lives
+ So worn by hopeless toil;
+ E’en Sorrow’s drooping form revives
+ Beneath her loving smile.
+ Where helpless Age reluctant seeks
+ Its refuge from distress,
+ E’en there _Her_ name the prayer bespeaks
+ God save our dear Princess!
+
+ It’s not in rank or princely show
+ True _Manhood’s_ heart to win;
+ ’Tis Love’s sweet sympathetic glow
+ That makes all hearts akin.
+ Though frequent storms the State must stir
+ While Freedom we possess,
+ Our hearts may all beat true to Her,
+ Our own beloved Princess.
+
+ The violet gives its sweet perfume
+ Unconscious of its worth;
+ So Love unfolds her sacred bloom
+ And hallows sinful earth;
+ May God her gentle life prolong
+ And all her pathway bless;
+ Be this the nation’s fervent song—
+ God save our dear Princess!
+
+Although the language of a song may not always be intelligible to the
+unlettered hearer, the spirit and sentiment are; especially when it
+appeals to the emotions through the charms of music. The sergeant had a
+musical voice capable of deep pathos; and as the note of a bird or the
+cry of an animal in distress is always distinguishable from every other
+sound, so the pathos of poetry finds its way where its words are not
+always accurately understood. It was very observable, and much I thought
+to the sergeant’s great power as a singer, that the first chorus was sung
+with a tone which seemed to imply that the audience was feeling its way:
+the second was given with more enthusiasm and vehemence: the third was
+thumped upon the table as though a drum were required to give full effect
+to the feelings of the company; while the fourth was shouted with such
+heartiness that mere singing seemed useless, and it developed into loud
+hurrahs, repeated again and again; and emphasized by the twirling of
+hats, the clapping of hands, and stamping of feet.
+
+“What d’ye think o’ that?” says the Boardman.
+
+“I’m on,” said Lazyman; “give me the shilling, sergeant, if you please?”
+
+“So’m I,” said Saunter.
+
+“Hooroar!” shouted the stentorian voice that had erstwhile charmed the
+audience with Brimstone’s sermon.
+
+“Bravo!” said Harry.
+
+“Look’ee here,” said Jack Outofwork, “we’ve had a werry pleasant evenin’
+together, and I ain’t goin’ to part like this ’ere; no more walkin’ about
+looking arter jobs for me, I’m your man, sergeant.”
+
+“Well,” said the sergeant, eyeing his company, “I didn’t expect this; a
+pluckier lot o’ chaps I never see; and I’m sure when the Queen sees you
+it’ll be the proudest moment of her life. Why, how tall do you stand,
+Mr. Lazyman?”
+
+“Six foot one,” said he.
+
+“Ha,” said the Sergeant, “I thought so. And you, Mr. Outofwork?”
+
+“I don’t rightly know,” said Jack.
+
+“Well,” said the sergeant, “just stand up by the side of me—ha, that will
+do,” he added, pretending to take an accurate survey, “I think I can
+squeeze you in—it will be a tight fit though.”
+
+“I hope you can, Mr. Sergeant,” said he.
+
+“Look ’ere,” laughed Joe; “We’ll kitch ’old of his legs and give him a
+stretch, won’t us, Sergeant?”
+
+And so the bright shillings were given, and the pretty maid’s services
+were again called in; and she said “she never see sich a lot o’ plucky
+fellows in her born days;” and all were about to depart when, as the
+sergeant was shaking hands with Dick Devilmecare in the most pathetic and
+friendly manner, as though he were parting from a brother whom he had not
+met for years, Devilmecare’s eyes filled with tears, and he exclaimed,
+
+“Danged if I’ll be left out of it, sergeant; give me the shillin’?”
+
+At this moment the portly figure of Mr. Bumpkin again appeared in the
+doorway!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+
+The famous Don O’Rapley and Mr. Bumpkin spend a social evening at the
+“Goose.”
+
+When Mr. Bumpkin, on this memorable evening, went into Mrs. Oldtimes’
+parlour to console himself after the fatigues and troubles of the day
+there were a cheerful fire and a comfortable meal prepared for him. Mr.
+O’Rapley had promised to spend the evening with him, so that they might
+talk over the business of the day and the prospects of the coming trial.
+It was a very singular coincidence, and one that tended to cement the
+friendship of these two gentlemen, that their tastes both inclined to
+gin-and-water. And this very house, as appeared from a notice on the
+outside, was the “noted house for Foolman’s celebrated gin.”
+
+But as yet Mr. O’Rapley had not arrived; so after his meal Mr. Bumpkin
+looked into the other room to see how Joe was getting on, for he was
+extremely anxious to keep his “head witness” straight. “Joe was his
+mainstay.”
+
+I have already related what took place, and the song that Bumpkin sang.
+The statement of the head witness that he was all right, and that he was
+up to Mr. Sergeant, to a great extent reassured Mr. Bumpkin: although he
+felt, keen man that he was, that that soldier was there for the purpose
+of “ketchin what young men he could to make sogers on ’em; he had ’eerd
+o’ sich things afore:” such were his thoughts as Mr. O’Rapley entered the
+apartment.
+
+“Dear me, Mr. Bumpkin,” said that official, “how very cold it is! how are
+you, Mrs. Oldtimes? I haven’t seen you for an age.”
+
+The Don always made that observation when strangers were present.
+
+“Hope you’re quite well, sir,” said the landlady, with much humility.
+
+“What’ll thee please to take, sir?” asked Bumpkin.
+
+“Well, now, I daresay you’ll think me remarkable strange, Mr. Bumpkin,
+but I’m going to say something which I very very seldom indulge in, but
+it’s good, I believe, for indigestion. I will take a little—just a very
+small quantity—of gin, with some hot water, and a large lump of sugar, to
+destroy the alcohol.”
+
+“Ha!” said the knowing Bumpkin; “that’s wot we call gin-and-water in our
+part of the country. So’ll I, Mrs. Oldtimes, but not too much hot water
+for I. What’ll thee smoke, sir?”
+
+“Thank you, one of those cheroots that my lord praised so much the last
+time we was ’ere.”
+
+“If you please, sir,” said the landlady, with a very good-natured smile.
+
+“Well,” said the O’Rapley, in his patronizing manner; “and how have we
+got on to-day? let us hear all about it. Come, your good health, Mr.
+Bumkin, and success to our lawsuit. I call it _ours_ now, for I really
+feel as interested in it as you do yourself; by-the-bye, what’s it all
+about, Mr. Bumpkin?”
+
+“Well, sir, you see,” replied the astute man, “I hardly knows; it beginnd
+about a pig, but what it’s about now, be more un I can tell thee. I
+think it be salt and trespass.”
+
+“You have not enquired?”
+
+“No, I beant; I left un all in the hands o’ my lawyer, and I believe he’s
+a goodun, bean’t he?”
+
+“Let me see; O dear, yes, a capital man—a very good man indeed, a close
+shaver.”
+
+“Is ur? and that’s what I want. I wants thic feller shaved as close to
+his chin as may be.”
+
+“Ah!” said O’Rapley, “and Prigg will shave him, and no mistake. Well,
+and how did we get on at the Mansion House? First of all, who was
+against you?—Mrs. Oldtimes, I _think_ I’ll just take a very small
+quantity more, it has quite removed my indigestion—who was against you,
+sir?”
+
+“Mr. Nimble; but, lor, he worn’t nowhere; I had un to rights,—jest gi’e
+me a leetle more, missus,—he couldn’t axe I a question I couldn’t answer;
+and I believe he said as good, for I zeed un talking to the Lord Mayor;
+it worn’t no use to question I.”
+
+“You didn’t say anything about me?”
+
+“No,” answered Bumpkin, in a loud whisper; “I din’t; but I did say afore
+I could stop the word from comin’ out o’ my mouth as I had a _companion_,
+but they didn’t ketch it, except that the gentleman under the lord mayor
+were gwine to ax about thee, and blowed if the counsellor didn’t stop un;
+so that be all right.”
+
+“Capital!” exclaimed the great bowler, waving his arm as if in the act of
+delivery; then, in a whisper, “Did they ask about the woman?”
+
+“Noa—they doan’t know nowt about thic—not a word; I was mighty plased at
+un, for although, as thee be aware, it be the biggest lie as ever wur
+heard, I wouldn’t have my wife hear o’ sich to save my life. She be a
+good wife to I an’ allays have a bin; but there I thee could clear me in
+a minute, if need be, sir.”
+
+“Yes, but you see,” said the artful Don, “if I was to appear, it would
+make a sensational case of it in a minute and fill all the papers.”
+
+“Would ur now? Morn’t do that nuther; but, wot d’ye think, sir? As I
+wur leavin’ the Cooart, a gemman comes up and he says, says he, ‘I
+spoase, sir, you don’t want this thing put in the papers?’ How the dooce
+he knowed that, I can’t make out, onless that I wouldn’t say where I
+lived, for the sake o’ Nancy; no, nor thee couldn’t ha’ dragged un out o’
+me wi’ horses.”
+
+“Yes?” said the Don, interrogatively.
+
+“‘Well,’ says I, ‘no, I don’t partickler want it in.’ I thought I’d say
+that, don’t thee zee (with a wink), ’cos he shouldn’t think I were eager
+like.”
+
+“Exactly,”
+
+“Well, this ’ere gemman says, says he, ‘It don’t matter to me, sir,
+whether it’s in or not, but if thee don’t want it in, I’ll keep it out,
+that’s all. It will pay I better p’raps to put un in.’
+
+“‘And who med thee be, sir?’ I axed.
+
+“‘Only the _Times_’, said the gemman, ‘that’s all.’ Then, turning to his
+friend, he said, ‘Come on, Jack, the gemman wants it in, so we’ll have it
+in, every word, and where he comes from too, and all about the gal; we
+know all about it, don’t us, Jack?’”
+
+“Ha!” said the O’Rapley, blowing out a large cloud, and fixing his eye on
+the middle stump.
+
+“Well,” continued Bumpkin, “thee could ha’ knocked I down wi’ a feather.
+How the doose they knowed where I comed from I can’t make out; but here
+wur I as cloase to the man as writes the _Times_ as I be to thee.”
+
+The O’Rapley nodded his head knowingly several times.
+
+“‘Well, and how much do thee charge to keep un out?’ seys I. ‘Don’t be
+too hard upon me, I be only a poor man.’
+
+“‘We have only one charge,’ says the _Times_, ‘and that is half a
+guinea.’
+
+“‘Spoase we say seven and six,’ sess I.
+
+“‘That,’ seys the _Times_, ‘wouldn’t keep your name out, and I suppose
+you don’t want that in?’ ‘Very well,’ I sess, takin’ out my leather bag
+and handin’ him the money; ‘this’ll keep un out, wool ur?’
+
+“‘Sartainly,’ says he; and then his friend Jack says, ‘My fee be five
+shillings, sir.’ ‘And who be thee?’ says I. ‘I’m the _Telegrarf_,’ seys
+he. ‘The devil thee be?’ I sess, ‘I’ve eerd tell on ee.’ ‘Largest
+calculation in the world,’ he says; ‘and, if thee like,’ he says, ‘I can
+take the _Daily Noos_ and _Stanard_ money, for I don’t see ’em here jist
+now; it’ll be five shillings apiece.’
+
+“‘Well,’ I sess, ‘this be rum business, this; if I takes a quantity like
+this, can’t it be done a little cheaper?’
+
+“‘No,’ he says; ‘we stands too high for anything o’ that sort. Thee can
+’ave it or leave it.’
+
+“‘Very well,’ I sess; ‘then, if there’s no option, there’s the money.’
+And with that I handed un the fifteen shillings.
+
+“‘Then,’ says the _Times_, ‘we’d better look sharp, Jack, or else we
+shan’t be in time to keep it out.’ And wi’ that they hurried off as fast
+as they could. I will say’t they didn’t let the grass grow under their
+feet.”
+
+“And why,” enquired the Don, with an amused smile, “were you so anxious
+to keep it out of the _Times_? Mrs. Bumpkin doesn’t read the _Times_,
+does she?”
+
+“Why, no; but then the Squoire tak it in, and when eve done wi un he
+lends un to the Doctor, Mr. Gossip; and when he gets hold o’ anything,
+away it goes to the Parish Clerk, Mr. Jeerum, and then thee med as well
+hire the town crier at once.”
+
+“I see; but if you’ll excuse me, Mr. Bumpkin, I will give you a bit of
+information that may be of service.”
+
+“Thankee, sir; will thee jist tak a little more to wet the tother eye
+like.”
+
+“Well, really,” replied O’Rapley, “it is long past my hour of nocturnal
+repose.”
+
+“What, sir? I doant ondustand.”
+
+“I mean to say that I generally hook it off to bed before this.”
+
+“Zackly; but we’ll ’ave another. Your leave, sir, thee was going to tell
+I zummat.”
+
+“O yes,” said Mr. O’Rapley, with a wave of the hand in imitation of the
+Lord Chief Justice. “I was going to say that those two men were a couple
+of rogues.”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin paused in the act of passing the tumbler to his lips, like
+one who feels he has been artfully taken in.
+
+“You’ve been done, sir!” said Mr. O’Rapley emphatically, “that man who
+said he was the _Times_ was no more the _Times_ than you’re _Punch_.”
+
+“Nor thic _Telegrarf_ feller!”
+
+“No. And you could prosecute them. And I’ll tell you what you could
+prosecute them for.” Mr. Bumpkin looked almost stupified.
+
+“I’ll tell you what these villains have been guilty of; they’ve been
+guilty of obtaining money by false pretences, and conspiring to obtain
+money by false pretences.”
+
+“Have um?” said Bumpkin.
+
+“And you can prosecute them. You’ve only got to go and put the matter in
+the hands of the police, and then go to some first-rate solicitor who
+attends police courts; now I can recommend you one that will do you
+justice. I should like to see these rascals well punished.”
+
+“And will this fust-rate attorney do un for nothin’?”
+
+“Why, hardly; any more than you would sell him a pig for nothing.”
+
+“Then I shan’t prosekit,” said Mr. Bumpkin; “the devil’s in’t, I be no
+sooner out o’ one thing than I be into another—why I beant out o’ thic
+watch job yet, for I got to ’pear at the Old Bailey on the
+twenty-fourth.”
+
+“O, committed for trial, was he?” exclaimed the Don.
+
+“Sure wur ur,” said Mr. Bumpkin triumphantly—“guilty!”
+
+Now I perceived that the wily Mr. O’Rapley did not recommend Bumpkin to
+obtain the services of a solicitor to conduct his prosecution in this
+case; and I apprehend for this reason, that the said solicitor being
+conscientious, would unquestionably recommend and insist that Mr.
+Bumpkin’s evidence at the Old Bailey should be supported by that of the
+Don himself. So Mr. Bumpkin was left to the tender mercies of the Public
+Prosecutor or a criminal tout, or the most inexperienced of “soup”
+instructed counsel, as the case might be, but of which matters at present
+I have no knowledge as I have no dreams of the future.
+
+Then Mr. Bumpkin said, “By thy leave, worthy Mr. O’Rapley, I will just
+see what my head witness be about: he be a sharp lad enow, but wants a
+dale o’ lookin arter.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+
+Don O’Rapley expresses his views of the policy of the legislature in not
+permitting dominoes to be played in public houses.
+
+When Mr. Bumpkin returned to the cosy parlour, his face was red and his
+teeth were set. He was so much agitated indeed, that instead of
+addressing Mr. O’Rapley, he spoke to Mrs. Oldtimes, as though in her
+female tenderness he might find a more sincere and sympathetic adviser.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin was never what you would call an eloquent or fluent speaker:
+his Somersetshire brogue was at times difficult of comprehension. He
+certainly was not fluent when he said to Mrs. Oldtimes: “Why
+thic—there—damn un Mrs. Oldtimes if he beant gwine and never zeed zich a
+thing in my bornd days—”
+
+“Why what ever in the name of goodness gracious is the matter?” asked the
+landlady.
+
+“Why thic there head witness o’ mine: a silly-brained—Gor forgive me that
+iver I should spake so o’ un, for he wor allays a good chap; and I do
+b’leeve he’ve got moore sense than do any thing o’ that kind.”
+
+“What’s the matter? what’s the matter?” again enquired Mrs. Oldtimes.
+
+“Why he be playin’ dominoes wi thic Sergeant.”
+
+“O,” said the landlady, “I was afraid something had happened. We’re not
+allowed to know anything about dominoes or card-playing in our house—the
+Law forbids our knowing it, Mr. Bumpkin; so, if you please, we will not
+talk about it—I wish to conduct my house as it always has been for the
+last five-and-twenty years, in peace and quietness and respectability,
+Mr. Bumpkin, which nobody can never say to the contrairy. It was only
+the last licensing day Mr. Twiddletwaddle, the chairman of the Bench,
+said as it were the best conducted house in Westminster.”
+
+Now whether it was that the report of this domino playing was made in the
+presence of so high a dignitary of the law as Mr. O’Rapley, or from any
+other cause, I cannot say, but Mrs. Oldtimes was really indignant, and
+positively refused to accept any statement which involved the character
+of her establishment.
+
+“I think,” she continued, addressing Mr. O’Rapley, “you have known this
+house for some time, sir.”
+
+“I have,” said O’Rapley. “I have passed it every evening for the last
+ten years.”
+
+“Ah now, to be sure—you hear that, Mr. Bumpkin. What do you think of
+that?”
+
+“Never saw anything wrong, I will say that.”
+
+“Never a game in my house, if I knows it; and what’s more, I won’t
+believe it until I sees it.”
+
+“Ockelar demonstration, that’s the law,” said the Don.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin’s excitement was absolutely merged in that of the landlady,
+whom he had so innocently provoked. He stared as the parties continued
+their wordy justification of this well-ruled household like one dreaming
+with his eyes open. No woman could have made more ado about her own
+character than Mrs. Oldtimes did respecting that of her house. But then,
+the one could be estimated in money, while the other possessed but an
+abstract value.
+
+“I believe,” she repeated, “that cards or dominoes has never been played
+in my house since here I’ve been, or since the law has been what it is.”
+
+“I be wery sorry,” said the penitent Bumpkin; “I warn’t aweare I wur
+doing anythin’ wrong.”
+
+“It’s unlawful, you see, to play,” said the Don; “and consequently they
+dursn’t play. Now, why is it unlawful? Because Public Houses is for
+drinking, not for amusement. Now, sir, Drink is the largest tax-payer
+we’ve got—therefore Drink’s an important Industry. Set people to work
+drinking and you get a good Rewenue, which keeps up the Army and Navy—the
+Navy swims in liquor, sir—but let these here Perducers of the Rewenue
+pause for the sake o’ playing dominoes, or what not, and what’s the
+consequence? You check this important industry—therefore don’t by any
+manner of means interrupt drinking. It’s an agreeable ockepation and a
+paying one.”
+
+“Well done, sir,” said Oldtimes, from the corner of the fireplace, where
+he was doing his best with only one mouth and one constitution to keep up
+the Army and Navy. A patriotic man was Oldtimes.
+
+“Drink,” continued O’Rapley, “is the most powerful horgsilery the
+Government has.”
+
+“Ah!” said Mr. Bumpkin, not knowing what a horgsilery was; “now thee’ve
+gone a-head o’ me, sir. Thee’re a larned man, Mr. O’Rapley, and I beant
+much of a schollard; will thee please to tell I what a horgs—what wur
+it?”
+
+“Horgsilery,” said Mr. O’Rapley.
+
+“Horsgilly—ah! so twur. Well, by thy leave, worthy sir, will thee be so
+kind as to tell I be it anything like a hogshead?”
+
+“Well,” said Mr. O’Rapley, “its more like a corkscrew: the taxes of the
+country would be bottled up as tight as champagne and you couldn’t get
+’em out without this corkscrew.”
+
+“But I worn’t spakin’ about taxes when I spak of dominoes; what I wur
+alludin’ to wur thic Joe been drawed in to goo for a soger.”
+
+“Lor, bless you,” said Mrs. Oldtimes, “many a man as good as Joe have
+listed before now and will again.”
+
+“Mayhap,” said Bumpkin; “but he wurn’t my ’ead witness and didn’t work
+for I. Joe be my right hand man, although I keeps un down and tells un
+he beant fit for nothin’.”
+
+“Ha,” said the Don, “he’s not likely to go for a soldier, I think, if
+it’s that good-looking young chap I saw with the kicking-straps on.”
+
+“Kickin’-straps,” said Bumpkin; “haw! haw! haw! That be a good un. Well
+he told I he wur up to un and I think ur be: he’ll be a clever feller if
+ur gets our Joe. Why Nancy ud goo amost out o’ her mind. And now, sir,
+will thee ’ave any moore?”
+
+Mr. O’Rapley, in the most decisive but polite manner, refused. He had
+quite gone out of his way as it was in the hope of serving Mr. Bumpkin.
+He was sure that the thief would be convicted, and as he rose to depart
+seized his friend’s hand in the most affectionate manner. Anything he
+could do for him he was sure he would do cheerfully, at any amount of
+self-sacrifice—he would get up in the night to serve him.
+
+“Thankee,” said Bumpkin; but he had hardly spoken when he was startled by
+the most uproarious cheers from the taproom. And then he began again
+about the folly of young men getting into the company of recruiting
+sergeants.
+
+“Look here,” said the Don, confidentially, “take my advice—say nothing—a
+still tongue makes a wise head; to persuade a man not to enter the army
+is tantamount to advising him to desert. If you don’t mind, you may lay
+yourself open to a prosecution.”
+
+“Zounds!” exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin, “it seem to me a man in Lunnon be every
+minit liable to a prosecution for zummat. I hope sayin’ that beant
+contempt o’ Coourt, sir.”
+
+Mr. O’Rapley was silent—his head drooped towards Mr. Bumpkin in a
+semi-conscious manner, and he nodded three consecutive times: called for
+another “seroot,” lit it after many efforts, and again assuring Mr.
+Bumpkin that he would do all he could towards facilitating his triumph
+over Snooks, was about to depart, when his friend asked him,
+confidentially, whether he had not better be at the Old Bailey when the
+trial came on, in case of its being necessary to call him.
+
+“Shurel not!” hiccupped the Don. Then he pointed his finger, and leering
+at Bumpkin, repeated, “Shurel not;—jus swell cll Ch. Jussiself”—which
+being interpreted meant, “Certainly not, you might just as well call the
+Chief Justice himself.”
+
+“Pr’aps he’ll try un?” said Bumpkin.
+
+“Noer won’t—noer won’t: Chansy Juge mos likel Massr Rolls.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+
+In spite of all warnings, Joe takes his own part, not to be persuaded on
+one side or the other—affecting scene between Mr. Bumpkin and his old
+servant.
+
+“Whatever can that there shoutin’ be for, Mrs. Oldtimes—they be terrible
+noisy.”
+
+“O,” said the landlady, “somebody else has listed.”
+
+“I hope it beant that silly Joe. I warned un two or three times agin
+thic feller.”
+
+“There have been several to-night,” said the landlady, who had scarcely
+yet recovered from the insinuations against the character of her house.
+
+“How does thee know thic, my dear lady?”
+
+“O, because Miss Prettyface have been in and out sewin’ the colours on
+all the evening, that’s all. Sergeant Goodtale be the best recrootin’
+sergeant ever come into a town—he’d list his own father!”
+
+“Would ur, now?” said Bumpkin. “Beant thee afeard o’ thy husband bein’
+took?”
+
+Mrs. Oldtimes shrieked with laughter, and said she wished he would list
+Tom, for he wasn’t any good except to sit in the chimney corner and smoke
+and drink from morning to night.
+
+“And keep up th’ Army,” growled the husband
+
+“Ha, keep up the Army, indeed,” said Mrs. Oldtimes; “you do your share in
+that way, I grant.”
+
+Now it was quite manifest that that last cheer from the taproom was the
+herald of the company’s departure. There was a great scuffling and
+stamping of feet as of a general clearing out, and many “good nights.”
+Then the big manly voice of the Sergeant said: “Nine o’clock, lads; nine
+o’clock; don’t oversleep yourselves; we shall have chops at eight. What
+d’ye say to that, Mrs. Oldtimes?”
+
+“As you please, Sergeant; but there’s a nice piece of ham, if any would
+like that.”
+
+“Ha!” said the Sergeant; “now, how many would like ham?”
+
+“I’se for a chop,” said Joe, working his mouth as if he would get it in
+training.
+
+“Right,” said the Sergeant, “we’ll see about breakfast in the morning.
+But you know, Mrs. Oldtimes, we like to start with a good foundation.”
+
+And with three cheers for the Sergeant the recruits left the house: all
+except Joe, who occupied his old room.
+
+After they were gone, and while Mr. Bumpkin was confidentially conversing
+with the landlord in the chimney corner, he was suddenly aroused by the
+indomitable Joe bursting into the room and performing a kind of dance or
+jig, the streamers, meanwhile, in his hat, flowing and flaunting in the
+most audaciously military manner.
+
+“Halloa! halloa! zounds! What be th’ meaning o’ all this? Why, Joe!
+Joe! thee’s never done it, lad! O dear! dear!”
+
+There were the colours as plain as possible in Joe’s hat, and there was a
+wild unmeaning look in his eyes. It seemed already as if the old
+intimacy between him and his master were at an end. His memory was more
+a thing of the future than the past: he recollected the mutton chops that
+were to come. And I verily believe it was brightened by the dawn of new
+hopes and aspirations. There was an awakening sense of individuality.
+Hitherto he had been the property of another: he had now exercised the
+right of ownership over himself; and although that act had transferred
+him to another master, it had seemed to give him temporary freedom, and
+to have conferred upon him a new existence.
+
+Man is, I suppose, what his mind is, and Joe’s mind was as completely
+changed as if he had been born into a different sphere. The moth comes
+out of the grub, the gay Hussar out of the dull ploughman.
+
+“Why, Joe, Joe,” said his old master. “Thee’s never gone an’ listed, has
+thee, Joe?”
+
+“Lookee ’ere, maister,” said the recruit, taking off his hat and
+spreading out the colours—“Thee sees these here, maister?”
+
+“Thee beant such a fool, Joe, I knows thee beant—thee’s been well brought
+oop—and I knows thee beant gwine to leave I and goo for a soger!”
+
+“I be listed, maister.”
+
+“Never!” exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin. “I wunt b’lieve it, Joe.”
+
+“Then thee must do tother thing, maister. I tellee I be listed; now,
+what’s thee think o’ that?”
+
+“That thee be a fool,” said Mr. Bumpkin, angrily; “thee be a
+silly-brained—.”
+
+“Stop a bit, maister, no moore o’ that. I beant thy sarvant now. I be a
+Queen’s man—I be in the Queen’s sarvice.”
+
+“A pooty Queen’s man thee be, surely. Why look at thic hair all down
+over thy face, and thee be as red as a poppy.”
+
+Now I perceived that although neither master nor man was in such a state
+as could be described as “intoxicated,” yet both were in that
+semi-beatific condition which may be called sentimental.
+
+“Lookee ’ere, maister,” continued Joe.
+
+“And lookee here,” said Mr. Bumpkin, “didn’t I come out to thee two or
+three times, and call thee out and tell ’ee to tak’ heed to thic soger
+feller, for he wur up to no good? Did I Joe, or did I not?”
+
+“Thee did, maister.”
+
+“Well, an’ now look where thee be; he’ve regler took thee in, thee silly
+fool.”
+
+“No, he beant; for he wouldn’t ’ave I at fust, and told I to goo and ax
+my mither. No ses I, I’ll goo to the divil afore I be gwine to ax
+mither. I beant a child, I ses.”
+
+“But thee’s fond o’ thy poor old mither, Joe; I knows thee be, and sends
+her a shillin’ a week out o’ thy wages; don’t thee, Joe?”
+
+This was an awkward thrust, and pricked the lad in his most sensitive
+part. His under-lip drooped, his mouth twitched, and his eyes glistened.
+He was silent.
+
+“Where’ll thy poor old mither get a shilling a week from noo, Joe?
+That’s what I wants to know.”
+
+Joe drew his sleeve over his face, but bore up bravely withal. _He_
+wasn’t going to cry, not he.
+
+“Thee beest a silly feller to leave a good ooame and nine shillin’ a week
+to goo a sogerin; and when thee was out o’ work, there were allays a
+place for thee, Joe, at the fireside: now, warnt there, Joe?”
+
+“Lookee ’ere, maister, I be for betterin’ myself.”
+
+“Betterin’ thyself? who put that into thy silly pate? thic sergeant, I
+bleeve.”
+
+“So ur did; not by anything ur said, but to see un wi beef steaks and
+ingons for supper, while I doan’t ’ave a mouthful o’ mate once a week,
+and work like a oarse.”
+
+“Poor silly feller—O dear, dear! whatever wool I tell Nancy and thy poor
+mither. What redgimen be thee in, Joe?”
+
+“Hooroars!”
+
+“Hooroars! hoo-devils!” and I perceived that Mr. Bumpkin’s eyes began to
+glisten as he more and more realized the fact that Joe was no more to
+him—“thee manest the oosors, thee silly feller; a pooty oosor thee’ll
+make!”
+
+“I tellee what,” said Joe, whose pride was now touched, “Maister Sergeant
+said I wur the finest made chap he ever see.”
+
+“That’s ow ur gulled thee, Joe.”
+
+“Noa didn’t; I went o’ my own free will. No man should persuade I—trust
+Joe for thic: couldn’t persuade I to goo, nor yet not to goo.”
+
+“That’s right,” chimed in Miss Prettyface, with her sweet little voice.
+
+“And thee sewed the colours on; didn’t thee, Miss?”
+
+“I did,” answered the young lady.
+
+“Joe,” said Mr. Bumpkin, “I be mortal sorry for thee; what’ll I do wirout
+thy evidence? Lawyer Prigg say thee’s the most wallible witness for I.”
+
+“Lookee ’ere, maister, ere we bin ’anging about for weeks and weeks and
+no forrerder so far as I can see. When thy case’ll come on I don’t
+bleeve no man can tell; but whensomdever thee wants Joe, all thee’ve got
+to do is to write to the Queen, and she’ll gie I leave.”
+
+“O thee silly, igerant ass!” said Mr. Bumpkin; “I can’t help saying it,
+Joe—the Queen doan’t gie leave, it be the kernel. I know zummut o’
+sogerin, thee see; I were in th’ militia farty year agoo: but spoase thee
+be away—abraird? How be I to get at thee then?”
+
+“Ha! if I be away in furren parts, and thy case be in the list, I doant
+zee—”
+
+“Thee silly feller, thee’ll ha to goo fightin’ may be.”
+
+“Well,” said Joe, “I loikes fightin’.”
+
+“Thee loikes fightin’! what’s thee know about fightin’? never fit
+anything in thy life but thic boar-pig, when he got I down in the yard.
+O, Joe, I can’t bear the thought o thee goin’.”
+
+“Noa, but Maister Sergeant says thee jist snicks off the ’eads of the
+enemy like snickin’ off the tops o’ beans.”
+
+“Yes, but ow if thee gets thine snicked off?”
+
+“Well, if mine be snicked off, it wunt be no use to I, and I doan’t care
+who has un when I ha’ done wi un: anybody’s welcome as thinks he can do
+better with un than I, or ’as moore right to un.”
+
+“Joe, Joe, whatever’ll them there pigs do wirout thee, and thic there
+bull ’ll goo out of his mind—he wur mighty fond o’ thee, Joe—thee couldst
+do anything wi un: couldn’t ur, Joe?”
+
+“Ha!” said the recruit; “that there bull ud foller I about anywhere, and
+so ur would Missis.”
+
+“Then there be Polly!”
+
+“Ha, that there Polly, she cocked her noase at I, maister, becos she
+thought I worn’t good enough; but wait till she sees me in my cloase; she
+wunt cock her noase at I then, I’ll warrant.”
+
+“Well, Joe, as thee maks thy bed so thee must lie on un, lad. I wish
+thee well, Joe.”
+
+“Never wronged thee, did I, maister?”
+
+“Never; no, never.” And at this point master and man shook hands
+affectionately.
+
+“Gie my love to thic bull,” said Joe. “I shall come down as soon as evir
+I can: I wish they’d let me bring my oarse.”
+
+“Joe, thee ha’ had too much to drink, I know thee has; and didn’t I warn
+thee, Joe? Thee can’t say I didn’t warn thee.”
+
+“Thee did, maister, I’ll allays say it; thee warned I well—but lor that
+there stuff as the Sergeant had, it jist shoots through thee and livins
+thee oop for all the world as if thee got a young ooman in thee arms in a
+dancin’ booth at the fair.”
+
+“Ha, Joe, it were drink done it.”
+
+“Noa, noa, never!—good-night, maister, and God bless thee—thee been a
+good maister, and I been a good sarvant. I shall allays think o’ thee
+and Missis, too.”
+
+Here I saw that Mr. Bumpkin, what with his feelings and what with his
+gin-and-water, was well nigh overcome with emotion. Nor was it to be
+wondered at; he was in London a stranger, waiting for a trial with a
+neighbour, with whom for years he had been on friendly terms; his hard
+savings were fast disappearing; his stock and furniture were mortgaged;
+some of it had been sold, and his principal witness and faithful servant
+was now gone for a soldier. In addition to all this, poor Mr. Bumpkin
+could not help recalling the happiness of his past life, his early
+struggles, his rigid self-denial, his pleasure as the modest savings
+accumulated—not so much occasioned by the sordid desire of wealth, as the
+nobler wish to be independent. Then there was Mrs. Bumpkin, who
+naturally crossed his mind at this miserable moment in his existence—at
+home by herself—faithful, hardworking woman, who believed not only in her
+husband’s wisdom, but in his luck. She had never liked this going to
+law, and would much rather have given Snooks the pig than it should have
+come about; yet she could not help believing that her husband must be
+right come what may. What would she think of Joe’s leaving them in this
+way? All this passed through the shallow mind of the farmer as he
+prepared for bed. And there was no getting away from his thoughts, try
+as he would. As he lay on his bed there passed before his mind the old
+farm-house, with its elm tree; and the barnyard, newly littered down with
+the sweet smelling fodder; the orchard blossoms smiling in the morning
+sunshine; the pigs routing through the straw; the excited ducks and the
+swifter fowls rushing towards Mrs. Bumpkin as she came out to shake the
+tablecloth; the sleek and shining cows; the meadows dotted all over with
+yellow buttercups; the stately bull feeding in the distance by himself;
+the lazy stream that pursued its even course without a quarrel or a
+lawsuit; all these, and a thousand other remembrances of home, passed
+before the excited and somewhat distempered vision of the farmer on this
+unhappy night. Had he been a criminal waiting his trial he could not
+have been more wretched. At length he endeavoured to console himself by
+thinking of Snooks: tried to believe that victory over that ill-disposed
+person would repay the trouble and anxiety it cost him to achieve. But
+no, not even revenge was sweet under his present circumstances. It is
+always an apple of ashes at the best; but, weighed now against the
+comforts and happiness of a peaceful life, it was worse than ashes—it was
+poison.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Here I awoke.
+
+“Now,” said my wife, “is it not just as I told you? I knew that artful
+Sergeant would enlist poor stupid Joe?”
+
+“O,” quoth I, “have I been talking again?”
+
+“More than ever; and I am very sorry Joe has deserted his kind master. I
+am afraid now he will lose his case.”
+
+“I am not concerned about that at present; my work is but to dream, not
+to prophesy events. I hope Mr. Bumpkin will win, but nothing is so
+uncertain as the Law.”
+
+“And why should that be? Law should be as certain as the Multiplication
+Table.”
+
+“Ah,” sighed I, “but—”
+
+“A man who brings an action must be right or wrong,” interrupted my wife.
+
+“Yes,” said I, “and sometimes he’s both; and one judge will take one view
+of his case—his conduct out of Court, and his demeanour in—while another
+judge will take another; why, I have known a man lose his case through
+having a wart upon his nose.”
+
+“Gracious!” exclaimed my wife, “is it possible?”
+
+“Yes,” quoth I; “and another through having a twitch in his eye. Then
+you may have a foolish jury, who take a prejudice against a man. For
+instance, if a lawyer brings an action, he can seldom get justice before
+a common jury; and so if he be sued. A blue ribbon man on the jury will
+be almost sure to carry his extreme virtue to the border of injustice
+against a publican. Masters decide against workmen, and so on.”
+
+“Well, Mr. Bumpkin is not a lawyer, or a publican, or a blue ribbon man,
+so I hope he’ll win.”
+
+“I don’t hope anything about it,” I replied. “I shall note down what
+takes place; I don’t care who wins.”
+
+“When will his case at the Old Bailey come on? I think that’s the term
+you use.”
+
+“It will be tried next week.”
+
+“He is sure to punish that wicked thief who stole his watch.”
+
+“One would think so: much will depend upon the way Mr. Bumpkin gives his
+evidence; much on the way in which the thief is defended; a good deal on
+the ability of the Counsel for the Prosecution; and very much on the
+class of man they get in the jury box.”
+
+“But the case is so clear.”
+
+“Yes, to us who know all about it; but you have to make it clear to the
+jury.”
+
+“There’s the watch found upon the man. Why, dear me, what can be clearer
+or plainer than that?”
+
+“True; that’s Mr. Bumpkin’s evidence.”
+
+“And Mr. Bumpkin saw him take it.”
+
+“That’s Bumpkin again.”
+
+“Then Mr. O’Rapley was with him.”
+
+“Did you not hear that he is not to be called; the Don doesn’t want to be
+seen in the affair.”
+
+“Well, I feel certain he will win. I shall not believe in trial by jury
+if they let that man off.”
+
+“You don’t know what a trial at the Old Bailey or Quarter Sessions is. I
+don’t mean at the Old Bailey before a real Common Law judge, but a
+Chancery judge. I once heard a counsel, who was prosecuting a man for
+passing bad money, interrupt a recorder in his summing up, and ask him to
+tell the jury there was evidence of seven bad florins having been found
+in the prisoner’s boot. As guilty knowledge was the gist of the offence,
+this seemed somewhat important. The learned young judge, turning to the
+jury, said, in a hesitating manner, ‘Well, really, gentlemen, I don’t
+know whether that will affect your judgment in any way; there is the
+evidence, and you may consider it if you please.’”
+
+“One more thing I should like to ask.”
+
+“By all means.”
+
+“Why can’t they get Mr. Bumpkin’s case tried?”
+
+“Because there is no system. In the County Court, where a judge tries
+three times as many cases in a day as any Superior judge, cases are tried
+nearly always on the day they are set down for. At the Criminal Courts,
+where every case is at least as important as any Civil case, everyone
+gets tried without unnecessary delay. In the Common Law Courts it’s very
+much like hunt the slipper—you hardly ever know which Court the case is
+in for five minutes together. Then they sit one day and not another, to
+the incalculable expense of the suitors, who may come up from Devonshire
+to-night, and, after waiting a week, go back and return again to town at
+the end of the following month.”
+
+“But, now that O’Rapley has taken the matter up, is there not some hope?”
+
+“Well, he seems to have as much power as anyone.”
+
+“Then I hope he’ll exert it; for it’s a shame that this poor man should
+be kept waiting about so long. I quite feel for him: there really ought
+not to be so much delay in the administration of justice.”
+
+“A dilatory administration of justice amounts too often to a denial of it
+altogether. It always increases the expense, and often results in
+absolute ruin.”
+
+“I wonder men don’t appoint someone when they fell out to arbitrate
+between them.”
+
+“They often do, and too frequently, after all the expense of getting
+ready for trial has been incurred, the case is at last sent to the still
+more costly tribunal called a reference. Many matters cannot be tried by
+a jury, but many can be that are not; one side clamouring for a reference
+in order to postpone the inevitable result; the other often obliged to
+submit and be defeated by mere lapse of time.”
+
+“It seems an endless sort of business.”
+
+“Not quite; the measure of it is too frequently the length of the purse
+on the one side or the other. A Railway Company, who has been cast in
+damages for £1,000, can soon wear out a poor plaintiff. One of the
+greatest evils of modern litigation is the frequency with which new
+trials are granted.”
+
+“Lawyers,” said my wife, “are not apparently good men of business.”
+
+“They are not organizers.”
+
+“It wants such a man as General Wolseley.”
+
+“Precisely.” And here I felt the usual drowsiness which the subject
+invariably produces. So I dreamed again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+
+Morning reflections—Mrs. Oldtimes proves herself to be a great
+philosopher—the departure of the recruits to be sworn in.
+
+And as I dreamed, methought what a strange paradox is human nature. How
+often the night’s convivialities are followed by despondent morning
+reflections! In the evening we grow valiant over the inspiriting
+converse and the inspiring glass; in the morning we are tame and
+calculating. The artificial gaslight disappears, and the sober, grey
+morning breaks in upon our reason. If the sunshine only ripened one-half
+the good resolves and high purposes formed at night over the social
+glass, what a harvest of good deeds there would be! Yes, and if the
+evening dissipations did not obliterate the good resolves of the morning,
+which we so often form as a protection against sin and sorrow, what happy
+creatures we should be!
+
+Methought I looked into a piece of three-cornered glass, which was
+resting on a ledge of the old wall in the room where Joe was sleeping,
+and that I read therein the innermost thoughts of this country lad. And
+I saw that he awoke to a very dreadful sense of the realities of his new
+position; that, one after another, visions of other days passed before
+his mind’s eye as he lay gazing at the dormer window of his narrow
+chamber. What a profound stillness there was! How different from the
+roystering glee of the previous night! It was a stillness that seemed to
+whisper of home; of his poor old mother; of the green sward lane that led
+to the old farm; of the old oak tree, where the owls lived, and ghosts
+were said to take up their quarters; of the stile where, of a Sunday
+morning, he used to smoke his pipe with Jack, and Ned, and Charley; where
+he had often stood to see Polly go by to church; and he knew that,
+notwithstanding she would not so much as look at him, he loved her down
+to the very sole of her boot; and would stand and contemplate the print
+of her foot after she had passed; he didn’t know why, for there was
+nothing in it, after all. No, Joe, nothing in it—it was in you; that
+makes all the difference. And the voice whispered to him of sunny days
+in the bright fields, when he held the plough, and the sly old rook would
+come bobbing and pecking behind him; and the little field-mouse would
+flit away from its turned up nest, frightened to death, as if it were
+smitten with an earthquake; and the skylark would dart up over his head,
+letting fall a song upon him, as though it were Heaven’s blessing. Then
+the voice spoke of the noontide meal under the hedge in the warm
+sunshine, or in the shade of the cool spreading tree; of the horses
+feeding close up alongside the hedge; of the going home in the evening,
+and the warm fireside, and the rustic song, and of the thousand and one
+beloved associations that he was leaving and casting behind him for ever.
+But then, again, he thought of “bettering his condition,” of getting on
+in the world, of the smart figure he should look in the eyes of Polly,
+who would be sure now to like him better than she liked the baker. He
+never could see what there was in the baker that any girl should care
+for; and he thought of what the Sergeant had said about asking his
+mother’s leave. And then he pondered on the beef steaks and onions and
+mutton chops, and other glories of a soldier’s life; so he got up with a
+brave, resolute heart to face the world like a man, although it was
+plainly visible that sorrow struggled in his eyes.
+
+There was just one tear for old times, the one tear that showed how very
+human Joe was beneath all the rough incrustations with which ignorance
+and poverty had enveloped him.
+
+As he was sousing his head and neck in a pail of cold water in the little
+backyard of the Inn, the thought occurred to him,—
+
+“I wonder whether or no we ’gins these ’ere mutton chops for brakfast
+to-day or arter we’re sweared in. I expects not till arter we’re sweared
+in.”
+
+Then his head went into the pail with a dash, as if that was part of the
+swearing-in process. As it came out he was conscious of a twofold
+sensation, which it may not be out of place to describe: the sensation
+produced by the water, which was refreshing in the highest degree, and
+the sensation produced by what is called wind, which was also deliciously
+refreshing; and it was in this wise. Borne along upon the current of air
+which passed through the kitchen, there was the most odoriferous savour
+of fried bacon that the most luxurious appetite could enjoy. It was so
+beautifully and voluptuously fragrant that Joe actually stopped while in
+the act of soaping his face that he might enjoy it. No one, I think,
+will deny that it must have been an agreeable odour that kept a man
+waiting with his eyes fall of soap for half a minute.
+
+“That beant amiss,” thought Joe; “I wonder whether it be for I.”
+
+The problem was soon solved, for as he entered the kitchen with a face as
+bright and ruddy almost as the sun when he comes up through a mist, he
+saw the table was laid out for five, and all the other recruits had
+already assembled. There was not one who did not look well up to his
+resolution, and I must say a better looking lot of recruits were never
+seen: they were tall, well made, healthy, good-looking fellows.
+
+Now Mrs. Oldtimes was busy at the kitchen fire; the frying-pan was doing
+its best to show what could be done for Her Majesty’s recruits. He was
+hissing bravely, and seemed every now and then to give a louder and
+heartier welcome to the company. As Joe came in I believe it fairly gave
+a shout of enthusiasm, a kind of hooray. In addition to the rashers that
+were frying, there was a large dish heaped up in front of the fire, so
+that it was quite clear there would be no lack, however hungry the
+company might be.
+
+Then they sat down and every one was helped. Mrs. Oldtimes was a woman
+of the world; let me also state she had a deep insight into human nature.
+She knew the feelings of her guests at this supreme moment, and how
+cheaply they could be bought off at their present state of soldiering.
+She was also aware that courage, fortitude, firmness, and the higher
+qualities of the soul depend so much upon a contented stomach, that she
+gave every one of her guests some nice gravy from the pan.
+
+It was a treat to see them eat. The Boardman was terrific, so was Jack.
+Harry seemed to have a little more on his mind than the others, but this
+did not interfere with his appetite; it simply affected his manner of
+appeasing it. He seemed to be in love, for his manner was somewhat
+reserved. At length the Sergeant came in, looking so cheerful and
+radiant that one could hardly see him and not wish to be a soldier. Then
+his cheery “Well, lads; good morning, lads,” was so home-like that you
+almost fancied soldiering consisted in sitting by a blazing kitchen fire
+on a frosty morning and eating fried bacon. What a spirit his presence
+infused into the company! He detected at a glance the down-heartedness
+of Harry, and began a story about his own enlistment years ago, when the
+chances for a young man of education were nothing to what they are now.
+The story seemed exactly to fit the circumstances of the case and cheered
+Harry up wonderfully. Breakfast was nearly finished when the Sergeant,
+after filling his pipe, said:
+
+“Comrades, what do you say; shall I wait till you’ve quite finished?”
+
+“No, no, Sergeant; no, no,” said all.
+
+Oh! the fragrance of that pipe! And the multiplied fragrance of all the
+pipes! Then came smiling Miss Prettyface to see if their ribbons were
+all right; and the longing look of all the recruits was quite an
+affecting sight; and the genial motherly good-natured best wishes of Mrs.
+Oldtimes were very welcome. All these things were pleasant, and proved
+Mrs. Oldtimes’ philosophy to be correct—if you want to develop the higher
+virtues in a man, feed him.
+
+Then came the word of command in the tone of an invitation to a pleasure
+party: “Now, lads, what do you say?” And off went Harry, upright as if
+he had been drilled; off went Bill, trying to shake off the deal boards
+in which he had been sandwiched for a year and a half; off went Bob as
+though he had found an agreeable occupation at last; off went Devilmecare
+as though the war was only just the other side of the road; off went Jack
+as though it mattered nothing to him whether it was the Army or the
+Church; and, just as Mr. Bumpkin looked out of the parlour window, off
+went his “head witness,” swaggering along in imitation of the Sergeant,
+with the colours streaming from his hat as though any honest employment
+was better than hanging about London for a case to “come on.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+
+A letter from home.
+
+“I wonder,” said Mrs. Oldtimes, “who this letter be for; it have been
+’ere now nigh upon a week, and I’m tired o’ seein’ it.”
+
+Miss Prettyface took the letter in her hand and began, as best she could,
+for the twentieth time to endeavour to decipher the address. It was very
+much blotted and besmeared, and presented a very remarkable specimen of
+caligraphy. The most legible word on it seemed “Gouse.”
+
+“There’s nobody here of that name,” said the young lady. “Do you know
+anybody, Mr. Bumpkin, of the name of Gouse?”
+
+“Devil a bit,” said he, taking the letter in his hands, and turning it
+over as if it had been a skittle-ball.
+
+“The postman said it belonged here,” said Mrs. Oldtimes, “but I can’t
+make un out.”
+
+“I can’t read the postmark,” said Miss Prettyface.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin put on a large pair of glasses and examined the envelope with
+great care.
+
+“I think you’ve got un upside down,” said Mrs. Oldtimes.
+
+“Ah! so ur be,” replied the farmer, turning it over several times.
+“Why,” he continued, “here be a _b_—and a _u_, beant it? See if that
+beant a _u_, Miss, your eyes be better un mine; they be younger.”
+
+“O yes, that’s a _u_,” said Miss Prettyface, “and an _m_.”
+
+“And that spell _bum_.”
+
+“But stop,” said Miss Prettyface, “here’s a _p_.”
+
+“That’s _bump_,” said Mrs. Oldtimes; “we shall get at something
+presently.”
+
+“Why,” exclaimed Bumpkin, “I be danged if I doant think it be my old
+’ooman’s writin’: but I beant sure. That be the way ur twists the tail
+of ur _y_’s and _g_’s, I’ll swear; and lookee ’ere, beant this _k i n_?”
+
+“I think it is,” said the maid.
+
+“Ah, then, thee med be sure that be Bumpkin, and the letter be for I.”
+
+“Yes,” said the young lady, “and that other word which looks more like
+Grouse is meant for Goose, the sign of the house.”
+
+“Sure be un,” exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin, “and Nancy ha put Bumpkin and Goose
+all in one line, when ur ought to ha made two lines ov un. Now look at
+that, that letter might ha been partickler.”
+
+“So it may be as it is,” said Mrs. Oldtimes; “it’s from Mrs. Bumpkin, no
+doubt. Aren’t you going to open it?”
+
+“I think I wool,” said Bumpkin, turning the letter round and round, and
+over and over, as though there was some special private entrance which
+could only be discovered by the closest search. At length Mrs. Oldtimes’
+curiosity was gratified, for he found a way in, and drew out the many
+folded letter of the most difficult penmanship that ever was subjected to
+mortal gaze. It was not that the writing was illegible, but that the
+spelling was so extraordinary, and the terms of expression so varied.
+Had I to interpret this letter without the aid of a dream I should have a
+long and difficult task before me. But it is the privilege of dreamers
+to see things clearly and in a moment: to live a lifetime in a few
+seconds, and to traverse oceans in the space of a single respiration.
+So, in the present instance, that which took Mr. Bumpkin, with the help
+of Mrs. Oldtimes and the occasional assistance of Lucy an hour to
+decipher, flashed before me in a single second. I ought perhaps to
+translate it into a more civilized language, but that would be impossible
+without spoiling the effect and disturbing the continuity of character
+which is so essential in a work made up of various actors. Mr. Bumpkin
+himself in his ordinary costume would be no more out of place in my Lord
+Mayor’s state carriage than Mrs. Bumpkin wielding the Queen’s English in
+its statelier and more fashionable adornment. So I give it as it was
+written. It began in a bold but irregular hand, and clearly indicated a
+certain agitation of mind not altogether in keeping with the even
+temperament of the writer’s daily life.
+
+“Deer Tom” (the letter began), “I ope thee be well for it be a long time
+agoo since thee left ere I cant mak un out wot be all this bother about
+a pig but Tom thee’ll be glad to ear as I be doin weel the lamin be over
+and we got semteen as pooty lams as ever thee clapped eyes on The weet
+be lookin well and so be the barly an wuts thee’ll be glad Tom to ear wot
+good luck I been avin wi sellin Mister Prigg have the kolt for twenty
+pun a pun more an the Squoire ofered Sam broked er in and ur do look
+well in Mrs. Prigg faten I met un the tother day Mr. Prigg wur drivin un
+an he tooked off his at jist th’ sam as if I’d been a lady Missis Prigg
+din’t see me as her edd wur turned th’ tother way I be glad to tell ee
+we sold the wuts ten quorter these was bort by Mister Prigg and so wur
+the stror ten load as clane and brite as ever thee seed Mr. Prigg be a
+rale good custumer an a nice man I wish there was moore like im it ud be
+the makin o’ th’ Parish we shal ave a nice lot o monie to dror from un at
+Miklemes he be the best customer we ever ad an I toold th’ Squoire wen ur
+corled about the wuts as Mister Prigg ad orfered ten shillin a quorter
+for un more un ee Ur dint seem to like un an rod away but we dooant o un
+anythink Tom so I dont mind we must sell ware we ken mak moast monie I
+spose Sampson be stronger an grander than ever it’s my belief an I thinks
+we shal do well wi un this Spring tell t’ Joe not to stop out o’ nites or
+keep bad kumpany and to read evere nite wat the Wicker told un the fust
+sarm an do thee read un Tom for its my bleef ur cant ’urt thee nuther.”
+
+“Humph!” said Bumpkin, “fust sarms indade. I got a lot o’ time for
+sarms, an’ as for thic Joe—lor, lor, Nancy, whatever will thee say, I
+wonder, when thee knows he’s gone for a soger—a sarm beant much good to
+un now; he be done for.”
+
+And then Mr. Bumpkin went and looked out of the window, and thought over
+all the good news of Mrs. Bumpkin’s letter, and mentally calculated that
+even up to this time Mr. Prigg’s account would come to enough to pay the
+year’s rent.
+
+Going to law seemed truly a most advantageous business. Here he had got
+two shillings a quarter more for the oats than the Squire had offered,
+and a pound more for the colt. Prigg was a famous customer, and no doubt
+would buy the hay. And, strange to say, just as Mr. Bumpkin thought
+this, he happened to turn over the last page of the letter, and there he
+saw what was really a Postscript.
+
+“Halloo!” says he, “my dear, here be moore on’t; lookee ’ere.”
+
+“So there is,” answered Lucy; “let’s have a look.” And thus she read:—
+
+“The klover cut out well it made six lode the little rik an four pun
+nineteen The Squoire ony offered four pun ten so in corse I let Mister
+Prigg ave un.”
+
+“Well done, Nancy, thee be famous. Now, thic big rik’ll fetch moore’n
+thic.”
+
+Such cheering intelligence put Mr. Bumpkin in good heart in spite of his
+witness’s desertion. Joe was a good deal, but he wasn’t money, and if he
+liked to go for a soger, he must go; but, in Mr. Bumpkin’s judgment, he
+would very soon be tired of it, and wish himself back at his fireside.
+
+“Now, you must write to Mrs. Bumpkin,” said Lucy.
+
+“Thee’ll write for I, my dear; won’t thee?”
+
+“If you like,” said Lucy. And so, after dinner, when she had changed her
+dress, she proceeded to write an epistle for Mrs. Bumpkin’s edification.
+She had _carte blanche_ to put in what she liked, except that the main
+facts were to be that Joe had gone for a horse soger; that he expected
+“the case would come on every day;” and that he had the highest opinion
+of the unquestioned ability of honest Lawyer Prigg.
+
+And now another surprise awaited the patient Bumpkin. As he sat, later
+in the day, smoking his pipe, in company with Mrs. Oldtimes, two men,
+somewhat shabbily dressed, walked into the parlour and ordered
+refreshment.
+
+“A fine day, sir,” said the elder of the two, a man about thirty-five.
+This observation was addressed to Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“It be,” said the farmer.
+
+The other individual had seated himself near the fire, and was apparently
+immersed in the study of the _Daily Telegraph_. Suddenly he observed to
+his companion, as though he had never seen it before,—
+
+“Hallo! Ned, have you seen this?”
+
+“What’s that?” asked the gentleman called Ned.
+
+“Never read such a thing in my life. Just listen.”
+
+ “‘A YOUNG MAN FROM THE COUNTRY.’
+ “EXTRAORDINARY STORY.
+
+ “A man, apparently about sixty-eight, who gave the name of Bumpkin,
+ appeared as the prosecutor in a case under the following
+ extraordinary circumstances. He said he was from the country, but
+ declined to give any more particular address, and had been taken by a
+ friend to see the Old Bailey and to hear the trials at that Court.
+ After leaving the Central Criminal Court, he deposed, that, walking
+ with his friend, he was accosted in the Street in the open daylight
+ and robbed of his watch; that he pursued the thief, and when near
+ Blackfriars Bridge met a man coming towards him; that he seized the
+ supposed thief, and found him wearing the watch which he affirmed had
+ been stolen. The manner and appearance of ‘the young man from the
+ country’ excited great laughter in Court, and the Lord Mayor, in the
+ absence of any evidence to the contrary, thought there was a _primâ
+ facie_ case under the circumstances, and committed the accused for
+ trial to the Central Criminal Court. The prisoner, who was
+ respectably dressed, and against whom nothing appeared to be known,
+ was most ably defended by Mr. Nimble, who declined to put any
+ questions in cross-examination, and did not address his Lordship.
+ The case created great sensation, and it is expected that at the
+ trial some remarkable and astounding disclosures will be made. ‘The
+ young man from the country’ was very remarkably dressed: he twirled
+ in his hand a large old-fashioned white-beaver hat with a black band
+ round it; wore a very peculiar frock, elaborately ornamented with
+ needlework in front and behind, while a yellow kerchief with red ends
+ was twisted round his neck. The countryman declined to give his town
+ address; but a remarkable incident occurred during the hearing, which
+ did not seem to strike either the Lord Mayor or the counsel for the
+ defence, and that was that no appearance of the countryman’s
+ companion was put in. Who he is and to what region he belongs will
+ probably transpire at the ensuing trial, which is expected to be
+ taken on the second day of the next Sessions. It is obvious that
+ while the case is _sub judice_ no comments can properly be made
+ thereon, but we are not prevented from saying that the evidence of
+ this extraordinary ‘young man from the country’ will be subjected to
+ the most searching cross-examination of one of the ablest counsel of
+ the English Bar.”
+
+The two men looked at Mr. Bumpkin; while the latter coloured until his
+complexion resembled beetroot. Miss Prettyface giggled; and Mrs.
+Oldtimes winked at Mr. Bumpkin, and shook her head in the most
+significant manner.
+
+“That’s a rum case, sir,” said Ned.
+
+Silence.
+
+“I don’t believe a word of the story,” said his companion.
+
+Silence.
+
+“Do you believe,” he continued, “that that man could have been wearing
+that watch if he’d stole it?”
+
+“Not I.”
+
+“Lor! won’t Jemmy Nimble make mincemeat of ’im!”
+
+Mrs. Oldtimes looked frequently towards Mr. Bumpkin as she continued her
+sewing, making the most unmistakeable signals that under no circumstances
+was he to answer. It was apparent to everyone, from Mr. Bumpkin’s
+manner, that the paragraph referred to him.
+
+“The best thing that chap can do,” said Ned, “is not to appear at the
+trial. He can easily keep away.”
+
+“He won’t, you’re sure,” answered the other man; “he knows a trick worth
+two of that. They say the old chap deserted his poor old wife, after
+beating her black and blue, and leaving her for dead.”
+
+“It be a lie!” exclaimed Bumpkin, thumping his fist on the table.
+
+“Oh!” said Ned, “do you know anything about it, sir? It’s no odds to me,
+only a man can’t shut his ears.”
+
+“P’r’aps I do and p’r’aps I doant; but it beant no bi’niss o’ thine.”
+
+“I didn’t mean no offence, but anybody can read the paper, surely; it’s a
+free country. P’r’aps you’re the man himself; I didn’t think o’ that.”
+
+“P’r’aps I be, and p’r’aps I beant.”
+
+“And p’r’aps your name is Bumpkin?”
+
+“And p’r’aps it beant, and what then?”
+
+“Why, you’ve nothing to do with it, that’s all; and I don’t see why you
+should interfere.”
+
+“I can’t have no quarrelling in my house,” said the landlady. “This
+gentleman’s nothing to do with it; he knows nothing at all about it; so,
+if you please, gentlemen, we needn’t say any more.”
+
+“Oh! I don’t want to talk about it,” said Ned.
+
+“No more do I,” chimed in his companion; “but it’s a pity that he should
+take up our conversation when he hasn’t anything to do with it, and his
+name isn’t Bumpkin, and he hasn’t lost his watch. It’s no odds to me; I
+don’t care, do you, Ned?”
+
+“Not I,” said Ned; “let’s be off; I don’t want no row; anybody mustn’t
+open his mouth now. Good day, sir.”
+
+And the two young men went away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+
+Mr. Bumpkin determines to maintain a discreet silence about his case at
+the Old Bailey—Mr. Prigg confers with him thereon.
+
+And I saw that Mr. Bumpkin’s case did not come on. Day by day passed
+away, and still it was not in the paper. The reason, however, is simple,
+and need not be told to any except those of my readers who are under the
+impression that the expeditious administration of justice is of any
+consequence. It was obvious to the most simple-minded that the case
+could not be taken for a day or two, because there was a block in every
+one of the three Courts devoted to the trial of Nisi Prius actions. And
+you know as well as anyone, Mr. Bumpkin, that when you get a load of
+turnips, or what not, in the market town blocked by innumerable other
+turnip carts, you must wait. Patience, therefore, good Bumpkin. Justice
+may be slow-footed, but she is sure handed; she may be blind and deaf,
+but she is not dumb; as you shall see if you look into one of the
+“blocked Courts” where a trial has been going on for the last sixteen
+days. A case involving a dispute of no consequence to any person in the
+world, and in which there is absolutely nothing except—O rare
+phenomenon!—plenty of money. It was interesting only on account of the
+bickerings between the learned counsel, and the occasionally friendly
+altercations between the Bench and the Bar. But the papers had written
+it into a _cause célèbre_, and made it a dramatic entertainment for the
+beauty and the chivalry of England. So Mr. Bumpkin had still to wait;
+but it enabled him to attend comfortably the February sittings of the Old
+Bailey, where his other case was to be tried.
+
+When Mr. Prigg read the account of the proceedings before the Lord Mayor,
+he was very much concerned, not to say annoyed, because he was under the
+impression that he ought to have been consulted. Not knowing what to do
+under the circumstances, he resolved, after due consideration, to get
+into a hansom and drive down to the “Goose.” Mr. Prigg, as I have before
+observed, was swift in decision and prompt in action. He had no sooner
+resolved to see Bumpkin than to Bumpkin he went. But his client was out;
+it was uncertain when he would be in. Judge of Mr. Prigg’s
+disappointment! He left word that he would call again; he did call
+again, and, after much dodging on the part of the wily Bumpkin, he was
+obliged to surrender himself a captive to honest Prigg.
+
+“My dear Mr. Bumpkin,” exclaimed he, taking both the hands of his client
+into his own and yielding him a double measure of friendship; “is it
+possible—have you been robbed? Is it you in the paper this morning in
+this _very_ extraordinary case?”
+
+Bumpkin looked and blushed. He was not a liar, but truth is not always
+the most convenient thing, say what you will.
+
+“I see,” said Mr. Prigg; “quite so—quite so! Now _how_ did this happen?”
+
+Bumpkin still looked and blushed.
+
+“Ah!” said Mr. Prigg; “just so. But who was this companion?”
+
+Bumpkin muttered “A friend!”
+
+“O! O! O!” said Mr. Prigg, drawing a long face and placing the
+fore-finger of his left hand perpendicularly from the tip of his nose to
+the top of his forehead.
+
+“Noa,” said Bumpkin, “’taint none o’ that nuther; I beant a man o’ that
+sort.”
+
+“Well, well,” said Mr. Prigg, “I only thought I’d call, you know, in case
+there should be anything which might in any way affect our action.”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin, conscious of his moral rectitude, like all good men, was
+fearless: he knew that nothing which he had done would affect the merits
+of his case, and, therefore, instead of replying to the subtle question
+of his adviser, he merely enquired of that gentleman when he thought the
+case would be on. The usual question.
+
+Mr. Prigg rubbed his hands and glanced his eyes as though just under his
+left elbow was a very deep well, at the bottom of which lay that
+inestimable jewel, truth. “Really,” Mr. Bumpkin, “I expect every hour to
+see us in the paper. It’s very extraordinary; they have no less than
+three Courts sitting, as I daresay you are aware. No less than—let me
+see, my mind’s so full of business, I have seven cases ready to come on.
+Where was I? O, I know; I say there are no less than three Courts, under
+the continuous sittings system, and yet we seem to make no progress in
+the diminution of the tremendous and overwhelming mass of business that
+pours in upon us.”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin said “Hem!”
+
+“You see,” continued Mr. Prigg, “there’s one thing, we shall not last
+long when we do come on.”
+
+“Shan’t ur?”
+
+“You see there’s only one witness, besides yourself, on our side.”
+
+“And ’eve gone for a soger,” said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“A soldier!” exclaimed Prigg. “A soldier, my dear Bumpkin. No—no—you
+don’t say so, really!”
+
+“Ay, sure ’ave ur; and wot the devil I be to do agin that there Snooks,
+as ’ll lie through a brick wall, I beant able to say. I be pooty nigh
+off my chump wot wi’ one thing and another.”
+
+“Off what, sir?” enquired Mr. Prigg.
+
+“Chump,” shouted Bumpkin.
+
+“O, indeed, yes; dear me, you don’t say so. Well, now I’m glad I called.
+I must see about this. What regiment did you say he’d joined?”
+
+“Hoosors!”
+
+“Ha! dear me, has he, indeed?” said Mr. Prigg, noting it down in his
+pocket-book. “What a pity for a young man like that to throw himself
+away—such an intelligent young fellow, too, and might have done so well;
+dear me!”
+
+“Ha,” answered Bumpkin, “there worn’t a better feller at plough nor thic
+there; and he could mend a barrer or a ’arrer, and turn his ’and to pooty
+nigh anything about t’ farm.”
+
+“And is there any reason that can be assigned for this extraordinary
+conduct? Wasn’t in debt, I suppose?”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin laughed one of his old big fireside laughs such as he had not
+indulged in lately.
+
+“Debt! why they wouldn’t trust un a shoe-string. Where the devil wur
+such a chap as thic to get money to get into debt wi’?”
+
+“My dear sir, we don’t want money to get into debt with; we get into debt
+when we have none.”
+
+“Do ur, sir. Then if I hadn’t ’ad any money I’d like to know ’ow fur
+thee’d ha’ trusted I.”
+
+“Dear me,” said Mr. Prigg, “what a very curious way of putting it! But,
+however, soldier or no soldier, we must have his evidence. I must see
+about it: I must go to the dépôt. Now, with regard to your case at the
+Old Bailey.”
+
+“Well,” said Mr. Bumpkin, rather testily; “I be bound over to proserkit,
+and that be all I knows about un. I got to give seam evidence as I guv
+afore the Lord Mayor, and the Lord Mayor said as the case wur clear, and
+away it went for trial.”
+
+“Indeed! dear me!”
+
+“And I got to tak no trouble at all about un, but to keep my mouth shut
+till the case comes on, that’s what the pleeceman told I. I bean’t to
+talk about un, or to tak any money not to proserkit.”
+
+“O dear, no,” said Mr. Prigg. “O dear, dear, no; you would be
+compounding a felony.” (Here Mr. Prigg made a note in his diary to this
+effect:—“Attending you at ‘The Goose’ at Westminster, when you informed
+me that you were the prosecutor in a case at the Old Bailey, and in which
+I advised you not, under any circumstances, to accept a compromise or
+money for the purpose of withdrawing from the prosecution, and strongly
+impressed upon you that such conduct would amount in law to a
+misdemeanor. Long conference with you thereon, when you promised to
+abide by my advice, £1 6_s._ 0_d._”).
+
+“Now,” said Bumpkin, “it seem to me that turn which way I wool, there be
+too much law, too many pitfalls; I be gettin’ sick on’t.”
+
+“Well,” said Mr. Prigg, “we have only to do our duty in that station of
+life in which we are called, and we have no cause to fear. Now you know
+you would _not_ have liked that unprincipled man, Snooks, to have the
+laugh of you, would you now?”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin clenched his fist as he said, “Noa, I’d sooner lose every
+penny I got than thic there feller should ha’ the grin o’ me.”
+
+“Quite so,” said the straightforward moralist. “Quite so! dear me!
+Well, well, I must wish you good morning, for really I am so overwhelmed
+with work that I hardly know which way to turn—bye, bye. I will take
+care to keep you posted up in—.” Here Mr. Prigg’s cab drove off, and I
+could not ascertain whether the posting up was to be in the state of the
+list or in the lawyer’s ledger.
+
+“What a nice man!” said the landlady.
+
+Yes, that was Mr. Prigg’s character, go where he would: “A nice man!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+
+The trial at the Old Bailey of Mr. Simple Simonman for highway robbery
+with violence—Mr. Alibi introduces himself to Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+I next saw Mr. Bumpkin wandering about the precincts of that Grand
+Institution, the Old Bailey, on a drizzly morning about the middle of
+February, 187—, waiting to go before the Grand Jury. As the famous
+prison in Scotland was called the “Heart of Midlothian” so the Old Bailey
+may be considered the Heart of Civilization. Its commanding situation,
+in the very centre of a commercial population, entitles it to this
+distinction; for nothing is supposed to have so civilizing an influence
+as Commerce. I was always impressed with its beautiful and picturesque
+appearance, especially on a fine summer morning, during its sittings,
+when the sun was pouring its brightest beams on its lively portals. What
+a charming picture was presented to your view, when the gates being open,
+the range of sheds on the left met the eye, especially the centre one
+where the gallows is kept packed up for future use. The gallows on the
+one side might be seen and the stately carriages of my Lord Mayor and
+Sheriffs on the other! Gorgeous coachmen and footmen in resplendent
+liveries; magnificent civic dignitaries in elaborate liveries too, rich
+with gold and bright with colour, stepping forth from their carriages,
+amid loud cries of “Make way!” holding in their white-gloved hands large
+bouquets of the loveliest flowers, emblems of—what?
+
+Crime truly has its magnificent accompaniments, and if it does not dress
+itself, as of old, in the rich costumes of a Turpin or a Duval, it is not
+without its beautiful surroundings. Here, where the channels and gutters
+of crime converge, is built, in the centre of the greatest commercial
+city in the world, the Bailey. Mr. Bumpkin wandered about for hours
+through a reeking unsavoury crowd of thieves and thieves’ companions,
+idlers of every type of blackguardism, ruffians of every degree of
+criminality; boys and girls receiving their finishing lessons in crime
+under the dock, as they used to do only a few years ago under the
+gallows. The public street is given over to the enemies of Society; and
+Civilisation looks on without a shudder or regret, as though crime were a
+necessity, and the Old Bailey, in the heart of London, no disgrace.
+
+And a little dirty, greasy hatted, black whiskered man, after pushing
+hither and thither through this pestiferous crowd as though he had
+business with everybody, but did not exactly know what it was, at length
+approached Mr. Bumpkin; and after standing a few minutes by his side
+eyeing him with keen hungry looks, began that interesting conversation
+about the weather which seems always so universally acceptable. Mr.
+Bumpkin was tired. He had been wandering for hours in the street, and
+was wondering when he should be called before the Grand Jury. Mr. Alibi,
+that was the dark gentleman’s name, knew all about Mr. Bumpkin’s case,
+his condition of mind, and his impatience; and he said deferentially:
+
+“You are waiting to go before the Grand Jury, I suppose, sir?”
+
+“I be,” answered Bumpkin.
+
+“Where’s your policeman?” enquired Alibi.
+
+“I doant know,” said Bumpkin.
+
+“What’s his number?”
+
+“Sev’n hunderd and sev’nty.”
+
+“O, I know,” said Alibi; “why not let me get you before the Grand Jury at
+once, instead of waiting about here all day, and perhaps to-morrow and
+the next day, and the day after that; besides, the sooner you go before
+the Grand Jury, the sooner your case will come on; that stands to common
+sense, I think.”
+
+“So ur do,” answered the farmer.
+
+“You will be here a month if you don’t look out. Have you got any
+counsel or solicitor?”
+
+“Noa, I beant; my case be that plaain, it spaks for itself.”
+
+“Ah!” said Mr. Alibi; “they won’t always let a case speak for itself—they
+very often stop it—but if you can get a counsel for nothing, why not have
+one; that stands to reason, I think?”
+
+“For nothing? well that be the fust time I ever eeard o’ a loryer as
+chape as thic.”
+
+How it could pay was the wonder to Mr. Bumpkin. And what a strange
+delusion it must seem to the mind of the general reader! But wait,
+gentle peruser of this history, you shall see this strange sight.
+
+“If you like to have a counsel and a lawyer to conduct your case, sir, it
+shall not cost you a farthing, I give you my word of honour! What do you
+think of that?”
+
+What could Mr. Bumpkin think of that? What a pity that he had not met
+this gentleman before! Probably he would have brought several actions if
+he had; for if you could work the machinery of the law for nothing, you
+would always stand to win.
+
+“O,” said Mr. Alibi, “here is seven hundred and seventy! This gentleman
+wants a counsel, and I’ve been telling him he can have one, and it won’t
+cost him anything.”
+
+“That’s right enough,” said the Policeman; “but it ain’t nothin’ to do
+with me!”
+
+“Just step this way, sir, we’ll soon have this case on,” said Alibi; and
+he led the way to the back room of a public-house, which seemed to be
+used as a “hedge” lawyer’s office.
+
+“Med I mak so bold, sir; be thee a loryer?”
+
+“No,” answered Alibi, “I am clerk to Mr. Deadandgone.”
+
+“And don’t Mr. Deadandam charge nothin’?”
+
+“O dear, no!”
+
+What a very nice man Mr. Deadandam must be!
+
+“You see,” said Alibi, “the Crown pays us!”
+
+“The Crown!”
+
+And here Mr. Alibi slipped a crown-piece into the artfully extended palm
+of the policeman, who said:
+
+“It ain’t nothin’ to do wi’ me; but the gentleman’s quite right, the
+Crown pays.” And he dropped the money into his leather purse, which he
+rolled up carefully and placed in his pocket.
+
+“You see,” said Alibi, “I act as the Public Prosecutor, who can’t be
+expected to do everything—you can’t grind all the wheat in the country in
+one mill, that stands to common sense.”
+
+“That be right, that’s werry good,”
+
+“And,” continued Mr. Alibi, “the Government allows two guineas for
+counsel, a guinea for the solicitor, and so on, and the witnesses, don’t
+you see?”
+
+“Zactly!” said Bumpkin.
+
+“And that’s quite enough,” continued Alibi; “we don’t want anything from
+the prosecutor—that’s right, policeman!”
+
+“It ain’t nothink to do wi’ me,” said the policeman; “but what this ’ere
+gentleman says is the law.”
+
+“There,” said Alibi, “I told you so.”
+
+“I spose,” said the policeman, “you don’t want me, gentlemen; it ain’t
+nothink to do with me?”
+
+“Oh, no, Leary,” replied Alibi; “we don’t want you; the case is pretty
+straight, I suppose.”
+
+“Oh, yes, sir; I expects it’ll be a plea of guilty. There ain’t no
+defence, not as I’m aware of.”
+
+“Oh,” said Alibi, “that’s all right—keep your witnesses together,
+Leary—don’t be out of the way.”
+
+“No, sir,” says Leary; “I thinks I knows my dooty.”
+
+And with this he slouched out of the room, and went and refreshed himself
+at the bar.
+
+In two or three minutes the policeman returned, and was in the act of
+drawing the back of his hand across his mouth, when Alibi said:
+
+“Yes?”
+
+“Beg pardin, sir; but there’s another gentleman wants to see you—I thinks
+he wants you to defend ---; but it ain’t nothink to do wi’ me, sir.”
+
+“Very good,” answered Alibi, “very good; now let me see—”
+
+“You got the Baker’s case?” said Leary.
+
+“Yes,” said Alibi; “O, yes—embezzlement.”
+
+Everything was thus far satisfactorily settled, and Mr. Bumpkin’s
+interests duly represented by Mr. Deadandgone, an eminent practitioner.
+No doubt the services of competent counsel would be procured, and the
+case fully presented to the consideration of an intelligent jury.
+
+Who shall say after this that the Old Bailey is _not_ the Heart of
+Civilization?
+
+I pass over the preliminary canter of Mr. Bumpkin before the Grand Jury;
+the decision of that judicial body, the finding of the true bill, the
+return of the said bill in Court, the bringing up of the prisoner for
+arraignment, and the fixing of the case to be taken first on Thursday in
+deference to the wishes of Mr. Nimble. I pass by all those preliminary
+proceedings which I have before attempted to describe, and which, if I
+might employ a racing simile, might be compared to the saddling of Mr.
+Bumpkin in the paddock, where, unquestionably, he was first favourite for
+the coming race, to be ridden by that excellent jockey, Alibi; and come
+at once to the great and memorable trial of Regina on the prosecution of
+Thomas Bumpkin against Simon Simpleman for highway robbery with violence.
+
+As the prisoner entered the dock there was a look of unaffected innocence
+in his appearance that seemed to make an impression on the learned Judge,
+Mr. Justice Technical, a recently appointed Chancery barrister. I may be
+allowed to mention that his Lordship had never had any experience in
+Criminal Courts whatever: so he brought to the discharge of his important
+duty a thoroughly unprejudiced and impartial mind. He did not suspect
+that a man was guilty because he was charged: and the respectable and
+harmless manner of the accused was not interpreted by his Lordship as a
+piece of consummate acting, as it would be by some Judges who have seen
+much of the world as it is exhibited in Criminal Courts.
+
+Many ladies of rank were ushered in by the Sheriff, all looking as
+smiling and happy as if they were about to witness the performance of
+some celebrated actress for the first time; they had fans and
+opera-glasses, and as they took their places in the boxes allotted to
+rank and fashion, there was quite a pleasant sensation produced in Court,
+and they attracted more notice for the time being than the prisoners
+themselves.
+
+Now these ladies were not there to witness the first piece, the mere
+trial of Simpleman for highway robbery, although the sentence might
+include the necessary brutality of flogging. The afterpiece was what
+they had come to see—namely, a fearful tragedy, in which two men at least
+were sure of being sentenced to death. This is the nearest approach to
+shedding human blood which ladies can now witness in this country; for I
+do not regard pigeon slaughtering, brutal and bloodthirsty as it is, as
+comparable to the sentencing of a fellow-creature to be strangled. And
+no one can blame ladies of rank if they slake their thirst for horrors in
+the only way the law now leaves open to them. The Beauty of Spain is
+better provided for. What a blessed thing is humanity!
+
+It is due to Mr. Newboy, the counsel for the prosecution in the great
+case of _Regina_ v. _Simpleman_, to say that he had only lately been
+called to the Bar, and only “_instructed_,” as the prisoner was placed in
+the dock. Consequently, he had not had time to read his brief. I do not
+know that that was a disadvantage, inasmuch as the brief consisted in
+what purported to be a copy of the depositions so illegibly scrawled that
+it would have required the most intense study to make out the meaning of
+a single line.
+
+Mr. Newboy was by no means devoid of ability; but no amount of ability
+would give a man a knowledge of the facts of a case which were never
+communicated to him. In its simplicity the prosecution was beautifully
+commonplace, and five minutes’ consideration would have been sufficient
+to enable counsel to master the details and be prepared to meet the
+defence. Alas, for the lack of those five minutes! The more Mr. Newboy
+looked at the writing (?) the more confused he got. All he could make
+out was his own name, and _Reg._ v. _Somebody_ on the back.
+
+Now it happened that Mr. Alibi saw the difficulty in which Mr. Newboy
+was, and knowing that his, Alibi’s, clerk, was not remarkable for
+penmanship, handed to the learned counsel at the last moment, when the
+last juryman was being bawled at with the “well and truly try,” a copy of
+the depositions.
+
+The first name at the top of the first page which caught the eye of the
+learned counsel, was that of the prisoner; for the depositions commence
+in such a way as to show the name of the prisoner in close proximity to,
+if not among the names of witnesses.
+
+So Mr. Newboy, in his confusion, taking the name of the prisoner as his
+first witness, shouted out in a bold voice, to give himself courage,
+“_Simon Simpleman_.”
+
+“’Ere!” answered the prisoner.
+
+The learned Judge was a little astonished; and, although, he had got his
+criminal law up with remarkable rapidity, his lordship knew well enough
+that you cannot call the prisoner as a witness either for or against
+himself. Mr. Newboy perceived his mistake and apologised. The laugh, of
+course, went round against him; and when it got to Mr. Nimble, that merry
+gentleman slid it into the jury-box with a turn of his eyes and a twist
+of his mouth. The counsel for the prosecution being by this time pretty
+considerably confused, and not being able to make out the name of a
+single witness on the depositions (there were only two) called out, “The
+Prosecutor.”
+
+“Here, I be,” said a voice from the crowd in a tone which provoked more
+laughter, all of which was turned into the jury-box by Mr. Nimble. “Here
+I be” struggled manfully with all his might and main to push through the
+miscellaneous crowd of all sorts and conditions that hemmed him in. All
+the arrangements at the Old Bailey, like the arrangements at most Courts,
+are expressly devised for the inconvenience of those who have business
+there.
+
+All eyes were turned towards “_Here I be_,” as, after much pushing and
+struggling as though he were in a football match, he was thrust headlong
+forward by three policemen and the crier into the body of the Court.
+There he stood utterly confounded by the treatment he had undergone and
+the sight that presented itself to his astonished gaze. Opera-glasses
+were turned on him from the boxes, the gentlemen on the grand tier
+strained their necks in order to catch a glimpse of him; the pit, filled
+for the most part with young barristers, was in suppressed ecstasies;
+while the gallery, packed to the utmost limit of its capacity, broke out
+into unrestrained laughter. I say, unrestrained; but as the Press truly
+observed in the evening papers, “it was immediately suppressed by the
+Usher.”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin climbed into the witness-box (as though he were going up a
+rick), which was situated between the Judge and the jury. His appearance
+again provoked a titter through the Court; but it was not loud enough to
+call for any further measure of suppression than the usual “Si—lence!”
+loudly articulated in two widely separated syllables by the crier, who
+had no sooner pronounced it than he turned his face from the learned
+Judge and pressed his hand tightly against his mouth, straining his eyes
+as if he had swallowed a crown-piece. Mr. Bumpkin wore his long drab
+frock overcoat, with the waist high up and its large flaps; his hell-fire
+waistcoat, his trousers of corduroy, and his shirt-collar, got up
+expressly for the occasion as though he had been a prime minister. The
+ends of his neckerchief bore no inconsiderable likeness to two well-grown
+carrots. In his two hands he carefully nursed his large-brimmed
+well-shaped white beaver hat; a useful article to hold in one’s hands
+when there is any danger of nervousness, for nothing is so hard to get
+rid of as one’s hands. I am not sure that Mr. Bumpkin was nervous. He
+was a brave self-contained man, who had fought the world and conquered.
+His maxim was, “right is right,” and “wrong is no man’s right.” He was
+of the upright and down-straight character, and didn’t care “for all the
+counsellors in the kingdom.” And why should he? His cause was good, his
+conscience clear, and the story he had to tell plain and
+“straightforrard” as himself. No wonder then that his face beamed with a
+good old country smile, such as he would wear at an exhibition where he
+could show the largest “turmut as ever wur growed.” That was the sort of
+smile he turned upon the audience. And as the audience looked at the
+“turmut,” it felt that it was indeed the most extraordinary specimen of
+field culture it had ever beheld, and worthy of the first prize.
+
+“What is your name?” inquired Mr. Newboy; “I mustn’t lead.”
+
+“Bumpkin, and I bearned asheamed on ’im,” answered the bold farmer.
+
+“Never mind whether you are ashamed or not,” interposed Mr. Nimble; “just
+answer the question.”
+
+“You must answer,” remarked the learned Judge, “not make a speech.”
+
+“Zackly, sir,” said Bumpkin, pulling at his hair.
+
+Another titter. The jury titter and hold down their heads. Evidently
+there’s fun in the case.
+
+Then Mr. Newboy questioned him about the occurrence; asked him if he
+recollected such a day, and where he had been, and where he was going,
+and a variety of other questions; the answer to every one of which
+provoked fresh laughter; until, after much floundering on the part of
+both himself and Mr. Newboy, as though they were engaged in a wrestling
+match, he was asked by the learned Judge “to tell them exactly what
+happened. Let him tell his own story,” said the Judge.
+
+“Ha!” said everybody; “now we shall hear something!”
+
+“I wur a gwine,” began Bumpkin, “hoame—”
+
+“That’s not evidence,” said Mr. Nimble.
+
+“How so?” asks the Judge.
+
+“It doesn’t matter where he was going to, my lord, but where he was!”
+
+“Well, that is so,” says the Judge; “you mustn’t tell us, Mr. Bumpkin,
+whither you were going, but where you were!”
+
+Bumpkin scratched his head; there were too many where’s for him.
+
+“Can’t yon tell us,” says Mr. Newboy, “where you were?”
+
+“Where I were?” says Bumpkin.
+
+A roar of laughter greeted this statement. Mr. Nimble turning it into
+the jury-box like a flood.
+
+“I wur in Lunnun—”
+
+“Yes—yes,” says his counsel; “but what locality?”
+
+You might just as well have put him under a mangle, as to try to get
+evidence out of him like that.
+
+“Look,” says the Judge, “attend to me; if you go on like that, you will
+not be allowed your expenses.”
+
+“What took place?” asks his counsel; “can’t you tell us, man?”
+
+“Why the thief cotch—”
+
+“I object,” says Mr. Nimble; “you mustn’t call him a thief; it is for the
+jury, my lord, to determine that.”
+
+“That is so,” says my lord; “you mustn’t call him a thief, Mr. Bumpkin.”
+
+“Beg pardon, your lord; but ur stole my watch.”
+
+“No—no,” says Mr. Newboy; “took your watch.”
+
+“An if ur took un, ur stole un, I allows,” says Bumpkin; “for I never gin
+it to un.”
+
+There was so much laughter that for some time nothing further was said;
+but every audience knows better than to check the source of merriment by
+a continued uproar; so it waited for another supply.
+
+“You must confine yourself,” says the Judge, “to telling us what took
+place.”
+
+“I’ll spak truth and sheam t’ devil,” says Bumpkin.
+
+“Now go on,” says Newboy.
+
+“The thief stole my watch, and that be t’ plain English on ’t.”
+
+“I shall have to commit you to prison,” says the Judge, “if you go on
+like that; remember you are upon your oath, and it’s a very serious
+thing—serious for you and serious for the young man at the bar.”
+
+At these touching words, the young man at the bar burst out crying, said
+“he was a respectable man, and it was all got up against him;” whereupon
+Mr. Nimble said “he must be quiet, and that his lordship and the
+gentlemen in the box would take care of him and not allow him to be
+trampled on.”
+
+“You are liable,” said the Judge, “to be prosecuted for perjury if you do
+not tell the truth.”
+
+“Well, then, your lord, if a man maun goo to prison for losin’ his watch,
+I’ll goo that’s all; but that ere man stole un.”
+
+Mr. Newboy: “He took it, did he?”
+
+“I object,” said Mr. Nimble; “that is a leading question.”
+
+“Yes,” said the Judge; “I think that is rather leading,” Mr. Newboy; “you
+may vary the form though, and ask him whether the prisoner stole it.”
+
+“Really, my lord,” said Mr. Nimble, “that, with very great respect, is as
+leading as the other form.”
+
+“Not quite, I think, Mr. Nimble. You see in the other form, you make a
+positive assertion that he did steal it; in this, you merely ask the
+question.”
+
+And I saw that this was a very keen and subtle distinction, such as could
+only be drawn by a Chancery Judge.
+
+“Would it not be better, my lord, if he told us what took place?”
+
+“That is what he is doing,” said the Judge; “go on, witness.”
+
+“I say as ’ow thic feller comed out and hugged up aginst I and took ’t
+watch and runned away. I arter’d him, and met him coomin’ along wi’ it
+in ’s pocket; what can be plaainer an thic?”
+
+There was great laughter as Mr. Bumpkin shook his head at the learned
+counsel for the defence, and thumped one hand upon the ledge in front of
+him.
+
+“That will do,” said Mr. Newboy, sitting down triumphantly.
+
+Then the counsel for the defence arose, and a titter again went round the
+Court, and there was a very audible adjustment of persons in preparation
+for the treat that was to come.
+
+“May the prisoner have a seat, my lord?”
+
+“Oh, certainly,” said his lordship; “let an easy-chair be brought
+immediately.”
+
+“Now then, Mr. Bumpkin, or whatever your name is, don’t lounge on the
+desk like that, but just stand up and attend to me. Stand up, sir, and
+answer my questions,” says Mr. Nimble.
+
+“I be standin’ oop,” said Bumpkin, “and I can answer thee; ax away.”
+
+“Just attend,” said the Judge. “You must not go on like that. You are
+here to answer questions and not to make speeches. If you wish those
+gentlemen to believe you, you must conduct yourself in a proper manner.
+Remember this is a serious charge, and you are upon your oath.”
+
+Poor Bumpkin! Never was there a more friendless position than that of
+Ignorance in the witness-box.
+
+“Just attend!” repeated Mr. Nimble; this was a favourite expression of
+his.
+
+“How may aliases have you?”
+
+“Ow many who?” asked Bumpkin. (Roars of laughter.)
+
+“How many different names?”
+
+“Naames! why I s’pose I got two, like moast people.”
+
+“How many more?”
+
+“None as iver I knowed of.”
+
+“Wait a bit, we shall see. Now, sir, will you swear you have never gone
+by the name of Pumpkin?”
+
+Loud laughter, in which the learned judge tried not to join.
+
+“Never!”
+
+“Do you swear it?”
+
+“I do.”
+
+“My lord, would you kindly let me see the depositions. Now look here,
+sir, is that your signature?”
+
+“I ain’t much of a scollard.”
+
+“No; but you can make a cross, I suppose.”
+
+“Ay, I can make a cross, or zummut in imitation as well as any man.”
+
+“Look at that, is that your cross?”
+
+“It look like un.”
+
+“Now then, sir; when you were before the Lord Mayor, I ask you, upon your
+oath, did you not give the name of Pumpkin?”
+
+“Noa, I din’t!”
+
+“Was this read over to you, and were you asked if it was correct?”
+
+“It med be.”
+
+“Med be; but wasn’t it? You know it was, or, don’t you?”
+
+Bumpkin seemed spiked, so silent; seemed on fire, so red.
+
+“Well, we know it was so. Now, my lord, I call your lordship’s attention
+to this remarkable fact; here in the depositions he calls himself
+Pumpkin.”
+
+His lordship looks carefully at the depositions and says that certainly
+is so.
+
+Mr. Newboy rises and says he understands that it may be a mistake of the
+clerk’s.
+
+Judge: “How can you say that, Mr. Newboy, when it’s in his affidavit?”
+
+(Clerk of Arraigns whispers to his lordship.) “I mean in his
+depositions, as I am told they are called in this Court; these are read
+over to him by the clerk, and he is asked if they are correct.” Shakes
+his head.
+
+(So they began to try the prisoner, not so much on the merits of the case
+as on the merits of the magistrate’s clerk.)
+
+“You certainly said your name was Pumpkin,” said the Judge, “and what is
+more you swore to it.”
+
+(“They’ve got the round square at work,” muttered a voice in the
+gallery.)
+
+Mr. Nimble: “Now just attend; have you ever gone so far as to say that
+this case did not refer to you because your name was not Bumpkin?”
+
+The witness hesitates, then says “he b’leeves not.”
+
+“Let those two gentlemen, Mr. Crackcrib and Mr. Centrebit, step forward.”
+
+There was a bustle in Court, and then, with grinning faces, up stepped
+the two men who had visited Mr. Bumpkin at the “Goose” some days before.
+
+“Have you ever seen these gentlemen before?” asks the learned counsel.
+
+The gentlemen alluded to looked up as if they had practised it together,
+and both grinned. How can Mr. Bumpkin’s confusion be described? His
+under jaw fell, and his head drooped; he was like one caught in a net
+looking at the fowler.
+
+The question was repeated, and Mr. Bumpkin wiped his face and returned
+his handkerchief into the depths of his hat, into which he would have
+liked to plunge also.
+
+Question repeated in a tone that conveyed the impression that witness was
+one of the biggest scoundrels in the Heart of Civilization.
+
+“You must really answer,” says the Judge.
+
+“They be put on, your lordship.”
+
+“No, no,” says the counsel, “you mustn’t say that, I’ll have an answer.
+Have you seen them before?”
+
+“Yes,” muttered the prosecutor.
+
+“Let them go out of Court. Now then,” says the counsel, extending his
+right hand and his forefinger and leaning towards the witness,
+“have—you—not—told—them—that—this case was nothing to do with you as your
+name wasn’t Bumpkin?”
+
+“My lord,” says the witness.
+
+“No, no; you must answer.”
+
+The witness stood confounded.
+
+“You decline to answer,” says the counsel. “Very well; now then, let me
+see if you will decline to answer this. When you were robbed, as you
+say, was anybody with you?”
+
+“Be I obligated to answer, my lord?”
+
+“I think you must answer,” said his lordship.
+
+“There wur.”
+
+“Who was it?”
+
+“A companion, I s’poase.”
+
+“Yes, but who was he? what was his name?”
+
+No answer.
+
+“You’d rather not answer; very well. Where does he live?”
+
+“I doant know. Westmunster, I believe.”
+
+“Is he here?”
+
+“Not as I knows on.”
+
+(“What a lark this is,” chuckled the Don, as he sat in the corner of the
+gallery peeping from behind the front row.)
+
+“Did he see the watch taken?”
+
+“He did, leastways I s’poase so.”
+
+“And has never appeared as a witness?”
+
+“How is that?” asks his lordship.
+
+“He axed me, m’lud, not to say as ’ow he wur in it.”
+
+Judge shakes his head. Counsel for the prisoner shakes his head at the
+jury, and the jury shake their heads at one another.
+
+Now in the front row of the gallery sat five young men in the undress
+uniform of the hussars: they were Joe and his brother recruits come to
+hear the famous trial. At this moment Mr. Bumpkin in sheer despair
+lifted his eyes in the direction of the gallery and immediately caught
+sight of his old servant. He gave a nod of recognition as if he were the
+only friend left in the wide world of that Court of Justice.
+
+“Never mind your friends in the gallery,” said Mr. Nimble; “I dare say
+you have plenty of them about; now attend to this question:”—Yes, and a
+nice question it was, considering the tone and manner with which it was
+asked. “At the moment when you were being robbed, as you say, did a
+young woman with a baby in her arms come up?”
+
+The witness’s attention was again distracted, but this time by no such
+pleasing object as on the former occasion. He was dumbfoundered; a
+sparrow facing an owl could hardly be in a greater state of nervousness
+and discomfiture: for down in the well of the Court, a place where he had
+never once cast his eyes till now, with a broad grin on his coarse
+features, and a look of malignant triumph, sat the _fiendlike Snooks_!
+His mouth was wide open, and Bumpkin found himself looking down into it
+as though it had been a saw-pit. By his side sat Locust taking notes of
+the cross-examination.
+
+“What are you looking at, Mr. Bumpkin?” inquired the learned counsel.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin started.
+
+“What are you looking at?”
+
+“I wur lookin’ doun thic there hole in thic feller’s head,” answered
+Bumpkin.
+
+Such a roar of laughter followed this speech as is seldom heard even in a
+breach of promise case, where the most touching pathos often causes the
+greatest amusement to the audience.
+
+“What a lark!” said Harry.
+
+“As good as a play,” responded Dick.
+
+“I be sorry for the old chap,” said Joe; “they be givin’ it to un pooty
+stiff.”
+
+“Now attend,” said the counsel, “and never mind the hole. Did a young
+woman with a baby come up?”
+
+“To the best o’ my b’leef.”
+
+“Don’t say to the best of your belief; did she or not?”
+
+“He can only speak to the best of his belief,” said the Judge.
+
+(“There’s the round square,” whispered O’Rapley.)
+
+“Did she come up then to the best of your belief?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“And—did—she—accuse—you—to the best of your belief of assaulting her?”
+
+“I be a married man,” answered the witness. (Great laughter.)
+
+“Yes, we know all about you; we’ll see who you are presently. Did she
+accuse you, and did you run away?”
+
+“I runned arter thic feller.”
+
+“No, no; did she accuse you?”
+
+“She might.”
+
+The learned counsel then sat down with the quickest motion imaginable,
+and then the policeman gave his evidence as to taking the man into
+custody; and produced the huge watch. Mr. Bumpkin was recalled and asked
+how long he had had it, and where he bought it; the only answers to which
+were that he had had it five years, and bought it of a man in the market;
+did not know who he was or where he came from; all which answers looked
+very black against Mr. Bumpkin. Then the policeman was asked to answer
+this question—yes or no. “Did he know the prisoner?” He said “No.”
+
+Mr. Nimble said to the jury, “Here was a man dressing himself up as an
+old man from the country (laughter) prowling about the streets of London
+in company with an associate whose name he dared not mention, and who
+probably was well-known to the police; here was this countryman actually
+accused of committing an assault in the public streets on a young woman
+with a baby in her arms: he runs away as hard as his legs will carry him
+and meets a man who is actually wearing the watch that this Bumpkin or
+Pumpkin charges him with stealing. He, the learned counsel, would call
+witness after witness to speak to the character of his client, who was an
+engraver (I believe he was an engraver of bank notes); he would call
+witness after witness who would tell them how long they had known him,
+and how long he had had the watch; and, curiously enough, such curious
+things did sometimes almost providentially take place in a Court of
+Justice, he would call the very man that poor Mr. Simpleman had purchased
+it of five years ago, when he was almost, as you might say, in the first
+happy blush of boyhood (that ‘blush of boyhood’ went down with many of
+the jury who were fond of pathos); let the jury only fancy! but really
+would it be safe—really would it be safe, let him ask them upon their
+consciences, which in after life, perhaps years to come, when their heads
+were on their pillows, and their hands upon their hearts, (here several
+of the jury audibly sniffed), would those consciences upbraid, or would
+those consciences approve them for their work to-day? would it be safe to
+convict after the exhibition the prosecutor had made of himself in that
+box, where, he ventured to say, Bumpkin stood self-condemned before that
+intelligent jury.”
+
+Here the intelligent jury turned towards one another, and after a moment
+or two announced, through their foreman (who was a general-dealer in old
+metal, in a dark street over the water), that if they heard a witness or
+two to the young man’s character that would be enough for them.
+
+Witnesses, therefore, were called to character, and the young man was
+promptly acquitted, the jury appending to their verdict that he left the
+Court without a stain upon his character.
+
+“Bean’t I ’lowed to call witnesses to charickter?” asks the Prosecutor.
+
+“Oh, no,” replied Mr. Nimble; “we know your character pretty well.”
+
+“What’s that?” inquired the Judge.
+
+“He wants to know, my lord,” says Mr. Nimble, laughing, “if he may call
+witnesses to character!”
+
+“Oh dear, no,” says the Judge; “you were not being tried.”
+
+Now many persons might have been of a different opinion from his lordship
+on this point. Snooks for one, I think; for he gave a great loud vulgar
+haw! haw! haw! and said, “I could ha’ gien him a charakter.”
+
+“Si-lence!” said the Usher.
+
+“May the prisoner have his watch, my lord?” asks Mr. Nimble.
+
+“O, yes,” said his lordship, “to be sure. Give the prisoner his watch.”
+
+“_His_ watch,” groaned a voice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+
+Mr. Alibi is stricken with a thunderbolt—interview with Horatio and Mr.
+Prigg.
+
+The “round square,” as the facetious Don called the new style of putting
+the round judicial pegs into the square judicial holes, had indeed been
+applied with great effect on this occasion; for I perceived that Mr.
+Alibi, remarkable man, was not only engaged on the part of the Crown to
+prosecute, but also on that of the prisoner to defend. And this fact
+came to my knowledge in the manner following:
+
+When Mr. Bumpkin got into the lower part of that magnificent pile of
+buildings which we have agreed to call the Heart of Civilisation, he soon
+became the centre of a dirty mob of undersized beings who were anxious to
+obtain a sight of him; and many of whom were waiting to congratulate
+their friend, the engraver. Amidst the crowd was Mr. Alibi. That
+gentleman had no intention of meeting Mr. Bumpkin any more, for certain
+expenses were due to him as a witness, and it had long been a custom at
+the Old Bailey, that if the representative of the Crown did not see the
+witnesses the expenses due to them would fall into the Consolidated Fund,
+so that it was a clear gain to the State if its representative officers
+did not meet the witnesses. On this occasion, however, Mr. Alibi ran
+against his client accidentally, and being a courteous gentleman, could
+not forbear condoling with him on the unsuccessful termination of his
+case.
+
+“You, see,” began Mr. Alibi, “I was instructed so late—really, the wonder
+is, when gentlemen don’t employ a solicitor till the last moment, how we
+ever lay hold of the facts at all. Now look at your case, sir. Yes,
+yes, I’m coming—bother my clerks, how they worry—I’ll be there directly.”
+
+“But thic feller,” said Mr. Bumpkin, “who had my case din’t know nowt
+about it. I could ha’ done un better mysel.”
+
+“Ah, sir; so we are all apt to think. He’s a most clever man, that—a
+very rising man, sir.”
+
+“Be he?” said Bumpkin.
+
+“Why, do you know, sir,” continued Mr. Alibi, “he was very great at his
+University.”
+
+“That bean’t everything, though, by a long way.”
+
+“No, sir, granted, granted. But he was Number Four in his boat; and the
+papers all said his feathering was beautiful.”
+
+“A good boatman, wur he?”
+
+“Magnificent, sir; magnificent!”
+
+“Then he’d better keep a ferry; bean’t no good at law.”
+
+“Ah! I am afraid you are a little prejudiced. He’s a very learned man.”
+
+“I wish he’d larned to open his mouth. Why, I got a duck can quack a
+devilish sight better un thic feller can talk.”
+
+“Ha, how d’ye do, Mr. Swindle?” said a shabby-looking gentleman, who came
+up at this moment.
+
+“Excuse me, sir; but you have the advantage of me,” said Alibi, winking.
+
+“Dear me, how very strange, I thought you were Mr. Wideawake’s
+representative.”
+
+“Ah!” said Mr. Alibi, laughing, “we are often taken for brothers—and yet,
+would you believe me, there is no relationship.”
+
+“No?” said the gentleman.
+
+“None, whatever. I think you’ll find him in the Second Court, if not,
+he’ll be there in a short time. I saw him only just now.”
+
+That is how I learned that Mr. Alibi represented the Crown and Mr.
+Deadandgone for the prosecutor; also the prisoner, and Mr. Wideawake for
+the defence. Clever man!
+
+“Now,” said Mr. Bumpkin, “Can’t un get a new trial?”
+
+“I fear not,” said Alibi; “but I should not be in the least surprised if
+that Wideawake, who represented the prisoner, brought an action against
+you for false imprisonment and malicious prosecution.”
+
+“What, thic thief?”
+
+“Ah, sir—law is a very deep pit—it’s depth is not to be measured by any
+moral plummet.”
+
+“Doan’t ’zacly zee’t.”
+
+“Well, it’s this,” said Mr. Alibi. “Whether you’re right or whether
+you’re wrong, if he brings an action you must defend it—it’s not your
+being in the right will save you.”
+
+“Then, what wool?” asked Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+Mr. Alibi did not know, unless it was instructing him in due time and not
+leaving it to the last moment. That seemed the only safe course.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin took off his hat, drew out his handkerchief, and wiped the
+perspiration from his forehead. Then he breathed heavily. Now at this
+moment a strange phenomenon occurred, not to be passed over in this
+truthful history. Past Mr. Bumpkin’s ear something shot, in appearance
+like a human fist, in velocity like a thunderbolt, and unfortunately it
+alighted full on the nose and eye of the great Mr. Alibi, causing that
+gentleman to reel back into the arms of the faithful thieves around. I
+cannot tell from what quarter it proceeded, it was so sudden, but I saw
+that in the neighbourhood whence it came stood five tall hussars, and I
+heard a voice say:
+
+“Now, look at that. Come on, Maister, don’t let us git into no row.”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin, with the politeness of his nature, said:
+
+“Good marnin’, sir,” and retired.
+
+And thus thought the unfortunate prosecutor: “This ’ere country be all
+law, actions grows out o’ actions, like that ’ere cooch that runs all
+over everywhere’s.” And then he saw the five recruits strutting along
+with their caps at the side of their heads, the straps across their
+chins, their riding-whips under their arms, and walking with such a
+swagger that one would have thought they had just put down a rebellion,
+or set up a throne.
+
+It was some time before, in the confusion of his mind, the disappointed
+Bumpkin could realize the fact that there was any connection between him
+and the military. But as he looked, with half-closed eyes, suddenly the
+thought crossed his mind: “Why, that be like our Joe—that middle un.”
+
+And so it was: they were walking at a fastish pace, and as they strutted
+along Joe seemed to be marching away with the whole farm and with all the
+pleasures of his past life. Even Mrs. Bumpkin herself, in some
+extraordinary manner, seemed to be eloping with him. Why was it? And
+now, despondent, disappointed and humiliated, with his blood once more
+up, poor old Bumpkin bethought himself seriously of his position. For
+weeks he had been waiting for his case to “come on”; weeks more might
+pass idly away unless he made a stir. So he would call at the office of
+Mr. Prigg. And being an artful man, he had a reason for calling without
+further delay. It was this: his desire to see Prigg before that
+gentleman should hear of his defeat. Prigg would certainly blame him for
+not employing a solicitor, or going to the Public Prosecutor. So to
+Prigg’s he went about three o’clock on that Thursday afternoon. I do not
+undertake to describe furniture, so I say nothing of Prigg’s dingy
+office, except this, that if Prigg had been a spider, it was just the
+sort of corner in which I should have expected him to spin his web.
+Being a man of enormous practice, and in all probability having some
+fifty to sixty representatives of county families to confer with, two
+hours elapsed before Mr. Bumpkin could be introduced. The place, small
+as it was, was filled with tin boxes bearing, no doubt, eminent names.
+Horatio was busy copying drafts of marriage settlements, conveyances, and
+other matters of great importance. He had little time for gossip because
+his work seemed urgent, and although he was particularly glad to see Mr.
+Bumpkin, yet being a lad of strict adherence to duty, he always replied
+courteously, but in the smallest number of words to that gentleman’s
+questions.
+
+“Will ur be long?” asked the client; “I don’t think so,” said Horatio.
+
+Then in a whisper, asked Mr. Bumpkin, “How does thee think, sir, we shall
+get on: win, shan’t us?”
+
+Horatio just raised his face from the paper and winked, as though he were
+conveying a valuable secret.
+
+“Have ur heard anythink, sir?”
+
+Another artful wink.
+
+“Thee know’s zummat, I knows thee do.”
+
+Another artful wink.
+
+“Thee can tell I, surely? I wunt let un goo no furder.”
+
+Horatio winked once more, and made a face at the door where the great
+Prigg was supposed to be.
+
+“Ain’t give in, ave ur?”
+
+Horatio put his finger in his mouth and made a popping noise as he pulled
+it out.
+
+“What the devil does thee mean, lad? there be zummat up, I’ll swear.”
+
+“Hush! hush!”
+
+“Now, look here,” said Bumpkin, taking out his purse; “thee beest a good
+chap, and writ out thic brief, didn’t thee? I got zummat for thee;” and
+hereupon he handed Horatio half-a-crown.
+
+The youth took the money, spun it into the air, caught it in the palm of
+his hand, spat on it for good luck, and put it in his pocket
+
+“I’ll have a spree with that,” said he, “if I never do again.”
+
+“Be careful, lad,” said Bumpkin, “don’t fool un away.”
+
+“Not I,” said Horatio; “I’m on for the Argille tonight, please the pigs.”
+
+“Be thic a place o’ wusship” said Bumpkin, laughing.
+
+“Not exactly,” answered Horatio; “it’s a place where you can just do the
+gentleman on the cheap, shoulder it with noblemen’s sons, and some of the
+highest. Would you like to go now, just for a lark? I’m sure you’d like
+it.”
+
+“Not I,” said the client; “this ’ere Lunnun life doan’t do for I.’.’
+
+“Yes; but this is a nice quiet sort of place.”
+
+“Gals, I spoase.”
+
+“Rather; I believe you my boy; stunners too.”
+
+“Thee be too young, it’s my thinking.”
+
+“Well, that’s what the Governor says; everybody says I’m too young; but I
+hope to mend that fault, Master Bumpkin, if I don’t get the better of any
+other.”
+
+“I wish I wur as old in the ’ead; but tell I, lad, hast thee ’eard
+anything? Thee might just as well tell I; it wunt goo no furder.”
+
+Horatio put his finger to his nose and made a number of dumb signs,
+expressive of more than mere words could convey.
+
+“Danged if I can mak’ thee out,” said Bumpkin.
+
+“You recollect that ride we had in the gig.”
+
+“Ha, now it’s coming,” thought he; “I shall have un now,” so he answered:
+“Well, it wur nice, wurn’t ur?”
+
+“Never enjoyed myself more in my life,” rejoined Horatio; “what a nice
+morning it was!”
+
+“Beautiful!”
+
+“And do you recollect the rum and milk?”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin remembered it.
+
+“Well, I believe that rum and milk was the luckiest investment you ever
+made. Hallo! there’s the bell—hush, _mither woy_!”
+
+“Dang thee!” said Bumpkin, “thee’s got un;” and he followed the youthful
+clerk into Mr. Prigg’s room.
+
+There sat that distinguished lawyer with his respectable head, in his
+easy chair, much worn, both himself and the chair, by constant use.
+There sat the good creature ready to offer himself up on the altar of
+Benevolence for the good of the first comer. His collar was still
+unruffled, so was his temper, notwithstanding the severe strain of the
+county families. There was his clear complexion indicating the continued
+health resulting from a well-spent life. His almost angelic features
+were beautiful rather in the amiability of their expression than in their
+loveliness of form. Anyone looking at him for the first time must
+exclaim, “Dear me, what a _nice_ man!”
+
+“Well, Mr. Bumpkin,” said he, extending his left hand lazily as though it
+were the last effort of exhausted humanity, “how are we now?”—always
+identifying himself with Bumpkin, as though he should say “We are in the
+same boat, brother; come what may, we sink or swim together—how are we
+now?”
+
+“Bean’t wery well,” answered Mr. Bumpkin, “I can tell ’ee.”
+
+“What’s the matter? dear me, why, what’s the matter? We must be cool,
+you know. Nothing like coolness, if we are to win our battle.”
+
+“Lookee ’ere,” said Bumpkin; “lookee ’ere, sir; I bin here dordlin’ about
+off an’ on six weeks, and this ’ere dam trial—”
+
+“Sh—sh!” remonstrated Mr. Prigg with the softest voice, and just lifting
+his left hand on a level with his forehead. “Let us learn resignation,
+good Mr. Bumpkin. Let us learn it at the feet of disappointment and
+losses and crosses.”
+
+“Yes, yes,” said Bumpkin; “but thic larnin’ be spensive, I be payin’ for
+it.”
+
+“Mr. Bumpkin,” said the good man sternly, “the dispensations of
+Providence are not to be denounced in this way. You are a man, Bumpkin;
+let us act, then, the man’s part. You see these boxes, these names: they
+represent men who have gone through the furnace; let us be patient.”
+
+“But I be sick on it. I wish I’d never know’d what law wur.”
+
+“Ah, sir, most of us would like to exist in that state of wild and
+uncultured freedom which only savages and beasts are permitted to enjoy;
+but life has higher aims, Mr. Bumpkin; grander pursuits; more sublime
+duties.”
+
+“Well, sir, I bean’t no schollard and so can’t argify; but if thee plase
+to tell I, sir, when this case o’ mine be likely to come on—”
+
+“I was just that minute going to write to you, Mr. Bumpkin, as your name
+was announced, to say that it would not be taken until next term.”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin uttered an exclamation which is not for print, and which
+caused the good Prigg to clap his hands to his ears and press them
+tightly for five minutes. Then he took them away and rubbed them
+together (I mean his hands), as though he were washing them from the
+contaminating influence of Mr. Bumpkin’s language.
+
+“Quite so,” he said, mechanically; “dear me!”
+
+“What be quite so,” asked Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“Yes—yes—you see,” said Prigg, “Her Majesty’s Judges have to go circuit;
+or, as it is technically called, jail delivery.”
+
+“They be allays gwine suckitt.”
+
+“Quite so. That is precisely what the profession is always observing.
+No sooner do they return from one circuit than they start off on another.
+Are you aware, Mr. Bumpkin, that we pay a judge five thousand a-year to
+try a pickpocket?”
+
+“Hem!” said Bumpkin, “I bean’t aware on it. Never used t’ have so many
+o’ these ’ere—what d’ye call ’ems?”
+
+“Circuits. No—but you see, here now is an instance. There’s a prisoner
+away somewhere, I think down at Bodmin, hundreds of miles off, and I
+believe he has sent to say that they must come down and try him at once,
+for he can’t wait.”
+
+“I’d mak’ un wait. Why should honest men wait for sich as he? I bin
+waitin’ long enough.”
+
+“Quite so. And the consequence is that the Lord Chief Justice of England
+is going down to try him, a common pickpocket, I believe, and his
+Lordship is the very head of the Judicial Body.”
+
+“Hem!” said Mr. Bumpkin; “then I may as well goo hoame?”
+
+“Quite so,” answered the amiable Prigg; “in fact, better—much better.”
+
+“An’ we shan’t come on now, sir; bean’t there no chance?”
+
+“Not the least, my dear sir; but you see we have not been idle; we have
+been advancing, in fact, during the whole time that has seemed to you so
+long. Now, just look, my dear sir; we have fought no less than ten
+appeals, right up, mind you, to the Court of Appeal itself; we have
+fought two demurrers; we have compelled them three times to give better
+answers to our interrogatories, and we have had fourteen other summonses
+at Chambers on which they have not thought proper to appeal beyond the
+Judge. Now, Mr. Bumpkin, after that, I _think_ you ought to be
+satisfied; but really that is one of the most disparaging things in the
+profession, the most disparaging, I may say; we find it so difficult to
+show our clients that we have done enough for them.”
+
+“An’ thee think, sir, as we shall win un?” said Bumpkin.
+
+“Well,” said Mr. Prigg, “I never like to prophesy; but if ever a case
+looked like winning it’s _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_. And I may tell you this,
+Mr. Bumpkin, only pray don’t say that I told you.”
+
+“What be thic, sir?” asked the eager client, with his eyes open as widely
+as ever client’s can be.
+
+“The other side are in a tre-_men_-dous way!”
+
+“What, funkin’, be um? I said so. That there Snooks be a rank bad
+un—now, then, we’ll at un like steam.”
+
+“All in good time, Bumpkin,” said the worthy Prigg, affectionately taking
+his client’s hand. “All in good time. My kind regards to Mrs. Bumpkin.
+I suppose you return to-night?”
+
+“Ay, sir, I be off by the fust train. Good day t’ ye, sir; good day and
+thankee.”
+
+Thus comforted and thus grateful did the confiding client take leave of
+his legal adviser, who immediately took down his costs-book and booked a
+long conference, including the two hours that Mr. Bumpkin was kept in the
+“outer office.” This followed immediately after another “long conference
+with you when you thought we should be in the paper to-morrow from what a
+certain Mr. O’Rapley had told you, and I thought we should not.”
+
+As he passed through the “outer office” he shook. Horatio by the hand.
+“Good-bye, sir. I knows what it wur now—bean’t comin’ on.”
+
+“Don’t say I told you,” said the pale boy, as though he were afraid of
+communicating some tremendous secret.
+
+“Noa, thee bean’t told I. Now, lookee ’ere, Mr. Jigger, come down when
+thee like; I shall be rare and prood to see thee, and so’ll Missus.”
+
+“Thanks,” said Horatio; “I’ll be sure and come. _Mither woy_!”
+
+“Ha! mither woy, lad! that’s ur; thee got un. Good-bye.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+
+Mr. Bumpkin at home again.
+
+How peaceful the farm seemed after all the turmoil and worry that Farmer
+Bumpkin had been subjected to in London! What a haven of rest is a
+peaceful Home! How the ducks seemed to quack!—louder, as Mr. Bumpkin
+thought, than they ever did before. The little flock of sheep looked up
+as he went, with his old ash stick under his arm, to look round the farm.
+They seemed to say to one another, “Why, here’s Master; I told you he’d
+come back.” And the cows turned their heads and bellowed a loud welcome.
+They knew nothing of his troubles, and only expressed their extreme
+pleasure at seeing him again. They left off eating the whole time he was
+with them; for they were very well bred Shorthorns and Alderneys. It was
+quite pleasant to see how well behaved they all were. And Mrs. Bumpkin
+pointed out which ones had calved and which were expected to calve in the
+course of a few months. And then the majestic bull looked up with an
+expression of immense delight; came up to Mr. Bumpkin and put his nose in
+his master’s hand, and gazed as only a bull would gaze on a farmer who
+had spent several weeks in London. It was astonishing with what
+admiration the bull regarded him; and he seemed quite delighted as Mrs.
+Bumpkin told her husband of the bull’s good conduct in his absence; how
+he had never broken bounds once, and had behaved himself as an exemplary
+bull on all occasions.
+
+“But,” said Mrs. Bumpkin, “I be ’bliged to say, Tom, that there Mrs.
+Snooks have belied him shamefully. She haven’t got a good word to say
+for un; nor, for the matter o’ that, for anything on the farm.”
+
+“Never mind,” said Mr. Bumpkin; “he bean’t the only one as ’ave been
+slandered hereabouts.”
+
+“No, Tom, sure enough; but we bean’t ’bliged to heed un.”
+
+“No, nor wun’t. And now here come Tim.”
+
+To see Tim run and bound and leap and put his paws round Mr. Bumpkin’s
+neck and lick him, was a sight which must have made up for a great deal
+of the unkindness which he had experienced of late. Nor could any dog
+say more plainly than Tim did, how he had had a row with that ill-natured
+cur of Snooks’, called Towser, and how he had driven him off the farm and
+forbade him ever setting foot on it again. Tim told all about the
+snarling of Towser, and said he would not have minded his taking Snooks’
+part in the action, if he had confined himself to that; but when he went
+on and barked at Mr. Bumpkin’s sheep and pigs, against whom he ought to
+have shown no ill-feeling, it was more than Tim could stand; so he flew
+at him and thoroughly well punished him for his malignant disposition.
+
+But in the midst of all this welcoming, there was an unpleasant
+experience, and that was, that all the pigs were gone but two. The rare
+old Chichester sow was no more.
+
+“There be only two affidavys left, Nancy!”
+
+“No, Tom—only two; the man fetched two yesterday.”
+
+“I hope they sold well. Have he sent any money yet?”
+
+“Not a farthing,” said Mrs. Bumpkin; “nor yet for the sheep. He have had
+six sheep.”
+
+“Zo I zee; and where be th’ heifers? we had six.”
+
+“They be all sold, Tom.”
+
+“And how much did ’em fetch?”
+
+“The man ain’t brought in the account yet, Tom; but I spect we shall have
+un soon.”
+
+“Why,” said Mr. Bumpkin, looking at the stackyard, “another rick be
+gone!”
+
+“Yes, Tom, it be gone, and fine good hay it wur; it cut out as well as
+any hay I ever zeed.”
+
+“Sure did ur!” answered Tom; “it were the six ak’r o’ clover, and were
+got up wirout a drop o’ rain on un; it wur prime hay, thic. Why, I wur
+offered six pun’ a looad for un.”
+
+“I don’ow what ur fetched, Tom; but I be mighty troubled about this ’ere
+lawsuit. I wish we’d never ’a had un.”
+
+“Doan’t say thic, Nancy; we be bound to bring un. As Laryer Prigg say,
+it bean’t so much t’ pig—”
+
+“No, Tom, thee said un fust.”
+
+“Well, s’poase I did—so ur did, and it worn’t so much t’ pig, it wur thic
+feller’s cheek.”
+
+“Well, I don’t know nothing about un; I dissay you be right, because
+you’ve allays been right, Tom; and we’ve allays got on well togither
+these five and thirty year: but, some’ow, Tom—down, Tim!—down, Tim!”
+
+“Poor old Tim!” said Tom. “Good boy! I wish men wur as good as dogs
+be.”
+
+“Some’ow,” continued Mrs. Bumpkin, “I doan’t like that ’aire Prigg; he
+seem to shake his head too much for I; and ’olds his ’at up to his face
+too long in church when ur goes in; and then ur shakes his head so much
+when ur prays. I don’t like un, Tom.”
+
+“Now, Nancy, thee knows nothing about un. I can tell ’ee he be a rare
+good man, and sich a clever lawyer, he’ll knock that ’aire Snooks out o’
+time. But, come on, let’s goo in and ’ave some ta.”
+
+So they went in. And a very comfortable tea there was set out on the old
+oak table in front of the large fireplace where the dog-irons were. And
+a bright, blazing log there was on the hearth; for a cold east wind was
+blowing, notwithstanding that the sun had shone out bravely in the day.
+Ah! how glad Tom was to see the bright pewter plates and dishes ranged in
+rows all round the homely kitchen! They seemed to smile a welcome on the
+master; and one very large family sort of dish seemed to go out of his
+way to give him welcome. I believe he tumbled down in his enthusiasm at
+Tom’s return, although it was accounted for by saying that Tim had done
+it by the excessive “waggling” of his tail. I believe that dish fell
+down in the name of all the plates and dishes on the shelves, for the
+purpose of congratulating the master; else why should all their faces
+brighten up so suddenly with smiles as he did so? It’s ridiculous to
+suppose plates and dishes have no feelings; they’ve a great deal more
+than some people. And then, how the great, big, bright copper kettle,
+suspended on his hook, which was in the centre of the huge fireplace, how
+he did sing! Why the nightingale couldn’t throw more feeling into a song
+than did that old kettle! And then the home-made bread and rashers of
+bacon, such as you never see out of a farmhouse; and tea, such as can’t
+be made anywhere else! And then the long pipe was brought out of his
+corner, where he had been just as Tom had left it before going to town.
+And the bowl of that pipe gave off circular clouds of the bluest smoke,
+expressive of its joy at the master’s return: it wasn’t very expressive,
+perhaps, but it was all that a pipe could do; and when one does his best
+in this world, it is all that mortal man can expect of him.
+
+And then said Mrs. Bumpkin,—still dubious as to the policy of the
+proceedings, but too loving to combat her husband upon them,—“When be
+thee gwine agin, Tom?”
+
+“I doan’t rightly know,” said Bumpkin. “Mr. Prigg will let I know;
+sometime in May, I reckon.”
+
+“Dear, dear!” said Mrs. Bumpkin; “it may be on, then, just as th’
+haymakin’s about.”
+
+“Lor, lor! no, dearie; it’ll be over long enough afore.”
+
+“Doan’t be too sure, Tom; it be a long time now since it begun.”
+
+“Ah!” said Tom, “a long time enough; but it’ll be in th’ paper afore long
+now; an’ we got one o’ the cleverest counsel in Lunnun?”
+
+“What be his name?”
+
+“Danged if I know, but it be one o’ the stunninest men o’ the day; two on
+’em, by Golly; we got two, Nancy.”
+
+“Who be th’ tother? p’r’aps thee med mind his name?”
+
+“Noa, I doan’t mind his name nuther. Now, what d’ye think o’ thic?”
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin laughed, and said, “I think it be a rum thing that thee ’as
+counsellors and doan’t mind their names.”
+
+And then the conversation turned upon Joe, whose place was vacant in the
+old chimney corner.
+
+The tears ran down Mrs. Bumpkin’s rosy cheeks as she said for the
+twentieth time since Mr. Bumpkin’s return,—
+
+“Poor Joe! why did ur goo for a soger?”
+
+“He wur a fool!” said Bumpkin, “and I told un so. So as I warned un
+about thic Sergeant; the artfullest man as ever lived, Nancy.”
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin wiped her eyes. “He wur a good boy, wur Joe, goo where ur
+wool; but, Tom, couldn’t thee ’a’ kept thine eye on un when thee see thic
+Sergeant hoverin’ roun’ like a ’awk arter a sparrer?”
+
+“I did keep eye on un, I tell ’ee; but what be the good o’ thic; as well
+keep thee eye on th’ sparrer when th’ hawk be at un. I tell ’ee I
+’suaded un and warned un, and begged on un to look out.”
+
+“An’ what did ur say?”
+
+“Say, why said ur wur up to un.”
+
+“Up to un,” repeated Mrs. Bumpkin. “Can’t think ’ow ur got ’old on un.”
+
+“No, and thee mark I, no more can nobody else—in Lunnon thee’re ’ad afore
+thee knows where thee be.”
+
+And now Mr. Bumpkin had his “little drop of warm gin and water before
+going to bed”: and Mrs. Bumpkin had a mug of elder wine, for the
+Christmas elder wine was not quite gone: and after that Mrs. Bumpkin, who
+as the reader knows, was the better scholar of the two, took down from a
+shelf on which the family documents and books were kept, a large old
+bible covered with green baize. Then she wiped her glasses, and after
+turning over the old brown leaves until she came to the place where she
+had read last before Tom went away, commenced her evening task, while her
+husband smoked on and listened.
+
+Was it the old tone with which she spelt her way through the sacred
+words? Hardly: here it could be perceived that in her secret heart there
+was doubt and mistrust. Do what she would her eyes frequently became so
+dim that it was necessary to pause and wipe her glasses; and when she had
+finished and closed the book, she took Tom’s hand and said:
+
+“O, Tom, I hope all ’ll turn out well, but sure enough I ha’ misgivings.”
+
+“What be it, my dear? Mr. Prigg say we shall win—how can ur do better
+’an thic?”
+
+“Shall we get back the pigs and sheep, Tom?”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin looked into her lap, and folding her apron very smooth with
+both hands, answered:
+
+“I doan’t think, Tom, that man looks like bringing anything back. He be
+very chuffy and masterful, and looks all round as he goo away, as though
+he wur lookin’ to see what ur would take next. I think he’ll have un
+all, Tom.”
+
+“Stuff!” said Mr. Bumpkin, “he be sellin’ for I, take what ur may.”
+
+“He be sellin’ THEE, Tom, I think, and I’d stop un from takin’ more.”
+
+They rose to go to bed, and as Mrs. Bumpkin looked at the cosy old
+hearth, and put up the embers of the log to make it safe for the night,
+it seemed as if the prosperity of their old home had burnt down at last
+to dull ashes, and she looked sadly at the vacant place where Joe had
+used to sit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+
+Joe’s return to Southwood—an invitation from the Vicar—what the old oak
+saw.
+
+It was a long time after the circumstances mentioned in the last chapter.
+The jails had been “delivered” of their prisoners, and prodigious events
+had taken place in the world; great battles had been fought and won,
+great laws made for the future interpretation of judges, and for the
+vexation of unfortunate suitors. It seemed an age to Mr. Bumpkin since
+his case commenced; and Joe had been in foreign parts and won his share
+of the glory and renown that falls to the lot of privates who have helped
+to achieve victory for the honour and glory of their General and the
+happiness of their country. It was a very long time, measured by events,
+since Mr. Bumpkin’s return from town, when on a bright morning towards
+the end of June, a fine sunburnt soldier of Her Majesty’s regiment of the
+--- Hussars knocked with the butt-end of his riding whip at the old oak
+door in the old porch of Southwood farm-house.
+
+“Well, I never! if that there bean’t our Joe!” exclaimed Mrs. Bumpkin,
+looking out of the window; and throwing down the rolling-pin which she
+had just been using in rolling-out the dough for a dumpling—(Mr. Bumpkin
+was “uncommon fond o’ dumplins”)—“well, I never!” repeated Mrs. Bumpkin,
+as she opened the door; “who ever would ha’ thought it? Why, how be’est
+thee, Joe? And bless the lad, ’ow thee’ve growed! My ’art alive, come
+along! The master’ll be mighty glad to see thee, and so be I, sure a
+ly.”
+
+And here Mrs. Bumpkin paused to look round him, sticking her knuckles in
+her sides and her elbows in the air as though Joe were a piece of
+handiwork—a dumpling, say—which she herself had turned out, clothes and
+all. And then she put the corner of her apron to her eye.
+
+“Why, Joe, I thought,” said she, “I should never see thee agin! Dear,
+dear, this ’ere lawsuit be the ruin on us, mark my words! But lor, don’t
+say as I said so to the master for the world, for he be that wropped up
+in un that nothing goes down night and morning, morning and night, but
+affidavys, and summonses, and counsellors, and jussices, and what not.”
+
+“Well,” said the soldier, slapping his whip on his leg as was his custom,
+“you might be sure I should come and see yer if they left me a leg to hop
+with, and I should ’a wrote, but what wi’ the smoke and what with the
+cannon balls flying about, you haven’t got much time to think about
+anything; but I did think this, that if ever I got back to Old England,
+if it was twenty year to come, I’d go and see the old master and missus
+and ’ear ’ow that lawsuit wur going on.”
+
+“And that be right, Joe—I knowed ’ee would; I said as much to master.
+But ’ow do thee think it’ll end? shall us win or lose?”
+
+Now this was the first time he had ever been called upon to give a legal
+opinion, or rather, an opinion upon a legal matter, so he was naturally
+somewhat put about; and looking at the rolling-pin and the dough and then
+at Mrs. Bumpkin, said:
+
+“Well, it’s like this: a man med win or a man med lose, there’s no
+telling about the case; but I be dang’d well sure o’ this, missus, he’ll
+lose his money: I wish master had chucked her up long agoo.”
+
+This opinion was not encouraging; and perceiving that the subject
+troubled Mrs. Bumpkin more than she liked to confess, he asked a question
+which was of more immediate importance to himself, and that was in
+reference to Polly Sweetlove.
+
+“Why, thee’ll make her look at thee now, I’ll warrant; thy clothes fit
+thee as though they growed on thee.”
+
+“Do she walk with the baker?” inquired Joe, with trembling accents.
+
+“I never heeard so, an’ it’s my belief she never looked at un wi’ any
+meaning. I’ve seen her many a time comin’ down the Green Lane by herself
+and peepin’ over th’ gate.”
+
+“Now look at that!” said Joe; “and when I was here I couldn’t get Polly
+to come near the farm—allays some excuse—did you ever speak to her about
+me, missus?”
+
+“I ain’t going to tell tales out of school, Joe, so there.”
+
+“Now look at that,” said Joe; “here’s a chap comes all this way and you
+won’t tell him anything.”
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin laughed, and went on rolling the dough, and told him what a
+nice dumpling she was making, and how he would like it, and asked how
+long he was going to stop, and hoped it would be a month, and was telling
+him all about the sheep and the cows and the good behaviour of the bull,
+when suddenly she said:
+
+“Here he be, Joe! lor, lor, how glad he’ll be to see thee!”
+
+But it wasn’t the Bull that stepped into the room; it was Mr. Bumpkin,
+rosy, stalwart, jolly, and artful as ever. Now Mrs. Bumpkin was very
+anxious to be the bearer of such good intelligence as Joe’s arrival, so,
+notwithstanding the fact that Mr. Bumpkin and he were face to face, the
+eager woman exclaimed:
+
+“Here be our Joe, Tom, hearty and well. And bean’t he a smart fine
+feller? What’ll Polly think of un now?”
+
+“Shut up thic chatter,” said Mr. Bumpkin, laughing. “Halloa! why, Joe,
+egad thee looks like a gineral. I’d take thee for a kernel at the wery
+least. Why, when did thee come, lad?”
+
+“Just now, master.”
+
+“That be right, an’ I be glad to see thee. I’ll warrant Nancy ain’t axed
+thee t’ have nothun.”
+
+“Why, thee be welcome to the ’ouse if thee can eat un, thee knows thic,”
+answered Nancy; “but dinner’ll be ready at twelve, and thee best not
+spoil un.”
+
+“A quart o’ ale wun’t spile un, will un, Joe?”
+
+“Now look at that,” said the soldier. “Thankee, master, but not a
+quart.”
+
+“Well, thee hasn’t got thee head snicked off yet, Joe?”
+
+“No, master, if my head had been snicked off I couldn’t ha’ bin here.”
+And he laughed a loud ha! ha! ha!
+
+And Mr. Bumpkin laughed a loud haw! haw! haw! at this tremendous
+witticism. It was not much of a witticism, perhaps, after all, when duly
+considered, but it answered the purpose as well as the very best, and
+produced as much pleasure as the most brilliant _repartee_, in the most
+fashionable circles. We must take people as they are.
+
+So Joe stayed chattering away till dinner-time, and then, referring to
+the pudding, said he had never tasted anything like it in his life; and
+went on telling the old people all the wonders of the campaign: how their
+regiment just mowed down the enemy as he used to cut corn in the
+harvest-field, and how nothing could stand aginst a charge of cavalry;
+and how they liked their officers; and how their General, who warn’t
+above up to Joe’s shoulder, were a genleman, every inch on him, an’ as
+brave as any lion you could pick out. And so he went on, until Mr.
+Bumpkin said:
+
+“An’ if I had my time over agin I’d goo for a soger too, Joe,” which made
+Mrs. Bumpkin laugh and ask what would become of her.
+
+“Ha! ha! ha! look at that!” said Joe; “she’s got you there, master.”
+
+“No she bean’t, she’d a married thic feller that wur so sweet on her
+afore I had ur.”
+
+“What, Jem?” said Mrs. Bumpkin, “why I wouldn’t ha’ had un, Tom, if every
+’air had been hung wi’ dimonds.”
+
+“Now look at that,” laughed Joe.
+
+And so they went on until it was time to take a turn round the farm.
+Everything seemed startled at Joe’s fine clothes, especially the bull,
+who snorted and pawed the earth and put out his tail, and placed his head
+to the ground, until Joe called him by name, and then, as he told his
+comrades afterwards in barracks, the bull said:
+
+“Why danged if it bean’t our Joe!”
+
+I must confess I did not hear this observation in my dream, but I was
+some distance off, and if Mr. Ricochet, Q.C., in cross-examination had
+said, “Will you swear, sir, upon your oath that the bull did not use
+those words?” I must have been bound to answer, “I will not.”
+
+But presently they met old Tim, the Collie, and there was no need for Joe
+to speak to him. Up he came with a bound and caressed his old mate in
+the most loving manner.
+
+The Queen’s uniform was no disguise to him.
+
+The next day it was quite a treat to see Joe go through the village.
+Such a swagger he put on that you would have thought he was the whole
+regiment. And when he went by the Vicarage, where Polly was housemaid,
+it was remarkable to see the air of indifference which he assumed. Whack
+went his riding-whip on his leg: you could hear it a hundred yards off.
+He didn’t seem to care a bit whether she was staring at him out of the
+study window as hard as she could stare or not. Two or three times he
+struck the same leg, and marched on perfectly indifferent to all around.
+
+At length came Sunday, as Sunday only comes in a country village. No
+such peace, no such Sabbath anywhere. You have only got to look at
+anything you like to know that it is Sunday. Bill’s shirt collar; the
+milkman; even his bright milk-can has a Sunday shine about it. The cows
+standing in the shallow brook have a reverent air about them. They never
+look like that on any other day. Why the very sunshine is Sabbath
+sunshine, and seems to bring more peace and more pleasantness than on any
+other day of the week. And all the trees seem to whisper together, “It’s
+Sunday morning.”
+
+Presently you see the people straggling up to the little church, whose
+donging bell keeps on as much as to say, “I know I’m not much of a peal,
+but in my humble way I do my duty to the best of my ability; it’s not the
+sound but the spirit of the thing that is required; and if I’m not very
+musical, and can’t give you many changes, I’m sincere in what I say.”
+And this was an emblem of the sincerity and the simplicity of the
+clergyman inside. He kept on hammering away at the old truths and
+performing his part in God’s great work to the best of his ability; and I
+know with very great success. So in they all came to church; and Joe,
+who had been a very good Sunday-school pupil (notwithstanding his love of
+poaching) and was a favourite with the vicar, as the reader knows, took
+his old place in the free seats, not very far from the pew where the
+vicar’s servants sat. Who can tell what his feelings were as he wondered
+whether Polly would be there that morning?
+
+The other servants came in. Ah, dear! Polly can’t come, now look at
+that! Just as he was thinking this in she came. Such a flutter in her
+heart as she saw the bright uniform and the brighter face, bronzed with a
+foreign clime and looking as handsome as ever a face could look. O what
+a flutter too in Joe’s heart! But he was determined not to care for her.
+So he wouldn’t look, and that was a very good way; and he certainly would
+have kept his word if he could.
+
+I think if I had to choose where and how I would be admired, if ever such
+a luxury could come to me, I would be Joe Wurzel under present
+circumstances. A young hero, handsome, tall, in the uniform of the
+Hussars, with a loved one near and all the village girls fixing their
+eyes on me! That for once only, and my utmost ambition would be
+gratified. Life could have no greater pride for me. I don’t know
+whether the sermon made much impression that day, but of the two, I
+verily believe Joe made the most; and as they streamed out of the little
+church all the young faces of the congregation were turned to him: and
+everywhere when they got outside it was, “Halloa, Joe!” “Why, Joe, my
+lad, what cheer?” “Dang’d if here bean’t Joe!” and other exclamations of
+welcome and surprise. And then, how all the pinafored boys flocked round
+and gazed with wondering eyes at this conquering hero; chattering to one
+another and contradicting one another about what this part of his uniform
+was and what that part was, and so on; but all agreeing that Joe was
+about the finest sight that had come into Yokelton since ever it was a
+place.
+
+And then the old clergyman sent for him and was as kind as ever he could
+be; and Joe was on the enchanted ground where the fairy Polly flitted
+about as noiselessly as a butterfly. Ah, and what’s this? Now let not
+the reader be over-anxious; for a few lines I must keep you, gentle one,
+in suspense; a great surprise must be duly prepared. If I told you at
+once what I saw, you would not think so much of it as if I kept you a
+little while in a state of wondering curiosity. What do you think
+happened in the Vicarage?
+
+Now’s the moment to tell it in a fresh paragraph. Why in came the fairy
+with a little tray of cake and wine! Now pause on that before I say any
+more. What about their eyes? Did they swim? What about their hearts;
+did they flutter? Did Polly blush? Did Joe’s bronzed face shine? Ah,
+it all took place, and much more than I could tell in a whole volume.
+The vicar did not perceive it, for luckily he was looking out of the
+window. It only took a moment to place the tray on the table, and the
+fairy disappeared. But that moment, not then considered as of so much
+importance, exciting as it was, stamped the whole lives of two beings,
+and who can tell whether or no such a moment leaves its impress on
+Eternity?
+
+All good and all kind was the old vicar; and how attentively he listened
+with Mrs. Goodheart to the eye-witness of England’s great deeds! And
+then—no, he did not give Joe a claptrap maudlin sermon, but treated him
+as a man subject to human frailties, and, only hoped in all his career he
+would remember some of the things he had been taught at the Sunday
+School.
+
+“Ay,” said Joe, “ay, sir, and the best lesson I ever larned, and what
+have done me most good, be the kindness I always had from you.”
+
+So they parted, and a day or two after, strangely enough, just as Joe was
+walking along by the old Oak that is haunted, and which the owls and the
+ghosts occupy between them, who should come down the lane in the opposite
+direction but Polly Sweetlove! Where she came from was the greatest
+mystery in the world! And it was so extraordinary that Joe should meet
+her: and he said so, as soon as he could speak.
+
+“Now look at that! Whoever would have thought of meeting anybody here?”
+
+Polly hung down her head and blushed. Neither of them knew what to say
+for a long time; for Joe was not a spokesman to any extent. At last
+Polly Sweetlove broke silence and murmured in the softest voice, and I
+should think the very sweetest ever heard in this world:
+
+“Are you going away soon, Joe?”
+
+“Friday,” answered the young Hussar.
+
+Ah me! This was Wednesday already; to-morrow would be Thursday, and the
+next day Friday! I did not hear this, but I give you my word it took
+place.
+
+“Are you coming to see the Vicar again?” asked the sweet voice.
+
+“No,” said Joe.
+
+They both looked down at the gnarled roots of the old tree—the roots did
+stick out a long way, and I suppose attracted their attention—and then
+Polly just touched the big root with her tiny toe. And the point of that
+tiny toe touched Joe’s heart too, which seemed to have got into that root
+somehow, and sent a thrill as of an electric shock, only much pleasanter,
+right through his whole body, and even into the roots of his hair.
+
+“When are you coming again?” whispered the sweet lips.
+
+“Don’t know,” said the young soldier; “perhaps never.”
+
+“But you’ll come and see—your mother?”
+
+“O yes,” answered Joe, “I shall come and see mother; but what’s it matter
+to thee, lassie?”
+
+The lassie blushed, and Joe thought it a good opportunity to take hold of
+her hand. I don’t know why, but he did; and he was greatly surprised
+that the hand did not run away.
+
+“I think the Vicar likes you, Joe?”
+
+“Do he?” and he kept drawing nearer and nearer, little by little, until
+his other hand went clean round Polly Sweetlove’s waist, and—well an owl
+flew out of the tree at that moment, and drew off my attention; but
+afterwards I saw that they both kept looking at the root of the tree, and
+then Joe said;
+
+“But you love th’ baker, Polly?”
+
+“No,” whispered Polly; “no, no, never!”
+
+“Now, look at that!” said Joe, recovering himself a little; “I always
+thought you liked the baker.”
+
+“Never, Joe.”
+
+“Well then, why didn’t you look at me?”
+
+Polly blushed.
+
+“Joe, they said you was so wild.”
+
+“Now, look at that,” said Joe; “did you ever see me wild, Polly?”
+
+“Never, Joe—I will say that.”
+
+“No, and you can ask my mother or Mrs. Bumpkin, or the Vicar, or anybody
+else you like, Polly—.”
+
+“I shall go and see your mother,” said Polly.
+
+“Will you come to-morrow night?” asked Joe.
+
+“If I can get away I will; but I must go now—good-bye—good-bye—good——”
+
+“Are you in a hurry, Polly.”
+
+“I must go, Joe—good—; but I will come to-morrow, as soon as dinner is
+over—good—good—good-bye.”
+
+“And then——,” but the Old Oak kept his counsel. Here I awoke.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“Well,” cried my wife, “you have broken off abruptly.”
+
+“One can’t help it,” quoth I, rubbing my eyes. “I cannot help waking any
+more than I can help going to sleep.”
+
+“Well, this would be a very pretty little courtship if true.”
+
+“Ah,” I said, “if I have described all that I saw in my dream, you may
+depend upon it it is true. But when I go to Southwood I will ask the Old
+Oak, for we are the greatest friends imaginable, and he tells me
+everything. He has known me ever since I was a child, and never sees me
+but he enters into conversation.”
+
+“What about?”
+
+“The past, present, and future—a very fruitful subject of conversation, I
+assure you.”
+
+“Wide enough, certainly.”
+
+“None too wide for a tree of his standing.”
+
+“Ask him, dear, if Joe will marry this Polly Sweetlove.”
+
+“He will not tell me that; he makes a special reservation in favour of
+lovers’ secrets. They would not confide their loves to his keeping so
+often as they do if he betrayed them. No, he’s a staunch old fellow in
+that respect, and the consequence is, that for centuries lovers have
+breathed their vows under his protecting branches.”
+
+“I’m sorry for that—I mean I am sorry he will not tell you about this
+young couple, for I should like to know if they will marry. Indeed, you
+must find out somehow, for everyone who reads your book will be curious
+on this subject.”
+
+“What, as to whether ploughman Joe will marry Polly the housemaid. Had
+he been the eldest son of the Squire now, and she the Vicar’s daughter,
+instead of the maid—”
+
+“It would not have been a whit more interesting, for love is love, and
+human nature the same in high and low degree. But, perhaps, this old
+tree doesn’t know anything about future events?”
+
+“He knows from his long experience of the past what will happen if
+certain conditions are given; he knows, for instance, the secret
+whispers, and the silent tokens exchanged beneath his boughs, and from
+them he knows what will assuredly result if things take their ordinary
+course.”
+
+“So does anyone, prophet or no prophet.”
+
+“But his process of reasoning, based upon the experience of a thousand
+years, is unerring; he saw William the Conqueror, and listened to a
+council of war held under his branches; he knew what would happen if
+William’s projects were successful: whether they would be successful was
+not within his knowledge. He was intimately acquainted with Herne’s Oak
+at Windsor, and they frequently visited.”
+
+“Visited! how was that possible?”
+
+“Quite possible; trees visit one another just the same as human
+beings—they hold intercourse by means of the wind. For instance, when
+the wind blows from the north-east, Southwood Oak visits at Windsor Park,
+and when the wind is in the opposite direction a return visit is paid.
+There isn’t a tree of any position in England but the Old Oak of
+Southwood knows. He is in himself the History of England, only he is
+unlike all other histories, for he speaks the truth.”
+
+“He must have witnessed many love scenes!”
+
+“Thousands!”
+
+“Tell me some?”
+
+“Not now—besides, I must ask leave.”
+
+“Does he ever tell you anything about yourself?”
+
+“A great deal—it is our principal topic of conversation; but he always
+begins it, lest my modesty should prevent any intercourse on the
+subject.”
+
+“What has he said?”
+
+“A great deal: he has inspired me with hope, even instilled into me some
+ambition: he has tried to impart to me an admiration of all that is true,
+and to awaken a detestation of all that is mean and pettifogging. I
+never look at him but I see the symbol of all that is noble, grand and
+brave: he is the emblem of stability, friendship and affection; a
+monument of courage, honesty, and fidelity; he is the type of manly
+independence and self-reliance. I am glad, therefore, that under his
+beautiful branches, and within his protecting presence, two young hearts
+have again met and pledged, as I believe they have, their troth, honestly
+resolving to battle together against the storms of life, rooted in
+stedfast love, and rejoicing in the sunshine of the Creator’s smiles!”
+
+After these observations, which were received with marked approval, I
+again gave myself up to the soft influence of a dreamy repose.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+
+A consultation as to new lodgings.—Also a consultation with counsel.
+
+It was a subject of grave discussion between the Bumpkins and Joe, as to
+where would be the best place for the plaintiff to lodge on his next
+visit to London. If he had moved in the upper ranks of life, in all
+probability he would have taken Mrs. Bumpkin to his town house: but being
+only a plain man and a farmer, it was necessary to decide upon the most
+convenient, and at the same time, inexpensive locality.
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin, who, of course, knew all about her husband’s adventures,
+was strongly opposed to his returning to the Goose. Never had created
+thing lost so much in her estimation by mere association as this domestic
+bird. Joe was a fine soldier, no doubt, but it was the Goose that had
+taken him in.
+
+Curiously enough, as they were discussing this important question, who
+should come in but honest Lawyer Prigg himself.
+
+What a blessing that man seemed to be, go where he would! Why, he spread
+an air of hope and cheerfulness over this simple household the moment he
+entered it! But the greatest virtue he dispensed was resignation; he had
+a large stock of this on hand. He always preached it: “resignation to
+the will of Providence;” resignation to him, Prigg!
+
+So when he came in with his respectable head, professional collar, and
+virtuous necktie, Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin could not choose but rise. Mr.
+Bumpkin meekly pulled his hair, and humbly bowed obeisance as to his
+benefactor. Mrs. Bumpkin curtseyed as to a superior power, whom she
+could not recognize as a benefactor. Joe stood up, and looked as if he
+couldn’t quite make out what Mr. Prigg was. He knew he worked the Law
+somehow, and “summut like as a man works a steam-threshing machine, but
+how or by what means, was a mystery unrevealed to the mind of the simple
+soldier.”
+
+“Good morning! good morning!” said Mr. Prigg, after the manner of a
+patriarch conferring a blessing. “Well, Joe, so you are returned, are
+you? Come, now, let me shake hands with one of our brave heroes!”
+
+What condescension! and his tone was the tone of a man reaching down from
+a giddy height to the world beneath him.
+
+“So you were in the thick of the fight, were you—dear me! what a charge
+that was!” Ah, but, dear reader, you should see Prigg’s charges!
+
+“I wur someur about, sir,” said Joe. “I dunnow where now though.”
+
+“Quite so,” said Mr. Prigg, “it was a great victory; I’m told the enemy
+ran away directly they heard our troops were coming.”
+
+“Now look at that,” said Joe; “what a lot of lies do get about sure-ly!”
+
+“Dear me!” said Mr. Prigg; “but you beat them, did you not? we won the
+battle?”
+
+“That’s right enough,” said Joe; “but if they’d run away we couldn’t a
+beat un—’tain’t much of a fight when there’s no enemy.”
+
+“Haw, haw, haw!” laughed Bumpkin. “That be good, Mr. Prigg, that be
+good!”
+
+“Very good, very good, indeed,” said Mr. Prigg; “I don’t wonder at your
+winning if you could make such sallies as that.”
+
+And that was good for Mr. Prigg.
+
+“And now,” said he, “to business—business, eh?”
+
+“We be jist gwine to ’ave a nice piece o’ pork and greens, Mr. Prigg,
+would ee please to tak some,” said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“Dear me!” answered Prigg; “how very strange, my favourite dish—if ever
+Mrs. Prigg is in doubt about—”
+
+“It be wery plain,” said Bumpkin.
+
+“The plainer the better, my dear sir; as I always say to my servants, if
+you—”
+
+“I’m sure,” said Mrs. Bumpkin; “I be ’ardly fit to wait on a gennleman
+like you. I ain’t ’ad time this morning to change my gown and tidy up
+myself.”
+
+“Really, my dear madam—don’t, now; I adjure you; make no apologies—it is
+not the dress—or the—or the —, anything in fact, that makes us what we
+are;—don’t, if you please.”
+
+And here his profound sentiments died away again and were lost to the
+world; and the worthy man, not long after, was discussing his favourite
+dish with greedy relish.
+
+“An when’ll this ’ere thing be on, Mr. Prigg, does thee think? It be a
+hell of a long time.”
+
+“Tom! Tom!” exclaimed Mrs. Bumpkin. But Mr. Prigg was too well bred and
+too much occupied with his pork and greens to hear the very wayward
+epithet of the Farmer Bumpkin.
+
+“Quite so,” said the lawyer; “quite so, it is so difficult to tell when a
+case will come on. You’re in the list to-day and gone to-morrow; a man
+the other day was just worried as you have been; but mark this; at the
+trial, Mr. Bumpkin, the jury gave that man a verdict for a thousand
+pounds!”
+
+“Look at that, Nancy,” exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin; “Will ’ee tak a little more
+pork, sir?”
+
+“Thank you,” said Mr. Prigg, “it’s uncommonly good; some of your own
+feeding, I suppose?”
+
+“Ay,” said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“Were that a pig case, Mr. Prigg, where the man got the thousand pounds?”
+asked Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+“Let me see,” answered Prigg, “_was_ it a pig case?” Here he put his
+finger to the side of his nose. “I really, at this moment, quite forget
+whether it was or was not a pig case. I’ll trouble you, Mrs. Bumpkin,
+for a little more greens, if you please.”
+
+“Now, I wur saying,” said Bumpkin, “jist as thee comed in, where be I to
+lodge when I gooes to Lunnon agin?”
+
+“Ah, now, quite so—yes; and you must go in a day or two. I expect we
+shall be on shortly. Now, let me see, you don’t like ‘The Goose’? A
+nice respectable hostelry, too!”
+
+“I wunt ’ave un goo there, Mr. Prigg,” said Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+“Quite so—quite so. Now what I was thinking was, suppose you took
+lodgings at some nice suburban place, say—”
+
+“What pleace, sir?” inquired Bumpkin.
+
+“Let us say Camden Town, for instance—nice healthy neighbourhood and
+remarkably quiet. You could come every morning by ’bus, or if you
+preferred it, by rail; and if by rail, you could take a season ticket,
+which would be much cheaper; a six months’ ticket, again, being cheaper
+than a three months’ ticket.”
+
+“In the name o’ Heaven, sir,” exclaimed Mrs. Bumpkin, “be this ’ere thing
+gwine on for ever?”
+
+Mr. Prigg smiled benignly, as much as to say, “You ladies are so
+impatient, so innocent of the business of life.”
+
+“It seems to me, Mr. Prigg, one need live to be as old as thic there
+Mackthusaler to bring a law-suit now-a-days.”
+
+“Now, look at that!” broke in Joe, “it’s made master look forty year
+older aready.”
+
+“So it have, Joe,” rejoined the mistress; “I wish it could be chucked up
+altogether.”
+
+Mr. Prigg benignantly shook his head.
+
+“D’ye think I be gwine to give in to thic sniggerin’ Snooks feller?”
+asked Mr. Bumpkin. “Not if I knows it. Why thic feller goo sniggerin’
+along th’ street as though he’d won; and he ’ave told lots o’ people how
+he’ll laugh I out o’ Coourt—his counsel be gwine to laugh I out o’ Coourt
+becors I be a country farmer.”
+
+“Right can’t be laughed out of Court, sir,” said the excellent Prigg,
+solemnly.
+
+“Noa, noa, right bean’t asheamed, goo where ur wool. Upright and
+down-straight wur allays my motto. I be a plain man, but I allays tried
+to act straight-forrerd, and bean’t asheamed o’ no man.”
+
+This speech was a complete success: it was unanswerable. It fixed the
+lodgings at Camden Town. It stopped Mrs. Bumpkin’s impatience;
+diminished her apprehensions; and apparently, lulled her misgivings. She
+was a gentle, hard-working, loving wife.
+
+And so all was settled. It was the month of April, and it was
+confidently expected that by the end of July all would be comfortably
+finished in time to get in the harvest. The crops looked well; the
+meadows and clover-field promised a fair crop, and the wheat and barley
+never looked better.
+
+The following week found Mr. Bumpkin in his new lodgings at Camden Town;
+and I verily believe, as Mr. Prigg very sagaciously observed, if it had
+not been for the Judges going circuit, _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_ would have
+been in the paper six weeks earlier than it really was. But even
+lawsuits must come on at last, be they never so tardy: and one day, in
+bustling haste, Mr. Prigg’s young man informed Mr. Bumpkin that a
+consultation was actually fixed at his leader’s chambers, Garden Court,
+Temple, at seven o’clock punctually the next day.
+
+Bumpkin was delighted: he was to be present at the express wish of the
+leading counsel. So to Garden Court he went at seven, with Mr. Prigg;
+and there sure enough was Mr. Dynamite, his junior counsel. Mr.
+Catapult, Q.C., had not yet arrived. So while they waited, Mr. Bumpkin
+had an opportunity of looking about him; never in his life had he seen so
+many books. There they were all over the walls; shelves upon shelves.
+The chambers seemed built with books, and Mr. Bumpkin raised his eyes
+with awe to the ceiling, expecting to see books there.
+
+“What be all these ’ere books, sir?” he whispered to Prigg.
+
+“These are law books,” answered the intelligent Prigg; “but these are
+only a few.”
+
+“Must be a good dale o’ law,” said Bumpkin.
+
+“A good deal too much,” observed Mr. Dynamite, with a smile; “if we were
+to burn nine-tenths of the law books we should have better law, eh, Mr.
+Prigg?”
+
+Mr. Prigg never contradicted counsel; and if Mr. Dynamite had said it’s a
+great pity that our libraries have so few authorities, Prigg would have
+made the same answer, “I quite agree, quite so! quite so!”
+
+“Mr. Cats-’is-name don’t seem to come,” observed Bumpkin, after an hour
+and a half had passed.
+
+“Mr. _Catapult_, Mr. _Catapult_,” said Mr. Prigg; “no, he doesn’t seem to
+come.” And then he rang for the clerk, and the clerk came.
+
+“Do you think Mr. Catapult will return to-night?” inquired Prigg.
+
+“I don’t think he will,” said the clerk, looking at his watch; “I am
+afraid not.”
+
+“Beant much good to stop then,” said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“I fear not,” observed the clerk, “he has so many engagements. Shall we
+fix another consultation, Mr. Prigg?”
+
+“If you please,” said that gentleman.
+
+“Say half-past seven to-morrow, then. The case, I find, is not in the
+paper to-morrow.”
+
+“Quite so, quite so,” returned Prigg, “half-past seven to-morrow.”
+
+And thus the consultation was at an end and the parties went their
+several ways.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+
+Mr. Bumpkin receives compliments from distinguished persons.
+
+One evening as Mr. Bumpkin was sitting in his little parlour, ruminating,
+or as he termed it, “rummaging” in his mind over many things, and
+especially wondering when the trial would come on, Horatio, in breathless
+impatience, entered the room. His excited and cheerful appearance
+indicated that something of an unusually pleasant nature had occurred. A
+strong intimacy had long been established between this boy and Mr.
+Bumpkin, who regarded Horatio as a kind of legal prodigy; his very hopes
+seemed centered in and inspired by this lad. He seemed to be the guiding
+spirit and the flywheel of the whole proceedings. Was Snooks to be
+pulverized? it must be under Horatio’s heel!
+
+This legal stripling brought almost as much comfort as Mr. Prigg himself;
+and it was quite a pleasure to hear the familiar terms in which he spoke
+of the bigwigs of the profession. He would say of McCannister, the
+Queen’s Counsel, “I like Mac’s style of putting a question, it’s so soft
+like—it goes down like a Pick-me-up.” Then he would allude to Mr.
+Heavytop, Q.C., as Jack; to Mr. Bigpot as old Kettledrum; to Mr. Swagger,
+Q.C., as Pat; to B. C. Windbag, Q.C., M.P., as B. C.—all which indicated
+to the mind of Mr. Bumpkin the particularly intimate terms upon which
+Horatio was with these celebrities. Nor did his intimacy cease there:
+instead of speaking of the highest legal official of the land in terms of
+respectful deference, as “my Lord High Chancellor,” or “my Lord
+Allworthy,”—he would say, in the most indifferent manner “Old Allworthy”
+this, and “Old Allworthy,” that; sometimes even, he ventured to call some
+of Her Majesty’s Judges by nick-names; an example which, I trust, will
+not be followed by the Horatios of the future. But I believe the pale
+boy, like his great namesake, was fearless. It was a comfort to hear him
+denounce the law’s delay, and the terrible “cumbersomeness” of legal
+proceedings: not that he did it in soothing language or in happy
+phraseology: it was rather in a manner that led Mr. Bumpkin to believe
+the young champion was standing up for his particular rights; as if he
+had said to the authorities, whoever they might be, “Look here! I’ll
+have no more of this: it’s a shame and disgrace to this country that a
+simple dispute between a couple of neighbours can’t be tried without
+months of quarrelling in Judges’ Chambers and elsewhere; if you don’t try
+this case before long I’ll see what can be done.” Then there was further
+consolation in the fact that Horatio declared that, in his opinion, Tommy
+_Catpup_, Q.C., would knock Snooks into a cocked hat, and that Snooks
+already looked very down in the mouth.
+
+On the evening at which I have arrived in my dream, when the pale boy
+came in, Mr. Bumpkin inquired what was the matter: was the case settled?
+Had Snooks paid the damages? Nothing of the kind. Horatio’s visit was
+of a common-place nature. He had simply come to inform Mr. Bumpkin that
+the Archbishop of Canterbury had kindly sent him a couple of tickets for
+the reserved seats at Canterbury Hall.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin was disappointed. He cared nothing for Archbishops. He was
+in hopes it had been something better.
+
+“I wunt goo,” said he.
+
+“We ought to go, I think,” said Horatio; “it was very kind of old Archy
+to send em, and he wouldn’t like it if we didn’t go: besides, he and the
+Rolls are great chums.”
+
+“Rolls!” said Bumpkin.
+
+“The Master of the Rolls. I shouldn’t wonder if he aint got Archy to
+send em—don’t you be a fool. And another thing, Paganani’s going to play
+the farmyard on the fiddle to-night. Gemminey, ain’t that good! You
+hear the pigs squeak, and the bull roar, and the old cock crow, and the
+sow grunt, and the horse kick—”
+
+“How the devil can thee hear a horse kick, unless he kicks zummat?”
+
+“Well, he does,” said Horatio; “that’s just what he does do. Let’s go, I
+am sure you will like it.”
+
+“It beant one o’ these ere playhouse pleaces, be it?”
+
+“Lor bless you,” said Horatio, “there’s pews just the same as if you was
+in Church: and the singing’s beautiful.”
+
+“No sarmon, I s’pooase.”
+
+“Not on week nights, but I’ll tell you what there is instead: a chap
+climbs up to the top of a high pole and stands on his head for ten
+minutes.”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin, although a man who never went out of an evening, could not
+resist the persuasions of his pale young friend. He had never been to
+any place of amusement, except the Old Bailey, since he had been in
+London; although he had promised himself a treat to the Cattle Show,
+provided that came on, which was very likely, as it only wanted five
+months to it, before his case.
+
+So they got on the top of a ’Bus and proceeded on their way to Lambeth
+Palace; for the Canterbury Hall, as everyone knows, is in that ancient
+pile. And truly, when they arrived everything was astonishingly
+beautiful and pleasing. Mr. Bumpkin was taken through the Picture
+Gallery, which he enjoyed, although he would have liked to see one or two
+like the Squire had got in his Hall, such as “Clinker,” the prize bull;
+and “Father Tommy,” the celebrated ram. But the Archbishop probably had
+never taken a prize: not much of a breeder maybe.
+
+Now they entered the Hall amid strains of sweet, soft, enchanting music.
+Never before had the soul of Bumpkin been so enthralled: it was as if the
+region of fairyland had suddenly burst upon his astonished view. In
+presence of all this beauty, and this delicious cadence of sweet sounds,
+what a common-place thing _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_ seemed!
+
+Theirs was a very nice pew, commanding a full view of the stage and all
+the angelic looking beings. And evidently our friends were considered
+fashionable people, for many of the audience looked round at them as they
+entered. So awed was Mr. Bumpkin when he first sat down, that he
+wondered whether he ought to look into his hat as the Squire did in
+Church; but, resolving to be guided by Horatio, and seeing that the pale
+youth did not even take his billycock off, but spread his elbows out on
+the front ledge and clapped his hands with terrific vehemence, and
+shouted “Anchore” as loudly as he could, Mr. Bumpkin, in imitation,
+clapped his hands and said “Hooroar!”
+
+It was glorious. The waiter came and exchanged winks with the pale boy,
+and brought some soda-and-brandy and a cigar. Mr. Bumpkin wondered more
+and more. It was the strangest place he had ever heard of. It seemed so
+strange to have smoking and drinking. But then he knew there were things
+occurring every day that the cleverest men could not account for: not
+even Mr. Slater, the schoolmaster at Yokelton, could account for them.
+
+Just in front of the two friends was another pew, a very nice one that
+was, and for some little time it was unoccupied. Presently with a great
+rustling of silks and a great smell of Jockey Club, and preceded by one
+of the servants of the establishment, entered two beautiful and
+fashionably dressed ladies of extremely quiet (except the Jockey Club)
+and retiring demeanour. They could not but attract Mr. Bumpkin’s
+attention: they so reminded him of the Squire’s daughters, only they
+dressed much better. How he would like Nancy to see them: she was very
+fond of beautiful gowns, was Nancy.
+
+“I wonder who they be?” whispered Bumpkin.
+
+“I don’t know,” answered Horatio; “I’ll ask as soon as I get a chance.
+It’s the Archbishop’s pew; I believe they are his daughters.”
+
+“Wouldn’t ur ha come wi em?” said Bumpkin.
+
+“He generally does, but I suppose he can’t get away to-night.”
+
+At this moment a waiter, or as Bumpkin called him a pew opener, was
+passing, and Horatio whispered something in his ear, his companion
+looking at him the while from the corner of his eyes.
+
+“The one on the right,” whispered the waiter, untwisting the wire of a
+bottle of sodawater, “is the Countess Squeezem, and the other is Lady
+Flora, her sister.”
+
+Bumpkin nodded his head as much as to say, “Just see that: high life,
+that, if you like!”
+
+And really the Countess and Lady Flora were as quiet and unassuming as if
+they had been the commonest bred people in the world.
+
+Now came forward on the stage a sweet young lady dressed in yellow satin,
+with lovely red roses all down the front and one on the left shoulder,
+greeted by a thunder of applause. Her voice was thrilling: now it was at
+the back of the stage; now it was just behind your ear; now in the
+ceiling. You didn’t know where to have it. After she had done, Horatio
+said:
+
+“What do you think of Nilsson?”
+
+“Wery good! wery good!”
+
+“Hallo,” says Horatio, “here’s Sims Reeves. Bravo Sims! bravo Reeves!”
+
+“I’ve eered tell o’ he,” says Bumpkin; “he be wery young, bean’t he?”
+
+“O,” says Horatio, “they paint up so; but ain’t he got a tenor—O gemminey
+crikery!”
+
+“A tenner?” says Bumpkin, “what’s thee mean, ten pun a week?”
+
+“O my eye!” says the youth, “he gets more than that.”
+
+“It be good wages.”
+
+“Yes, but it’s nothing to what some of em get,” says Horatio; “why if a
+man can play the fool well he can get as much as the Prime Minister.”
+
+“Ah, and thic Prime Minister can play the fool well at times; it seem to
+me—they tooked the dooty of whate and made un too chape.”
+
+“Who’s this?” asks Horatio of the waiter.
+
+“Patti,” says the waiter, “at the express wish of the Queen.”
+
+Bumpkin nods again, as though there was no end to the grandeur of the
+company.
+
+Then comes another no less celebrated, if Horatio was correct.
+
+“Hullo,” says he, “here’s Trebelli!”
+
+Now this was too much for the absorbing powers of even a Bumpkin.
+Horatio had carried it too far. Not that his friend had ever heard of
+the great vocalist, but if you are inclined for fun pray use names that
+will go down. Mr. Bumpkin looked hard at Horatio’s face, on which was
+just the faintest trace of a smile. And then he said:
+
+“What a name, _Bellie_! danged if I doan’t think thee be stickin it into
+I,” and then he laughed and repeated, “thee be stickin it into I.”
+
+“Now for Pagannini!” says Horatio; “now you’ll hear something. By Jove,
+he’ll show you!”
+
+“Why I’ve eerd tell o’ thic Piganiny when I were a boy,” says Bumpkin,
+“used to play on one leg.”
+
+“That’s the man,” says Horatio.
+
+“But this ere man got two legs, how can he be Piganiny?”
+
+“I don’t know anything about that,” says Horatio; “what’s it matter how
+many legs he’s got, just listen to that!”
+
+“Why danged if that bean’t as much like thic Cochin Chiner cock o’ mine
+as ever I eered in my life.”
+
+“Told you so,” says Horatio; “but keep quiet, you’ll hear something
+presently.”
+
+And sure enough he did: pig in the straw; sow in the stye; bull in the
+meadow; sheep in the fold; everything was perfect.
+
+Never before had Mr. Bumpkin been so overpowered. He never before knew
+what music was. Truly Piganiny was a deserving man, and a clever one
+too. Mr. Bumpkin’s enthusiasm had carried him thus far, when to his
+great satisfaction the Lady Flora looked round. It was very nice of her,
+because it was as if she wished to know if Mr. Bumpkin and his friend
+felt the same rapturous delight as she and her sister. What a nice face
+Lady Flora’s was! It wasn’t unlike the Squire’s eldest daughter’s.
+Between that, perhaps, and the Vicar’s youngest daughter’s.
+
+Then the Countess slightly turned round, her face wearing a smile of
+great complaisance, and Mr. Bumpkin could have seen at once that she was
+a person of great distinction even if he had not been informed of her
+rank. Well, taken for all in all, it was a night he would never forget,
+and his only feeling of regret was that Mrs. Bumpkin was not present to
+share his pleasure—the roar of that bull would have just pleased her; it
+was so like Sampson.
+
+And now the scene shifters were preparing for another performance, and
+were adjusting ropes and fixing poles, and what not, when, as Mr. Bumpkin
+was lost in profound meditation, up rose from her seat the beautiful Lady
+Flora, and turning round with a bewitching face, and assuming an air of
+inexpressible simplicity, she exclaimed to Mr. Bumpkin in the sweetest of
+voices: “O you duck!”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin started as if a cannon had exploded in his face instead of a
+beautiful young lady. He blushed to the deepest crimson, and then the
+lady Flora poured into him a volley of her sweetiest prettiest laughter.
+Attacked thus so suddenly and so effectively, what could he do? He felt
+there must be some mistake, and that he ought to apologize. But the Lady
+Flora gave him no time; leaning forward, she held out her hand—
+
+“Beg pardon, m’lady—thic—I—I.”
+
+Then the Countess rose and smiled upon Mr. Bumpkin, and said she hoped he
+wouldn’t mind; her sister was of such a playful disposition.
+
+The playful one here just touched Mr. Bumpkin under the chin with her
+forefinger, and again said he was a “_perfect duck_!”
+
+“What be the manin’ o’ this?” said he. “I be off; come on, sir. This be
+quite enough for I.”
+
+“Don’t go like that,” said Lady Flora. “Oh, dear, dear, what a cruel
+man!”
+
+“Not a glass of wine,” said the Countess.
+
+“Not one, Mr. Bumpkin!” urged Lady Flora.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin had risen, and was angry: he was startled at his name being
+known: he looked to Horatio, hoping some explanation might come; but the
+pale youth had his back to him, and was preparing to leave the Hall.
+There were many curious eyes looking at them, and there was much
+laughter. Mr. Bumpkin’s appearance would alone have been sufficient to
+cause this: but his mind was to be farther enlightened as to the meaning
+of this extraordinary scene; and it happened in this wise. As he was
+proceeding between the rows of people, followed closely by those
+illustrious members of the aristocracy, the Countess and Lady Flora;
+while the waiters grinned and the people laughed, his eye caught sight of
+an object away over the front seat, which formed a right angle with the
+one he had been occupying; it was an object unattractive in itself but
+which, under the circumstances, fixed and riveted his attention; that
+object was Snooks, in the corner of the third row, with his sawpit mouth
+on the broadest grin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+
+The trial.
+
+Who shall describe the feelings of joy which animated the breast of Mr.
+Bumpkin when at last, with the suddenness of lightning, Mr. Prigg’s clerk
+flashed into his little parlour the intelligence, “Case in paper; be at
+Court by ten o’clock; Bail Court.” Such was the telegram which Mr.
+Bumpkin got his landlady to read on that pleasant evening towards the end
+of July. The far-seeing Prigg was right. It would come on about the end
+of July. That is what he had predicted. But it would not have been safe
+for Mr. Bumpkin to be away from town for a single day. It might have
+been in the paper at any moment; and here it was, just as he was
+beginning to get tired of “Camden Town and the whole thing.”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin put on a clean shirt, with a good stiff high collar, which he
+had reserved from Mrs. Bumpkin’s wash; for, in his opinion, there was no
+stiffening in the London starch, and no getting up like Mrs. Bumpkin’s.
+He put on his best neckerchief, and a bran new waistcoat which he had
+bought for Sundays six years ago at the market town. He put on his drab
+coat with the long tails, which he had worn on the day of his marriage,
+and had kept for his best ever since; he put on his velvety looking
+corduroy trowsers and his best lace-up watertight boots; and then, after
+a good breakfast, put on his white beaver hat, took his ash-stick, and
+got into a Westminster ‘Bus. What a beautiful morning it was! Just the
+morning for a law suit! Down he got at Palace Yard, walked towards the
+spacious door of the old hall, entered its shadowy precincts, and then,
+in my dream, I lost sight of him as he mingled with the crowd. But I saw
+some few moments after in the Bail Court enter, amidst profound silence
+and with impressive dignity, Mr. Justice Stedfast. Let me here inform
+the reader that if by any chance, say by settlement, postponement or
+otherwise, the first case in the list “goes off,” as it is called (from
+its bearing a striking resemblance to the unexpected going off of a gun),
+and the parties in the next case, taken by surprise, are not there at the
+moment, that case goes off by being struck out; and very often the next
+and the next, and so on to the end of the list. Parties therefore should
+be ready, so as to prevent a waste of time. The time of the Court is not
+to be wasted by parties not being ready. Now, strangely enough, this is
+what happened in the case of _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_. Being number eight,
+no one thought it would be reached; and the leading counsel, and also the
+junior counsel being engaged elsewhere; and Mr. Prigg and Mr. Prigg’s
+clerk not having arrived; and Mr. Bumpkin not knowing his way; at five
+minutes after the sitting of the Court, so expeditious are our legal
+proceedings, the celebrated case was actually reached, and this is what
+took place:
+
+“Are the parties ready?” inquired his Lordship.
+
+Mr. Ricochet, Q.C., who appeared with Mr. Weasel for the defendant, said
+he was ready for the defendant.
+
+“Call the plaintiff!” said a voice.
+
+Loud cries for Bumpkin, who was just pushing his way down the passage
+outside.
+
+“Does anyone answer?” asked his lordship; “do you know if any gentleman
+is instructed, Mr. Ricochet?”
+
+“I am not aware, my lud.”
+
+“Stand up and be sworn, gentlemen,” says the associate. Up stood the
+jury; and in less than half a minute they found a verdict for the
+defendant, counterclaim being abandoned, just as Mr. Bumpkin had pushed
+into Court. And judgment is given.
+
+The business having been thus got through, the Court rose and went away.
+And then came in both counsel and Mr. Prigg and Horatio; and great
+complaints were made of everybody except the Judge, who couldn’t help it.
+
+But our administration of justice is not so inelastic that it cannot
+adapt itself to a set of circumstances such as these. It was only to
+make a few more affidavits, and to appear before his lordship by counsel,
+and state the facts in a calm and respectful manner, to obtain the
+necessary rectification of the matter. All was explained and all
+forgiven. _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_ was to be restored to the paper upon
+payment of the costs of the day—a trifling matter, amounting only to
+about eighteen pounds seventeen shillings. But a severe admonition from
+the Bench accompanied this act of grace: “The Court cannot be kept
+waiting,” said his lordship; “and it is necessary that all suitors should
+know that if they are not here when their cases are called on they will
+be struck out, or the party to the cause who is here will be entitled to
+a verdict, if the defendant; or to try his case in the other’s absence,
+if he be the plaintiff. It was idle to suppose that parties could not be
+there in time: it was their business to be there.”
+
+At this every junior barrister nodded approvingly, and the usher called
+silence.
+
+Of course, the cause could not be in the paper again for some time: they
+must suit Mr. Ricochet’s convenience now: and accordingly another period
+of waiting had to be endured. Mr. Bumpkin was almost distracted, but his
+peace of mind was restored by the worthy Prigg, who persuaded him that a
+most laudable piece of good fortune had been brought about by his
+intervention; and that was the preventing the wily Snooks from keeping
+the verdict he had snatched.
+
+What a small thing will sometimes comfort us!
+
+Mr. Bumpkin was, indeed, a lucky man; for if his case had not been in the
+paper when at last it was, it would have “gone over the Long Vacation.”
+
+At length I saw Mr. Justice Pangloss, the eminent Chancery Judge, take
+his seat in the Bail Court. He was an immense case lawyer. He knew
+cases that had been tried in the reigns of the Edwards and Henries. A
+pig case could not, therefore, come amiss.
+
+A case lawyer is like Moses and Sons; he can fit anybody, from Chang down
+to a midget. But there is sometimes an inconvenience in trying to fit an
+old precedent on to new circumstances: and I am not unfrequently reminded
+of the boy whose corduroy trousers were of the exact length, and looked
+tolerable in front; but if you went round they stuck out a good deal on
+the other side. He might grow to them, no doubt, but it is a clumsy mode
+of tailoring after all.
+
+Now Mr. Bumpkin, of course, could not be sure that his case was “coming
+on.” All he knew was, that he must avoid Snooks’ snatching another
+verdict. He had been to great expense, and a commission had actually
+been issued to take Joe’s evidence while his regiment was detained at
+Malta. Mr. Prigg had taken the plaintiff into a crowd, and there had
+left him early in the morning.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin’s appearance even in the densest crowd was attractive, to say
+the least: and many and various were the observations from time to time
+made by the vulgar roughs around as to his personal appearance. His
+shirtcollar was greatly praised, so was the beauty of his waistcoat:
+while I heard one gentleman make an enquiry which showed he was desirous
+of ascertaining what was the name of the distinguished firm which had the
+honour of supplying him with hats. One said it was Heath, he could tell
+by the brim; another that it was Cole, he went by the polish; and the
+particular curl of the brim, which no other hatter had ever succeeded in
+producing. While another gentleman with one eye and half a nose
+protested that it was one of Lincoln and Bennett’s patent dynamite
+resisters on an entirely new principle.
+
+The subject of all these remarks listened as one in doubt as to whether
+they were levelled at him or in any other direction. He glanced at the
+many eyes turned upon him, and heard the laughter that succeeded every
+new witticism. His uncertainty as to whether he was “the party eamed
+at,” heightened the amusement of the wits.
+
+Now came a bolder and less mistakable allusion to his personal
+appearance:
+
+“I should like Gladstone to see that, Jem; talk about a collar! the Grand
+Old Man’s nowhere—he’d better take to turndowns after this.”
+
+“Yes,” replied the gentleman addressed; “I think this would settle him—is
+he liberal or tory, I wonder?”
+
+“Tory, you’re sure—wotes for the Squoire, I’ll warrant. A small loaf and
+a big jail.”
+
+Mr. Bumpkin turned his eyes first towards one speaker and then towards
+another without moving his head, as he thought:
+
+“Danged if I doan’t bleeve thee means I.” But he wisely said nothing.
+
+“I say,” said another, “I wonder if pigeon’s milk is good for the
+complexion.”
+
+“No,” said Jem, “it makes your nose red, and makes the hair sprout out of
+the top of it.”
+
+Here was a laugh all round, which made the Usher call out silence; and
+the Judge said he would have the Court cleared if order was not
+preserved. Then there was a loud shouting all over the Court for “Thomas
+Bumpkin!”
+
+“Here I be!” said Bumpkin, amid more laughter—and especially of the wits
+around him. Then a great bustling and hustling, and pushing and
+struggling took place.
+
+“Danged if that beant my case,” said Mr. Bumpkin; “but it ain’t my
+counsellor.”
+
+“Make way for the plaintiff,” shouted the Usher; “stand on one side—don’t
+crowd up this passage. This way, sir, make haste; the Court’s waiting
+for you, why do you keep the Court waiting in this way?”
+
+“I was just going to strike your case out,” said the Judge, “the public
+time can’t be wasted in this way.”
+
+Bumpkin scrambled along through the crowd, and was hustled into the
+witness-box. The Judge put up his eye-glass, and looked at the plaintiff
+as though he was hardly fit to bring an action in a Superior Court. Up
+went the book into his hand. “Take the book in your right hand. Kiss
+the book; now attend and speak up—speak up so that those gentlemen may
+hear.”
+
+“Why weren’t you here before?” asked the Judge.
+
+“I wur, my lord?”
+
+“Didn’t you hear your learned counsel opening your case?”
+
+“I didn’t know it wur my case,” said Bumpkin, amid roars of laughter.
+
+“I don’t wonder at that,” said Mr. Ricochet, looking at the jury.
+
+“Now then,” said the Judge.
+
+“And now, then,” said Mr. Silverspoon; for neither of his own counsel was
+able to be present.
+
+“You are a farmer, I believe?”
+
+“I be.”
+
+“On the 29th of May, 18--; did the defendant come to your farm?”
+
+“Ur did.”
+
+“Did he buy a pig?”
+
+“Ur did not; but ur said he’d be d---d if ur wouldn’t ’ave un.”
+
+“And did he come and take it away?”
+
+“Ur did; pulled un slick out of the sty; and when I tried to stop un in
+the Lane, took un by main force?”
+
+Mr. Silverspoon sat down.
+
+“What was the age of this pig, Mr. Bumpkin,” enquired the Judge.
+
+“He wur ten weeks old, your lord.”
+
+“Isn’t there a calf case, Mr. Ricochet, very similar to this?”
+
+“Yes, my lord.”
+
+“I think,” said Mr. Justice Pangloss, “it was tried in the reign of James
+the First.”
+
+Mr. Ricochet, who knew nothing of the calf case, except what his Lordship
+had told him, said he believed it was.
+
+“If this was anything,” continued Mr. Ricochet, “upon the plaintiff’s own
+showing it was a felony, and the plaintiff should have prosecuted the
+defendant criminally before having recourse to his civil remedy; that is
+laid down in the sheep case reported in Walker’s Trumpery Cases.”
+
+“What volume of the Trumpery Cases is that, Mr. Ricochet?”
+
+“Six hundred and fifty, my lud.”
+
+His Lordship writes it down. “Page?” says his lordship.
+
+“Nineteen hundred and ninety-five, my lud; about the middle of the book.”
+
+Judge calls to the Usher to bring the six hundred and fiftieth volume of
+Walker’s Trumpery Cases.
+
+“But there’s a case before that,” said his lordship. “There’s a case, if
+I recollect rightly, about the time of Julius Cæsar—the donkey case.”
+
+“It’s on all fours with this,” said Mr. Ricochet.
+
+“What do you say, Mr. Silverspoon?”
+
+Then Mr. Silverspoon proceeded to show that none of those cases was on
+all fours with the present case; and a long and interesting argument
+followed between the Bench and the Bar. And it was said by those who
+were most competent to judge, that Mr. Silverspoon quite distinguished
+himself for the wonderful erudition he displayed in his knowledge of the
+donkey case, and several other cases of four-footed beasts that were
+called to his attention by Mr. Justice Pangloss. A perfect menagerie was
+“adduced.” Mr. Bumpkin meanwhile wondering where he was, and what on
+earth they had all got to do with the plain fact of Snooks taking his pig
+without paying for it.
+
+At length, after four hours had been consumed in these learned
+disquisitions, Mr. Justice Pangloss, reviewing the judgments of the
+various eminent lawyers who had presided over the respective cases in the
+several reigns, and after quoting many observations of those eminent
+jurists, said that in order to save time he would hold, for the purposes
+of to-day, that Mr. Bumpkin was entitled to bring his action: but, of
+course, he would reserve the point; he was by no means clear; he
+considered himself bound by authority; and as the point was extremely
+important, and left undecided after no less than twelve hundred years of
+argument on the one side and the other, he thought it ought to be
+solemnly settled. An unsettled state of the law was a very bad thing in
+his lordship’s opinion; especially in these modern times, when it
+appeared to him that the public were clamouring for further reform, and a
+still further simplification of legal procedure.
+
+This suited Mr. Ricochet exactly; he could not be said now to have lost
+his case, even if the jury should find against him. But he had yet to
+cut up Bumpkin in cross-examination. The old trial was brought up
+against the plaintiff; and every thing that could tend to discredit him
+was asked. Mr. Ricochet, indeed, seemed to think that the art of
+cross-examination consisted in bullying a witness, and asking all sorts
+of questions tending to cast reflections upon his character. He was
+especially great in insinuating perjury; knowing that that is always open
+to a counsel who has no other defence.
+
+“Will you swear that?” was asked at almost every answer; sometimes
+prefaced by the warning, “Be careful, sir—be careful.” If he could get
+hold of anything against a witness’s character, be it ever so small, and
+at ever so remote a distance in the man’s life, he brought it out; and
+being a Queen’s Counsel he did not always receive the reproofs that would
+have crushed a stuff gownsman into respectable behaviour.
+
+“Were you charged with assaulting a female in the public streets, sir?”
+
+“No, I worn’t.”
+
+“Be careful, sir—she may be in Court.”
+
+“Let her come forward then,” said the courageous Silverspoon, who was by
+no means wanting in tact.
+
+“Will you be quiet, sir,” retorted Ricochet. “Now Mr. Bumpkin, or
+whatever your name is, will you swear she did not accuse you of
+assaulting her?”
+
+“She coomed oop, and it’s my belief she wur in the robbery.”
+
+“Bravo Bumpkin!” said one of the men who had chaffed him. And the jury
+looked at one another in a manner that showed approval.
+
+“Will you swear, sir, you have never been in trouble?”
+
+“I donnow what thee means.”
+
+“Be careful, sir; you know what I mean perfectly well.”
+
+Then Locust whispers to him, and he says:
+
+“O, you frequent Music Halls, don’t you?”
+
+“Donnow what thee means,” says Bumpkin.
+
+“O, you don’t, don’t you; will you swear that?”
+
+“I wool.”
+
+“Be careful, sir. Were you at the Canterbury Hall with two women, who
+passed as the Countess and Lady Flora?”
+
+“It be a lie!”
+
+And thus every form of torture was ruthlessly employed, till Mr. Bumpkin
+broke down under it, and cried like a child in the witness-box. This
+awakened sympathy for him. There had been much humour and much laughter;
+and Mr. Ricochet having no knowledge of human nature, was not aware how
+closely allied are laughter and tears; that in proportion as the jury had
+laughed at the expense of Mr. Bumpkin they would sympathize with his
+unhappy position.
+
+“I’ve worked hard,” said he, “for sixty year, and let any man come
+forrard and say I’ve wronged man, ooman, or child!”
+
+That was a point for Bumpkin. Every one said, “Poor old man!” and even
+his Lordship, who was supposed to have no feeling, was quite sympathetic.
+Only Mr. Ricochet was obtuse. He had no heart, and very little skill, or
+he would have managed his case more adroitly. “Badgering” is not much
+use if you have no better mode of winning your case.
+
+“Stand down, Mr. Bumpkin,” said his counsel, as Mr. Ricochet resumed his
+seat amid the suppressed hisses of the gallery.
+
+“Joseph Wurzel,” said Mr. Silverspoon.
+
+Joe appeared in the uniform of the Hussars. And he wore a medal too.
+Mr. Ricochet had no sympathy with heroes any more than he had with men of
+letters, artists, or any other class of talent. He was a dry,
+uncompromising, blunt, unfeeling lawyer, looking at justice as a
+thimblerig looks at his pea; lift which thimble you may, he will take
+care the pea shall not be found if he can help it. He smiled a grim,
+inhuman smile at Bumpkin’s tears, and muttered that he was an “unmanly
+milksop.”
+
+Joe gave his evidence briefly and without hesitation. Everyone could see
+he was speaking the truth; everybody but Mr. Ricochet, who commenced his
+cross-examination by telling him to be careful, and that he was upon his
+oath.
+
+“Be careful, sir;” he repeated.
+
+Joe looked.
+
+“You are on your oath, sir.” Joe faced him.
+
+“You deserted your master, did you?”
+
+“No,” said Joe; “I aint no deserter?”
+
+“But you enlisted.”
+
+“I don’t know as that’s desertion,” said Joe; “and I’m here to speak for
+him now; and I give my evidence at Malta, too.”
+
+“Do you swear that, sir?” enquired Mr. Ricochet. “Were you not with your
+master when the young woman accused him of assaulting her?”
+
+“I was not.”
+
+“Why did you enlist, then?” enquired Mr. Ricochet.
+
+“Cause I choose to,” said Joe.
+
+“Now, sir, upon your oath; I ask you, did you not enlist because of this
+charge?”
+
+“No; I never heard on it till arter I was listed.”
+
+“When did you hear of it?”
+
+“At the trial at the Old Bailey.”
+
+“O,” said the learned Q.C.; “wait a minute, you were there, were you?
+Were you there as a witness?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“Because I warnt.”
+
+“Will you swear that?” asked Ricochet, amid roars of laughter.
+
+“What were you there for?”
+
+“To hear the trial!”
+
+“And you were not called?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“And do you mean on your oath, sir, to say that you had enlisted at that
+time.”
+
+“Now look at that,” said Joe; “the Sergeant there enlisted me, and he
+knows.”
+
+“I suppose you had seen your master’s watch many times?”
+
+“I’d seen it,” said Joe.
+
+“And did not give evidence!”
+
+“No; I warnt called, and know’d nothing about it.”
+
+“You’ve been paid for coming here, I suppose?”
+
+“Not a farden, and wouldn’t take un; he bin a good maister to me as ever
+lived.”
+
+“And you left him. Now then, sir, be careful; do you swear you heard
+Bumpkin say Snooks should not have the pig?”
+
+“I do.”
+
+“Have you been speaking to anyone about this case before to-day?”
+
+Joe thought a bit.
+
+“Be careful, sir, I warn you,” says Ricochet.
+
+“Yes,” said Joe; “I have.”
+
+“I thought so. When? To whom?”
+
+And here an air of triumph lit up the features of Mr. Ricochet.
+
+“Afore I comed here.”
+
+“When! let’s have it?”
+
+“Outside the Court.”
+
+“To Bumpkin?”
+
+“No; to that there Locust; he axed un—”
+
+“Never mind what he axed you;” said Ricochet, whose idea of humour
+consisted in the repetition of an illiterate observation; and he sat
+down—as well he might—after such an exhibition of the art of advocacy.
+
+But on re-examination, it turned out that Mr. Locust had put several
+questions to Joe with a view of securing his evidence himself at a
+reasonable remuneration, and of contradicting Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+This caused the jury to look at one another with grave faces and shake
+their heads.
+
+Mr. Ricochet began and continued his speech in the same common-place
+style as his cross-examination; abusing everyone on the other side,
+especially that respectable solicitor, Mr. Prigg; and endeavouring to
+undo his own bad performance with the witness by a worse speech to the
+jury. What he was going to show, and what he was going to prove, was
+wonderful; everybody who had been called was guilty of perjury; everybody
+he was going to call would be a paragon of all the virtues. He
+expatiated upon the great common sense of the jury (as though they were
+fools), relied on their sound judgment and denounced the conduct of Mr.
+Bumpkin in the witness-box as a piece of artful acting, intended to
+appeal to the weakness of the jury. But all was useless. Snooks made a
+sorry figure in the box. He was too emphatic, too positive, too abusive.
+Mr. Ricochet could not get over his own cross-examination. The
+ridiculous counterclaim with its pettifogging innuendoes vanished before
+that common sense of the jury to which Mr. Ricochet so dryly appealed.
+The edifice erected by the modern pleader’s subtle craftiness was
+unsubstantial as the icy patterns on the window-pane, which a single
+breath can dissipate. And yet these ingenious contrivances were
+sufficient to give an unimportant case an appearance of substantiality
+which it otherwise would not have possessed.
+
+The jury, after a most elaborate charge from Mr. Justice Pangloss, who
+went through the cases of the last 900 years in the most careful manner,
+returned a verdict for the plaintiff with twenty-five pounds damages.
+The learned Judge did not give judgment, inasmuch as there were points of
+law to be argued. Mr. Bumpkin, although he had won his case so far as
+the verdict was concerned, did not look by any means triumphant. He had
+undergone so much anxiety and misery, that he felt more like a man who
+had escaped a great danger than one who had accomplished a great
+achievement.
+
+Snooks’ mouth, during the badgering of the witnesses, which was intended
+for cross-examination was quite a study for an artist or a physiologist.
+When he thought a witness was going to be caught, the orifice took the
+form of a gothic window in a ruinous condition. When he imagined the
+witness had slipped out of the trap laid for him, it stretched
+horizontally, and resembled a baker’s oven. He was of too coarse a
+nature to suspect that his own counsel had damaged his case, and believed
+the result of the trial to have been due to the plaintiff’s “snivelling.”
+He left the Court with a melancholy downcast look, and his only chance of
+happiness hereafter in this life seemed now to be in proportion to his
+power of making Mr. Bumpkin miserable. Mr. Locust was not behind in his
+advice on their future course; and, after joining his client in the hall,
+at once pointed out the utterly absurd conclusion at which the jury had
+arrived; declared that there must be friends of the plaintiff among them,
+and that Mr. Ricochet would take the earliest opportunity of moving for a
+new trial; a piece of information which quite lit up the coarse features
+of his client, as a breath of air will bring a passing glow to the
+mouldering embers of an ash-heap on a dark night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+
+Motion for rule nisi, in which is displayed much learning, ancient and
+modern.
+
+On the following day there was a great array of judicial talent and
+judicial dignity sitting in what is called “Banco,” not to be in any way
+confounded with “Sancho;” the two words are totally distinct both as to
+their meaning and etymology. In the centre of the Bench sat Mr. Justice
+Doughty, one of the clearest heads perhaps that ever enveloped itself in
+horsehair. On his right was Mr. Justice Pangloss, and on his left Mr.
+Justice Technical.
+
+Then arose from the Queen’s Counsel row, Mr. Ricochet to apply for a rule
+_nisi_ for a new trial in the cause of _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_ which was
+tried yesterday before Mr. Justice Pangloss.
+
+“Before me?” says Mr. Justice Pangloss.
+
+“Yes, my lud,” says Mr. Ricochet.
+
+“Are you sure?” enquired the learned Judge, turning over his notes.
+
+“O, quite, my lud.”
+
+“Ah!” says his lordship: “what do you say the name of the case was?”
+
+“_Bumpkin_ against _Snooks_, my lud,” says Mr. Ricochet, Q.C.
+
+“Coots; what was it,—a Bill of Exchange?” asks his lordship.
+
+“Snooks, my lud, Snooks;” says Mr. Ricochet, “with the greatest
+deference, my lud, his name is spelt with an S.”
+
+Judge, still turning over his book from end to end calls to his clerk,
+and addressing Mr. Ricochet, says: “When do you say it was tried, Mr.
+Ricochet?”
+
+“Yesterday, my lud; with great submission, my lud, I overheard your
+ludship say Coots. Snooks, my lud.”
+
+Then all the Judges cried “Snooks!” as if it had been a puzzle or a
+conundrum at a family Christmas party, and they had all guessed it at
+once.
+
+“Bring me the book for this term,” said the Judge sharply to his clerk.
+
+“What was the name of the plaintiff?” enquired Mr. Justice Doughty.
+
+“Bumpkin, my lud,” said Mr. Ricochet, “with great deference.”
+
+“Ah, Pumpkin, so it was,” said the presiding Judge.
+
+“With great submission, my lud, Bumpkin!”
+
+“Eh?”
+
+“Bumpkin, my lud;” and then all the Judges’ cried “Bumpkin!” as pleased
+as the followers of Columbus when they discovered America.
+
+“Ah, here it is,” said Mr. Justice Pangloss, passing his forefinger
+slowly along the page; “the name of the case you refer to, Mr. Ricochet,
+is _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_, not _Coots_ v. _Pumpkin_, and it was tried
+before me and a special jury on the twenty-eighth of July of the present
+year.”
+
+“Yes, my lud, with all submission.”
+
+“Why, that was yesterday,” said Mr. Justice Pangloss. “Why did you not
+say so; I was referring to last year’s book.”
+
+“With all deference, my lud—”
+
+“Never mind, never mind, Mr. Ricochet; let us get on.”
+
+“What do you move for?” asked Mr. Justice Doughty.
+
+“A new trial, my lud.”
+
+“A new trial—yes—? Which way was the verdict, Mr. Ricochet?”
+
+“Verdict for the plaintiff, my lud.”
+
+“And whom do you appear for?”
+
+“I am for the defendant, my lud.”
+
+“O! you’re for the defendant. Stop—let me have my note correct. I find
+it always of great assistance when the rule comes on to be argued. I
+don’t say you’re going to have a rule. I must know a little more of the
+case before we grant a rule.”
+
+“If your ludship pleases.”
+
+I did not gather what his lordship intended to say when he made the
+observations recorded, and can only regret that his lordship should have
+broken off so abruptly.
+
+“What ground do you move upon, Mr. Ricochet.”
+
+Mr. Ricochet said, “The usual grounds, my lud; that is to say, that the
+verdict was against the weight of evidence.”
+
+“Stop a minute,” said Mr. Justice Doughty; “let me have my note correct,
+‘against the weight of evidence,’ Mr. Ricochet.”
+
+“Misdirection, my lud—with all respect to Mr. Justice Pangloss—and
+wrongful admission of evidence.”
+
+“What was the action for?”
+
+Now this was a question that no man living had been able to answer yet.
+What was in the pleadings, that is, the pattern of the lawyer’s net, was
+visible enough; but as regards merits, I predict with the greatest
+confidence, that no man will ever be able to discover what the action of
+_Bumpkin_ versus _Snooks_ was about. But it speaks wonders for the
+elasticity of our system of jurisprudence and the ingenuity of our
+lawyers that such a case could be _invented_.
+
+“Trespass,” said Ricochet, “was one paragraph; then there was assault and
+battery; breach of contract in not accepting a pig at the price agreed;
+trespass in seizing the pig without paying for it; and then, my lud,
+there were the usual money counts, as they used to be called, to which
+the defendant pleaded, among other pleas, a right of way; an easement;
+leave and license; a right to take the pig; that the pig was the property
+of the defendant, and various other matters. Then, my lud, there was a
+counter-claim for slander, for assault and battery; for loss of profit
+which would have been made if the pig had been delivered according to
+contract; breach of contract for the non-delivery of the pig.”
+
+Mr. Justice Doughty: “This was pig-iron, I suppose?”
+
+The two other Judges fell back, shaking their sides with laughter; and
+then forcibly thrust their hands against their hips which made their
+tippets stick out very much, and gave them a dignified and imposing
+appearance. Then, seeing the Judges laugh, all the bar laughed, and all
+the ushers laughed, and all the public laughed. The mistake, however,
+was a very easy one to fall into, and when Mr. Justice Doughty, who was
+an exceedingly good-tempered man, saw the mistake he had made, he laughed
+as much as any man, and even caused greater laughter still by
+good-humouredly and wittily observing that he supposed somebody must be a
+pigheaded man. To which Mr. Ricochet laughingly replied, that he
+believed the plaintiff was a very pigheaded man.
+
+“Now,” said Mr. Justice Pangloss, “have you considered what Vinnius in
+his ‘Commentary on Urban Servitudes’ says.”
+
+Mr. Ricochet said, “Hem!” and that was the very best answer he could make
+to the learned Pangloss, and if he only continues to answer in that
+manner he’ll get any rule he likes to apply for—(no, not the Rule of
+Three, perhaps).
+
+So Mr. Justice Pangloss went on:
+
+“There are, as Gale says, ‘two classes of easements distinctly recognised
+by the Civil Law—’”
+
+“Hem!” said Ricochet.
+
+“‘Under the head of “Urban Servitudes—’”
+
+Ricochet: “Hem!”
+
+“‘That a man,’ (continued Mr. Justice Pangloss), ‘shall receive upon his
+house or land the _flumen_ or _stillicidium_ of his neighbour—’”
+
+“Hem!” coughed Mr. Ricochet, in a very high key; I verily believe in
+imitation of that wonderful comedian, J. C. Clarke.
+
+Then Mr. Justice Pangloss proceeded, to the admiration of the whole Bar:
+
+“‘The difference,’ says Vinnius, in his Commentary on this passage,
+between the _flumen_ and the _stillicidium_ is this—the latter is the
+rain falling from the roof by drops (_guttatim et stillatim_).’”
+
+“Hem!” from the whole Bar.
+
+“‘The _flumen_’—”
+
+“I think,” said Mr. Justice Doughty, “you are entitled to a rule on that
+point, Mr. Ricochet.”
+
+Then Mr. Justice Technical whispered, and I heard Mr. Justice Doughty say
+the principle was the same, although there might be some difference of
+opinion about the facts, which could be argued hereafter. “But what is
+the misreception of evidence, Mr. Ricochet? I don’t quite see that.”
+
+“With all submission, my lud, evidence was admitted of what the solicitor
+for the defendant said to the plaintiff.”
+
+“Wait a minute, let me see how that stands,” said Mr. Justice Doughty;
+“the solicitor for the defendant said something to the plaintiff, I don’t
+quite follow that.”
+
+Mr. Justice Technical observed that it was quite clear that what is said
+by the solicitor of one party to the solicitor of another party is not
+evidence.
+
+“O,” said the learned Pangloss, “so far back as the time of Justinian it
+was laid down—”
+
+“And that being so,” said the eminent Chancery Judge, Mr. Justice
+Technical, “I should go so far as to say, that what the solicitor of one
+party says to the client stands upon the same footing.”
+
+“Precisely,” said Mr. Ricochet
+
+“I think you are entitled to a rule on that point,” remarked Mr. Justice
+Doughty, “although my brother Pangloss seems to entertain some doubt as
+to whether there was any such evidence.”
+
+“O, my lud, with all submission, with the greatest possible deference and
+respect to the learned Judge, I assure your ludship that it was so, for I
+have a note of it.”
+
+“I was about to say,” continued Mr. Justice Doughty, “as my brother
+Pangloss says, it may have been given while he was considering a point in
+Justinian. What is the misdirection?”
+
+“O, my lud, the misdirection was, I venture respectfully and
+deferentially to submit, and with the utmost deference to the learned
+Judge, in his lordship’s telling the jury that if they found that the
+right of way which the defendant set up in his answer to the trespass, or
+easement—but perhaps, my lud, I had better read from the short-hand
+writer’s notes of his ludship’s summing-up. This is it, my lud, his
+ludship said: ‘In an action for stopping of his _ancient_ lights —.”
+
+“What!” said Mr. Justice Doughty, “_did he black the plaintiff’s eyes_,
+then?”
+
+“No, my lud,” said Mr. Ricochet, “that was never alleged or suggested.”
+
+“I only used it by way of illustration,” said Mr. Justice Pangloss.
+
+Then their lordships consulted together, and after about three-quarters
+of an hour’s conversation the learned Mr. Justice Doughty said:
+
+“You can take a rule, Mr. Ricochet.”
+
+“On all points, my lud, if your ludships please.”
+
+“It will be more satisfactory,” said his lordship, “and then we shall see
+what there is in it. At present, I must confess, I don’t understand
+anything about it.”
+
+And I saw that what there was really in it was very much like what there
+is in a kaleidoscope, odds and ends, which form all sorts of combinations
+when you twist and turn them about in the dark tube of a “legal
+argument.” And so poor Bumpkin was deprived of the fruit of his victory.
+Truly the law is very expeditious. Before Bumpkin had got home with the
+cheerful intelligence that he had won, the wind had changed and was
+setting in fearfully from the north-east. Juries may find as many facts
+as they like, but the Court applies the law to them; and law is like
+gunpowder in its operation upon them,—twists them out of all recognisable
+shape. It is very difficult in a Court of law to get over “_guttatims_”
+and “_stillatims_,” even in an action for the price of a pig.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+
+Mr. Bumpkin is congratulated by his neighbours and friends in the market
+place and sells his corn.
+
+What a lovely peace there was again over the farm! It was true Mr.
+Bumpkin had not obtained as large a measure of damages as his solicitor
+had led him to anticipate, but he was triumphant, and that over a man
+like Snooks was something. So the damages were forgotten beneath that
+peaceful August sky. How bright the corn looked! There was not a
+particle of “smut” in the whole field. And it was a good breadth of
+wheat this year for Southwood Farm. The barley too, was evidently fit
+for malting, and would be sure to fetch a decent price: especially as
+they seemed to say there was not much barley this year that was quite up
+to the mark for malting. The swedes, too, were coming on apace, and a
+little rain by and by would make them swell considerably. So everything
+looked exceedingly prosperous, except perhaps the stock. There certainly
+were not so many pigs. Out of a stye of eleven there was only one left.
+The sow was nowhere to be seen. She had been sold, it appeared, so no
+more were to be expected from that quarter. When Mr. Bumpkin asked where
+“old Jack” was (that was the donkey), he was informed that “the man” had
+fetched it. “The man” it appeared was always fetching something.
+Yesterday it was pigs; the day before it was ducks; the day before that
+it was geese; and about a week ago it was a stack of this year’s hay: a
+stack of very prime clover indeed. Then “the man” took a fancy to some
+cheeses which Mrs. Bumpkin had in the dairy, some of her very finest
+make. She remonstrated, but “the man” was peremptory. But what most
+surprised Mr. Bumpkin, and drew tears from Mrs. Bumpkin’s eyes, was when
+the successful litigant enquired how the bull was.
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin had invented many plans with a view to “breaking this out”
+to her husband: and now that the time had come every plan was a failure.
+The tears betrayed her.
+
+“What, be he dead?” enquired Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“O, no, Tom—no, no—”
+
+“Well, what then?”
+
+“The man!”
+
+“The man! The devil’s in thic man, who be he? Where do ur come from?
+I’ll bring an action agin him as sure’s he’s alive or shoot un dead wi my
+gun;” here Mr. Bumpkin, in a great rage, got up and went to the beam
+which ran across the kitchen ceiling, and formed what is called the
+roof-tree of the house, by the side of which the gun was suspended by two
+loops.
+
+“No, no, Tom, don’t—don’t—we have never wronged any one yet, and
+don’t—don’t now.”
+
+“But I wool,” said Bumpkin; “what! be I to be stripped naaked and not
+fight for th’ cloathes—who be thic feller as took the bull?”
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin was holding her apron to her eyes, and for a long while
+could say nothing.
+
+“Who be he, Nancy?”
+
+“I don’t know, Tom—but he held a paper in his hand writ all over as close
+as the stubble-rows in the field, and he said thee had signed un.”
+
+“Lord! lord!” exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin, and then sat down on the settle and
+looked at the fire as though it threw a light over his past actions. He
+couldn’t speak for a long time, not till Mrs. Bumpkin went up to him and
+laid her hand upon his shoulder, and said:
+
+“Tom! Tom! thee ha winned the case.”
+
+“Aye, aye,” said Bumpkin, starting up as from a reverie. “I ha winned,
+Nancy. I ha beat thic there Snooks; ur wont snigger now when ur gooes
+by—lor, lor,—our counsellor put it into un straight, Nancy.”
+
+“Did ur, Tom?—well, I be proud.”
+
+“Ah!” said Bumpkin, “and what d’ye think?—it wornt our counsellor, that
+is the Queen’s Counsellor nuther; he wornt there although I paid un, but
+I spoase he’ll gie up the money, Nancy?”
+
+“Were it much, Tom?”
+
+“Farty guineas!”
+
+“Farty guineas, Tom! Why, it wur enough to set up housekeepin wi—and
+thee only winned twenty-five, Tom; why thic winnin were a heavy loss I
+think.”
+
+“Now, lookee ere,” said Bumpkin; “I oughter had five undered, as Laryer
+Prigg said, our case were that good, but lor it baint sartain: gie I a
+little gin and water, Nancy—thee ain’t asked I to have a drap since I bin
+oame.”
+
+“Lor, Tom, thee knows I be all for thee, and that all be thine.”
+
+“It beant much, it strikes me; lor, lor, whatever shall us do wirout pigs
+and sheep, and wirout thic bull. I be fit to cry, Nancy, although I
+winned the case.”
+
+Tom had his gin and water and smoked his pipe, and went to bed and
+dreamed of all that had taken place. He rose with the lark and went into
+the fields and enjoyed once again the fresh morning air, and the sweet
+scent of the new hayrick in the yard; and, without regarding it, the song
+of the lark as it shot heavenward and poured down its stream of glad
+music: but there was amidst all a sadness of spirit and a feeling of
+desolation. It was not like the old times when everything seemed to
+welcome him about the farm wherever he went. The work of “the man” was
+everywhere. But the harvest was got in, and a plentiful harvest it was:
+the corn was threshed, and one day Mr. Bumpkin went to market with his
+little bags of samples of the newly-housed grain. Everybody was glad to
+see him, for he was known everywhere as a regular upright and
+down-straight man. Every farmer and every corn-dealer and cattle-dealer
+congratulated him in his homely way on his success. They looked at his
+samples and acknowledged they were very bright and weighty. “I never
+liked that Snooks feller,” was the general cry, and at the farmers’
+ordinary, which was held every market day at the “Plough,” every one who
+knew Bumpkin shook hands and wished him well, and after dinner, before
+they broke up, Farmer Gosling proposed his health, and said how proud he
+“were that his old neighbour had in the beautiful words o’ the National
+Anthem, ‘confounded their politicks’: and he hoped that the backbone o’
+old England, which were the farmers, wornt gwine to be broked jist yet
+awhile. Farmin might be bad, but yet wi little cheaper rents and a good
+deal cheaper rates and taxes, there’d be good farmin and good farmers in
+England yit.”
+
+Now this speech, I saw in my dream, brought down the house. Everyone
+said it was more to the point than the half-mile speeches which took up
+so much of the newspapers to the exclusion of murders, burglaries and
+divorces. And in truth, now I come to look at it in my waking moments, I
+respectfully commend it to our legislators, or what is better, to their
+constituencies, as embodying on this subject both the principles of true
+conservatism and true liberalism: and I don’t see what the most exacting
+of politicians can require more than that.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin made a suitable reply—that is to say, “he wur mighty proud o’
+their neighbourliness—he wur a plaain man, as had made his own way in the
+world, or leastwise tried to do un by ard work and uprightedness and
+downstraightedness; tried to be straight forrerd, and nobody as he knowed
+of could ax un for a shillin’. But,” he added: “I be praisin oop myself,
+neighbours, I be afeard, and I doant wish to do thic, only to put I
+straaight afore thee. I beant dead yit, and I hope we shall all be
+friends and neighbours, and meet many moore times at this ornary
+together.”
+
+And so, delighted with one another, after a glass or two, and a song or
+two, the party broke up, all going to their several farms. Mr. Bumpkin
+was particularly well pleased, for he had sold twenty quarters of wheat
+at forty-nine shillings a quarter; which, as times went, was a very
+considerable increase, showing the excellent quality of the samples.
+
+Sooner or later, however, it must be told, that when Bumpkin reached his
+quiet farm, a strange and sad scene presented itself. Evidences of “_the
+man_” were in all directions. He had been at work while Mr. Bumpkin in
+his convivial moments was protesting that he did not owe anyone a
+shilling. Alas! how little the best of as know how much we owe!
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin, who had borne up like a true woman through all the troubles
+that had come upon her home,—borne up for his sake, hoping for better
+days, and knowing nothing of the terrible net that had been spread around
+them by the wily fowler, at length gave way, as she saw “the man” loading
+his cart with her husband’s wheat; the wheat he had gone that day to
+sell. Bitterly she wrung her hands, and begged him to spare her husband
+that last infliction. Was there anything that she could do or give to
+save him this blow? No, no; the man was obstinate in the performance of
+his duty; “right was right, and wrong was no man’s right!”
+
+So when Mr. Bumpkin returned, the greater part of his wheat was gone, and
+the rest was being loaded. The beautiful rick of hay too, which had not
+yet ceased to give out the fresh scent that a new rick yields, were being
+cut and bound into trusses.
+
+Poor Tom was fairly beside himself, but Mrs. Bumpkin had taken the
+precaution to hide the gun and the powder-flask, for she could not tell
+what her husband might do in his distraction. Possibly she was right.
+Tom’s rage knew no bounds. Youth itself seemed to be restored in the
+strength of his fury. He saw dimly the men standing around looking on;
+he saw, as in a dream, the man cutting on the rick, and he uttered
+incoherent sentences which those only understood who were accustomed to
+his provincial accent.
+
+“Tom, Tom,” said Mrs. Bumpkin, “don’t be in a rage.”
+
+“Who be thic feller on my rick?”
+
+“I beant any more a feller nor thee, Maister Boompkin; it aint thy rick
+nuther.”
+
+“Then in the name of h—, whose be it?”
+
+“It be Maister Skinalive’s; thee can’t have t’ cake an eat un; thee
+sowled it to un.”
+
+“It be a lie, a --- lie; come down!”
+
+“Noa, noa, I beant coomin doon till I coot all t’ hay; it be good hay an
+all, as sweet as a noot.”
+
+“Where is thy master?” enquired Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+“I dooant rightly knoo, missus, where ur be; but I think if thee could
+see un, he’d poot it right if thee wanted time loike, and so on, for he
+be a kind-hearted man enoo.”
+
+“Can we find un, do ur think?” asked Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+“If thee do, missus, it wur moor un I bin able to do for the last three
+moonths.”
+
+“I’ll find some un,” said Mr. Bumpkin; “here, goo and fetch a pleeceman.”
+
+This was said to a small boy who did the bird-minding, and was now
+looking on with his mouth wide open, and his eyes actually shedding
+tears.
+
+“Ah, fetch a pleeceman an all,” said the man, thrusting the big hay-knife
+down into the centre of the rick; “but take a soop o’ cyder, maister; I
+dessay thee feels a bit out o’ sorts loike.”
+
+“Thee darn thief; it be my cyder, too, I’ve a notion.”
+
+“How can it be thine, maister, when thee ha’ sowled un?” said the man
+with his unanswerable logic: “haw! haw! haw!”
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin held her husband’s hand, and tried her hardest to keep him
+from using violence towards the man. She felt the convulsive twitches of
+his strong muscles, and the inward struggle that was shaking his stalwart
+frame. “Come away, Tom; come away; let un do as they like, we’ll have
+them as will see us righted yet. There’s law for un, surely.”
+
+“It beant no use to kick, maister,” said the man, again ramming the knife
+down into the rick as though he were cutting Mr. Bumpkin himself in half,
+and were talking to him the while; “it beant no use to kick, maister.
+Here thee be; thee owes the man the money, and can’t pay, so ur does this
+out of kindness to prevent thee being sowled oop loike.”
+
+“Here be the pleeceman,” said Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin turned suddenly, and shouted, “Tak thic thief into custody.”
+
+The policeman, albeit a country constable, was a very sensible man; and
+seeing how matters stood, he very wisely set himself to the better task
+of taking Mr. Bumpkin into custody without appearing to do so, and
+without Mr. Bumpkin knowing it.
+
+“Now,” said he, “if so be as you will come indoors, Mr. Bumpkin, I think
+we can put our heads together and see what can be done in this ’ere case;
+if it’s stealing let him steal, and I’ll have him nicely; but if it ain’t
+stealing, then I woant have him at all.” (A pause.)
+
+“For why?” (A pause.)
+
+“Because the law gives you other remedies.”
+
+“That be right, pleeceman,” said Bumpkin; “I’ll goo wi’ thee. Now then,
+Nancy, let’s goo; and look ’ere, thee thief, I’ll ha’ thee in th’ jail
+yet.”
+
+The man grinned with a mouth that seemed to have been cut with his own
+hay-knife, so large was it, and went on with his work, merely saying: “I
+dooant charge thee nothin for cootin’ nor yet for bindin, maister; I does
+it all free graatis, loike.”
+
+“Thee d--- thief, thee’ll be paid.”
+
+So they went in, and the policeman was quite a comforter to the poor old
+man. He talked to him about what the law was on this point and that
+point, and how a trespass was one thing, and a breach of the peace
+another; and how he mustn’t take a man up for felony just because
+somebody charged him: otherwise, the man on the rick might have charged
+Mr. Bumpkin, and so on; till he got the old man into quite a discussion
+on legal points. But meanwhile he had given him another piece of advice,
+which was also much to his credit, and that was to send to his solicitor,
+Mr. Prigg. Mr. Prigg was accordingly sent for; but, like most good men,
+was very scarce. Nowhere could Mr. Prigg be found. But it was well
+known, for it was advertised everywhere on large bills, that the
+excellent gentleman would take the chair at a meeting, to be held in the
+schoolroom in the evening, for the propagation of Christianity among the
+Jews. The policeman would be on duty at that meeting, and he would be
+sure to see Mr. Prigg, and tell him Mr. Bumpkin was very desirous to see
+him as early as possible on the following day. Mr. Bumpkin was thankful,
+and to some extent pacified. As the policeman wished them goodnight,
+Mrs. Bumpkin accompanied him to the door, and begged, if he wouldn’t
+mind, that he would look in to-morrow, for he seemed a kind of protection
+for them.
+
+It was about three in the afternoon of the following day when good Mr.
+Prigg drove up to Mr. Bumpkin’s door; he drove up with the mare that had
+been Mr. Bumpkin’s cow.
+
+“Here he be,” said Mrs. Bumpkin; and if Mr. Prigg had been an angel from
+heaven, his presence could not have been more welcome. Oh, what sunshine
+he seemed to bring! Was it a rainbow round his face, or was it only his
+genial Christian smile? His collar was perfect, so was his tie; his head
+immoveable, so were his principles. “Dear, dear!” said Mrs. Bumpkin, “I
+be so glad thee be come, Mr. Prigg—here be master takin’ on so as never
+was; I never see’d anything like it.”
+
+“What’s the matter, my dear lady?” inquired the good man.
+
+“Be that loryer Prigg?” shouted a voice from the inner room.
+
+“Aye, aye, Tom, it be Mr. Prigg.”
+
+“Come in, zur,” said the voice, “come in; I be mighty glad to see thee.
+Why dam—”
+
+“Hush!” remonstrated the diffuser of Christianity among the Jews; “hush!”
+and his hands were softly raised in gentle protest—albeit his head never
+turned so much as a hair’s breadth. “Let us be calm, my dear sir, let us
+be calm. We win by being calm.”
+
+“Ah, we winned the lawsuit; didn’t us, sir?”
+
+“Ah, that thee did, Tom!” exclaimed Mrs. Bumpkin, delighted at this
+momentary gleam of gladness in her husband’s broken heart.
+
+“Of course we won,” said Mr. Prigg. “Did I ever entertain a doubt from
+the first about the merits of that case?”
+
+“Thee did not, sir,” said Tom; “but lookee ’ere, sir,” he continued, in
+almost a whisper, “I dreamt last night as we lost un; and I see thic
+Snooks a sniggering as plaain as ever I see’d anybody in my life.”
+
+“My dear sir, what matters your dream? We won, sir. And as for Snooks’
+sniggering, I am sorry to say he is sold up.”
+
+“Sold oop!” exclaimed Bumpkin. “Sorry! why beest thee sorry for un—beant
+thee sorry for I?”
+
+“Sorry you’ve won, Mr. Bumpkin? No; but, I’m sorry for Snooks, because
+we lose our costs. Oh, that Locust is the greatest dodger I ever met.”
+
+“I don’t understand thee, sir,” said Bumpkin. “What d’ye mean by not
+getting costs—won’t ur pay?”
+
+“I fear not,” said Mr. Prigg, rubbing his hands. “I am surprised, too,
+that he should not have waited until the rule for a new trial was
+argued.”
+
+“What the devil be the meaning o’ all this?” exclaimed Bumpkin.
+
+“Really, really,” said the pious diffuser of Christianity, “we must
+exercise patience; we may get more damages if there should be another
+trial.”
+
+“This be trial enough,” said Mr. Bumpkin; “and after all it were a
+trumpery case about a pig.”
+
+“Quite so, quite so,” said the lawyer, rubbing his hands; “but you see,
+my dear sir, it’s not so much the pig.”
+
+“No, no,” said Mr. Bumpkin, “it beant so much th’ pig; it be the hoarses
+moore, and the hayricks, and the whate, and—where be all my fowls and
+dooks?”
+
+“The fowls—quite so! Let me see,” said the meditative man, pressing the
+head of his gold pencil-case against his forehead, “the fowls—let me
+see—oh, I know, they did the pleadings—so they did.”
+
+“And thic sow o’ mine?”
+
+“Yes, yes; I think she made an affidavit, if I remember rightly. Yes,
+yes—and the bacon,” said he, elevating his left hand, “six flitches I
+think there were; they used to be in this very room—”
+
+“Ay, sure did ur,” said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“Well I remember; they made a very splendid affidavit too: I have a note
+of all of them in my memory.”
+
+“What coomed o’ the cows?”
+
+“Cows? Yes—I have it—our leading counsel had them; and the calf, if I
+remember rightly, went to the junior.”
+
+‘“Who had the cheeses?” inquired Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“Cheeses!” said the good man. “Oh, yes, the cheeses; they went in
+refreshers.”
+
+“And the poor old donkey?” asked Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+“Ah, where be Jock?” said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“Went for the opinion,” answered the lawyer.
+
+“Where be thic bull o’ mine?” said Tom. “He wur the finest bull in all
+thic county, woren’t he, Nancy?”
+
+“Ay,” answered Mrs. Bumpkin, “and ur follered I about, Tom, jist like a
+Christian.”
+
+“So ur did, Nancy. Dost thee mind, when ur got through thic gap into
+Squire Stucky’s meadow, ’mong the cows?”
+
+“Ay, Tom; and thee went and whistled un; but ur wouldn’t come for thy
+whistlin; and Joe, poor Joe! went and got a great stick.”
+
+“There I mind un,” said Bumpkin; “what coomed of un, Master Prigg?”
+
+“Quite so,” said Mr. Prigg; “quite so; let me see.” And again the gold
+pencil-case was pressed against his respectable forehead in placid
+cogitation. “Yes, that bull argued the appeal.”
+
+“Hem!” said Mr. Bumpkin; “argied appeal, did ur? Well, I tell ee what,
+Master Prigg, if that air bull ’ad knowed what I knows now, he’d a gi’en
+them jusseses a bit o’ his mind, and thee too.”
+
+“Dear me,” said Mr. Prigg; “you entirely mis-apprehend—”
+
+“Well, lookee ’ere,” said Tom, “it beant no use to mince matters wi’ ee.
+What I wants to know is as this; I winned my case—”
+
+“Quite so,” said Prigg.
+
+“And ’ow be it then that all my sheep and things be took off the farm?”
+
+“Dear me!” said Mr. Prigg, in the tone of an injured man; “I think, of
+all men, clients are the most ungrateful. I have worked night and day to
+serve you; I have sacrificed my pleasures, which I do not reckon—my home
+comforts—”
+
+“But who be thic feller that steals my corn an’ hay, and pigs?”
+
+“Really, Mr. Bumpkin, this is language which I did not expect from you.”
+
+“But ’ow comes my farm stripped, Maister Prigg? tell I thic.”
+
+“I suppose you have given a bill of sale, Mr. Bumpkin. You are aware
+that a lawsuit cannot be carried on without means, and you should have
+calculated the cost before going to war. I think there is Scripture
+authority for that.”
+
+“Then have this Skinalive feller the right to take un?”
+
+“I presume so,” said Prigg; “I know he’s a most respectable man.”
+
+“A friend o’ thine, I s’poase?”
+
+“Well,” said Prigg, hesitating, “I may even go so far as to say that.”
+
+“Then I be gwine so fur as to say thee be a damned rogue!” said Mr.
+Bumpkin, rising, and thumping the table with great vehemence.
+
+You might have knocked Mr. Prigg down with a feather, certainly with a
+bludgeon; such a shock he had never received at the hands of a client in
+the whole course of his professional experience. He rose and drew from
+his pocket an envelope, a very large official-looking envelope, such as
+no man twice in his life would like to see, even if he could be said to
+enjoy the prospect once.
+
+It is not usual for respectable solicitors to carry about their bills of
+costs in their pockets, and why Mr. Prigg should have done so on this
+occasion I am not aware. I merely saw in my dream that he did so. There
+was not a change in his countenance; his piety was intact; there was not
+even a suffusion of colour. Placid, sweet-tempered, and urbane, as a
+Christian should be, he looked pityingly towards the hot and irascible
+Bumpkin, as though he should say, “You have smitten me on this cheek, now
+smite me on that!” and placed the great envelope on the table before the
+ungrateful man.
+
+“What be thic?” inquired Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+“A list of my services, sir,” said Prigg, meekly: “You will see there,
+ungrateful man, the sacrifices I have made on your behalf; the
+journeyings oft; the hunger, and, I may say, thirst; the perils of
+robbers, the perils amongst false friends, the—”
+
+“I doant understand, sir,” said Bumpkin.
+
+“Because darkness hath blinded your eyes,” said the pious lawyer; “but I
+leave you, Mr. Bumpkin, and I will ask you, since you no longer repose
+confidence in my judgment and integrity, to obtain the services of some
+other professional gentleman, who will conduct your case with more zeal
+and fidelity than you think I have shown; I who have carried your cause
+to a triumphant issue; and may be said to have established the grand
+principle that an Englishman’s house is his castle.”
+
+And with this the good man, evidently affected by deep emotion, shook
+hands silently with Mrs. Bumpkin, and disappeared for ever from my view.
+
+Never in any dream have I beheld that man again. Never, surely, under
+any form of humanity have so many virtues been concealed. I have looked
+for him in daily life, about the Courts of Justice and in the political
+arena, but his equal for simplicity of character, for unaffected piety,
+and purity of motive, have I never discovered, although I have seen many,
+who, without his talents, have vainly endeavoured to emulate his virtues.
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin examined the document he had left, and found a most
+righteous statement of the services rendered by this great and good man;
+which, after giving credit to Mr. Bumpkin for cash received from Mr.
+Skinalive, Mr. Prigg’s friend, of seven hundred and twenty-two pounds,
+six shillings and eightpence-half-penny, left a balance due to Honest
+Lawyer Prigg of three hundred and twenty-eight pounds, seven shillings
+and threepence,—subject, of course, to be reduced on taxation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+
+
+Farewell.
+
+The last chapter of a book must always possess a special and melancholy
+interest for the author. He gives his words reluctantly, almost
+grudgingly, like one who is spending his last coins and will soon be left
+penniless upon the world. Or like one who is passing his last moments at
+the house of a friend whom he may see no more for ever. The author is
+taking farewell of his characters and his readers, and therefore his
+regret is twofold; added to which is the doubt as to whether, judged by
+the severe standard of Public Opinion, he has been faithful to both.
+Thought is large, and may fill the world, permeating every class and
+every section of society; it may be circumscribed, and operate only upon
+some infinitesimal proportion of mankind: but whether great or small, for
+good or evil, it is published, and a corresponding responsibility
+devolves upon the writer. I record my dream faithfully, and am therefore
+exonerated, in my conscience, from responsibility in its effect.
+
+How shall I describe the closing scene of this eventful story? I will
+imagine nothing; I will exaggerate nothing; for, during the whole
+progress of the story, it has been my constant care not to give the most
+captious critic the opportunity of saying that I have exaggerated a
+single incident. I will relate faithfully what I saw in my dream, and
+that only; diminishing nothing, and adding nothing.
+
+In my waking moments my wife said it was very wrong of Mr. Bumpkin, after
+all that Mr. Prigg had done for him, to be so rude. I agreed that it
+was: but said, great allowance must be made for Mr. Bumpkin’s want of
+education. Then said my wife, “Will not some shallow-minded persons say
+that your story attacks the administration of justice?” To which I
+replied that it did not matter what shallow-minded persons said, but that
+in fact I had in no way attacked the administration of justice; nor had I
+in the least degree reflected on the great body of respectable solicitors
+who had in their hands the interests of the country, and faithfully
+discharged their duties. And then I stood up, and putting forth my hand
+in imitation of Pitt’s statue in the corridor of the House of Commons, I
+said, “Justice is Divine, not Human; and you cannot detract from anything
+that is Divine, any more than you can lessen the brilliancy of the sun.
+You may obscure its splendour to mortal eyes, but its effulgence is the
+same. Man may so ostensibly assert his own dignity, or the dignity of a
+perishable system, that it may temporarily veil the beauty of a Divine
+attribute; but Justice must still remain the untarnished glory of Divine
+wisdom. It is not the pomp of position or the majesty of office that
+imparts dignity to Justice.”
+
+Here, exhausted with my effort, and with my wife’s applause ringing in my
+ears, I fell asleep again, and dreamed that I saw Bumpkin sadly wandering
+about the old farm; his faithful wife following, and never for one moment
+ceasing to cheer him up. It was a fine bright morning in October as they
+wandered forth. There wasn’t a living thing about the farm except the
+birds, and even they seemed sad in their twittering. Could it be
+possible that they knew of poor Bumpkin’s miserable condition?
+
+There was an old jackdaw that certainly did; for he hopped and hopped
+along after the master with the saddest expression I ever saw bird wear.
+But the master took no notice. On and on he wandered, seemingly
+unconscious of the presence even of his wife.
+
+“Tom!” she said, “Tom, where beest thee gwine?”
+
+Bumpkin started; turned round, and said:
+
+“Nancy! what, be it thee, lassie?”
+
+“Ay, Tom, sure enough it be I. Let’s cheer up, Tom. If the worst come
+to the worst—we can but goo to Union.”
+
+“The wust have come to th’ wust, Nancy; we be ruined! Look at this ’ere
+farm—all be bare—all be lost, Nancy. Hark how silent it all be!”
+
+“Never mind, Tom; never mind. I wish Joe wur here.”
+
+“Ah! Joe, yes. I wonder where Joe be; praps he be out here in th’ six
+akre.”
+
+“No, no, Tom, he be gwine for a sojer; but I’ve a mind he’ll come back.
+And who knows, we may be ’appy yet! We’ve worked hard, Tom, together
+these five-and-thirty year, and sure we can trudge on t’ th’ end. Come,
+let’s goo in and ave some breakfast.”
+
+But Tom kept on walking and looking round the fields after his old
+manner.
+
+“I think we’ll ave wuts here,” said he.
+
+“So ur will, Tom, but let’s have breakfast fust. Come, lad.”
+
+They wandered still through the quiet fields, and the old man’s mind
+seemed giving way. But I saw that Mrs. Bumpkin kept up with him and
+cheered him whenever she could put in a word of comfort, cold and
+hopeless as it was. And so the day was spent, and the night came, and
+they entered their home for the last time. It was a terribly sad night;
+but the Vicar came and sat up late with the old people, and talked to
+them and read and cried with them, until at last Tom said:
+
+“I zee it, sir, thee hast showed I; thank God for thy words. Yes, yes,
+we maun leave t’ morrer, and we’ll call on thee, and maybe thou’lt goo to
+th’ Squire wi’ us and explaain to un how we can’t pay our rent, and may
+be th’ Squire’ll let I work un out. If we could only work un out, I’d be
+’appy.”
+
+“Ay, Tom,” said Mrs. Bumpkin, “an I’ll work too; thee knows that.”
+
+“Thee wast allays a good wife, Nancy; and I’ll allays say’t, come what
+wooll.”
+
+“Yes,” said the Vicar, “to-morrow we will go—”
+
+“I don’t want un to forgive I th’ rent,” said Tom; “only to gie us time,
+and Nancy and I’ll work un out.” And so it was arranged that the next
+morning the old home was to be left for ever. It was no longer home, for
+every article of furniture, every tool, every scrap that was of any value
+had been ruthlessly seized by the heartless money-lender whom the Law
+permitted to rob under the name of a bill of sale. The man was in
+possession to take away their bed and the few other articles that were
+left for their accommodation till the morrow.
+
+And on the morrow I saw the last of poor Bumpkin that I shall ever see.
+In the beautiful sunshine of that October morning, just by the old oak,
+he was leaning over the gate looking his last at the dear old fields and
+the old farm-house where so many happy years had been spent. By his side
+was his wife, with her hand shading her eyes; the old dog was between
+them, looking into the face now of Tom and then of his wife. Mr.
+Bumpkin’s arms were resting on the gate, and his old ash stick that he
+used to walk with over the fields was in his hand. They stood there for
+a long, long time as though they could never leave it. And I saw the
+tears trickle down the old man’s face as Mrs. Bumpkin, letting fall the
+corner of her apron, which she had held to her eyes, and placing her arm
+through his, said in a faltering voice:—
+
+“Come, Tom, we must goo.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE END.
+
+
+
+
+THE LAWSUIT.
+
+
+ Tom Bumpkin was a thriving man,
+ As all the world could see;
+ In forty years he’d raised himself
+ From direst poverty.
+
+ And now he rented from the Squir
+ Some acres, near a score;
+ Some people said ’twas twenty-five,
+ And some that it was more.
+
+ He had a sow of rare brave breed,
+ And nine good pigs had he;
+ A cow and calf, a rick of hay,
+ And horses he had three.
+
+ And Mrs. Bumpkin had a bull,
+ The finest creature out;
+ “And, like a Christian,” so she said,
+ “It follered her about.”
+
+ So Bumpkin was a thriving man,
+ As all the world could see;
+ A self-made man, but yet not made
+ Of scholarship was he.
+
+ With neighbour Snooks he dealings had
+ About his latest farrow;
+ Snooks said he’d bought a pig, and so,
+ To prove it, brought his barrow.
+
+ Tom said, “It wur to be two crowns;”
+ Snooks said, “Twur nine-and-six;”
+ Then Tom observed, “You doan’t ’ave me
+ Wi none o’ them there tricks.”
+
+ So there was battle; Lawyer Prigg
+ Was told this tale of woe;
+ The Lawyer rubbed his bony hands
+ And said, “I see; quite so!”
+
+ “A case of trespass,”—“Ay zo ’t be!”
+ Said Bumpkin, feeling big;
+ “Now mak un pay vor’t, mak un pay;
+ It beant so much th’ pig.”
+
+ “No, no, it’s not so much the pig,
+ That were a matter small;
+ Indeed, good Bumpkin, we may say
+ It’s not the pig at all!
+
+ “It’s more the _principle_ involved,
+ The rights of man, you see”—
+ “Ay, ay,” quoth Tom; “the devil’s in’t
+ ’F I beant as good as he.”
+
+ There never was a man more prompt
+ Or swift to strike a blow:
+ Give but the word, and Charger Prigg
+ Was down upon the foe.
+
+ The LETTER, WRIT, and STATEMENT went
+ Like lightning, thunder, rain;
+ INSPECTION and DISCOVERY rode
+ Like Uhlans o’er the plain!
+
+ Then INTERROGATORIES flew
+ Without procrastination:
+ As when the ambushed outposts give
+ A deadly salutation.
+
+ Now Snooks’s lawyer was a man
+ To wrong would never pander;
+ And like a high-souled Pleader drew
+ A COUNTERCLAIM for slander;
+
+ And then with cautious skill behind
+ The legal outworks clambers;
+ Until dislodged, he held his own
+ Entrenched in Judges’ Chambers.
+
+ At length came battle hot and fierce,
+ And points reserved as though
+ The case must be economized,
+ Not murdered at a blow.
+
+ Then came appeals upon the points,
+ New trials on the facts;
+ More points, more learned arguments,
+ More precedents and Acts.
+
+ But LAW, thou art a tender plant
+ That needs must droop and die;
+ And bear no fruit unless thy root
+ Be watered constantly:
+
+ And Bumpkin with a generous hand
+ Had given thee good supply;
+ He drained the well, and yet withal
+ The noble Prigg was dry.
+
+ With plaintive look would move a stone,
+ Tom gazed on Lawyer Prigg:
+ Who rubbed his hands and said, “You see,
+ It’s not so much the pig.”
+
+ “Noa, noa, it be th’ horses moore,
+ The calf and sheep and kine,
+ Where be th’ hay-rick and the straw?
+ And where thic bull o’ mine?”
+
+ The Lawyer said, “Quite so, quite so!”
+ Looked wise, and wisely grinned;
+ For Tom was like a ship becalmed,
+ He stopped for want of wind.
+
+ “You see,” said Prigg with gravity
+ Would almost make you laugh,
+ “Our leading Counsel had the Cow,
+ The junior had the Calf.
+
+ “The hay and straw _Rules nisi_ got,
+ Made _Absolute_ with corn,
+ The pigs made _Interrogat’ries_,
+ Most beautifully drawn.
+
+ “The Bacon—ah, dear Bumpkin, few
+ In Law suits ever save it;
+ It made together with the sow,
+ A splendid _Affidavit_.
+
+ “The cocks and hens the _Pleadings_ did
+ Most exquisitely utter;
+ And some few pans of cream there were,
+ Which made the _Surre-butter_.”
+
+ “Why, Surrey butter! I’d a tub
+ The best in this ere nation”—
+ “Quite so!” said Prigg; “but you forget,
+ ’Twas used in _Consultation_.”
+
+ “Well, well, of all the hungry mouths,
+ There’s nothing like the Law’s;
+ No wonder they can talk if that
+ Be how they iles their jaws.
+
+ “Now just look ere; I’d twenty cheese,
+ The finest of old Cheshires,”—
+ “Quite so, quite so!” said Prigg; “but they
+ Just furnished the _Refreshers_.
+
+ “The Ass for the _Opinion_ went;
+ The Horses, _Costs_ between us;
+ And all the Ducks and Drakes, my boy,
+ Were turned into SUBPŒNAS.”
+
+ “I zee it all; the road to Ruin,
+ Straight as any furrer:
+ That Bull o’ mine”—“Excuse me, Sir,
+ Went up upon DEMURRER.”
+
+ “Then beant there nothing left for I,
+ In all this ere undoin?
+ Nay, Nance, our fireside be gone,
+ It’s emptiness and ruin.
+
+ “I wish we’d fought un out ourselves
+ Wi’ fists instead o’ law;
+ Since Samson fit, there never was
+ Good fightin wi the jaw.”
+
+ So _now_ Tom’s not a thriving man,
+ He owns not cow or pig;
+ And evermore he’ll be in debt
+ To Honest Lawyer Prigg.
+
+ BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
+
+
+
+
+Footnotes
+
+
+{0a} Since the First Edition, “a bulky volume” of new rules has
+appeared. No independent existence at present, and therefore anatomy
+uncertain. I have peeped at it, and think if it reaches maturity it will
+help the rich litigant very much; and, if it abolishes trial by jury, as
+it threatens, we shall be, in time to come, a Judge-ridden people, which
+God forbid. I am not afraid of a Judge now, but I should be then. The
+choice in the future _might_ be between servility and a prison; and I
+sincerely believe that if trial by jury should be abolished, this country
+would not be safe to live in. Much _mending_, therefore, and
+consequently the more holes. I wonder what the Liberalism of the future
+will say when it learns that the Liberalism of Mr. Gladstone’s Government
+struck the first blow at _Trial by Jury_? Truly “the axe to laid to the
+root of the tree,” and, reversing the Divine order, “every tree that
+_bringeth forth good fruit is_” in danger of being “hewn down.”
+
+ R. H.
+
+{22} This inscription, with the exception of the names, is a literal
+copy.
+
+{52} Modern pleaders would say the Court would take judicial notice of
+the existence of Egypt: I am aware of this, but at the time I write of
+the Courts were too young to take notice.
+
+{138} The correctness of Mr. O’Rapley’s views may be vouched for by a
+newspaper report in the _Evening Standard_ of April 17th, 1883, which was
+as follows:—“Mr. Justice Day in charging the Grand Jury at the Manchester
+Spring Assizes yesterday, expressed his disagreement with the opinion of
+other Judges in favour of the Commission being so altered that the Judge
+would have to ‘deliver all the prisoners detained in gaol,’ and regarded
+it as a waste of the Judge’s time that he should have to try a case in
+which a woman was indicted for stealing a shawl worth
+three-and-ninepence, or a prisoner charged with stealing two mutton pies
+and two ounces of bacon.”
+
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HUMOUROUS STORY OF FARMER
+BUMPKIN'S LAWSUIT***
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Humourous Story of Farmer Bumpkin's
+Lawsuit, by Richard Harris
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Humourous Story of Farmer Bumpkin's Lawsuit
+
+
+Author: Richard Harris
+
+
+
+Release Date: November 27, 2009 [eBook #30551]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HUMOUROUS STORY OF FARMER
+BUMPKIN'S LAWSUIT***
+</pre>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1883 Stevens and Sons edition by David
+Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<h1><span class="smcap">the</span><br />
+HUMOUROUS STORY<br />
+<span class="smcap">of</span><br />
+FARMER BUMPKIN&rsquo;S LAWSUIT:</h1>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">by</span><br />
+RICHARD HARRIS,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span
+class="smcap">barrister-at-law</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">author of</span> &ldquo;<span
+class="smcap">hints on advocacy</span>,&rdquo; <span
+class="smcap">etc.</span>, <span class="smcap">etc.</span></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">SECOND EDITION.</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center">LONDON:<br />
+STEVENS AND SONS, 119, CHANCERY LANE,<br />
+Law Publishers and Booksellers.<br />
+1883.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><!-- page iv--><a
+name="pageiv"></a><span class="pagenum">p. iv</span><span
+class="smcap">london</span>:<br />
+<span class="smcap">bradbury</span>, <span
+class="smcap">agnew</span>, &amp; <span class="smcap">co.</span>,
+<span class="smcap">printers</span>, <span
+class="smcap">whitefriars</span>.</p>
+<h2><!-- page v--><a name="pagev"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+v</span>PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.</h2>
+<p>Considering the enormous interest which the Public have in
+&ldquo;a more efficient and speedy administration of
+justice,&rdquo; I am not surprised that a Second Edition of
+&ldquo;Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s Lawsuit&rdquo; should be called for so
+soon after the publication of the first.&nbsp; If any proof were
+wanting that I had not overstated the evils attendant on the
+present system, it would be found in the case of
+<i>Smitherman</i> v. <i>The South Eastern Railway Company</i>,
+which came before the House of Lords recently; and judgment in
+which was delivered on the 16th of July, 1883.&nbsp; The facts of
+the case were extremely simple, and were as follow:&mdash;A man
+of the name of Smitherman was killed on a level crossing of <!--
+page vi--><a name="pagevi"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+vi</span>the South Eastern Railway Company at East Farleigh, in
+December, 1878.&nbsp; His widow, on behalf of herself and four
+children, brought an action against the Company on the ground of
+negligence on the part of the defendants.&nbsp; The case in due
+course was tried at the Maidstone Assizes, and the plaintiff
+obtained a verdict for &pound;400 for herself and &pound;125 for
+each of the children.&nbsp; A rule for a new trial was granted by
+the Divisional Court: the rule for the new trial was discharged
+by the Court of Appeal.&nbsp; The Lords reversed the decision of
+the Court of Appeal, and ordered a new trial.&nbsp; New trial
+took place at Guildhall, City of London, before Mr. Baron
+Pollock; jury again found for the plaintiff, with &pound;700
+<i>agreed</i> damages: Company thereby saving &pound;200.&nbsp;
+Once more rule for new trial granted by Divisional Court: once
+more rule discharged by Court of Appeal: once more House of Lords
+reverse decision of Court of Appeal, and order <i>second new
+trial</i>.&nbsp; So <!-- page vii--><a name="pagevii"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. vii</span>that after more than four years of
+harassing litigation, this poor widow and her children are left
+in the same position that they were in immediately after the
+accident&mdash;except that they are so much the worse as being
+liable for an amount of costs which need not be calculated.&nbsp;
+The case was tried by competent judges and special juries; and
+yet, by the subtleties of the doctrine of contributory
+negligence, questions of such extreme nicety are raised that a
+third jury are required to give an opinion <i>upon the same state
+of facts</i> upon which two juries have already decided in favour
+of the plaintiff and her children.</p>
+<p>Such is the power placed by our complicated, bewildering, and
+inartistic mode of procedure, in the hands of a rich Company.</p>
+<p>No one can call in question the wisdom or the learning of the
+House of Lords: it is above criticism, and beyond censure; but
+the <!-- page viii--><a name="pageviii"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. viii</span>House of Lords itself works upon
+the basis of our system of Procedure, and as that is neither
+beyond criticism nor censure, I unhesitatingly ask, <i>Can Old
+Fogeyism and Pettifoggism further go</i>?</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">RICHARD HARRIS.</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Lamb Building</span>, <span
+class="smcap">Temple</span>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>October</i>, 1883.</p>
+<h2><!-- page ix--><a name="pageix"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+ix</span>PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION.</h2>
+<p>When Old Fogeyism is being lowered to his last resting place,
+Pettifoggism, being his chief mourner, will be so overwhelmed
+with grief that he will tumble into the same grave.&nbsp; How
+then to hasten the demise of this venerable Humbug is the
+question.&nbsp; Some are for letting him die a natural death,
+others for reducing him gradually by a system of slow starvation:
+for myself, I confess, I am for knocking him on the head at
+once.&nbsp; Until this event, so long wished for by all the
+friends of Enlightenment and Progress, shall have happened, there
+will be no possibility of a Reform which will lessen the needless
+expense and shorten the unjustifiable delay which our present
+system of legal procedure occasions; a system which gives to the
+rich immeasurable <!-- page x--><a name="pagex"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. x</span>advantages over poor litigants; and
+amounts in many cases not only to a perversion of justice but to
+a denial of it altogether.</p>
+<p>Old Fogeyism only tinkers at reform, and is so nervous and
+incompetent that in attempting to mend one hole he almost
+invariably makes two.&nbsp; The Public, doubtless, will, before
+long, undertake the much needed reform and abolish some of the
+unnecessary business of &ldquo;judges&rsquo; chambers,&rdquo;
+where the ingenuity of the Pettifogging Pleader is so
+marvellously displayed.&nbsp; How many righteous claims are
+smothered in their infancy at this stage of their existence!</p>
+<p>I have endeavoured to bring the evils of our system before the
+Public in the story of Mr. Bumpkin.&nbsp; The solicitors, equally
+with their clients, as a body, would welcome a change which would
+enable actions to be carried to a legitimate conclusion instead
+of being stifled by the &ldquo;Priggs&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Locusts&rdquo; who will crawl into an honorable
+profession.&nbsp; It is impossible to keep them out, but it is
+not impossible to prevent their using the profession to the
+injury of their clients.&nbsp; All respectable solicitors would
+<!-- page xi--><a name="pagexi"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xi</span>be glad to see the powers of these unscrupulous
+gentlemen curtailed.</p>
+<p>The verses at the end of the story have been so often
+favourably received at the Circuit Mess, that I thought an
+amplified version of them in prose would not be unacceptable to
+the general reader, and might ultimately awaken in the public
+mind a desire for the long-needed reform of our legal
+procedure.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">RICHARD HARRIS.</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Lamb Building</span>, <span
+class="smcap">Temple</span>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; <i>July</i>, 1883.</p>
+<h2><!-- page xiii--><a name="pagexiii"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. xiii</span>ADVERTISEMENT.</h2>
+<p>On the 4th of December, 1882, Our Gracious Queen, on the
+occasion of the opening of the Royal Courts of Justice,
+said:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I trust that the uniting together in one
+place of the various branches of Judicature in this my Supreme
+Court, will conduce to the <i>more efficient</i> and
+<i>speedy</i> administration of justice to my
+subjects.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>On April 20th, 1883, in the House of Commons, Mr. H. H. Fowler
+asked the Attorney-General whether he was aware of the large
+number of causes waiting for trial in the Chancery Division of
+the High Court, and in the Court of Appeal; and whether the
+Government proposed to take any steps to remedy the delay and
+increased cost occasioned to the suitors by the present
+administration of the Judicature Acts.</p>
+<p>The Attorney-General said the number of cases of all
+descriptions then waiting for trial in the Chancery Division was
+848, and in the Court of Appeal 270.&nbsp; The House would be
+aware that a committee of Judges had been engaged for some time
+in framing rules in the <!-- page xiv--><a
+name="pagexiv"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xiv</span>hope of
+getting rid of some of the delay that now existed in the hearing
+of cases; and until those rules were prepared, which would be
+shortly, the Government were not desirous of interfering with a
+matter over which the Judges had jurisdiction.&nbsp; The
+Government were now considering the introduction of a short
+Judicature Act for the purpose of lessening the
+delay.&mdash;<i>Morning Post</i>.</p>
+<p>[No rules or short Judicature Act at present!] <a
+name="citation0a"></a><a href="#footnote0a"
+class="citation">[0a]</a></p>
+<p>On the 13th April, 1883, Mr. Glasse, Q.C., thus referred to a
+statement made by Mr. Justice Pearson of the Chancery Division:
+&ldquo;The citizens of this great country, of which your Lordship
+is one of the representatives, will look at the statement you
+have made with respectful amazement.&rdquo;&nbsp; The statement
+appears to <!-- page xv--><a name="pagexv"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. xv</span>have been, that his Lordship had
+intended to continue the business of the Court in exactly the
+same way in which it had been conducted by Mr. Justice Fry; but
+he had been informed that he would have to take the interlocutory
+business of Mr. Justice Kay&rsquo;s Court whilst his Lordship
+<i>was on Circuit</i>; and, as it was requisite that he should
+take his own interlocutory business <i>before the causes set down
+for hearing</i>, &ldquo;<span class="smcap">all the Causes in the
+two Courts must go to the wall</span>&rdquo;!!!&nbsp; His
+Lordship added, that it would be necessary for him to rise at 3
+o&rsquo;clock every day (not at 3 o&rsquo;clock in the
+<i>morning</i>, gentle reader), because he understood he should
+have to conduct the business of Mr. Justice Kay&rsquo;s Chambers
+as well as his own.&mdash;<i>Morning Post</i>.</p>
+<p>On the 16th April, 1883, Mr. Justice Day, in charging the
+Grand Jury at the Manchester Spring Assizes, expressed his
+disagreement with the opinion of the other Judges in favour of
+the Commission being so altered that the Judge would have to
+&ldquo;<i>deliver all the prisoners detained in gaol</i>,&rdquo;
+and regarded it as &ldquo;a waste of the Judge&rsquo;s time that
+he should have to try a case in which a woman was indicted for
+<i>stealing a shawl worth</i> 3<i>s.</i> 9<i>d.</i>; or a
+prisoner charged with stealing <i>two mutton pies</i> and <i>two
+ounces of bacon</i>.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Evening Standard</i>.</p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><h2><!-- page xvii--><a name="pagexvii"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. xvii</span>CONTENTS.</h2>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER I.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Shows the Beauty of a Farm Yard on a Sabbath-Day, and what
+a difference a single letter will sometimes make in the legal
+signification of a Sentence</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page1">1</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER II.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The Simplicity and Enjoyments of a Country life
+depicted</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page11">11</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER III.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Showing how true it is that it takes at least Two to make
+a Bargain or a Quarrel</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page17">17</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER IV.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>On the extreme Simplicity of Going to Law</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page27">27</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER V.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>In which it appears that the Sting of Slander is not
+always in the Head</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page35">35</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER VI.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Showing how the greatest Wisdom of Parliament may be
+thrown away on Ungrateful People</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page45">45</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER VII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Showing that Appropriateness of Time and Place should be
+studied in our Pastimes</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page55">55</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center"><!-- page
+xviii--><a name="pagexviii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+xviii</span>CHAPTER VIII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The Pleasure of a Country Drive on a Summer Evening
+described as enhanced by a Pious Mind</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page63">63</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER IX.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>A Farm-house Winter Fire-side&mdash;A morning Drive and a
+mutual interchange of Ideas between Town and Country, showing how
+we may all learn something from one another</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page71">71</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER X.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The last Night before the first London Expedition, which
+gives occasion to recall pleasant reminiscences</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page87">87</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XI.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Commencement of London Life and Adventures</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page97">97</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>How the great Don O&rsquo;Rapley became an Usher of the
+Court of Queen&rsquo;s Bench, and explained the Ingenious
+Invention of the Round Square&mdash;How Mr. Bumpkin took the
+water and studied Character from a Penny Steamboat</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page105">105</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XIII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>An interesting Gentleman&mdash;showing how true it is that
+one half the World does not know how the other half lives</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page111">111</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XIV.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The Old Bailey&mdash;Advantages of the New System
+illustrated</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page119">119</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XV.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s Experience of London Life enlarged</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page133">133</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center"><!-- page xix--><a
+name="pagexix"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xix</span>CHAPTER
+XVI.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The coarse mode of Procedure in Ahab <i>versus</i> Naboth
+ruthlessly exposed and carefully contrasted with the humane and
+enlightened form of the Present Day</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page143">143</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XVII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Showing that Lay Tribunals are not exactly Punch and Judy
+Shows where the Puppet is moved by the Man underneath</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page151">151</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XVIII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>A comfortable Evening at the &ldquo;Goose&rdquo;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page165">165</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XIX.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The Subject continued</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page175">175</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XX.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Mr. Bumpkin sings a good old Song&mdash;The Sergeant
+becomes quite a convivial Companion and plays Dominoes</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page179">179</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXI.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Joe electrifies the Company and surprises the Reader</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page191">191</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The Sergeant makes a loyal Speech and sings a Song, both
+of which are well received by the Company</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page203">203</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXIII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The famous Don O&rsquo;Rapley and Mr. Bumpkin spend a
+social Evening at the &ldquo;Goose&rdquo;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page213">213</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center"><!-- page xx--><a
+name="pagexx"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xx</span>CHAPTER
+XXIV.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Don O&rsquo;Rapley expresses his views of the Policy of
+the Legislature in not permitting Dominoes to be played in
+Public-houses</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page221">221</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXV.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>In spite of all warnings, Joe takes his own part, not to
+be persuaded on one side or the other&mdash;Affecting Scene
+between Mr. Bumpkin and his old Servant</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page227">227</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXVI.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Morning Reflections&mdash;Mrs. Oldtimes proves herself to
+be a great Philosopher&mdash;The Departure of the Recruits to be
+sworn in</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page239">239</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXVII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>A Letter from Home</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page245">245</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXVIII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Mr. Bumpkin determines to maintain a discreet silence
+about his Case at the Old Bailey&mdash;Mr. Prigg confers with him
+thereon</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page255">255</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXIX.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The Trial at the Old Bailey of Mr. Simple Simonman for
+Highway Robbery with violence&mdash;Mr. Alibi introduces himself
+to Mr. Bumpkin</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page261">261</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXX.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Mr. Alibi is stricken with a Thunderbolt&mdash;Interview
+with Horatio and Mr. Prigg</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page283">283</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXXI.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Mr. Bumpkin at Home again</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page295">295</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center"><!-- page xxi--><a
+name="pagexxi"></a><span class="pagenum">p. xxi</span>CHAPTER
+XXXII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Joe&rsquo;s Return to Southwood&mdash;An Invitation from
+the Vicar&mdash;What the Old Oak saw</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page303">303</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXXIII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>A Consultation as to new Lodgings&mdash;Also a
+Consultation with Counsel</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page317">317</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXXIV.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Mr. Bumpkin receives Compliments from distinguished
+Persons</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page325">325</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXXV.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>The Trial</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page335">335</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXXVI.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Motion for Rule <i>Nisi</i>, in which is displayed much
+Learning, Ancient and Modern</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page351">351</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER XXXVII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Mr. Bumpkin is congratulated by his Neighbours and Friends
+in the Market Place and sells his Corn</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page359">359</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2"><p style="text-align: center">CHAPTER
+XXXVIII.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Farewell</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page375">375</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">The Lawsuit</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page381">381</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<blockquote><p><!-- page xxiii--><a name="pagexxiii"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. xxiii</span>&ldquo;<i>He never suffered his
+private partiality to intrude into the conduct of publick
+business</i>.&nbsp; <i>Nor in appointing to employments did he
+permit solicitation to supply the place of merit</i>; <i>wisely
+sensible</i>, <i>that a proper choice of officers is almost the
+whole of Government</i>.&rdquo;&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Burke</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><!-- page xxiv--><a name="pagexxiv"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. xxiv</span><i>Extract from Notice of the Work
+in</i> <span class="smcap">The Saturday Review</span>,
+<i>September</i> 15<i>th</i>, 1883:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;He was obviously quite as eager for a good
+battle in Court as ever was Dandy Dinmont.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h2><!-- page 1--><a name="page1"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+1</span>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">The beauty of a farm yard on a Sabbath day,
+and what a difference a single letter will sometimes make in the
+legal signification of a sentence.</p>
+<p>It was during the Long Vacation&mdash;that period which is
+Paradise to the Rich and Purgatory to the Poor Lawyer&mdash;to
+say nothing of the client, who simply exists as a necessary evil
+in the economy of our enlightened system of Legal Procedure: it
+was during this delightful or dismal period that I returned one
+day to my old Farm-house in Devonshire, from a long and
+interesting ramble.&nbsp; My excellent thirst and appetite having
+been temperately appeased, I seated myself cosily by the huge
+chimney, where the log was always burning; and, having lighted my
+pipe, surrendered my whole being to the luxurious enjoyment of so
+charming a situation.&nbsp; I had scarcely finished smoking, when
+I fell into a sound and delicious sleep.&nbsp; And behold! I
+dreamed a dream; and methought:</p>
+<p>It was a beautiful Sabbath morning, in the early part of May,
+18--, when two men might have been seen leaning over a
+pigstye.&nbsp; The pigstye was situated in a <!-- page 2--><a
+name="page2"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 2</span>farm-yard in
+the lovely village of Yokelton, in the county of Somerset.&nbsp;
+Both men had evidently passed what is called the &ldquo;prime of
+life,&rdquo; as was manifest from their white hair, wrinkled
+brows, and stooping shoulders.&nbsp; It was obvious that they
+were contemplating some object with great interest and thoughtful
+attention.</p>
+<p>And I perceived that in quiet and respectful conversation with
+them was a fine, well-formed, well-educated sow of the Chichester
+breed.&nbsp; It was plain from the number of her rings that she
+was a sow of great distinction, and, indeed, as I afterwards
+learned, was the most famous for miles around: her progeny (all
+of whom I suppose were honourables) were esteemed and sought by
+squire and farmer.&nbsp; How that sow was bred up to become so
+polite a creature, was a mystery to all; because there were
+gentlemen&rsquo;s homesteads all around, where no such
+thoroughbred could be found.&nbsp; But I suppose it&rsquo;s the
+same with pigs as it is with men: a well-bred gentleman may work
+in the fields for his living, and a cad may occupy the
+manor-house or the nobleman&rsquo;s hall.</p>
+<p>The Chichester sow looked up with an air of easy nonchalance
+into the faces of the two men who smoked their short pipes, and
+uttered ever and anon some short ejaculation, such as,
+&ldquo;Hem!&rdquo; &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; &ldquo;Zounds!&rdquo; and so
+forth, while the sow exhibited a familiarity with her superiors
+only to be acquired by mixing in the best society.&nbsp; There
+was a respectful deference which, while it betrayed no sign of
+servility, was in pleasing contrast with the boisterous and
+somewhat unbecoming levity of the other inhabitants of the
+stye.&nbsp; These people were the last progeny of this
+illustrious Chichester, and numbered <!-- page 3--><a
+name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 3</span>in all
+eleven&mdash;seven sons and four daughters&mdash;honourables
+all.&nbsp; It was impossible not to admire the high spirit of
+this well-descended family.&nbsp; That they had as yet received
+no education was due to the fact that their existence dated only
+from the 21st of January last.&nbsp; Hence their somewhat erratic
+conduct, such as jumping, running, diving into the straw, boring
+their heads into one another&rsquo;s sides, and other
+unceremonious proceedings in the presence of the two gentlemen
+whom it is necessary now more particularly to describe.</p>
+<p>Mr. Thomas Bumpkin, the elder of the two, was a man of about
+seventy summers, as tall and stalwart a specimen of Anglo-Saxon
+peasantry as you could wish to behold.&nbsp; And while I use the
+word &ldquo;peasantry&rdquo; let it be clearly understood that I
+do so in no sense as expressing Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s present
+condition.&nbsp; He had risen from the English peasantry, and was
+what is usually termed a &ldquo;self-made man.&rdquo;&nbsp; He
+was born in a little hut consisting of &ldquo;wattle and
+dab,&rdquo; and as soon as he could make himself heard was sent
+into the fields to &ldquo;mind the birds.&rdquo;&nbsp; Early in
+the November mornings, immediately after the winter sowings, he
+would be seen with his little bag of brown bread round his neck,
+trudging along with a merry whistle, as happy as if he had been
+going home to a bright fire and a plentiful breakfast of ham,
+eggs, and coffee.&nbsp; By degrees he had raised himself to the
+position of ploughman, and never ploughman drove a straighter or
+leveller furrow.&nbsp; He had won prizes at the annual ploughing
+and harrowing matches: and upon the strength of ten and sixpence
+a week had married Nancy Tugby, to whom he had been engaged off
+and on for eleven years.&nbsp; Nancy was a frugal housewife, and
+worked hard, morning, noon and night.&nbsp; She was quite a
+treasure <!-- page 4--><a name="page4"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 4</span>to Bumpkin; and, what with taking in a
+little washing, and what with going out to do a little charing,
+and what with Tom&rsquo;s skill in mending cart-harness (nearly
+all the cart-harness in the neighbourhood was in a perpetual
+state of &ldquo;mendin&rsquo;&rdquo;), they had managed to put
+together in a year or two enough money to buy a sow.&nbsp; This,
+Tom always said, was &ldquo;his first start.&rdquo;&nbsp; And
+mighty proud they both were as they stood together of a Sunday
+morning looking at this wonderful treasure.&nbsp; The sow soon
+had pigs, and the pigs got on and were sold, and then the money
+was expended in other things, which in their turn proved equally
+remunerative.&nbsp; Then Tom got a piece of land, and next a pet
+ewe-lamb, and so on, until little by little wealth accumulated,
+and he rented at last, after a long course of laborious years,
+from the Squire, a small homestead called &ldquo;Southwood
+Farm,&rdquo; consisting of some fifty acres.&nbsp; Let it not be
+supposed that the accession of an extra head of live stock was a
+small matter.&nbsp; Everything is great or little by
+relation.&nbsp; I believe the statesman himself knows no greater
+pleasure when he first obtains admission to the Cabinet, than Tom
+did when he took possession of his little farm.&nbsp; And he
+certainly experienced as great a joy when he got a fresh pig as
+any young barrister does when he secures a new client.</p>
+<p>Southwood Farm was a lovely homestead, situated near a very
+pretty river, and in the midst of the most picturesque
+scenery.&nbsp; The little rivulet (for it was scarcely more)
+twisted about in the quaintest conceivable manner, almost
+encircling the cosy farm; while on the further side rose abruptly
+from the water&rsquo;s edge high embankments studded thickly with
+oak, ash, and an undergrowth of saplings of almost every
+variety.&nbsp; The old house was spacious for <!-- page 5--><a
+name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 5</span>the size of the
+farm, and consisted of a large living-room, ceiled with massive
+oak beams and oak boards, which were duly whitewashed, and looked
+as white as the sugar on a wedding cake.&nbsp; The fireplace was
+a huge space with seats on either side cut in the wall; while
+from one corner rose a rude ladder leading to a bacon loft.&nbsp;
+Dog-irons of at least a century old graced the brick hearth,
+while the chimney-back was adorned with a huge slab of iron
+wrought with divers quaint designs, and supposed to have been in
+some way or other connected with the Roman invasion, as it had
+been dug up somewhere in the neighbourhood, by whom or when no
+one ever knew.&nbsp; There was an inner chamber besides the one
+we are now in, which was used as a kitchen; while on the opposite
+side was a little parlour with red-tiled floor and a
+comparatively modern grate.&nbsp; This was the reception room,
+used chiefly when any of the ladies from
+&ldquo;t&rsquo;Squoire&rsquo;s&rdquo; did Mrs. Bumpkin the honour
+to call and taste her tea-cakes or her gooseberry wine.&nbsp; The
+thatched roof was gabled, and the four low-ceiled bedrooms had
+each of them a window in a gable.&nbsp; The house stood in a
+well-stocked garden, beyond which was a lovely green meadow
+sloping to the river side.&nbsp; In front was the little
+farm-yard, with its double-bayed barn, its lean-to cow-houses,
+its stables for five horses, and its cosy loft.&nbsp; Then there
+were the pigstyes and the henhouses: all forming together a very
+convenient and compact homestead.&nbsp; Adjoining the home meadow
+was a pretty orchard, full of apple, pear, cherry and plum trees;
+and if any one could imagine that Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin had no eye
+or taste for the beautiful, I would have advised that
+ill-conditioned person to visit those good people of a Sunday
+morning after &ldquo;brakfast&rdquo; when <!-- page 6--><a
+name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 6</span>the orchard was
+in full blossom.&nbsp; This beautiful picture it was not only Mr.
+and Mrs. Bumpkin&rsquo;s special joy to behold, but their great
+and proud delight to show; and if they had painted the blossoms
+themselves they could not have felt more intense enjoyment and
+satisfaction.</p>
+<p>There was one other feature about the little farm which I must
+mention, because it is one of the grandest and most beautiful
+things in nature, and that is the magnificent &ldquo;Old
+Oak&rdquo; that stood in the corner of one of the home fields,
+and marked the boundary of the farm in that direction.&nbsp; If
+the measure of its girth would be interesting to the reader to
+know, it was just twenty-seven feet: not the largest in England
+certainly, notwithstanding which the tree was one of the grandest
+and most beautiful.&nbsp; It towered high into the air and spread
+its stalwart branches like giant trees in all directions.&nbsp;
+It was said to be a thousand years old, and to be inhabited by
+owls and ghosts.&nbsp; Whether the ghosts lived there or not I am
+unable to say, but from generation to generation the tradition
+was handed down and believed to be true.&nbsp; Such was Mr.
+Bumpkin&rsquo;s home, in my dream: the home of Peace and Plenty,
+Happiness and Love.</p>
+<p>The man who was contemplating Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s pigs on this
+same Sunday morning was also a &ldquo;self-made man,&rdquo; whose
+name was Josiah <span class="smcap">Snooks</span>.&nbsp; He was
+not made so well as Bumpkin, I should say, by a great deal, but
+nevertheless was a man who, as things go, was tolerably well put
+together.&nbsp; He was the village coal-merchant, not a Cockerell
+by any means, but a merchant who would have a couple of trucks of
+&ldquo;Derby Brights&rdquo; down at a time, and sell them round
+the village by the hundredweight.&nbsp; No doubt he was a very
+thrifty man, and to the extent, so some people said, of nipping
+the poor <!-- page 7--><a name="page7"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 7</span>in their weight.&nbsp; And once he
+nearly lost the contract for supplying the coal-gifts at
+Christmas on that account.&nbsp; But he made it a rule to attend
+church very regularly as the season came round, and so did Mrs.
+Josiah Snooks; and it will require a great deal of
+&ldquo;nipping&rdquo; to get over that in a country village, I
+promise you.&nbsp; I did not think Snooks a nice looking man, by
+any means; for he had a low forehead, a scowling brow, a nobbly
+fat nose, small eyes, one of which had a cast, a large mouth
+always awry and distorted with a sneer, straight hair that hung
+over his forehead, and a large scar on his right cheek.&nbsp; His
+teeth were large and yellow, and the top ones protruded more, I
+thought, than was at all necessary.&nbsp; Nor was he generally
+beliked.&nbsp; In fact, so unpopular was this man with the poor,
+that it was a common thing for mothers to say to their children
+when they could not get them in of a summer&rsquo;s evening,
+&ldquo;You, Betsy,&rdquo; or &ldquo;You, Jane, come in directly,
+or old Snooks will have you!&rdquo;&nbsp; A warning which always
+produced the desired effect.</p>
+<p>No one could actually tell whether Snooks had made money or
+merely pretended to possess it.&nbsp; Some said they knew he had,
+for he lived so niggardly; others said the coal trade was not
+what it was; and there were not wanting people who hinted that
+old Betty Bodger&rsquo;s house and garden&mdash;which had been
+given to her years ago by the old squire, what for, nobody
+knew&mdash;had been first mortgaged to Josiah and then sold to
+him and &ldquo;taken out in coals.&rdquo;&nbsp; A very cunning
+man was Snooks; kept his own counsel&mdash;I don&rsquo;t mean a
+barrister in wig and gown on his premises&mdash;but in the sense
+of never divulging what was in his sagacious mind.&nbsp; He was
+known as a universal buyer of everything that he could turn a
+penny out of; and he sold everybody whenever <!-- page 8--><a
+name="page8"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 8</span>he got the
+chance.&nbsp; Such was the character of old Snooks.</p>
+<p>How then came our good guileless friend Bumpkin to be
+associated with such a man on this beautiful Sunday
+morning?&nbsp; I can only answer: there are things in this world
+which admit of no explanation.&nbsp; This, so far as I am
+concerned, was one.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They be pooty pork,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Middlin&rsquo;,&rdquo; rejoined the artful Snooks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They be a mighty dale more an middlin&rsquo;, if you
+come to thic,&rdquo; said the farmer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve seen a good deal better,&rdquo; remarked
+Snooks.&nbsp; This was always his line of bargaining.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I aint,&rdquo; returned Bumpkin,
+emphatically.&nbsp; &ldquo;Look at that un&mdash;why, he be fit
+for anything&mdash;a regler pictur.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s he worth?&rdquo; said Snooks.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Three arf crowns?&rdquo;&nbsp; That was Snooks&rsquo; way
+of dealing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whisht!&rdquo; exclaimed Bumpkin; &ldquo;and four
+arf-crowns wouldn&rsquo;t buy un.&rdquo;&nbsp; That was
+Bumpkin&rsquo;s way.</p>
+<p>Snooks expectorated and gave a roar, which he intended for a
+laugh, but which made every pig jump off its feet and dive into
+the straw.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell &rsquo;ee what, maister Bumpkin, I doant want
+un&rdquo;&mdash;that was his way again; &ldquo;but I doant mind
+giving o&rsquo; thee nine shillings for that un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee wunt &rsquo;ave un&mdash;not a farden less nor ten
+if I knows it; ye doant &rsquo;ave we loike that, nuther&mdash;ye
+beant sellin&rsquo; coals, maister Snooks&mdash;no, nor
+buyin&rsquo; pigs if I knows un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>How far this conversation would have proceeded, and whether
+any serious altercation would have arisen, I know not; but at
+this moment a combination of <!-- page 9--><a
+name="page9"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 9</span>circumstances
+occurred to interrupt the would-be contracting parties.&nbsp;
+First, Mrs. Bumpkin, who had been preparing the Sunday dinner,
+came across the yard with her apron full of cabbage-leaves and
+potato-peelings, followed by an immense number of chickens, while
+the ducks in the pond clapped their wings, and flew and ran with
+as much eagerness as though they were so many lawyers seeking
+some judicial appointment, and Mrs. Bumpkin were Lord High
+Chancellor of Great Britain; and they made as much row as a flock
+of Chancery Barristers arguing about costs.&nbsp; Then came
+along, with many a grunt and squeak, a pig or two, who seemed to
+be enjoying a Sunday holiday in their best clothes, for they had
+just come out of a puddle of mud; then came slouching along, a
+young man whose name was Joe (or, more correctly speaking, Joseph
+Wurzel), a young man of about seventeen, well built, tall and
+straight, with a pleasant country farm-house face, a roguish
+black eye, even teeth, and a head of brown straight hair, that
+looked as if the only attention it ever received was an
+occasional trimming with a reap-hook, and a brush with a
+bush-harrow.</p>
+<p>It was just feeding time; that was why Joe came up at this
+moment; and in addition to all these circumstances, there came
+faintly booming through the trees the ding of the old church
+bell, reminding Mr. Bumpkin that he must &ldquo;goo and smarten
+oop a bit&rdquo; for church.&nbsp; He already had on his purple
+cord trousers, and, as Joe termed it, his hell-fire waistcoat
+with the flames coming out of it in all directions; but he had to
+put on his drab &ldquo;cooat&rdquo; and white smock-frock, and
+then walk half a mile before service commenced.&nbsp; He always
+liked to be there before the Squire, and see him and his
+daughters, Miss Judith and Miss Mary, come in.</p>
+<p><!-- page 10--><a name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+10</span>So he had to leave the question of the
+&ldquo;walley&rdquo; of the pig and attend to the more important
+interests of his immortal soul.&nbsp; But now as he was going
+comes the point to which the reader&rsquo;s special attention is
+directed.&nbsp; He had got about six yards from the stye, or it
+may have been a little more, when Snooks cried out:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve bought un for nine and six.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To which Mr. Bumpkin replied, without so much as turning his
+head&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Ave ur.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now this expression, according to Chitty on Contracts, would
+mean, &ldquo;Have you, indeed? Mr. Snooks.&rdquo;&nbsp; But the
+extreme cunning of Josiah converted it into &ldquo;&rsquo;Ave
+un,&rdquo; which, by the same learned authority would signify,
+&ldquo;Very well, Mr. Snooks, you can have him.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 11--><a name="page11"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+11</span>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">The simplicity and enjoyments of a country
+life depicted.</p>
+<p>A quiet day was Sunday on Southwood Farm.&nbsp; Joe used to
+slumber in the meadows among the buttercups, or in the loft, or
+near the kitchen-fire, as the season and weather invited.&nbsp;
+That is to say, until such time as, coming out of Sunday School
+(for to Sunday School he sometimes went) he saw one of the
+fairest creatures he had ever read about either in the Bible or
+elsewhere!&nbsp; It was a very strange thing she should be so
+different from everybody else: not even the clergyman&rsquo;s
+daughters&mdash;no, nor the Squire&rsquo;s daughters, for the
+matter of that&mdash;looked half so nice as pretty Polly
+Sweetlove, the housemaid at the Vicar&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now look at that,&rdquo; said Joe, as he went along the
+lane on that Sunday when he first beheld this divine
+creature.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;m danged if she beant about the
+smartest lookin o&rsquo; any on &rsquo;em.&nbsp; Miss Mary beant
+nothing to her: it&rsquo;s a dandelion to a toolup.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So ever since that time Joe had slept less frequently in the
+hay-loft on a Sunday afternoon; and, be it said to his credit,
+had attended his church with greater punctuality.&nbsp; The vicar
+took great notice of the lad&rsquo;s religious tendencies, and
+had him to his night-school at the vicarage, in consequence; and
+certainly no vicar ever <!-- page 12--><a name="page12"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 12</span>knew a boy more regular in his
+attendance.&nbsp; He was there waiting to go in ever so long
+before the school began, and was always the very last to leave
+the premises.</p>
+<p>Often he would peep over the quick-set hedge into the
+kitchen-window, just to catch a glance of this lovely
+angel.&nbsp; And yet, so far as he could tell, she had never
+looked at him.&nbsp; When she opened the door, Joe always felt a
+thrill run through him as if some extraordinary thing had
+happened.&nbsp; It was a kind of jump; and yet he had jumped many
+times before that: &ldquo;it wasn&rsquo;t the sort of
+jump,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;as a chap gits either from
+bein&rsquo; frit or bein&rsquo; pleased.&rdquo;&nbsp; And what to
+make of it he didn&rsquo;t know.&nbsp; Then Polly&rsquo;s cap was
+about the loveliest thing, next to Polly herself, he had ever
+seen.&nbsp; It was more like a May blossom than anything else, or
+a beautiful butterfly on the top of a water-lily.&nbsp; In fact,
+all the rural images of a rude but not inartistic mind came and
+went as this country boy thought of his beautiful Polly.&nbsp; As
+he ploughed the field, if he saw a May-blossom in the hedgerow,
+it reminded him of Polly&rsquo;s cap; and even the little gentle
+daisy was like Polly herself.&nbsp; Pretty Polly was
+everywhere!</p>
+<p>Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin, on a fine Sabbath afternoon, would take
+their pastime in the open air.&nbsp; First Mr. Bumpkin would take
+down his long churchwarden pipe from its rack on the ceiling,
+where it lay in close companionship with an ancient flint-gun;
+then he would fill it tightly, so as to make it last the longer,
+with tobacco from his leaden jar; and then, having lighted it, he
+and his wife would go out of the back door, through the garden
+and the orchard, and along by the side of the quiet river.&nbsp;
+By their side, as a matter of course, came <!-- page 13--><a
+name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 13</span>Tim the
+Collie (named after Mrs. Bumpkin&rsquo;s grandfather Timothy),
+who knew as well as possible every word that was being
+said.&nbsp; If Mrs. Bumpkin only asked, &ldquo;Where is
+Betsy?&rdquo; (that was the head Alderney cow) Tim would bark and
+fly across to the meadow where she was; and then, having said to
+her and to the five other Alderney cows and four heifers,
+&ldquo;Why, here&rsquo;s master and missus coming round to look
+at you, why on earth don&rsquo;t you come and see them?&rdquo; up
+the whole herd would come, straggling one after the other, to the
+meadow where Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin were waiting for them; and all
+would look over the hedge, as much as to say, &ldquo;How
+d&rsquo;ye do, master, and how d&rsquo;ye do, missus; what a nice
+day, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo; exactly in the same manner as men and
+women greet one another as often as they meet.&nbsp; And then
+there was the old donkey, Jack, whom Tim would chaff no matter
+when or where he saw him.&nbsp; I believe if Tim had got him in
+church, he would have chaffed him.&nbsp; It was very amusing to
+see Jack duck his head and describe a circle as Tim swept round
+him, barking with all his might, and yet only laughing all the
+while.&nbsp; Sometimes Jack, miscalculating distances&mdash;he
+wasn&rsquo;t very great at mathematics&mdash;and having no eye
+for situations, would kick out vigorously with his hind legs,
+thinking Tim was in close proximity to his heels; whereas the
+sagacious and jocular Tim was leaning on his outstretched
+fore-feet immediately in front of Jack&rsquo;s head.</p>
+<p>Then there was another sight, not the least interesting on
+these afternoon rambles: in the far meadow, right under
+&ldquo;the lids,&rdquo; as they were called, lived the famous
+Bull of Southwood Farm.&nbsp; He was Mrs. Bumpkin&rsquo;s
+pet.&nbsp; She had had him from a baby, and used to feed him in
+<!-- page 14--><a name="page14"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+14</span>his infant days from a bottle by the kitchen fire.&nbsp;
+And so docile was he that, although few strangers would be safe
+in intruding into his presence, he would follow Mrs. Bumpkin
+about, as she said, &ldquo;just like a Christian.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The merits of this bull were the theme, on all appropriate
+occasions, of Mrs. Bumpkin&rsquo;s unqualified praise.&nbsp; If
+the Vicar&rsquo;s wife called, as she sometimes did, to see how
+Mrs. Bumpkin was getting on, Mrs. Bumpkin&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;baby&rdquo; (that is the bull) was sure to be brought
+up&mdash;I don&rsquo;t mean by the nurse, but in
+conversation.&nbsp; No matter how long she waited her
+opportunity, Mrs. Goodheart never left without hearing something
+of the exploits of this remarkable bull.&nbsp; In truth, he was a
+handsome, well-bred fellow.&nbsp; He had come from the
+Squire&rsquo;s&mdash;so you may be sure his breed was gentlemanly
+in the extreme; and his grandmother, on the maternal side, had
+belonged to the Bishop of Winchester; so you have a sufficient
+guarantee, I hope, for his moral character and orthodox
+principles.&nbsp; Indeed, it had been said that no dissenter
+dared pass through the meadow where he was, in consequence of his
+connection with the Establishment.&nbsp; Now, on the occasions
+when Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin took their walks abroad through the
+meadows to see their lambkins and their bull skip, this is what
+would invariably happen.&nbsp; First, Mrs. Bumpkin would go
+through the little cosy-looking gate in the corner of the meadow,
+right down by the side of the old boat-house; then Mr. Bumpkin
+would follow, holding his long pipe in one hand and his ash-stick
+in the other.&nbsp; Then, away in the long distance, at the far
+end of the meadow (he was always up there on these occasions),
+stood &ldquo;Sampson&rdquo; (that was the bull), with his head
+turned right round towards his master and mistress, as <!-- page
+15--><a name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 15</span>if he
+were having his photograph taken.&nbsp; Thus he stood for a
+moment; then down went his huge forehead to the ground; up went
+his tail to the sky; then he sent a bellow along the earth which
+would have frightened anybody but his &ldquo;mother,&rdquo; and
+started off towards his master and mistress like a ship in a
+heavy sea; sometimes with his keel up in the air, and sometimes
+with his prow under water: it not only was playful, it was
+magnificent, and anybody unaccustomed to oxen might have been a
+little terrified by the furious glare of his eyes and the
+terrible snort of his nostrils as he approached.</p>
+<p>Not so Mrs. Bumpkin, who held out her hand, and
+ejaculated,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My pretty baby; my sweet pet; good Sampson!&rdquo; and
+many other expressions of an endearing character.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good Sampson&rdquo; looked, snorted, danced, plunged
+and careered; and then came up and let Mrs. Bumpkin stroke and
+pat him; while Bumpkin looked on, smoking his pipe peacefully,
+and thinking what a fine fellow he, the bull, was, and what a
+great man he, Bumpkin, must be to be the possessor of
+&ldquo;sich!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus the peaceful afternoon would glide quietly and sweetly
+away, and so would the bull, after the interesting interview was
+over.</p>
+<p>They always returned in time for tea, and then Mrs. Bumpkin
+would go to evening service, while Mr. Bumpkin would wait for her
+on the little piece of green near the church, where neighbours
+used to meet and chat of a Sunday evening; such as old Mr.
+Gosling, the market gardener, and old Master Mott, the head
+gardener to the Squire, and Master Cole, the farmer, and various
+others, the original inhabitants of Yokelton; discussing <!--
+page 16--><a name="page16"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+16</span>the weather and the crops, the probability of Mr. Tomson
+getting in again at the vestry as waywarden; what kind of a
+highway rate there would be for the coming year; how that horse
+got on that Mr. Sooby bought at the fair; and various other
+matters of importance to a village community.&nbsp; They would
+also pass remarks upon any striking personage who passed them on
+his way to church.&nbsp; Mr. Prigg, for instance, the village
+lawyer, who, they said, was a remarkably upright and
+down-straight sort of man; although his wife, they thought, was
+&ldquo;a little bit stuck up like&rdquo; and gave herself airs a
+little different from Mrs. Goodheart, who would &ldquo;always
+talk to &rsquo;em jist the same as if she was one o&rsquo;
+th&rsquo; people.&rdquo;&nbsp; So that, on the whole, they
+entertained themselves very amicably until such time as the
+&ldquo;organ played the people out of church.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then
+every one looked for his wife or daughter, as the case might be,
+and wished one another good night: most of them having been to
+church in the morning, they did not think it necessary to repeat
+the performance in the evening.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 17--><a name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+17</span>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Showing how true it is that it takes at least
+two to make a bargain or a quarrel.</p>
+<p>The day after the events which I have recorded, while the good
+farmer and his wife were at breakfast, which was about seven
+o&rsquo;clock, Joe presented himself in the sitting-room, and
+said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Plase, maister, here be t&rsquo; money for t&rsquo;
+pig.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Money for t&rsquo; pig,&rdquo; exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin;
+&ldquo;what&rsquo;s thee mean, lad? what pig?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maister Snooks!&rdquo; said Joe, &ldquo;there ur be,
+gwine wi&rsquo; t&rsquo; pig in t&rsquo; barrer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nothing shall induce me to repeat the language of Mr. Bumpkin,
+as he jumped up from the table, and without hat or cap rushed out
+of the room, followed by Joe, and watched by Mrs. Bumpkin from
+the door.&nbsp; Just as he got to the farmyard by one gate, there
+was Snooks leaving it by another with Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s pig in
+a sack in the box barrow which he was wheeling.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hulloa!&rdquo; shouted the farmer; &ldquo;hulloa
+here!&nbsp; Thee put un down&mdash;dang thee, what be this?&nbsp;
+I said thee shouldn&rsquo;t ave un, no more thee
+sha&rsquo;n&rsquo;t.&nbsp; I beant gwine to breed Chichster pigs
+for such as thee at thy own price, nuther.&rdquo;&nbsp; Snooks
+grinned and went on his way, saying;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I bought un and I&rsquo;ll &rsquo;ave un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An I&rsquo;ll &rsquo;ave thee, dang&rsquo;d if I doant,
+afore jussices; t&rsquo; Squoire&rsquo;ll tell thee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 18--><a name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+18</span>&ldquo;I doant keer for t&rsquo; Squire no more nor I do
+for thee, old Bumpkin; thee be a cunnin&rsquo; man, but thee sold
+I t&rsquo; pig and I&rsquo;ll &rsquo;ave un, and I got un too:
+haw! haw! haw! an thee got t&rsquo;
+money&mdash;nine-and-six&mdash;haw! haw! haw!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin by this time came up to him, but was so much out
+of breath, or &ldquo;winded,&rdquo; that he was unable to carry
+on the conversation, so he just tapped the bag with his stick as
+if to be certain the pig was there, and sure enough it was, if
+you might judge by the extraordinary wriggling that went on
+inside the bag.</p>
+<p>The indomitable Snooks, however, with the largest and most
+hideous grin I ever saw, pushed on with his barrow, and Mr.
+Bumpkin having now sufficiently recovered his breath, said,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee see ur tak un, didn&rsquo;t thee, Joe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure did ur,&rdquo; answered the lad.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+seed un took un clane out o&rsquo; the stye, and put un in the
+sack, and wheeled un away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha! so ur did, Joe; stick to that, lad&mdash;stick to
+un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And thee seed I pay th&rsquo; money for un, Joe,
+didn&rsquo;t thee?&rdquo; laughed Snooks.&nbsp; &ldquo;Seed I put
+un on t&rsquo; poast, and thee took un oop&mdash;haw! haw!
+haw!&nbsp; I got t&rsquo; pig and thee got t&rsquo;
+money&mdash;haw! haw! haw!&nbsp; Thee thowt thee&rsquo;d done I,
+and I done thee&mdash;haw! haw! haw!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And away went Snooks and away went pig; but Snooks&rsquo;
+laugh remained, and every now and then Snooks turned his head and
+showed his large yellow teeth and roared again.</p>
+<p>The rage of Mr. Bumpkin knew no bounds.&nbsp; There are some
+things in life which are utterly unendurable; and one is the
+having your pig taken from you against your will and without your
+consent&mdash;an act which would be described legally as <i>the
+rape of the pig</i>.&nbsp; This offence, <!-- page 19--><a
+name="page19"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 19</span>in Mr.
+Bumpkin&rsquo;s judgment, Snooks was guilty of; and therefore he
+resolved to do that which is considered usually a wise thing,
+namely, to consult a solicitor.</p>
+<p>Now, if I were giving advice&mdash;which I do not presume to
+do&mdash;I should say that in all matters of difficulty a man
+should consult his wife, his priest, or his solicitor, and in the
+order in which I have named them.&nbsp; In the event of
+consulting a solicitor the next important question arises,
+&ldquo;What solicitor?&rdquo;&nbsp; I could write a book on this
+subject.&nbsp; There are numerous solicitors, within my
+acquaintance, to whom I would entrust my life and my character;
+there are some, not of my acquaintance, but of my knowledge, into
+whose hands, if I had one spark of Christian feeling left, I
+would not see my enemy delivered.&nbsp; There is little
+difference between one class of men and another as to natural
+disposition; and whether you take one or another, you must find
+the shady character.&nbsp; But where the opportunities for
+mischief are so great as they are in the practice of the Law, it
+is necessary that the utmost care should be exercised in
+committing one&rsquo;s interests to the keeping of another.&nbsp;
+Had Mr. Bumpkin been a man of the world he would have suspected
+that under the most ostentatious piety very often lurked the most
+subtle fraud.&nbsp; Good easy man, had he been going to buy a
+hay-stack, he would not have judged by the outside but have put
+his &ldquo;iron&rdquo; into it; he could not put his iron into
+Mr. Prigg, I know, but he need not have taken him by his
+appearance alone.&nbsp; I may observe that if Mr. Bumpkin had
+consulted his sensible and affectionate spouse, or a really
+respectable solicitor, this book would not have been
+written.&nbsp; If he had consulted the Vicar, possibly another
+book might have been written; but, as it was, he resolved to
+consult <!-- page 20--><a name="page20"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 20</span>Mr. Prigg in the first
+instance.&nbsp; Now Mrs. Bumpkin, except as the mother of the
+illustrious Bull, has very little to do with this story.&nbsp;
+Mr. Prigg is one of its leading characters; but in my description
+of that gentleman I am obliged to be concise: I must minimize
+Prigg, great as he is, and I trust that in doing so I shall
+prospectively minimize all future Priggs that may ever appear on
+the world&rsquo;s stage.&nbsp; I do not attempt to pulverize him,
+that would require the crushing pestle of the legislature; but
+merely to make him as little as I can, with due consideration for
+the requirements of my story.</p>
+<p>I should be thought premature in mentioning Prigg, but that he
+was a gentleman of great pretensions in the little village of
+Yokelton.&nbsp; Gentleman by Act of Parliament, and in his own
+estimation, you may be sure he was respected by all around
+him.&nbsp; That was not many, it is true, for his house was the
+last of the straggling village.&nbsp; He was a man of great piety
+and an extremely white neck-cloth; attended the parish church
+regularly, and kept his white hair well brushed upwards&mdash;as
+though, like the church steeple, it was to point the way at all
+times.&nbsp; He was the most amiable of persons in regard to the
+distribution of the parish gifts; and, being a lawyer it was not
+considered by the churchwardens, a blacksmith and a builder, safe
+to refuse his kind and generous assistance.&nbsp; He involved the
+parish in a law-suit once, in a question relating to the duty to
+repair the parish pump; and since that time everyone knew better
+than to ignore Mr. Prigg.&nbsp; I have heard that the money spent
+in that action would have repaired all the parish pumps in
+England for a century, but have no means of ascertaining the
+truth of this statement.</p>
+<p>Mr. Prigg was a man whose merits were not appreciated <!--
+page 21--><a name="page21"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+21</span>by the local gentry, who never asked him to
+dinner.&nbsp; Virtue is thus sometimes ill-rewarded in this
+world.&nbsp; And Mrs. Prigg&rsquo;s virtue had also been equally
+ignored when she had sought, almost with tears, to obtain tickets
+for the County Ball.</p>
+<p>Mr. Prigg was about sixty years old, methodical in his habits,
+punctilious in his dress, polite in his demeanour, and precise in
+his language.&nbsp; He wore a high collar of such remarkable
+stiffness that his shoulders had to turn with his head whenever
+it was necessary to alter his position.&nbsp; This gave an
+appearance of respectability to the head, not to be acquired by
+any other means.&nbsp; It was, indeed, the most respectable head
+I ever saw either in the flesh or in marble.</p>
+<p>Mr. Prigg had descended from the well-known family of Prigg,
+and he prided himself on the circumstance.&nbsp; How often was he
+seen in the little churchyard of Yokelton of a Sunday morning,
+both before and after service, pointing with family pride to the
+tombstone of a relative which bore this beautiful and touching
+inscription:&mdash;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">here</span><br
+/>
+<span class="smcap">lie the ashes of</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">Mr. John Prigg</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">of smith street</span>, <span
+class="smcap">bristol</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">originally of duck green</span>, <span
+class="smcap">yokelton</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">who under peculiar disadvantages</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">which to common minds</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">would have been a bar to any
+exertions</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">raised himself from all obscure
+situations</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">of birth and fortune</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">by his own industry and frugality</span><br
+/>
+<span class="smcap">to the enjoyment of a </span><span
+class="smcap"><i>moderate competency</i></span>.<br />
+<span class="smcap">he attained a peculiar excellence</span><br
+/>
+<span class="smcap">in penmanship and drawing</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">without the instructions of a
+master</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">and to eminence in arithmetic</span>,<br />
+<!-- page 22--><a name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+22</span><span class="smcap">the useful and the higher branches
+of</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">the mathematics</span>,<br />
+<span class="smcap">by going to school only a year and eight
+months</span>.</p>
+<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">he</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">died a bachelor</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">on the 24th day of october</span>, 1807,<br
+/>
+<span class="smcap">in the 55th year of his age</span>;<br />
+<span class="smcap">and without forgetting</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">relations friends and acquaintances</span><br
+/>
+<span class="smcap">bequeathed one fifth of his
+property</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">to public charity</span>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span
+class="smcap">reader</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">the world is open to thee</span>.<br />
+&ldquo;<span class="smcap">go thou and do likewise</span>.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation22"></a><a href="#footnote22"
+class="citation">[22]</a></p>
+<p>It was generally supposed that this beautiful composition was
+from the pen of Mr. Prigg himself, who, sitting as he did so high
+on his branch of the Family Tree,</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">could
+look</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">with pride and sympathy</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">on</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">the manly struggles</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">of a humbler member</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">lower down</span>!</p>
+<p>High Birth, like Great Wealth, can afford to condescend!</p>
+<p>Mrs. Prigg was worthy of her illustrious consort.&nbsp; She
+was of the noble family of the Snobs, and in every way did honour
+to her progenitors.&nbsp; As the reader is aware, there is what
+is known as a &ldquo;cultivated voice,&rdquo; the result of
+education&mdash;it is absolutely without affectation: there is
+also the voice which, in imitation of the well-trained one, is
+little more than a burlesque, and is <!-- page 23--><a
+name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 23</span>affected in
+the highest degree: this was the only fault in Mrs. Prigg&rsquo;s
+voice.</p>
+<p>Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s home was charmingly small, but had all the
+pretensions of a stately country house&mdash;its conservatory,
+its drawing-room, its study, and a dining-room which told you as
+plainly as any dining-room could speak, &ldquo;I am related to
+Donkey Hall, where the Squire lives: I belong to the same
+aristocratic family.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then there was the great heavy-headed clock in the
+passage.&nbsp; He did not appear at all to know that he had come
+down in the world through being sold by auction for two pounds
+ten.&nbsp; He said with great plausibility, &ldquo;My worth is
+not to be measured by the amount of money I can command; I am the
+same personage as before.&rdquo;&nbsp; And I thought it a very
+true observation, but the philosophy thereof was a little
+discounted by his haughty demeanour, which had certainly gone up
+as he himself had come down; and that is a reason why I
+don&rsquo;t as a rule like people who have come down in the
+world&mdash;they are sure to be so stuck up.&nbsp; But I do like
+a person who has come down in the world and doesn&rsquo;t at all
+mind it&mdash;much better than any man who has got up in the
+world from the half-crown, and does mind it upon all
+occasions.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Prigg, apart from her high descent, was a very
+aristocratic person: as the presence of the grand piano in the
+drawing-room would testify.&nbsp; She could no more live without
+a grand piano than ordinary people could exist without food: the
+grand piano, albeit a very dilapidated one, was a necessity of
+her well-descended condition.&nbsp; It was no matter that it
+displaced more useful furniture; in that it only imitated a good
+many other persons, and it told you whenever you entered the
+room: &ldquo;You see <!-- page 24--><a name="page24"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 24</span>me here in a comparatively small way,
+but understand, I have been in far different circumstances: I
+have been courted by the great, and listened to by the
+aristocracy of England.&nbsp; I follow Mrs. Prigg wherever she
+goes: she is a lady; her connections are high, and she never yet
+associated with any but the best families.&nbsp; You could not
+diminish from her very high breeding: put her in the workhouse,
+and with me to accompany her, it would be transformed into a
+palace.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Prigg was by no means a rich man as the world counts
+richness.&nbsp; No one ever heard of his having a
+&ldquo;<i>practice</i>,&rdquo; although it was believed he did a
+great deal in the way of &ldquo;lending his name&rdquo; <i>and
+profession</i> to impecunious and uneducated men; who could turn
+many a six-and-eightpence under its prestige.&nbsp; So great is
+the moral &ldquo;power of attorney,&rdquo; as contradistinguished
+from the legal &ldquo;power of attorney.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Prigg, as I have hinted, was not only respectable, he was
+<i>good</i>: he was more than that even, he was
+<i>notoriously</i> good: so much so, that he was called, in
+contradistinction to all other lawyers, &ldquo;<i>Honest Lawyer
+Prigg</i>&rdquo;; and he had further acquired, almost as a
+universal title, the sobriquet of &ldquo;Nice.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Everybody said, &ldquo;What a very nice man Mr. Prigg
+is!&rdquo;&nbsp; Then, in addition to all this, he was considered
+<i>clever</i>&mdash;why, I do not know; but I have often observed
+that men can obtain the reputation of being clever at very little
+cost, and without the least foundation.&nbsp; The cheapest of all
+ways is to abuse men who really are clever, and if your abuse be
+pungently and not too coarsely worded, it will be accepted by the
+ignorant as <i>criticism</i>.&nbsp; Nothing goes down with
+shallow minds like criticism, and the severest criticism is
+generally based on envy and jealousy.</p>
+<p><!-- page 25--><a name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+25</span>Mr. Prigg, then, was clever, respectable, good, and
+nice, remarkably potent qualities for success in this world.</p>
+<p>So I saw in my dream that Mr. Bumpkin, whose feelings were
+duly aroused, turned his eye upon Honest Lawyer Prigg, and
+resolved to consult him upon the grievous outrage to which he had
+been subjected at the hands of the cunning Snooks: and without
+more ado he resolved to call on that very worthy and extremely
+nice gentleman.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 27--><a name="page27"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+27</span>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">On the extreme simplicity of going to law.</p>
+<p>With his right leg resting on his left, with his two thumbs
+nicely adjusted, and with the four points of his right fingers in
+delicate contact with the fingers of his left hand, sat Honest
+Lawyer Prigg, listening to the tale of unutterable woe, as
+recounted by Farmer Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>Sometimes the good man&rsquo;s eyes looked keenly at the
+farmer, and sometimes they scanned vacantly the ceiling, where a
+wandering fly seemed, like Mr. Bumpkin, in search of consolation
+or redress.&nbsp; Sometimes Mr. Prigg nodded his respectable head
+and shoulders in token of his comprehension of Mr.
+Bumpkin&rsquo;s lucid statement: then he nodded two or three
+times in succession, implying that the Court was with Mr.
+Bumpkin, and occasionally he would utter with a soft soothing
+voice,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When he said &ldquo;quite so,&rdquo; he parted his fingers,
+and reunited them with great precision; then he softly tapped
+them together, closed his eyes, and seemed lost in profound
+meditation.</p>
+<p>Here Mr. Bumpkin paused and stared.&nbsp; Was Mr. Prigg
+listening?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pray proceed,&rdquo; said the lawyer, &ldquo;I quite
+follow you;&mdash;never mind about what anybody else had offered
+you for the pig&mdash;the question really is whether you actually
+sold this pig to Snooks or not&mdash;whether the bargain was
+complete or inchoate.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 28--><a name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+28</span>Mr. Bumpkin stared again.&nbsp; &ldquo;I beant much of a
+scollard, sir,&rdquo; he observed; &ldquo;but I&rsquo;ll take my
+oath I never sold un t&rsquo;pig.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is the question,&rdquo; remarked the lawyer.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You say you did not?&nbsp; Quite so; had this Joe of yours
+any authority to receive money on your behalf?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Devil a bit,&rdquo; answered Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Excuse me,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg, &ldquo;I have to put
+these questions: it is necessary that I should understand where
+we are: of course, if you did not sell the pig, he had no right
+whatever to come and take it out of the sty&mdash;it was a
+trespass?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I says,&rdquo; said Bumpkin; and down
+went his fist on Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s table with such vehemence that
+the solicitor started as though aroused by a shock of
+dynamite.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let us be calm,&rdquo; said the lawyer, taking some
+paper from his desk, and carefully examining the nib of a quill
+pen, &ldquo;Let me see, I think you said your name was
+Thomas?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it, sir; and so was my father&rsquo;s
+afore me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thomas Bumpkin?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I beant ashamed on him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And then Mr. Prigg wrote out a document and read it aloud; and
+Mr. Bumpkin agreeing with it, scratched his name at the
+bottom&mdash;very badly scratched it was, but well enough for Mr.
+Prigg.&nbsp; This was simply to retain Mr. Prigg as his solicitor
+in the cause of <i>Bumpkin</i> v. <i>Snooks</i>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so, quite so; now let me see; be calm, Mr.
+Bumpkin, be calm; in all these matters we must never lose our
+self-possession.&nbsp; You see, I am not excited.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 29--><a name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+29</span>&ldquo;Noa,&rdquo; said Bumpkin; &ldquo;but then ur dint
+tak thy pig.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite true, I can appreciate the position, it was no
+doubt a gross outrage.&nbsp; Now tell me&mdash;this Snooks, as I
+understand, is the coal-merchant down the village?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s ur,&rdquo; said Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose he&rsquo;s a man of some property,
+eh?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin looked for a few moments without speaking, and
+then said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He wur allays a close-fisted un, and I should reckon
+have a goodish bit o&rsquo; property.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because you know,&rdquo; remarked the solicitor,
+&ldquo;it is highly important, when one wins a case and obtains
+damages, that the defendant should be in a position to pay
+them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was the first time that ever the flavour of damages had
+got into Bumpkin&rsquo;s mouth; and a very nice flavour it
+was.&nbsp; To beat Snooks was one thing, a satisfaction; to make
+him pay was another, a luxury.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir,&rdquo; he repeated; &ldquo;I bleeve he ave, I
+bleeve he ave.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What makes you think so?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wull, fust and foremust, I knows he lent a party a
+matter of a hundred pound, for I witnessed un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then he hasn&rsquo;t got that,&rdquo; said the
+lawyer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes ur ave, sir, or how so be as good; for it wur a
+morgage like, and since then he&rsquo;ve got the
+house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Prigg made a note, and asked where the house was.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It be widder Jackson&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed; very well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An then there be the bisness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Exactly,&rdquo; said the lawyer, &ldquo;horses and
+carts, weighing machines, and so on?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 30--><a name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+30</span>&ldquo;And the house he live in,&rdquo; said Bumpkin,
+&ldquo;I know as ow that longs to him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well; I think that will be enough to start
+with.&rdquo;&nbsp; Now, Mr. Prigg knew pretty well the position
+of the respective parties himself; so it was not so much for his
+own information that he made these inquiries as to infuse into
+Bumpkin&rsquo;s mind a notion of the importance of the case.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said he, throwing down the pen, &ldquo;this
+is a very serious matter, Mr. Bumpkin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was a comfort, and Bumpkin looked agreeably surprised and
+vastly important.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A very serious case,&rdquo; and again the tips of the
+fingers were brought in contact.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I spoase we can&rsquo;t bring un afore jusseses,
+sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you see the criminal law is dangerous; you
+can&rsquo;t get damages, and you may get an action for malicious
+prosecution.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think we ought to mak un pay for &rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is precisely my own view, but I am totally at a
+loss to understand the reason of such outrageous conduct on the
+part of this Snooks.&nbsp; Now don&rsquo;t be offended, Mr.
+Bumpkin, if I put a question to you.&nbsp; You know, we lawyers
+like to search to the bottom of things.&nbsp; I can understand,
+if you had owed him any money&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Owe un money!&rdquo; exclaimed Bumpkin contemptuously;
+&ldquo;why I could buy un out and out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, quite so, quite so; so I should have supposed from
+what I know of you, Mr. Bumpkin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lookee ere, sir,&rdquo; said the farmer; &ldquo;I bin a
+ard workin man all my life, paid my way, twenty shillins in the
+pound, and doant owe a penny as fur as I knows.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 31--><a name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+31</span>&ldquo;And if you did, Mr. Bumpkin,&rdquo; said the
+lawyer with a good-natured laugh, &ldquo;I dare say you could
+pay.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wull, I bleeve there&rsquo;s no man can axe me for
+nothing; and thank God, what I&rsquo;ve got&rsquo;s my own; and
+there aint many as got pootier stock nor mine&mdash;all good bred
+uns, Mr. Prigg.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I&rsquo;ve often heard your cattle
+praised.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He be a blagard if ur says I owed un money.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, dear, Mr. Bumpkin, pray don&rsquo;t misunderstand
+me; he did not, that I am aware, allege that he took the pig
+because you owed him money; and even if you did, he could not
+legally have done so.&nbsp; Now this is not a mere matter of
+debt; it&rsquo;s a very serious case of trespass.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay; zo &rsquo;t be sir; that was my bleef, might jist
+as wull a tooked baacon out o&rsquo; baacon loft.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just the same.&nbsp; Quite so&mdash;quite
+so!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I want thee, Mr. Prigg, to mak un pay
+for&rsquo;t&mdash;mak un pay, sir; it beant so much th&rsquo;
+pig.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so: quite so: that were a very trifling affair,
+and might be settled in the County Court; but, in fact,
+it&rsquo;s not the pig at all, it&rsquo;s trespass, and you want
+to make him answerable in damages.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it, sir; you&rsquo;ve got un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose an apology and a return of the pig would not
+be enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll make un know he beant everybody,&rdquo; said
+Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so; now what shall we lay the damages
+at?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wull, sir, as for that, I doant rightly know; if so be
+he&rsquo;d pay down, that&rsquo;s one thing, but it&rsquo;s my
+bleef as you might jist as wull try to dror blood out of a stoane
+as git thic feller to do what&rsquo;s right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 32--><a name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+32</span>&ldquo;Shall we say a hundred pounds and
+costs?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Never did man look more astonished than Bumpkin.&nbsp; A
+hundred pounds!&nbsp; What a capital thing going to law must
+be!&nbsp; But, as the reader knows, he was a remarkably discreet
+man, and never in the course of his dealing committed himself
+till the final moment.&nbsp; Whenever anybody made him a
+&ldquo;bid,&rdquo; he invariably met the offer with one form of
+refusal.&nbsp; &ldquo;Nay, nay; it beant good enough: I bin
+offered moore.&rdquo;&nbsp; And this had answered so well, that
+it came natural to Bumpkin to refuse on all occasions the first
+offer.&nbsp; It was not to be wondered at then that the question
+should be regarded in the light of an offer from Snooks
+himself.&nbsp; Now he could hardly say &ldquo;I bin <i>bid
+moore</i> money,&rdquo; because the case wasn&rsquo;t in the
+market; but he could and did say the next best thing to it,
+namely:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wunt let un goo for that&mdash;&rsquo;t be wuth
+moore!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; observed Prigg; &ldquo;so long as we
+know: we can lay our damages at what we please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now there was great consolation in that.&nbsp; The plaintiff
+paused and rubbed his chin.&nbsp; &ldquo;What do thee think,
+sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think if he pays something handsome, and gives us an
+apology, and pays the costs, I should advise you to take
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As you please, sir; I leaves it to you; I beant a hard
+man, I hope.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very good; we will see what can be done.&nbsp; I shall
+bring this action in the Chancery Division.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hem! I&rsquo;ve eerd tell, sir, that if ever a case
+gets into that ere Coourt he niver comes out agin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, that&rsquo;s all nonsense; there used to be a good
+deal of truth in that; but the procedure is now so altered <!--
+page 33--><a name="page33"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+33</span>that you can do pretty much what you like: this is an
+age of despatch; you bring your action, and your writ is almost
+like a cheque payable on demand!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wull, I beant no lawyer, never had nothing to do wi un
+in my life; but I should like to axe, sir, why thee&rsquo;ll
+bring this ere case in Chancery?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good; well, come now, I like to be frank; we shall get
+more costs?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin again rubbed his chin.&nbsp; &ldquo;And do I get
+em?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, they go towards expenses; the other side always
+pays.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was a stroke of reasoning not to be gainsaid.&nbsp; But
+Mr. Prigg had a further observation to make on the subject, and
+it was this:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;After the case has gone on up to being ready for trial,
+and the Judges find that it is a case more fitting to be tried in
+the Common Law Courts, then an order is made transferring it,
+that is, sending it out of Chancery to be tried by one of the
+other Judges.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t see un,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;I beant
+much of a scollard, but I tak it thee knows best.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Prigg smiled: a beneficent, sympathizing smile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I dare say,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;it looks a little
+mysterious, but we lawyers understand it; so, if you don&rsquo;t
+mind, I shall bring it in the Chancery Division in the first
+instance; and nice and wild the other side will be.&nbsp; I fancy
+I see the countenance of Snooks&rsquo; lawyer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was a good argument, and perfectly satisfactory to the
+unsophisticated mind of Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And when,&rdquo; he asked, &ldquo;will ur come on,
+think&rsquo;ee?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, in due time; everything is done very quickly
+now&mdash;not like it used to be&mdash;you&rsquo;d be surprised,
+we <!-- page 34--><a name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+34</span>used to have to wait years&mdash;yes, years, sir, before
+an action could be tried; and now, why bless my soul, you get
+judgment before you know where you are.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>How true this turned out to be may hereafter appear; but in a
+dream you never anticipate.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall write at once,&rdquo; said &ldquo;Honest
+Prigg,&rdquo; &ldquo;for compensation and an apology; I think I
+would have an apology.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Make un pay&mdash;I doant so much keer for the
+t&rsquo;other thing; that beant much quonsequence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so&mdash;quite so.&rdquo;&nbsp; And with this
+observation Mr. Prigg escorted his client to the door.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 35--><a name="page35"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+35</span>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">In which it appears that the sting of slander
+is not always in the head.</p>
+<p>Mr. Prigg lost no time in addressing a letter to the
+ill-advised Josiah Snooks with the familiar and affectionate
+commencement of &ldquo;Dear Sir,&rsquo;&rdquo; asking for
+compensation for the &ldquo;gross outrage&rdquo; he had committed
+upon &ldquo;his client;&rdquo; and an apology to be printed in
+such papers as he, the client, should select.</p>
+<p>The &ldquo;Dear Sir&rdquo; replied, not in writing, for he was
+too artful for that, but by returning, as became his vulgar
+nature, Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s letter in a very torn and disgusting
+condition.</p>
+<p>To a gentleman of cultivated mind and sensitive nature, this
+was intolerable; and Mr. Prigg knew that even the golden bridge
+of compromise was now destroyed.&nbsp; He no longer felt as a
+mere lawyer, anxious in the interests of his client, which was a
+sufficient number of horse-power for anything, but like an
+outraged and insulted gentleman, which was more after the force
+of hydraulic pressure than any calculable amount of
+horse-power.&nbsp; It was clear to his upright and sensitive mind
+that Snooks was a low creature.&nbsp; Consequently all
+professional courtesies were at an end: the writ was issued and
+duly served upon the uncompromising Snooks.&nbsp; Now a writ is
+not a matter to grin at and to treat with <!-- page 36--><a
+name="page36"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 36</span>contempt or
+levity.&nbsp; Mr. Snooks could not return that document to Mr.
+Prigg, so he had to consider.&nbsp; And first he consulted his
+wife: this consultation led to a domestic brawl and then to his
+kicking one of his horses in the stomach.&nbsp; Then he threw a
+shovel at his dog, and next the thought occurred to him that he
+had better go and see Mr. Locust.&nbsp; This gentleman was a
+solicitor who practised at petty sessions.&nbsp; He did not
+practise much, but that was, perhaps, his misfortune rather than
+his fault.&nbsp; He was a small, fiery haired man, with a close
+cut tuft of beard; small eyes, and a pimply nose, which showed an
+ostentatious disdain for everything beneath it.</p>
+<p>Mr. Locust was not at home, but would return about nine.&nbsp;
+At nine, therefore, the impatient Snooks appeared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mr. Locust, as he looked at the writ,
+&ldquo;I see this writ is issued by Mr. Prigg.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did he not write to you before issuing it?&mdash;dear
+me, this is very sharp practice&mdash;very sharp practice: the
+sharpest thing I ever heard of in all my life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wull, he did write, but I giv un as good as he
+sent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear me!&rdquo; exclaimed Mr. Locust; &ldquo;I am
+afraid you have committed yourself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No I beant, sir,&rdquo; said the cunning Snooks, with a
+grin, &ldquo;no I beant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You should never write without consulting a
+solicitor&mdash;bear that in mind, Mr. Snooks; it will be an
+invaluable lesson&mdash;hem!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never writ, sir&mdash;I ony sent un his letter
+back.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Locust, &ldquo;come now, that is
+better; but still you should have consulted me.&nbsp; I see this
+claim is for three hundred and fifty pounds&mdash;it&rsquo;s for
+trespass.&nbsp; Now sit down quietly and calmly, and tell me the
+facts.&rdquo;&nbsp; <!-- page 37--><a name="page37"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 37</span>And then he took pen and paper and
+placed himself in position to take his retainer and
+instructions.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wull, sir, it is as this: a Sunday mornin&mdash;no, a
+Sunday mornin week&mdash;I won&rsquo;t tell no lie if I knows
+it&mdash;a Sunday mornin week&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sunday morning week,&rdquo; writes Locust.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I buyd a pig off this ere man for nine and six: well,
+o&rsquo; the Monday mornin I goes with my barrer and a sack and I
+fetches the pig and gies the money to his man Joe Wurzel;
+leastways I puts it on the poast and he takes it up.&nbsp; Then
+out comes Bumpkin and swears I never bought un at all, gets in a
+rage and hits the bag wi&rsquo; a stick&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now stop,&rdquo; said the Lawyer; &ldquo;are you quite
+sure he did not strike <i>you</i>?&nbsp; That&rsquo;s the
+point.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sir, he would a&rsquo; done if I adn&rsquo;t a
+bobbed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good: that&rsquo;s an assault in law.&nbsp; You are
+sure he would have struck you if you hadn&rsquo;t ducked or
+bobbed your head?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In course it would, else why should I bob?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just so&mdash;just so.&nbsp; Now then, we&rsquo;ve got
+him there&mdash;we&rsquo;ve got him nicely.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Snooks&rsquo; eyes gleamed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Next I want to know: I suppose you didn&rsquo;t owe him
+anything?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, nor no other man,&rdquo; said Snooks, with an air
+of triumph.&nbsp; &ldquo;I worked hard for what I got, and no man
+can&rsquo;t ax me for a farden.&nbsp; I allays paid twenty
+shillings in the pound.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The reader will observe how virtuous both parties were on this
+point.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So!&rdquo; said Locust.&nbsp; &ldquo;Now you
+haven&rsquo;t told me all that took place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 38--><a name="page38"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+38</span>&ldquo;That be about all, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes; but I suppose there was something said
+between you&mdash;did you have any words&mdash;was he
+angry&mdash;did he call you any names or say anything in an angry
+way?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, not partickler&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not particular: I will judge of that.&nbsp; Just tell
+me what was said.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, begin on the Sunday morning.&nbsp; What was first
+said?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then Snooks told the Solicitor all that took place, with
+sundry additions which his imagination supplied when his memory
+failed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I member the price wull, becos he said &lsquo;You
+beant sellin coals, recollect, so you doant ave me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ho! ho!&rdquo; exclaimed Locust rubbing his hands,
+&ldquo;You are sure he said that?&rdquo; writing down the words
+carefully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That will do, we&rsquo;ve got him: we&rsquo;ve got him
+nicely.&nbsp; Was anybody present when he said this?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&nbsp; Joe were there, and t&rsquo; best
+o&rsquo; my belief, Mrs. Bumpkin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind Mrs. Bumpkin.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t suppose
+she was there, if you come to recollect; it&rsquo;s quite enough
+if Joe was present and could hear what was said.&nbsp; I suppose
+he could hear it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stood cloase by.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well&mdash;that is slander&mdash;and slander of a
+very gross kind.&nbsp; We&rsquo;ve got him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be it?&rdquo; said Snooks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll show you,&rdquo; said Locust; &ldquo;in law
+a man slanders you if he insinuates that you are dishonest; now
+what <!-- page 39--><a name="page39"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+39</span>does this Bumpkin do? he says &lsquo;you don&rsquo;t
+have me,&rsquo; meaning thereby that you don&rsquo;t trick him
+out of his pig; and, &lsquo;you are not selling coals,&rsquo;
+meaning that when you do sell coals you do trick people.&nbsp; Do
+you see?&mdash;that you cheat them, in fact rob them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Snooks thought Mr. Locust the most wonderful man he had ever
+come across.&nbsp; This was quite a new way of putting it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But ur didn&rsquo;t say as much,&rdquo; he said,
+wondering whether that made any difference.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perfectly immaterial in law,&rdquo; said Mr. Locust:
+&ldquo;it isn&rsquo;t what a man says, it&rsquo;s what he
+<i>means</i>: you put that in by an innuendo&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A what, sir? begging pardon&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s what we lawyers call an innuendo: that is to
+say, making out that a man says so and so when he
+doesn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I zee,&rdquo; said the artful Snooks, quick at
+apprehending every point.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then if he called a chap a
+devilish honest man and the innu&mdash;what d&rsquo;ye call it,
+meant he were a thief, you got him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mr. Locust, smiling, &ldquo;that is
+going rather far, Mr. Snooks, but I see you understand what I
+mean.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thinks so, sir.&nbsp; I thinks I has your
+meanin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a very gross slander,&rdquo; observed Mr.
+Locust, &ldquo;and especially upon a tradesman in your
+position.&nbsp; I suppose now you have lived in the neighbourhood
+a considerable time?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All my life, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! just so, just so&mdash;now let me see; and, if I
+remember rightly, you have a vote for the County.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I ave, sir, and allus votes blue, and that&rsquo;s
+moore.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 40--><a name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+40</span>&ldquo;Then you&rsquo;re on our side.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m
+very glad indeed to hear that; a vote&rsquo;s a vote, you know,
+now-a-days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Any one would have thought, to hear Mr. Locust, that votes
+were scarce commodities, whereas we know that they are among the
+most plentiful articles of commerce as well as the cheapest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you have, I think, a family, Mr. Snooks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Four on em, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! how very nice, how laudable to make a little
+provision for them: as I often say, if a man can only leave his
+children a few hundreds apiece, it&rsquo;s something.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The solicitor watched his client&rsquo;s face as he uttered
+this profound truism, and the face being as open and genuine as
+was Snooks&rsquo; character, it said plainly enough &ldquo;Yes, I
+have a few hundreds.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well then,&rdquo; continued Mr. Locust, &ldquo;having
+been in business all these years, and being, as times go,
+tolerably successful, being a careful man, and having got
+together by honest industry a nice little
+independency&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here the learned gentleman paused, and here, unfortunately,
+Snooks&rsquo; open and candid heart revealed itself through his
+open and candid countenance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I <i>believe</i>,&rdquo; said Mr. Locust, &ldquo;I am
+right?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re about right, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very charming, very gratifying to one&rsquo;s
+feelings,&rdquo; continued Mr. Locust; &ldquo;and then, just as
+you are beginning to get comfortable and getting your family
+placed in the world, here comes this what shall I call him, I
+never like to use strong language, this intolerable blackguard,
+and calls you a thief&mdash;a detestable thief.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, he didn&rsquo;t use that air word, sir&mdash;I
+wool say that,&rdquo; said Mr. Snooks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In law he did, my good man&mdash;he meant it and said
+<!-- page 41--><a name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+41</span>it&mdash;he insinuated that you cheated the
+poor&mdash;you serve a good many of the poor, I think?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, he insinuated that you cheated them by giving
+short weight and bad coals&mdash;that is worse than being a
+thief, to my mind&mdash;such a man deserves hanging.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Damn him,&rdquo; said Snooks, &ldquo;that&rsquo;s it,
+is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it, my dear sir, smooth it over as you
+will.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t want to make more of it than necessary,
+but we must look at it fairly and study the consequences.&nbsp;
+Now I want to ask you particularly, because we must claim special
+damage for this, if possible&mdash;have you lost any customers
+through this outrageous slander?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t say I have, rightly, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, but you will&mdash;mark my words, as soon as people
+hear of this they will cease to deal with you.&nbsp; They
+can&rsquo;t deal with you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope not, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So do I; but let me tell Mr. Bumpkin&rdquo; (here the
+learned man shook his forefinger as though it had been the often
+quoted finger of scorn) &ldquo;that for every customer you lose
+we&rsquo;ll make him answerable in damages.&nbsp; He&rsquo;ll
+repeat this slander: take my advice and get some one to look out,
+and make a note of it&mdash;be on your guard!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Snooks wiped the perspiration from his forehead and then threw
+his large coloured handkerchief into his hat, which he held by
+both hands between his knees,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It be a bad case then, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A very bad case for Bumpkin!&rdquo; replied Mr. Locust;
+&ldquo;let me have a list of your customers as soon as you can,
+and we shall see who leaves you in consequence of this
+slander.&nbsp; Does my friend, Mr. Overrighteous, deal with
+you?&nbsp; I think he does?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 42--><a name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+42</span>&ldquo;He do, sir, and have for five or six
+years&mdash;and a good customer he be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! now, there&rsquo;s a man!&nbsp; Whatever you do
+don&rsquo;t let Mr. Overrighteous know of it: he would leave you
+directly: a more particular man than that can&rsquo;t be.&nbsp;
+Then again, there is my friend Flythekite, does he deal with
+you?&nbsp; Of course he does!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you&rsquo;ll lose him&mdash;sure to lose
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Judging from Mr. Snooks&rsquo; countenance it would have been
+small damage if he did.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ve-ry well,&rdquo; continued Locust, after a pause,
+&ldquo;ve-ry well&mdash;just so.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then he looked at
+the copy of the writ and perceived that it was dated eighteen
+hundred and ninety something instead of eighteen hundred and
+seventy something.&nbsp; So he said that the writ was wrong and
+they ought not to appear; &ldquo;by which means,&rdquo; said he,
+&ldquo;we shall let them in at the start for a lot of
+costs&mdash;we shall let them in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And will that stash the action?&rdquo; asked
+Snooks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will not stash ours,&rdquo; said Locust.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I suppose you mean to go on whether he does or not?&nbsp;
+Your claim is for assault and slander.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As you please, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, as you please.&nbsp; I have not been called a
+thief&mdash;they haven&rsquo;t said that I sell short weight and
+cheat and defraud the poor: <i>my</i> business will not be
+ruined&mdash;<i>my</i> character is not at stake.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let un have it, sir; he be a bad un,&rdquo; and here he
+rose to depart.&nbsp; Mr. Locust gave him a professional shake of
+the hand and wished him good day.&nbsp; But as the door was just
+about to be closed on his client, he remembered <!-- page 43--><a
+name="page43"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 43</span>something
+which he desired to ask, so he called, &ldquo;Mr.
+Snooks!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said the client.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is there any truth in the statement that this Bumpkin
+beats his wife?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I doant rightly know,&rdquo; said Snooks, in a
+hesitating voice; &ldquo;it may be true.&nbsp; I shouldn&rsquo;t
+wonder&mdash;he&rsquo;s just the sort o&rsquo; man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just enquire about that, will you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wool, sir,&rdquo; said Snooks; and thus his interview
+with his Solicitor terminated.</p>
+<p>Now the result of the enquiries as to the domestic happiness
+of Bumpkin was this; first, the question floated about in a vague
+sort of form, &ldquo;<i>Does Bumpkin beat his wife</i>?&rdquo;
+then it grew into &ldquo;<i>Have you heard that Bumpkin beats his
+wife</i>?&rdquo; and lastly, it was affirmed that Bumpkin
+&ldquo;<i>really did beat his wife</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; And the
+scandal spread so rapidly that it soon reached the ears of
+plaintiff himself, who would have treated it with the contempt it
+deserved, knowing the quarter whence it came, but that it was so
+gross a calumny that he determined to give the lying Snooks no
+quarter, and to press his action with all the energy at his
+command.</p>
+<p>After this there could be no compromise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish,&rdquo; said Snooks to himself, as he smoked his
+pipe that evening, &ldquo;I could a worked one o&rsquo; them
+there innerenders in my trade&mdash;I could a made summut on
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 45--><a name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+45</span>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Showing how the greatest wisdom of Parliament
+may be thrown away on ungrateful people.</p>
+<p>The first skirmish between the two doughty champions of the
+hostile forces took place over the misdated writ.&nbsp; Judgment
+was signed for want of appearance; and then came a summons to set
+it aside.&nbsp; The Judge set it aside, and the Divisional Court
+set aside the Judge, and the Court of Appeal set aside the
+Divisional Court upon the terms of the defendant paying the
+costs, and the writ being amended, &amp;c. &amp;c.&nbsp; And I
+saw that when the Judge in Chambers had hesitatingly and
+&ldquo;not without grave doubt&rdquo; set aside the judgment, Mr.
+Prigg said to Mr. Locust, &ldquo;What a very nice
+point!&rdquo;&nbsp; And Mr. Locust replied:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A very nice point, indeed!&nbsp; Of course you&rsquo;ll
+appeal?&rdquo;&nbsp; And Mr. Quibbler, Mr. Locust&rsquo;s
+pleader, said, &ldquo;A very neat point!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh dear, yes,&rdquo; answered Mr. Prigg.</p>
+<p>And then Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s clerk said to Mr. Locust&rsquo;s
+clerk&mdash;&ldquo;What a very nice point!&rdquo;&nbsp; And Mr.
+Locust&rsquo;s clerk rejoined that it was indeed a very nice
+point!&nbsp; And then Mr. Locust&rsquo;s boy in the office said
+to Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s boy in the office, &ldquo;What a very nice
+point!&rdquo;&nbsp; And Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s boy, a pale tall lad of
+about five feet six, and of remarkably quiet demeanour,
+replied&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A dam nice point!&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 46--><a name="page46"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+46</span>Next came letters from the respective Solicitors,
+suggesting a compromise in such terms that compromise became
+impossible; each affirming that he was so averse from litigation
+that almost any amicable arrangement that could be come to would
+be most welcome.&nbsp; Each required a sum of two hundred pounds
+and an apology in six morning papers.&nbsp; And I saw at the foot
+of one of Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s letters, when the hope of compromise
+was nearly at an end, these touching words:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bumpkin&rsquo;s blood&rsquo;s up!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And at the end of the answer thereto, this very expressive
+retort:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You say Bumpkin&rsquo;s blood is up; so is
+Snooks&rsquo;&mdash;do your worst!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As I desire to inform the lay reader as to the interesting
+course an action may take under the present expeditious mode of
+procedure, I must now state what I saw in my dream.&nbsp; The
+course is sinuosity itself in appearance, but that only renders
+it the more beautiful.&nbsp; The reader will be able to judge for
+himself of the simple method by which we try actions nowadays,
+and how very delightful the procedure is.&nbsp; The first
+skirmish cost Snooks seventeen pounds six shillings and
+eight-pence.&nbsp; It cost Bumpkin only three pounds seventeen
+shillings, or <i>one heifer</i>.&nbsp; Now commenced that
+wonderful process called &ldquo;Pleading,&rdquo; which has been
+the delight and the pride of so many ages; developing gradually
+century by century, until at last it has perfected itself into
+the most beautiful system of evasion and duplicity that the world
+has ever seen.&nbsp; It ranks as one of the fine Arts with Poetry
+and Painting.&nbsp; A great Pleader is truly a great Artist, and
+more imaginative than any other.&nbsp; The number of summonses at
+Chambers is only <!-- page 47--><a name="page47"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 47</span>limited by his capacity to invent
+them.&nbsp; Ask any respectable solicitor how many honest claims
+are stifled by proceedings at Chambers.&nbsp; And if I may
+digress in all sincerity for the purpose of usefulness, I may
+state that while recording my dream for the Press, Solicitors
+have begged of me to bring this matter forward, so that the
+Public may know how their interests are played with, and their
+rights stifled by the iniquitous system of proceedings at
+Chambers.</p>
+<p>The Victorian age will be surely known as the Age of Pleading,
+Poetry, and Painting.</p>
+<p>First, the Statement of Claim.&nbsp; Summons at Chambers to
+plead and demur; summons to strike out; summons to let in;
+summons to answer, summons not to answer; summonses for all sorts
+of conceivable and inconceivable objects; summonses for no
+objects at all except costs.&nbsp; And let me here say Mr. Prigg
+and Mr. Locust are not alone blameable for this: Mr. Quibbler,
+Mr. Locust&rsquo;s Pleader, had more to do with this than the
+Solicitor himself.&nbsp; And so had Mr. Wrangler, the Pleader of
+Mr. Prigg.&nbsp; But without repeating what I saw, let the reader
+take this as the line of proceeding throughout, repeated in at
+least a dozen instances:&mdash;</p>
+<p class="poetry">The Judge at Chambers reversed the Master;</p>
+<p class="poetry">The Divisional Court reversed the Judge;</p>
+<p class="poetry">And the Court of Appeal reversed the Divisional
+Court.</p>
+<p>And let this be the chorus:&mdash;</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;What a very nice point!&rdquo; said
+Prigg;</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;What a very nice point!&rdquo; said
+Locust;</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;What a very nice point!&rdquo; said
+Gride (Prigg&rsquo;s clerk);</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;What a d--- nice point!&rdquo; said
+Horatio! (the pale boy).</p>
+<p class="poetry"><!-- page 48--><a name="page48"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 48</span>Summons for
+particulars.&mdash;Chorus.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Further and better
+particulars.&mdash;Chorus.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Interrogatories&mdash;Summons to strike
+out.&mdash;Chorus.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Summons for further and better
+answers.&mdash;Chorus.</p>
+<p class="poetry">More summonses for more, further, better, and
+all sorts of things.&mdash;Chorus.</p>
+<p>All this repeated by the other side, of course; because each
+has his proper innings.&nbsp; There is great fairness and
+impartiality in the game.&nbsp; Something was always going up
+from the foot of this Jacob&rsquo;s ladder called &ldquo;the
+Master&rdquo; to the higher regions called the Court of
+Appeal.&nbsp; The simplest possible matter, which any old
+laundress of the Temple ought to have been competent to decide by
+giving both the parties a box on the ear, was taken before the
+Master, from the Master to the Judge, from the Judge to the
+Divisional Court, and from the Divisional Court to the Court of
+Appeal, at the expense of the unfortunate litigants; while
+Judges, who ought to have been engaged in disposing of the
+business of the country, were occupied in deciding legal quibbles
+and miserable technicalities.&nbsp; All this I saw in my
+dream.&nbsp; Up and down this ladder Bumpkin and Snooks were
+driven&mdash;one going up the front while the other was coming
+down the back.&nbsp; And I heard Bumpkin ask if he wasn&rsquo;t
+entitled to the costs which the Court gave when he won.&nbsp; But
+the answer of Mr. Prigg was, &ldquo;No, my dear sir, the labourer
+is worthy of his hire.&rdquo;&nbsp; And I saw a great many more
+ups and downs on the ladder which I should weary the reader by
+repeating: they are all alike equally useless and equally
+contemptible.&nbsp; Then I thought that poor Bumpkin went up the
+ladder with a great bundle on his back; and his face seemed quite
+<!-- page 49--><a name="page49"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+49</span>changed, so that I hardly knew him, and I said to
+Horatio, the pale boy&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who is that going up now?&nbsp; It looks like Christian
+in the Pilgrim&rsquo;s Progress.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; said Horatio, &ldquo;that&rsquo;s old
+Bumpkin&mdash;it&rsquo;s a regler sweater for him, ain&rsquo;t
+it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I said, &ldquo;Whatever can it be? will he ever reach the
+top?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here Bumpkin seemed to slip, and it almost took my breath
+away; whereat the pale boy laughed, stooping down as he laughed,
+and thrusting his hands into his breeches pockets,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By George!&rdquo; he exclaimed, &ldquo;what a jolly
+lark!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope he won&rsquo;t fall,&rdquo; I exclaimed.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;What has he got on his back?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A <span class="smcap">demurrer</span>,&rdquo; said
+Horatio, laughing.&nbsp; &ldquo;Look at him!&nbsp; That there
+ladder&rsquo;s the Judicatur Act: don&rsquo;t it reach a
+height?&nbsp; There&rsquo;s as many rounds in that there ladder
+as would take a man a lifetime to go up if it was all spread out;
+it&rsquo;s just like them fire escapes in reaching up, but nobody
+ever escapes by it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will break the poor man&rsquo;s back,&rdquo; said I,
+as he was a few feet from the top.&nbsp; And then in my dream I
+thought he fell; and the fright was so great that I awoke, and
+found I was sitting in my easy chair by the fire, and the pipe I
+had been smoking had fallen out of my hand.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve been dreaming,&rdquo; said my wife;
+&ldquo;and I fear have had a nightmare.&rdquo;&nbsp; When I was
+thoroughly aroused, and had refilled my pipe, I told her all my
+dream.</p>
+<p><!-- page 50--><a name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+50</span>Then cried she, &ldquo;I hope good Mr. Bumpkin will get
+up safely with that great bundle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It doesn&rsquo;t matter,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;whether
+he do or not; he will have to bear its burden, whether he take it
+up or bring it back.&nbsp; He will have to bring it down again
+after showing it to the gentlemen at the top.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do they want to see it for?&rdquo; cried she.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They have no wish to see it,&rdquo; I replied;
+&ldquo;on the contrary, they would rather not.&nbsp; They will
+simply say he is a very foolish man for his pains to clamber up
+so high with so useless a burden.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But why don&rsquo;t they check him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because they have no power; they look and wonder at the
+folly of mankind, who can devise no better scheme of amusement
+for getting rid of their money.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But the lawyers are wise people, and they should know
+better.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The lawyers,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;do know better; and
+all respectable lawyers detest the complicated system which
+brings them more abuse than fees.&nbsp; They see men, permitted
+by the law, without character and conscience, bring disgrace on
+an honourable body of practitioners.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But do they not remonstrate?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They do, but with little effect; no one knows who is
+responsible for the mischief or how to cure it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is strange.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, but the time will come when the people will insist
+on a cheaper and more expeditious system.&nbsp; Half-a-dozen
+solicitors and members of the junior bar could devise such a
+system in a week.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then why are they not permitted to take it in
+hand?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 51--><a name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+51</span>&ldquo;Because,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;Old Fogeyism has,
+at present, only got the gout in one leg; wait till he has it in
+both, and then Common Sense will rise to the occasion.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what,&rdquo; quoth she, &ldquo;is this fine art you
+spoke of?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pleading!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; in what consists its great art?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In artfulness,&rdquo; quoth I.</p>
+<p>Then there was a pause, and at length I said, &ldquo;I will
+endeavour to give you an illustration of the process of pleading
+from ancient history: you have heard, I doubt not, of Joseph and
+his Brethren.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, to be sure,&rdquo; cried she; &ldquo;did they not
+put him in the pit?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I believe they put him in the pit, but I am not
+referring to that.&nbsp; The corn in Egypt is what I
+mean.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When they found all their money in their sacks&rsquo;
+mouths?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Exactly.&nbsp; Now if Joseph had prosecuted those men
+for stealing the money, they would simply have pleaded not
+guilty, and the case would have been tried without any bother,
+and the defendants have been acquitted or convicted according to
+the wisdom of the judge, the skill of the counsel, and the common
+sense of the jury.&nbsp; But now suppose instead thereof, Joseph
+had brought an action for the price of the corn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would it not have been as simple?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You shall see.&nbsp; The facts would have been stated
+with some accuracy and a good deal of inaccuracy, and a good many
+things which were not facts would have been introduced.&nbsp;
+Then the defendants in their statement of defence would have
+denied that there was any such place <!-- page 52--><a
+name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 52</span>as Egypt as
+alleged; <a name="citation52"></a><a href="#footnote52"
+class="citation">[52]</a> denied that Pharaoh was King thereof;
+denied that he had any corn to sell; denied that the said Joseph
+had any authority to sell; denied that they or any of them went
+into Egypt; denied that they ever saw the said Joseph or had any
+communication with him whatever, either by means of an
+interpreter or otherwise; denied, in fact, everything except
+their own existence; but in the alternative they would go on to
+say, if it should be proved that there was a place called Egypt,
+a man called Pharaoh, an agent of his called Joseph, and that the
+defendants actually did go to Egypt, all of which they one and
+all absolutely deny (as becomes men of honour), then they say,
+that being large corn-merchants and well known to the said
+Joseph, the factor of the said Pharaoh, as purchasers only of
+corn for domestic purposes, and requiring therefore a good sound
+merchantable article, the said Joseph, by falsely and
+fraudulently representing that certain corn of which he, the said
+Joseph, was possessed, was at that time of a good sound and
+merchantable quality and fit for seed and domestic purposes, by
+the said false and fraudulent representations he, the said
+Joseph, induced the defendants to purchase a large quantity
+thereof, to wit, five thousand sacks; whereas the said corn was
+not of a good sound and merchantable quality and fit for seed and
+domestic purposes, but was maggoty from damp, and infected with
+smut and altogether worthless, as he, the said Joseph, well knew
+at the time he made the said false representations.&nbsp; The
+defendants would also further allege <!-- page 53--><a
+name="page53"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 53</span>that, relying
+on the said Joseph&rsquo;s word, they took away the said corn,
+but having occasion at the inn to look into the said sacks, they
+found that the said wheat was worthless, and immediately
+communicated with the said Joseph by sending their younger
+brother Simeon down to demand a return of the price of the said
+corn.&nbsp; But when the said Simeon came to the said Joseph the
+said Joseph caught him, and kicked him, and beat him with a great
+stick, and had him to prison, and would not restore him to his
+brethren, the defendants.&nbsp; Whereupon the defendants sent
+other messengers, and at length, after being detained a long time
+at the said inn, the said Joseph came down, and on being shown
+the said corn, admitted that it was in bad condition.&nbsp;
+Whereupon the defendants, fearing to trust the said Joseph with
+the said sacks until they had got a return of their said money,
+demanded that he, the said Joseph, should put the full tale of
+every man&rsquo;s money in the sack of the said man; which thing
+the said Joseph agreed to, and placed every man&rsquo;s money in
+the mouth of his said sack.&nbsp; And when the said man was about
+to reach forth his hand to take his said money, the said Joseph
+seized the said hand and held him fast&mdash;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stop, stop!&rdquo; cried my wife; &ldquo;the said
+Joseph had not ten hands.&nbsp; You must surely draw the line
+somewhere.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;that is good pleading; if
+the other side should omit to deny it, it will be taken by the
+rules of pleading to be admitted.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But surely you can&rsquo;t admit
+impossibilities!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t you, though!&rdquo; cried I.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You can do almost anything in pleading.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Except, it seems to me, tell the truth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 54--><a name="page54"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+54</span>&ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t be too hard upon us poor
+juniors,&rdquo; cried I.&nbsp; &ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t come to the
+Counterclaim yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O don&rsquo;t let us have Counterclaims,&rdquo; quoth
+she; &ldquo;they can have no claim against Joseph?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, not for selling them smutty wheat?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nonsense.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I say yes; and he&rsquo;ll have to call a number of
+witnesses to prove the contrary&mdash;nor do I think he will be
+able to do it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I fail now,&rdquo; said my wife, &ldquo;to see how this
+pleading is a fine art.&nbsp; Really, without joking, what is the
+art?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The art of pleading,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;consists in
+denying what is, and inducing your adversary to admit what
+isn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 55--><a name="page55"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+55</span>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Showing that appropriateness of time and place
+should be studied in our pastimes.</p>
+<p>The next night, sitting over the cheerful fire and comfortably
+resting after the labours of the day, I dreamed again, and I saw
+that Horatio Snigger was &ldquo;the Office Boy&rdquo; of Mr.
+Prigg.&nbsp; He had been in the employment of that gentleman
+about two years.&nbsp; He was tall for his money, standing, in
+his shoes, at least five feet six, and receiving for his
+services, five shillings and sixpence a week, (that is, a
+shilling for every foot and a penny for every odd inch), his last
+rise (I mean in money,) having taken place about a month ago.</p>
+<p>Horatio was a lad of as much spirit as any boy I ever
+saw.&nbsp; I do not believe he had any liking for the profession,
+but had entered it simply as his first step in life, utterly in
+the dark as to whither it would lead him.&nbsp; It was, I
+believe, some disappointment to his father that on no occasion
+when he interrogated him as to his &ldquo;getting on,&rdquo;
+could he elicit any more cheering reply than &ldquo;very
+well.&rdquo;&nbsp; And yet Horatio, during the time he had been
+with Mr. Prigg, had had opportunities of studying character in
+its ever-varying phases as presented by Courts of Justice and
+kindred places.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Kindred places!&rdquo;&nbsp; Yes, I mean
+&ldquo;Judges&rsquo; Chambers,&rdquo; where any boy may speedily
+be impressed with the <!-- page 56--><a name="page56"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 56</span>dignity and simplicity of the
+practice of the Law, especially since the passing of the
+Judicature Act.&nbsp; To my lay readers who may wish to know what
+&ldquo;Judges&rsquo; Chambers&rdquo; means, I may observe that it
+is a place where innumerable proceedings may be taken for
+lengthening a case, embarrassing the clients, and spending
+money.&nbsp; It is, to put it in another form, a sort of Grands
+Mulets in the Mont Blanc of litigation, whence, if by the time
+you get there you are not thoroughly &ldquo;pumped out,&rdquo;
+you may go on farther and in due time reach the top, whence, I am
+told, there is a most magnificent view.</p>
+<p>But even the beauty of the proceedings at Judges&rsquo;
+Chambers failed to impress Horatio with the dignity of the
+profession.&nbsp; He lounged among the crowds of chattering boys
+and youths who &ldquo;cheeked&rdquo; one another before that
+august personage &ldquo;the Master,&rdquo; declaring that
+&ldquo;Master&rdquo; couldn&rsquo;t do this and
+&ldquo;Master&rdquo; couldn&rsquo;t do that; that the other side
+was too late or too soon; that his particulars were too meagre or
+too full; or his answers to interrogatories too evasive or not
+sufficiently diffuse, and went on generally as if the whole
+object of the law were to raise as many difficulties as possible
+in the way of its application.&nbsp; As if, in fact, it had
+fenced itself in with such an undergrowth of brambles that no
+amount of ability and perseverance could arrive at it.</p>
+<p>From what I perceived of the character of Horatio, I should
+say that he was a scoffer.&nbsp; He was a mild, good-tempered,
+well-behaved boy enough, but ridiculed many proceedings which he
+ought to have reverenced.&nbsp; He was a great favourite with Mr.
+Prigg, because, if anything in the world attracted the
+boy&rsquo;s admiration, it was <!-- page 57--><a
+name="page57"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 57</span>that
+gentleman&rsquo;s pious demeanour and profound knowledge.&nbsp;
+But the exuberance of the lad&rsquo;s spirits when away from his
+employer was in exact proportion to the moral pressure brought to
+bear upon him while in that gentleman&rsquo;s presence.&nbsp; As
+an illustration of this remark and proof of the twofold character
+of Horatio, I will relate what I saw after the
+&ldquo;Master&rdquo; had determined that the tail of the 9 was a
+very nice point, but that there was nothing in it.&nbsp; They had
+all waited a long time at Judge&rsquo;s Chambers, and their
+spirits were, no doubt, somewhat elated by at last getting the
+matter disposed of.</p>
+<p>Horatio heard Mr. Prigg say to Mr. Locust, &ldquo;What a very
+nice point!&rdquo; and had heard Mr. Locust reply, &ldquo;A very
+nice point, indeed!&rdquo;&nbsp; And Mr. Gride, the clerk, say,
+&ldquo;What, a very nice point!&rdquo; and somebody else&rsquo;s
+clerk say, &ldquo;What a very nice point!&rdquo;&nbsp; And
+Horatio felt, as a humble member of the profession, he must chime
+in with the rest of the firm.&nbsp; So, having said to
+Locust&rsquo;s boy, &ldquo;What a dam nice point!&rdquo; he went
+back to his lonely den in Bedford Row and then, as he termed it,
+&ldquo;let himself out.&rdquo;&nbsp; He accomplished this
+proceeding by first taking off his coat and throwing it on to a
+chair; he next threw but his arms, with his fists firmly
+clenched, as though he had hardly yet to its fullest extent
+realized the &ldquo;<i>niceness</i>&rdquo; of the point which the
+Master had determined.&nbsp; The next step which Horatio took was
+what is called &ldquo;The double shuffle,&rdquo; which, I may
+inform my readers, is the step usually practised by the gentleman
+who imitates the sailor in the hornpipe on the stage.&nbsp; Being
+a slim and agile youth, Horatio&rsquo;s performance was by no
+means contemptible, except that it was no part of his
+professional duty to dance a Hornpipe.&nbsp; <!-- page 58--><a
+name="page58"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 58</span>Then I saw
+that this young gentleman in the exuberance of his youthful
+spirits prepared for another exhibition of his talent.&nbsp; He
+cleared his throat, once more threw out his arms, stamped his
+right foot loudly on the floor, after the manner of the Ethiopian
+dancer with the long shoe, and then to my astonishment poured
+forth the following words in a very agreeable, and, as it seemed
+to me, melodious voice,&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;What a very nice point, said
+Prigg.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Then came what I suppose would be called a few bars of the
+hornpipe; then he gave another line,&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;What a very nice point, said
+Gride.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>(Another part of the hornpipe.)&nbsp; Then he sang the third
+and fourth lines, dancing vigorously the while:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;It will take a dozen lawyers with their
+everlasting jaw:<br />
+It will take a dozen judges with their ever changing
+law&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>(Vigorous dancing for some moments), and then a pause, during
+which Horatio, slightly stooping, placed two fingers of his left
+hand to the side of his nose, and turning his eyes to the right,
+sang&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;And&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Paused again, and finished vehemently as follows:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Twenty golden guineas to decide!&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Then came the most enthusiastic hornpipe that ever was seen,
+and Horatio was in the seventh Heaven of delight, when the door
+suddenly opened, and Mr. Prigg entered!</p>
+<p><!-- page 59--><a name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+59</span>It was unfortunate for Horatio that his back being
+towards the door he could not see his master enter; and it need
+scarcely be said that the noise produced by the dance prevented
+him from hearing his approach.</p>
+<p>Mr. Prigg looked astounded at the sight that presented
+itself.&nbsp; The whole verse was repeated, and the whole dance
+gone through again in the sight and hearing of that
+gentleman.&nbsp; Was the boy mad?&nbsp; Had the strain of
+business been too much for him?</p>
+<p>As if by instinct Horatio at last became aware of his
+master&rsquo;s presence.&nbsp; A change more rapid,
+transformation more complete I never saw.&nbsp; The lad hung his
+head, and wandered to the chair where his coat was lying.&nbsp;
+It took him some time to put it on, for the sleeves seemed
+somehow to be twisted; at length, once more arrayed, and
+apparently in his right mind, he stood with three-quarter face
+towards his astonished master.</p>
+<p>Mr. Prigg did not turn his head even on this occasion.&nbsp;
+He preserved a dignified silence for some time, and then spoke in
+a deep tragic tone:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Horatio!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Horatio did hot answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is the meaning of this exhibition,
+Horatio?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was only having a little fun, sir,&rdquo; said the
+youthful clerk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not averse to youth enjoying itself,&rdquo; said
+Mr. Prigg; &ldquo;but it must be at proper seasons, and in
+appropriate places; there is also to be exercised a certain
+discretion in the choice of those amusements in which youth
+should indulge.&nbsp; I am not aware what category of recreation
+your present exhibition may belong to, but I may inform you that
+in my humble judgment&mdash;I may be mistaken, and you may know
+far better than I&mdash;but <!-- page 60--><a
+name="page60"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 60</span>as at present
+advised, I do not see that your late performance is consistent
+with the duties of a solicitor&rsquo;s clerk.&rdquo;&nbsp; And
+then he muttered to himself, &ldquo;Quite so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After this magnificent rebuke, Mr. Prigg drew out his cambric
+handkerchief, and most gently applied it to his stately nose.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Again,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg, &ldquo;I heard language,
+or thought I heard language, which I should construe as decidedly
+derogatory to the Profession which you serve and to which I have
+the honour to belong.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was only in fun, sir,&rdquo; said Horatio, gathering
+confidence as Mr. Prigg proceeded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so, quite so; that may be, I sincerely hope you
+were; but never make fun of that by which you live; you derive
+what I may call a very competent, not to say handsome, salary
+from the proceedings which you make fun of.&nbsp; This is sad,
+and manifests a spirit of levity.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t mean it like that, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; said the good man, &ldquo;I am glad
+to perceive that you are brought to a proper sense of the
+impropriety of your conduct.&nbsp; I will not discharge you on
+this occasion, for the sake of your father, whom I have known for
+so many years: but never let this occur again.&nbsp; Dancing is
+at all times, to my mind, a very questionable amusement; but when
+it is accompanied, as I perceived it was on this occasion, with
+gestures which I cannot characterize by any other term than
+disgusting; and when further you take the liberty of using my
+name in what I presume you intended for a comic song, I must
+confess that I can hardly repress my feelings of
+indignation.&nbsp; I hope you are penitent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Horatio hung down his head, and said he was very <!-- page
+61--><a name="page61"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 61</span>sorry
+Mr. Prigg had heard it, for he only intended it for his own
+amusement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall take care,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg, &ldquo;that
+you have less opportunity for such exercises as I have
+unfortunately witnessed.&rdquo;&nbsp; And having thus admonished
+the repentant youth, Mr. Prigg left him to his reflections.&nbsp;
+I am glad Mr. Prigg did not return while the pale boy was
+reflecting.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 63--><a name="page63"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+63</span>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">The pleasure of a country drive on a summer
+evening described as enhanced by a pious mind.</p>
+<p>It is only fair to the very able solicitors on both sides in
+the memorable case of <i>Bumpkin</i> v. <i>Snooks</i> to state
+that the greatest possible despatch was exercised on all
+occasions.&nbsp; Scarcely a day passed without something being
+done, as Prigg expressed it, &ldquo;to expedite
+matters.&rdquo;&nbsp; Month after month may have passed away
+without any apparent advance; but this in reality was not the
+case.&nbsp; Many appeals on what seemed trifling matters had been
+heard; so many indeed that <i>Bumpkin</i> v. <i>Snooks</i> had
+become a household word with the Court of Appeal, and a bye-word
+among the innumerable loafers about Judge&rsquo;s Chambers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What!&nbsp; <i>Bumpkin</i> v. <i>Snooks</i>
+again!&rdquo; the President would say.&nbsp; &ldquo;What is it
+now?&nbsp; It&rsquo;s a pity the parties to this case can&rsquo;t
+agree: it seems a very trifling matter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not so, my lord, as your lordship will quickly
+apprehend when the new point is brought before your notice.&nbsp;
+A question of principle is here which may form a precedent for
+the guidance of future Judges, as did the famous case of
+<i>Perryman</i> v. <i>Lister</i>, which went to the House of
+Lords about prosecuting a man for stealing a <!-- page 64--><a
+name="page64"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 64</span>gun.&nbsp;
+This is about a pig, my lord&mdash;a little pig, no doubt, and
+although there is not much in the pig, there is a good deal
+outside it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And often did Prigg say to Locust:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I say, Locust, whenever <i>shall</i> we be ready to set
+this case down for trial?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Really, my dear Prigg,&rdquo; Locust would reply,
+&ldquo;it seems interminable&mdash;come and dine with
+me.&rdquo;&nbsp; So the gentle and innocent reader will at once
+perceive that there was great impatience on all sides to get this
+case ready for trial.&nbsp; Meanwhile it may not be uninteresting
+to describe shortly some of the many changes that had taken place
+in the few short months since the action commenced.</p>
+<p>First it was clearly observable by the inhabitants of Yokelton
+that Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s position had considerably improved.&nbsp;
+I say nothing of his new hat; that was a small matter, but not so
+his style of living&mdash;so great an advance had that made that
+it attracted the attention of the neighbours, who often remarked
+that Mr. Prigg seemed to be getting a large practice.&nbsp; He
+was often seen with his lady on a summer afternoon taking the air
+in a nice open carriage&mdash;hired, it is true, for the
+occasion.&nbsp; And everybody remarked how uncommonly ladylike
+Mrs. Prigg lay back in the vehicle, and how very gracefully she
+held her new &aelig;sthetic parasol.&nbsp; And what a proud
+moment it was for Bumpkin, when he saw this good and respectable
+gentleman pass with the ladylike creature beside him; and Mr.
+Bumpkin would say to his neighbours, lifting his hat at the same
+moment,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That be my loryer, that air be!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And then Mr. Prigg would gracefully raise his hat, and Mrs.
+Prigg would lie back perfectly motionless as <!-- page 65--><a
+name="page65"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 65</span>became a very
+languid lady of her exalted position.&nbsp; And when Mr. Prigg
+said to Mrs. Prigg, &ldquo;My dear, that is our new
+client;&rdquo; Mrs. Prigg would elevate her arched eyebrows and
+expand her delicate nostrils as she answered,&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Really, my love, what a very vulgar-looking
+creechar!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not nearly so vulgar as Locust&rsquo;s client,&rdquo;
+rejoined her husband.&nbsp; &ldquo;You should see him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you, my love, it is quite enough to catch a
+glimpse of the superior person of the two.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Prigg seemed to think it a qualifying circumstance that
+Snooks was a more vulgar-looking man than Bumpkin, whereas a
+moment&rsquo;s consideration showed Mrs. Prigg how illogical that
+was.&nbsp; It is the intrinsic and personal value that one has to
+measure things by.&nbsp; This value could not be heightened by
+contrast.&nbsp; Mrs. Prigg&rsquo;s curiosity, however, naturally
+led her to inquire who the other creechar was?&nbsp; As if she
+had never heard of <i>Bumpkin</i> v. <i>Snooks</i>, although she
+had actually got the case on four wheels and was riding in it at
+that very moment; as if in fact she was not practically all
+Bumpkin, as a silkworm may be said to be all mulberry
+leaves.&nbsp; As if she knew nothing of her husband&rsquo;s
+business!&nbsp; Her ideas were not of this world.&nbsp; Give her
+a church to build, she&rsquo;d harass people for subscriptions;
+or let it be a meeting to clothe the naked savage, Mrs. Prigg
+would be there.&nbsp; She knew nothing of clothing Bumpkin!&nbsp;
+But she did interest herself sufficiently in her husband&rsquo;s
+conversation to ask, in answer to his reference to Locust&rsquo;s
+disreputable client,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And who is he, pray?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 66--><a name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+66</span>&ldquo;My darling,&rdquo; said Prigg, &ldquo;you must
+have heard of Snooks?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; drawled Mrs. Prigg, &ldquo;do you mean the
+creechar who sells coals?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The same, my dear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And are you engaged against <i>that</i> man?&nbsp; How
+very dreadful!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My darling,&rdquo; observed Mr. Prigg, &ldquo;it is not
+for us to choose our opponents; nor indeed, for the matter of
+that, our clients.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can quite perceive that,&rdquo; returned the lady,
+&ldquo;or you would never have chosen such men&mdash;dear
+me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are like physicians,&rdquo; returned Mr. Prigg,
+&ldquo;called in in case of need.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the healing virtues of your profession must not be
+confined to rich patients,&rdquo; said Mrs. Prigg, in her jocular
+manner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By no means,&rdquo; was the good man&rsquo;s reply;
+&ldquo;justice is as much the right of the poor as the
+rich&mdash;so is the air we breathe&mdash;so is
+everything.&rdquo;&nbsp; And he put his fingers together again,
+as was his wont whenever he uttered a philosophical or moral
+platitude.</p>
+<p>So I saw in my dream that the good man and his ladylike wife
+rode through the beautiful lanes, and over the breezy common on
+that lovely summer afternoon, and as they drew up on the summit
+of a hill which gave a view of the distant landscape, there was a
+serenity in the scene which could only be compared to the
+serenity of Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s benevolent countenance; and there
+was a calm, deeply, sweetly impressive, which could only be
+appreciated by a mind at peace with itself in particular, and
+with the world in general.&nbsp; Then came from a neighbouring
+wood the clear voice of the cuckoo.&nbsp; It <!-- page 67--><a
+name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 67</span>seemed to
+sing purposely in honour of the good man; and I fancied I could
+see a ravenous hawk upon a tree, abashed at Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s
+presence and superior ability; and a fluttering timid lark seemed
+to shriek, &ldquo;Wicked bird, live and let live;&rdquo; but it
+was the last word the silly lark uttered, for the hawk was upon
+him in a moment, and the little innocent songster was crushed in
+its ravenous beak.&nbsp; Still the cuckoo sang on in praise of
+Mr. Prigg, with now and then a little note for Mrs. Prigg; for
+the cuckoo is a very gallant little bird, and Mrs. Prigg was such
+a heavenly creature that no cuckoo could be conscious of her
+presence without hymning her praise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Listen,&rdquo; said Mrs. Prigg, &ldquo;isn&rsquo;t it
+beautiful?&nbsp; I wonder where cuckoos go to?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, my dear!&rdquo; said Prigg, enraptured with the
+clear notes and the beautiful scene; but neither of them seemed
+to wonder where hawks go to.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you hear the echo, love?&nbsp; Isn&rsquo;t it
+beautiful?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>O, yes, it was beautiful!&nbsp; Nature does indeed lift the
+soul on a quiet evening from the grovelling occupations of earth
+to bask in the genial sunshine of a more spiritual
+existence.&nbsp; What was Bumpkin?&nbsp; What was Snooks to a
+scene like this?&nbsp; Suddenly the cuckoo ceased.&nbsp;
+Wonderful bird!&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t know whether it was the
+presence of the hawk that hushed its voice or the sight of Mr.
+Prigg as he stood up in the carriage to take a more extended view
+of the prospect; but the familiar note was hushed, and the
+evening hymn in praise of the Priggs was over.</p>
+<p>So the journey was continued by the beautiful wood of oaks and
+chestnuts, along by the hillside from which you could perceive in
+the far distance the little stream <!-- page 68--><a
+name="page68"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 68</span>as it wound
+along by meadow and wood and then lost itself beneath the hill
+that rose abruptly on the left.</p>
+<p>The stream was the symbol of life&mdash;probably
+Bumpkin&rsquo;s life; all nature presents similes to a religious
+mind.&nbsp; And so the evening journey was continued with ever
+awakening feelings of delight and gratitude until they once more
+entered their peaceful home.&nbsp; And this brings me to another
+consideration which ought not to be passed over with
+indifference.</p>
+<p>I saw in my dream that a great change had taken place in the
+home of the Priggs.&nbsp; The furniture had undergone a
+metamorphosis almost so striking that I thought Mr. Prigg must be
+a wizard.&nbsp; The gentle reader knows all about Cinderella; but
+here was a transformation more surprising.&nbsp; I saw that one
+of Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s pigs had been turned into a very pretty
+walnut-wood whatnot, and stood in the drawing-room, and on it
+stood several of the ducks and geese that used to swim in the
+pond of Southwood farm.&nbsp; They were not ducks and geese now,
+but pretty silent ornaments.&nbsp; An old rough-looking stack of
+oats had been turned into a very nice Turkey carpet for the
+dining-room.&nbsp; Poor old Jack the donkey had been changed into
+a musical box that stood on a little table made out of a
+calf.&nbsp; One day Mr. Bumpkin called to see how his case was
+going on, and by mistake got into this room among his cows and
+pigs; but not one of them did the farmer know, and when the maid
+invited him to sit down he was afraid of spoiling something.</p>
+<p>Now summonses at Chambers, and appeals, and demurrers, are not
+at all bad conjuring wands, if you only know how to use
+them.&nbsp; Two clever men like Prigg and Locust, not only
+surprise the profession, but alarm the <!-- page 69--><a
+name="page69"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 69</span>public, since
+no one knows what will take place next, and Justice herself is
+startled from her propriety.&nbsp; Let no clamorous law reformer
+say that interrogatories or any other multitudinous proceedings
+at Judge&rsquo;s Chambers are useless.&nbsp; It is astonishing
+how many changes you can ring upon them with a little ingenuity,
+and a very little scrupulosity.&nbsp; Mr. Prigg turned two sides
+of bacon into an Indian vase, and performed many other feats
+truly astonishing to persons who look on as mere spectators, and
+wonder how it is done.&nbsp; Wave your magic wand, good Prigg,
+and you shall see a hayrick turn into a chestnut mare; and a
+four-wheeled waggon into a Victoria.</p>
+<p>But the greatest change he had effected was in Mr. Bumpkin
+himself, who loved to hear his wife read the interrogatories and
+answers.&nbsp; The almanac was nothing to this.&nbsp; He had no
+idea law was so interesting.&nbsp; I dare say there were two
+guiding influences working within him, in addition to the many
+influences working without; one being that inherent British
+pluck, which once aroused, &ldquo;doesn&rsquo;t care, sir, if it
+costs me a thousand pound, I&rsquo;ll have it out wi&rsquo;
+un;&rdquo; the other was the delicious thought that all his
+present outlay would be repaid by the cunning and covetous
+Snooks.&nbsp; So much was Bumpkin&rsquo;s heart in the work of
+crushing his opponent, that expense was treated with
+ridicule.&nbsp; I heard him one day say jocularly to Mr. Prigg,
+who had come for an affidavit:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be it a pig, sir, or a heifer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O,&rdquo; said the worthy Prigg, &ldquo;we want a
+pretty good one; I think it must be a heifer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>All this was very pleasant, and made the business, dull and
+prosaic in itself, a cheerful recreation.</p>
+<p>Then, again, there was a feeling of self-importance <!-- page
+70--><a name="page70"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+70</span>whenever these affidavits came to be sworn.&nbsp; Mr.
+Bumpkin would put down his ash-stick by the side of the
+fireplace, and bidding his visitor be seated, would compose
+himself with satisfaction to listen to the oft-repeated
+words:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I, Thomas Bumpkin, make oath, and say&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fancy, &ldquo;<i>I</i>, <i>Bumpkin</i>!&rdquo;&nbsp; Just let
+the reader pause over that for a moment!&nbsp; What must
+&ldquo;I, Bumpkin,&rdquo; be whose statement is required on oath
+before my Lord Judge?</p>
+<p>Always, at these words, he would shout.&nbsp; &ldquo;That be
+it&mdash;now then, sir, would you please begin that
+agin?&rdquo;&mdash;while, if Mrs. Bumpkin were not too busy, he
+would call her in to hear them too.</p>
+<p>So there was no wonder that the action went merrily
+along.&nbsp; Once get up enthusiasm in a cause, and it is half
+won.&nbsp; Without enthusiasm, few causes can succeed against
+opposition.&nbsp; Then, again, the affidavit described Bumpkin as
+a Yeoman.&nbsp; What, I wonder, would Snooks the coal-merchant
+think of that?</p>
+<p>So everything proceeded satisfactorily, and the months rolled
+away; the seasons came in their turn, so did the crops, so did
+the farrows of pigs, so did the spring chickens, and young ducks
+(prettiest little golden things in the world, on the water); so
+did Mr. Prigg, and so did a gentleman (hereafter to be called
+&ldquo;the man,&rdquo;) with whom a very convenient arrangement
+was made, by which Mr. Bumpkin preserved the whole of his
+remaining stock intact; had not in fact to advance a single penny
+piece more; all advances necessary for the prosecution of the
+action being made by the strange gentleman (whose name I did not
+catch) under that most convenient of all legal forms, &ldquo;a
+Bill of Sale.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 71--><a name="page71"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+71</span>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">A farmhouse winter fireside&mdash;a morning
+drive and a mutual interchange of ideas between town and country:
+showing how we may all learn something from one another.</p>
+<p>I never saw the home of Farmer Bumpkin without thinking what a
+happy and comfortable home it was.&nbsp; The old elm tree that
+waved over the thatched roof, seemed to bless and protect
+it.&nbsp; On a winter&rsquo;s evening, when Bumpkin was sitting
+in one corner smoking his long pipe, Mrs. Bumpkin darning her
+stockings, and Joe on the other side looking into the blazing
+fire, while the old Collie stretched himself in a snug corner
+beside his master, it represented a scene of comfort almost as
+perfect as rustic human nature was capable of enjoying.&nbsp; And
+when the wind blew through the branches of the elm over the roof,
+it was like music, played on purpose to heighten the
+enjoyment.&nbsp; Comfort, thou art at the evening fireside of a
+farm-house, if anywhere!</p>
+<p>You should have seen Tim, when an unusual sound disturbed the
+harmony of this peaceful fireside.&nbsp; He growled first as he
+lay with his head resting between his paws, and just turned up
+his eyes to his master for approval.&nbsp; Then, if that warning
+was not sufficient, he rose and barked vociferously.&nbsp;
+Possessed, I believe, of <!-- page 72--><a
+name="page72"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 72</span>more insight
+than Bumpkin, he got into the most tremendous state of excitement
+whensoever anyone came from Prigg&rsquo;s, and he cordially hated
+Prigg.&nbsp; But most of all was he angry when &ldquo;the
+man&rdquo; came.&nbsp; There was no keeping him quiet.&nbsp; I
+wonder if dogs know more about Bills of Sale than farmers.&nbsp;
+I am aware that some farmers know a good deal about them; and
+when they read this story, many of them will accuse me of being
+too personal; but Tim was a dog of strong prejudices, and I am
+sure he had a prejudice against money-lenders.</p>
+<p>As the persons I have mentioned were thus sitting on this
+dreary evening in the month of November, suddenly, Tim sprang
+from his recumbent position, and barked furiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Down, Tim! down, Tim!&rdquo; said the farmer;
+&ldquo;what be this, I wonder!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tim, Tim,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin, &ldquo;down, Tim!
+hold thee noise, I tell ee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good Tim!&rdquo; said Joe; he also had an instinct.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll goo and see what it be,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Bumpkin; &ldquo;whoever can come here at this time o&rsquo;
+night! it be summat, Tom.&rdquo;&nbsp; And she put down her
+stockings, and lighting a candle went to the front door, whereat
+there was a loud knocking.&nbsp; Tim jumped and flew and thrust
+his nose down to the bottom of the door long before Mrs. Bumpkin
+could get there.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quiet, Tim!&nbsp; I tell thee; who be there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s,&rdquo; answered a voice.</p>
+<p>This was enough for Tim; the name of Prigg made him
+furious.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Somebody from Mr. Prigg, Tom.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wull, let un in, Nance; bless thee soul, let un in; may
+be the case be settled.&nbsp; I hope they ain&rsquo;t took less
+<!-- page 73--><a name="page73"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+73</span>nor a hundred pound.&nbsp; I told un not
+to.&rdquo;&nbsp; The door was unbolted and unbarred, and a long
+time it took, and then stood before Mrs. Bumpkin a tall pale
+youth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve come from Mr. Prigg.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will er plase to walk in, sir?&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>By this time the master had got up from his seat, and
+advancing towards the youth said:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do, sir; how do, sir; wark in, wark in, tak a seat,
+I be glad to see thee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I come from Mr. Prigg,&rdquo; said the youth,
+&ldquo;and we want another affidavit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hem!&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;be it a pig or a
+eifer, sir?&rdquo;&nbsp; He couldn&rsquo;t forget the old
+joke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We want an affidavit of documents,&rdquo; said the
+youth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what be the manin o&rsquo; that?&mdash;affiday
+o&rsquo; what?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Documents, sir,&rdquo; said the mild youth; &ldquo;here
+it is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;I got to swear un, I
+spoase, that&rsquo;s all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it, sir,&rdquo; said Horatio.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, thee can&rsquo;t take oaths, I spoase.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir, not exactly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wull then I spoase I must goo to --- in the
+marnin.&nbsp; And thee&rsquo;ll stop here the night and mak
+thyself comfortable.&nbsp; We can gie un a bed, can&rsquo;t us,
+Nancy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Two, if ur wishes it,&rdquo; answered Mrs. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Devil&rsquo;s in it, ur doan&rsquo;t want two beds,
+I&rsquo;ll warrant?&nbsp; Now then, sir, sitten doon and mak
+theeself comfortable.&nbsp; What&rsquo;ll thee drink?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m too young to drink,&rdquo; said Horatio, with
+a smile.</p>
+<p>Bumpkin smiled too.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll warrant thee
+be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m always too young,&rdquo; said Horatio,
+&ldquo;for every thing that&rsquo;s nice.&nbsp; Mr. Prigg says
+I&rsquo;m too young to <!-- page 74--><a name="page74"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 74</span>enjoy myself; but if you don&rsquo;t
+mind, sir, I&rsquo;m not too young to be hungry.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve
+walked a long distance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have ur now?&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin.&nbsp; &ldquo;We
+ain&rsquo;t got anything wery grand, sir; but there be a nice
+piece o&rsquo; pickle pork and pease-puddin, if thee doan&rsquo;t
+mind thic.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bring un out,&rdquo; said Bumpkin; and accordingly a
+nice clean cloth was soon spread, and the table was groaning (as
+the saying is), with a large leg of pork and pease-pudding and
+home-made bread; to which Horatio did ample justice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bain&rsquo;t bad pooark,&rdquo; said Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Best I ever tasted,&rdquo; replied Horatio; &ldquo;we
+don&rsquo;t get this sort of pork in London&mdash;pork there
+doesn&rsquo;t seem like pork.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now look at that,&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;I fed that
+air pig.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So ur did, Joe,&rdquo; said the farmer;
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll gie thee credit, Joe, thee fed un
+well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;and that air pig knowed I
+as well as I knows thee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When Horatio had supped, and the things were removed, Mr.
+Bumpkin assured the youth that a little drop of gin-and-water
+would not hurt him after his journey; and accordingly mixed him a
+tumbler.&nbsp; &ldquo;Thee doan&rsquo;t smoke, I spoase?&rdquo;
+he said; to which Mrs. Bumpkin added that she &ldquo;spoased he
+wur too young like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll try,&rdquo; answered the courageous youth,
+nothing daunted by his youngness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So thee shall&mdash;dang if thee shan&rsquo;t,&rdquo;
+rejoined Mr. Bumpkin; and produced a long churchwarden pipe, and
+a big leaden jar of tobacco of a very dark character, called
+&ldquo;shag.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Horatio filled his pipe, and puffed away as if he had been a
+veteran smoker; cloud after cloud came forth, <!-- page 75--><a
+name="page75"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 75</span>and when Mr.
+and Mrs. Bumpkin and Joe looked, expecting that the boy should be
+ill, there was not the least sign; so Joe observed with great
+sagacity:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look at that now, maister; I bleeve he&rsquo;ve smoked
+afoore.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have ur, sir?&rdquo; asked Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A little,&rdquo; said Horatio.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, I never smoked afoore I wur turned twenty,&rdquo;
+said the farmer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe the right time now is fourteen,&rdquo;
+observed the youth; &ldquo;it used to be twenty, I have heard
+father say; but everything has been altered by the Judicature
+Act.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look at that air,&rdquo; said Joe, &ldquo;he&rsquo;ve
+eeard father say.&nbsp; You knows a thing or two, I&rsquo;ll
+warrant, Mr. &mdash;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here Joe was baffled, and coming so abruptly to an end of his
+address, Mr. Bumpkin took the matter up, and asked, if he might
+make so bold, what the youth&rsquo;s name might be.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Horatio Snigger,&rdquo; answered that gentleman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When will this ere case be on, think&rsquo;ee,
+sir?&rdquo; inquired Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We expect it to be in the paper every day now,&rdquo;
+said the youth; &ldquo;they&rsquo;ve tried to dodge us a good
+deal, but they can&rsquo;t dodge us much longer&mdash;we&rsquo;re
+a little too downy for em.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It have been a mighty long time about, surely,&rdquo;
+said Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, that&rsquo;s nothing,&rdquo; said Horatio;
+&ldquo;time&rsquo;s nothing in Law!&nbsp; Why, a suit to
+administer a Will sometimes takes &rsquo;ears; and Bankruptcy, O
+my eye, ain&rsquo;t there dodging about that, and jockeying too,
+eh!&nbsp; Crikey!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin here winked at his wife, as much as to <!-- page
+76--><a name="page76"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 76</span>say,
+&ldquo;Now you hold your tongue, and see me dror un out.&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;ll have un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will ee tak a little more gin-and-water,
+sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, thankee,&rdquo; said the youth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A little more won&rsquo;t hurt ee&mdash;it&rsquo;ll do
+thee good.&rdquo;&nbsp; And again he filled the tumbler; while
+the pale boy refilled his pipe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, who&rsquo;s my counsellor gwine to be?&rdquo;
+asked the farmer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said Horatio, &ldquo;a regular
+cruncher&mdash;Mr. Catapult.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He be a cruncher, be he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe you; he turned a man inside out the other
+day; a money-lender he was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did ur now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look at that,&rdquo; said Joe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And we&rsquo;re going to have Mr. Dynamite for junior;
+my eye, don&rsquo;t he make a row!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Two an em!&rdquo; exclaimed Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Must have two for the plaintiff,&rdquo; said Horatio;
+&ldquo;that&rsquo;s the law.&nbsp; Why, a Queen&rsquo;s Counsel
+ain&rsquo;t allowed to open a case without a junior starts
+him&mdash;it&rsquo;s jist like the engine-driver and the
+guard.&nbsp; You have the junior to shove the leader.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look at that,&rdquo; said Joe; expectorating into the
+fire.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin looked again at Nancy, and gave another wink that
+you might have heard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the tother side?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t know about them,&rdquo; said
+the boy.&nbsp; &ldquo;They&rsquo;re artful dodgers, they
+are.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is &rsquo;em now? but artfulness don&rsquo;t allays
+win, do ur?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 77--><a name="page77"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+77</span>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Horatio; &ldquo;but it goes a
+long way, and sometimes when it&rsquo;s gone a long way it beats
+itself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look at that,&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;that&rsquo;s like
+that ere&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be quiet, Joe,&rdquo; said Bumpkin; &ldquo;let I talk,
+will ur?&nbsp; You said it beats itself, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If the judge gets &rsquo;old of him, it&rsquo;s sure
+to,&rdquo; said Horatio.&nbsp; &ldquo;There ain&rsquo;t no judge
+on the Bench as will let artfulness win if he knows it.&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;ve sin em watchin like a cat watches a mouse; and
+directly it comes out o&rsquo; the &rsquo;ole, down he is on
+em&mdash;like that:&rdquo; and he slapped his hand on the table
+with startling effect.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good!&rdquo; said Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And don&rsquo;t they know who the solicitor is,
+eh&mdash;that&rsquo;s all!&nbsp; My word, if he&rsquo;s a shady
+one&mdash;the judge is down on the case like winkin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And be this ere Locust a shady un?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+(Another wink at Mrs. Bumpkin.)</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&nbsp; I&rsquo;m too young to know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee beest too old, thee meanest,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Bumpkin, laughing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now hold thee tongue, Nancy; I wur gwine to say that
+myself&mdash;dang if I warnt!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now look at thic,&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;maister were
+gwine to say thic.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So I wur,&rdquo; repeated Bumpkin.&nbsp; &ldquo;Jist
+got the word o&rsquo; th&rsquo; tip o&rsquo; th&rsquo;
+tongue.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And be these Queen&rsquo;s Counsellors,&rdquo; he
+asked, &ldquo;summat grand?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe you,&rdquo; said Horatio; &ldquo;they wears
+silk gowns.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do em?&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin, laughing.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Silk gowns&mdash;and what kind o&rsquo;
+petticoats?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shut up,&rdquo; said Bumpkin; &ldquo;thee be as igorant
+as a <!-- page 78--><a name="page78"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+78</span>donkey; these Queen&rsquo;s Counsellors be made for
+their larnin and cleverness, beant em, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Horatio, &ldquo;nobody ever could
+make out&mdash;some of em are pretty good, and some of em
+ain&rsquo;t much&mdash;not near so good as the others.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But this ere Mr. Catapult be a good un, bean&rsquo;t
+he&mdash;a regler crunsher?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, I believe you, my boy: his look&rsquo;s enough for
+some of em.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I spoase he be dear?&rdquo;&nbsp; (Another wink at Mrs.
+Bumpkin.)</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re all dear,&rdquo; said Horatio;
+&ldquo;some of em are dear because their fees are high; and some
+of em would be dear at a gift, but I&rsquo;m too young to know
+much about it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now hark at that,&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;like that air
+old horse o&rsquo; Morris&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hold thee tongue, Joe, I tell ee, putten thy spoke in;
+does thee think the Queen &rsquo;as old &rsquo;orses in her
+stable?&nbsp; It&rsquo;s merit, I tell ee&mdash;ain&rsquo;t it,
+Mr. Jigger?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Merit, sir; I believe it&rsquo;s merit.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And thus in pleasant conversation the evening passed merrily
+away, until the clock striking nine warned the company that it
+was time to retire.</p>
+<p>A bright, brisk frosty morning succeeded, and a substantial
+breakfast of bacon, eggs, fresh butter, and home-made bread, at
+seven o&rsquo;clock, somewhat astonished and delighted the
+youthful Horatio; and then the old horse, with plenty of hair
+about his heels, was brought round with the gig.&nbsp; And Mr.
+Bumpkin and his guest got up and took their seats.&nbsp; The old
+Market Town was about seven miles off, and the road lay through
+the most picturesque scenery of the county.&nbsp; To ride on such
+<!-- page 79--><a name="page79"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+79</span>a pleasant morning through such a country almost made
+one think that swearing affidavits was the most pleasing
+occupation of life.&nbsp; It was the first time Horatio had ever
+ridden in a gig: the horse went a good old market pace, and the
+beautiful sunshine, lovely scenery, and crisp air produced in his
+youthful bosom a peculiarly charming and delightful sense of
+exhilaration.&nbsp; He praised the country and the weather and
+the horse, and asked if it was what they called a
+thoroughbred.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Chit!&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;thoroughbred!&nbsp;
+So be I thoroughbred&mdash;did thee ever see thoroughbred
+wi&rsquo; &rsquo;air on his &rsquo;eels?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, he goes well,&rdquo; said Horatio.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gooes well enough for I,&rdquo; said Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>This answer somewhat abashed Horatio, who was unlearned in
+horses; for some time he remained silent.&nbsp; Then it became
+Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s turn to renew the conversation:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I spoase,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;thee be gwine to be a
+loryer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not if I know it,&rdquo; answered Horatio.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not, then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t care for it; I like the country.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What wouldst thee like to be then, a farmer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should&mdash;that&rsquo;s the life for me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee likes plenty o&rsquo; fresh air?&rdquo; said the
+farmer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; answered Horatio, &ldquo;and fresh butter
+and fresh eggs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go to ---, if thee doen&rsquo;t know
+what&rsquo;s good for thee, anyhow.&nbsp; Thee&rsquo;d ha&rsquo;
+to work &rsquo;ard to keep straaight, I can tell thee;
+thee&rsquo;d had to plough, and danged if I believe thee could
+hold plough!&nbsp; What&rsquo;s thee say to that, lad?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think I could.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 80--><a name="page80"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+80</span>&ldquo;Devil a bit! now spoase thee&rsquo;st got
+plough-handles under thy arms, and the cord in the &rsquo;ands,
+and thee wanted to keep t&rsquo;colter from jibbin into t&rsquo;
+soil, wouldst thee press down wi&rsquo; might and main, or
+how?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Press down with might and main,&rdquo; said
+Horatio.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Right!&rdquo; exclaimed Bumpkin; &ldquo;danged if I
+doant think thee&rsquo;d make a ploughman now.&nbsp; Dost know
+what th&rsquo; manin o&rsquo; mither woiy be?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was rather a startling question for the unsophisticated
+London youth.&nbsp; He had never heard such an expression in his
+life; and although he might have puzzled his agricultural
+interrogator by a good many questions in return, yet that
+possibility was no answer to &ldquo;mither woiy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know that, Mr. Bumpkin,&rdquo; he
+ingenuously replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No? well, there ain&rsquo;t a commoner word down ere
+nor &lsquo;mither woiy,&rsquo; and there ain&rsquo;t a boy arf
+your age as doan&rsquo;t know the manin o&rsquo;t, so thee see
+thee got summat to larn.&nbsp; Now it mane this&mdash;spoase thee
+got a team o&rsquo; horses at dung cart or gravel cart, and thee
+wants em to come to ee; thee jest holds whip up over to the ed
+o&rsquo; th&rsquo; leadin orse like this ere, and says
+&lsquo;mither woiy,&rsquo; and round er comes as natteral as
+possible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, that&rsquo;s it!&rdquo; said Horatio; &ldquo;I
+see.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;I can teach ee summat,
+can&rsquo;t I, though thee comes from town, and I be only a
+country clown farmer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should just like to come down a month on trial,
+that&rsquo;s all, when I have my holiday,&rdquo; said the youth;
+&ldquo;I think it would do me good: &lsquo;mither
+woiy,&rsquo;&rdquo; he said, mimicking his instructor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee shall come if thee likes,&rdquo; replied the
+good-natured <!-- page 81--><a name="page81"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 81</span>Bumpkin; &ldquo;Nancy&rsquo;ll be
+proud to see thee&mdash;thee&rsquo;s got &lsquo;mither
+woiy&rsquo; to rights.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What a very nice public-house!&rdquo; exclaimed
+Horatio, as they approached a village green where an old Inn that
+had flourished in the coaching days still stood, the decaying
+monument of a past age, and an almost forgotten style of
+locomotion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be a good house.&nbsp; I often pulls up there on way
+from market.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you ever try rum and milk for your cough?&rdquo;
+inquired the pale youth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never had no cough,&rdquo; said Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What a good thing!&nbsp; But it&rsquo;s capital, they
+say, in case you should have one; they say there&rsquo;s nothing
+beats rum and milk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hem!&rdquo; muttered Bumpkin, giving his horse a
+tremendous jerk with the reins.&nbsp; &ldquo;I spoase
+thee&rsquo;d like a glass, Mr. Jigger.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t care about it for myself,&rdquo; answered
+the youth; &ldquo;but if you like to have one I&rsquo;ll join you
+with pleasure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So us wool then;&rdquo; and up they pulled at the sign
+of the &ldquo;Merry-go-round&rdquo; on Addlehead Green.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bain&rsquo;t bad tackle!&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin,
+tossing off his glass.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; responded Horatio, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve tasted
+worse medicine.&nbsp; I quite enjoy my ride, Mr. Bumpkin; I wish
+we had a dozen more affidavits to swear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I doan&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said the client; &ldquo;I sworn
+a goodish many on em as it be.&nbsp; I doan&rsquo;t think that
+air Snooks can bate un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think he can,&rdquo; said Horatio, as
+they once more climbed into the old-fashioned gig; &ldquo;but
+talk <!-- page 82--><a name="page82"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+82</span>about paper, you should see your brief: that&rsquo;s a
+caution and no mistake!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is ur now?&nbsp; In what way, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lor, how I should like a cigar, Mr. Bumpkin, if
+I&rsquo;d only got my case with me, but
+unfortunately&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would ur&mdash;then thee shall &rsquo;ave one; here,
+Mr. Ostler, jest goo and fetch one o&rsquo; them there what
+d&rsquo;ye call ems.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, do they sell them down here?&nbsp;
+Cigars&mdash;cigars,&rdquo; said Horatio, &ldquo;I wasn&rsquo;t
+aware of that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now then, sir; what about this ere what d&rsquo;ye call
+un&mdash;beef?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin, being a very artful man, was inwardly chuckling
+at the successful man&oelig;uvring by which he was drawing out
+this pale unsophisticated London youth, and hoped by dint of a
+little strategy to learn a good deal before they parted
+company.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Brief! brief!&rdquo; said Horatio, laughing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! so it wur; thee said he wur a hell of a big
+un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, and I wrote him myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did ur now; then thee knows all about un?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From beginning to end&mdash;he is a clipper, I can tell
+you; a regular whacker.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope he&rsquo;ll whack thic Snooks then.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s a beauty!&rdquo; rejoined Horatio, much to
+his companion&rsquo;s surprise; for here was this young man
+speaking of a brief in the same terms that he (Bumpkin) would use
+with reference to a prize wurzel or swede.&nbsp; A brief being a
+<i>beauty</i> sounded somewhat strange in the ears of a farmer
+who could associate the term with nothing that didn&rsquo;t grow
+on the farm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I dare say you&rsquo;ve heard of Macaulay&rsquo;s
+England?&rdquo; asked the lad.</p>
+<p><!-- page 83--><a name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+83</span>&ldquo;Whose England?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Macaulay&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve eerd o&rsquo; England, if you mean this ere
+country, sartainly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve heard of Macaulay&rsquo;s History, I
+mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t say as ever I eerd tell on un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, there&rsquo;s as much in your brief as there is
+in that book, and that&rsquo;s saying something, ain&rsquo;t
+it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Zo&rsquo;t be; but what th&rsquo; devil be &rsquo;t all
+about?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ll tell you,&rdquo; said Horatio, holding
+out his hands and putting the point of his right forefinger on to
+the point of the forefinger of his left hand.&nbsp; &ldquo;First:
+biography of the plaintiff.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There now,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, shaking the reins;
+&ldquo;thee med jist as well talk Greek&mdash;it&rsquo;s the same
+wally (value) to me, for I doan&rsquo;t understan&rsquo; a
+word&mdash;bography, indade!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well then, Mr. Bumpkin, there is first a history of
+your life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good lord, what be that for?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you presently&mdash;then there&rsquo;s
+the history of Mrs. Bumpkin from the cradle.&rdquo;&nbsp; (Mr.
+Bumpkin uttered an exclamation which nothing shall induce me to
+put on paper.)&nbsp; &ldquo;Then&rdquo;&mdash;and here the young
+man had reached the third finger of the left
+hand&mdash;&ldquo;then comes a history of the defendant
+Snooks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Bumpkin, as though they were getting
+nearer the mark; &ldquo;that be summut like&mdash;that&rsquo;ll
+do un&mdash;have you put in about the gal?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that?&rdquo; asked the youth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! didn&rsquo;t thee &rsquo;ear?&nbsp; Why, thee
+&rsquo;st left out the best part o&rsquo; Snooks&rsquo; life; he
+were keepin company wi&rsquo; a gal and left her in t&rsquo;
+lurch: but I &rsquo;ope thee &rsquo;st shown <!-- page 84--><a
+name="page84"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 84</span>up ur carater
+well in other ways&mdash;he be the worst man as ever lived in
+this &rsquo;ere country.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Horatio, travelling towards his
+little finger; &ldquo;then there&rsquo;s the history of the
+pig.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Zounds!&rdquo; laughed the farmer, &ldquo;if ever I
+eerd tell o&rsquo; such a thing in my bornd days.&nbsp; What the
+devil be the good o&rsquo; thic?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, a good deal; the longer you make the brief the more
+money you get&mdash;you are paid by the yard.&nbsp; They
+don&rsquo;t pay lawyers accordin&rsquo; to the value of their
+services, but the length of &rsquo;em.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, look ee &rsquo;ere, if I sells a pig it
+ain&rsquo;t wallied by its length, but by its weight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It ain&rsquo;t so with lawyers then,&rdquo; rejoined
+Horatio; &ldquo;the taxing master takes the length of the pig,
+and his tail counts, and the longer the tail the better the
+taxing master likes it; then comes,&rdquo;&mdash;(as the young
+lad had only four fingers he was obliged to have recourse to his
+thumb, placing his forefinger thereon)&mdash;&ldquo;then comes
+about ten pages on the immortality of the soul.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That be the tail, I spoase.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You got it,&rdquo; said Horatio, laughing.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;O, he&rsquo;s a stunner on the immortality of the
+soul.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who be?&mdash;Snooks?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;Prigg&mdash;he goes into it like
+winkin&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what be it to do with thic case?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, if you only put in a brief what had got to do
+with the case it would be a poor thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And I saw in my dream that the young man was speaking
+truthfully: it was a beautifully drawn essay on the immortality
+of the soul, especially Bumpkin&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By George!&rdquo; continued the youth,
+&ldquo;it&rsquo;ll cost something&mdash;that brief.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 85--><a name="page85"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+85</span>Mr. Bumpkin twitched as if he had touched with ice a
+nerve of his hollow tooth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I had the money that case&rsquo;ll cost I
+wouldn&rsquo;t do any more work,&rdquo; said the youth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What would&rsquo;st thee be then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I should try and get an Associate&rsquo;s place
+in one of the Courts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hem! but this ere Snooks ull have to pay, won&rsquo;t
+he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Horatio, breathing deeply and
+indignantly, &ldquo;I hope so; he&rsquo;s a mean cuss&mdash;what
+d&rsquo;ye think? never give Locust&rsquo;s boy so much as a
+half-sovereign!&nbsp; Now don&rsquo;t such a feller deserve to
+lose?&nbsp; And do you think Locust&rsquo;s boy will interest
+himself in his behalf?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Bumpkin looked slily out of the corners of his eyes at the
+young man, but the young man was impassive as stone, and pale as
+if made of the best Carrara marble.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But tell I, sir&mdash;for here we be at the plaace of
+Mr. Commissioner to take oaths&mdash;what need be there o&rsquo;
+this ere thing I be gwine to swear, for I&rsquo;ll be danged if I
+understand a word of un, so I tell ee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Costs, my dear sir, costs!&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>And I heard Bumpkin mutter to himself that &ldquo;he&rsquo;d
+he danged if this &rsquo;ere feller wur so young as he made
+out&mdash;his &rsquo;ead wur a mighty dale older nor his
+body.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 87--><a name="page87"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+87</span>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">The last night before the first London
+expedition, which gives occasion to recall pleasant
+reminiscences.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I, Bumpkin, make oath and say,&rdquo; having been duly
+presented, and the Commissioner having duly placed the Testament
+in Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s hands, and said to him that to the best of
+his knowledge and belief the contents of the &ldquo;I
+Bumpkin&rdquo; paper were true, the matter was over, and Mr.
+Snigger, with the valuable document in his possession, might have
+returned to London by the next train.&nbsp; But as Horatio
+afterwards observed to a friend, he &ldquo;was not quite so
+green.&rdquo;&nbsp; It was market day; Mr. Bumpkin was a genial
+companion, and had asked him to partake of the Market
+Ordinary.&nbsp; So thither at one o&rsquo;clock they repaired,
+and a very fine dinner the pale youth disposed of.&nbsp; It
+seemed in proportion to the wonderful brief whose merits they had
+previously discussed.&nbsp; More and more did Horatio think that
+a farmer&rsquo;s life was the life for him.&nbsp; He had never
+seen such &ldquo;feeding;&rdquo; more and more would he like that
+month on trial in the country; more and more inclined was he to
+throw up the whole blessed law at once and for ever.&nbsp; This
+partly-formed resolution he communicated to Mr. Bumpkin, and
+assured him that, but for the case of <i>Bumpkin</i> v.
+<i>Snooks</i>, he would do so on that very afternoon, and wash
+his hands of it.</p>
+<p><!-- page 88--><a name="page88"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+88</span>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;to
+leave you in the lurch, Mr. Bumpkin, or else I&rsquo;d cut it at
+once, and throw this affidavit into the fire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, come,&rdquo; said the farmer, &ldquo;thee beest a
+young man, don&rsquo;t do nowt that be wrong&mdash;stick to thy
+employer like a man, and when thee leaves, leave like a
+man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As soon as your case is over, I shall hook it, Mr.
+Bumpkin.&nbsp; And now let me see&mdash;you&rsquo;ll have to come
+to London in a week or two, for I am pretty nigh sure we shall be
+in the paper by that time.&nbsp; I shall see you when you come
+up&mdash;where shall you stay?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Danged if I know; I be a straanger in
+Lunnun.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, now, look &rsquo;ere, Mr. Bumpkin, I can tell you
+of a very nice quiet public-house in Westminster where
+you&rsquo;ll be at home; the woman, I believe, comes from your
+part of the country, and so does the landlord.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What be the naame o&rsquo; the public
+&rsquo;ouse?&rdquo; asked Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the sign of the &lsquo;Goose,&rsquo; and
+stands just a little way off from the water-side.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Goose&rdquo; sounded countryfied and homelike, and
+being near the water would be pleasant, and the landlord and
+landlady being Somersetshire people would also be pleasant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be it a dear plaace?&rdquo; he inquired.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no; dirt cheap.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, that air <i>dirt</i> cheap I doan&rsquo;t
+like&mdash;I likes it a bit clean like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, clean as a smelt&mdash;clean as ever it can
+be; and I&rsquo;ll bespeak your lodgings for you if you like, and
+all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, thankee, sir, thankee,&rdquo; said the farmer,
+shaking hands with the youth, and giving him a
+half-sovereign.&nbsp; <!-- page 89--><a name="page89"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 89</span>&ldquo;I be proud to know
+thee.&rdquo;&nbsp; And thus they parted: Horatio returning to his
+office, and Mr. Bumpkin driving home at what is called a
+&ldquo;shig-shog&rdquo; pace, reflecting upon all the events that
+had transpired during that memorable day.</p>
+<p>Pretty much the same as ever went on the things at the farm,
+and the weeks passed by, and the autumn was over, and Christmas
+Day came and went, and the Assizes came and went, and
+<i>Bumpkin</i> v. <i>Snooks</i> alone in all the world seemed to
+stand still.&nbsp; One day in the autumn a friend of Mr.
+Prigg&rsquo;s came and asked the favour of a day&rsquo;s fishing,
+which was granted with Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s usual
+cordiality.&nbsp; He was not only to fish on that day, but to
+come whenever he liked, and make the house his &ldquo;hoame,
+like.&rdquo;&nbsp; So he came and fished, and partook of the
+hospitality of the homely but plentiful table, and enjoyed
+himself as often as he pleased.&nbsp; He was a most agreeable
+man, and knew how to talk.&nbsp; Understood a good deal about
+agriculture and sheep breeding, and quite enjoyed a walk with Mr.
+Bumpkin round the farm.&nbsp; This happened five or six times
+during the autumn.&nbsp; He was reticent when Mr. Bumpkin
+mentioned the lawsuit, because he knew so little about legal
+proceedings.&nbsp; Nor could Mr. Bumpkin &ldquo;draw him
+out&rdquo; on any point.&nbsp; Nothing could be ascertained
+concerning him except that he had a place in Yorkshire, and was
+in London on a visit; that he had known Mr. Prigg for a good many
+years, and always &ldquo;found him the same.&rdquo;&nbsp; At
+last, the month of February came, and the long expected letter
+from Mr. Prigg.&nbsp; Bumpkin and Joe were to be in London on the
+following day, for it was expected they would be in the
+paper.&nbsp; What a flutter of preparation there was at the
+farm!&nbsp; Bumpkin was eager, Mrs. Bumpkin anxious.&nbsp; <!--
+page 90--><a name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+90</span>She had never liked the lawsuit, but had never once
+murmured; now she seemed to have a presentiment which she was too
+wise to express.&nbsp; And she went about her preparations for
+her husband&rsquo;s leaving with all the courage she could
+command.&nbsp; It was, however, impossible entirely to repress
+her feelings, and now and again as she was packing the flannels
+and worsted stockings, a tear would force its way in spite of all
+she could do.</p>
+<p>Night came, and the fireside was as cosy as ever.&nbsp; But
+there was a sense of sadness nevertheless.&nbsp; Tim seemed to
+understand that something was not quite as it should be, for he
+was restless, and looked up plaintively in his master&rsquo;s
+face, and went to Joe and put his head in his lap; then turned
+away and stretched himself out on the hearth, winking his eyes at
+the fire.</p>
+<p>It is always a melancholy effort to &ldquo;keep up the
+spirits&rdquo; when the moment of separation is at hand.&nbsp;
+One longs for the last shake of the hand and the final
+good-bye.&nbsp; This was the case at Southwood Farm on this
+memorable evening.&nbsp; Nothing in the room looked as
+usual.&nbsp; The pewter plates on the shelf shone indeed, but it
+was like the smile of a winter sun; it lacked the usual cheery
+warmth.&nbsp; Even the old clock seemed to feel sad as he ticked
+out with melancholy monotony the parting moments; and the wind,
+as it came in heavy gusts and howled round the old chimney,
+seemed more melancholy than need be under the circumstances.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee must be careful, Tom,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin;
+&ldquo;that Lunnun, as I hear, be a terrible plaace.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How be un a terrible plaace?&rdquo; said Bumpkin,
+sarcastically.&nbsp; &ldquo;I bean&rsquo;t a child,
+Nancy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, thee bean&rsquo;t a child, Tom; but thee
+bean&rsquo;t up to <!-- page 91--><a name="page91"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 91</span>Lunnun ways: there be thieves and
+murderers, and what not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thieves and murderers!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And Joe, doan&rsquo;t ee git out o&rsquo; nights; if
+anything &rsquo;appened to thee, thy old mother &rsquo;ud brak
+her &rsquo;art.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look ee &rsquo;ere,&rdquo; said Joe, &ldquo;I
+bean&rsquo;t got nuthin&rsquo; to lose, so I bean&rsquo;t afeared
+o&rsquo; thieves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, but thee might git into trouble, thee might be led
+away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So might thic bull,&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;but
+I&rsquo;d like to zee what &rsquo;ud become o&rsquo; the chap as
+led un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Chap as led un!&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin, laughing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d gie un a crack o&rsquo; the canister,&rdquo;
+said Joe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t thee git knockin&rsquo; down, Joe, unless
+thee be &rsquo;bliged,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin; &ldquo;keep out
+o&rsquo; bad company, and don&rsquo;t stay out o&rsquo;
+nights.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And lookee &rsquo;ere, Joe,&rdquo; said Bumpkin,
+&ldquo;when thee comes afore th&rsquo; Counsellor wi&rsquo; wig
+on, hold up thee head; look un straight in t&rsquo; face and spak
+oop.&nbsp; Thee needn&rsquo;t be afeared t&rsquo; spak t&rsquo;
+truth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I bean&rsquo;t afeard,&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;I mind
+me when old Morris wur at plough, and I was leadin&rsquo;
+th&rsquo; &rsquo;orses, Morris says, says he, &lsquo;Now then,
+cock, let&rsquo;s see if we can&rsquo;t git a eend this
+time;&rsquo; so on we goes, and jist afore I gits the
+&rsquo;orses to eend o&rsquo; t&rsquo; field, Dobbin turns, and
+then, dash my bootons, the tother turns after un, and me
+tryin&rsquo; to keep em oop, Dobbin gits his legs over the
+trace.&nbsp; Well, Morris wur that wild, he says, says he,
+&lsquo;Damme, if yer doan&rsquo;t look sharp, I&rsquo;ll gie thee
+a crack o&rsquo; t&rsquo; canister wi&rsquo; this &rsquo;ere
+whippense presny&rsquo;&rdquo; (presently).</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Crack o&rsquo; the canister!&rdquo; laughed Mrs.
+Bumpkin, &ldquo;and that&rsquo;s what Morris called thy head,
+eh?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was a capital hit on Joe&rsquo;s part, for it set them
+<!-- page 92--><a name="page92"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+92</span>thinking of the events of old times, and Joe, seeing the
+effect of it, ventured upon another anecdote relating to the old
+carter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee recollect, master, when that there Mr. Gearns come
+down to shoot; lor, lor, what a queer un he wur,
+surely!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Couldn&rsquo;t shoot a hit,&rdquo; said Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not he.&nbsp; Wall, we was carrying wheat, and Morris
+wur loadin, and jest as we gits the last pitch on t&rsquo; load,
+right through th&rsquo; &rsquo;orses legs runds a rat.&nbsp;
+Gearns wi&rsquo;out more ado oops wi&rsquo; his loaded gun and
+bangs her off right under t&rsquo; &rsquo;orses legs; up jumps
+th&rsquo; &rsquo;orse, and Morris wur wery nigh tossed head fust
+into th&rsquo; yard.&nbsp; Wall, he makes no moore ado, for he
+didn&rsquo;t keer, gemman or no gemman&mdash;didn&rsquo;t
+Morris&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No more ur didn&rsquo;t, Joe,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He makes no moore ado, but he up and said,
+&lsquo;damme,&rsquo; he says, &lsquo;sir, you might as well a
+said you was gwine to shoot; you might a had me off and broked my
+neck.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Haw! haw! haw!&rdquo; laughed Mr. Bumpkin, and
+&ldquo;Well done, Morris,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wall,&rdquo; said Joe, &ldquo;this ere gemman says,
+&lsquo;It wouldn&rsquo;t er bin much loss,&rsquo; he says,
+&lsquo;if he had!&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Damme,&rsquo; roars Morris,
+&lsquo;it had a bin as much wally to me as yourn,
+anyhow.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They all remembered the story, and even Tim seemed to remember
+it too, for when they laughed he wagged his tail and laughed with
+them.</p>
+<p>And thus the evening dragged along and bed time came.</p>
+<p>In the morning all was in readiness, and the plaintiff with
+his witness drove away in the gig to the station, where Morris
+waited to bring the old horse back.</p>
+<p><!-- page 93--><a name="page93"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+93</span>And as the train came into the little country station I
+awoke.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope,&rdquo; cried my wife, &ldquo;that Mr. Prigg is
+a respectable man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Respectable,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;I know he is;
+but whether he is honest is another matter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But don&rsquo;t you know?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I only know what I dream.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have no opinion of him,&rdquo; said she; &ldquo;nor
+of that Locust; I believe they are a couple of rogues.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should be very sorry to suggest such a thing as
+that,&rdquo; I answered, &ldquo;without some proof.&nbsp;
+Everybody should give credit for the best of motives.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what are all these summonses you speak
+of?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, they are summonses in the action.&nbsp; You may have
+as many of them as you can invent occasion for.&nbsp; You may go
+up to the Court of Appeal about twenty times before you try the
+action, which means about eighty different hearings before Master
+and Judges.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But how can a poor man endure that?&nbsp; It&rsquo;s a
+great shame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He can&rsquo;t&mdash;he may have a perfectly good cause
+of action against a rich man or a rich company, and they can
+utterly ruin him before ever his case can come into
+Court.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But will no solicitor take it up for the poor
+man?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, some will, and the only reward they usually get
+for their pains is to be stigmatized as having brought a
+speculative action&mdash;accused of doing it for the sake of
+costs; although I have known the most honourable men do it out of
+pure sympathy for the poor man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And so they ought,&rdquo; cried she.</p>
+<p><!-- page 94--><a name="page94"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+94</span>&ldquo;And I trust,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;that hereafter
+it will be considered honourable to do so.&nbsp; It is quite as
+honourable, in my judgment, to bring an action when you may never
+be paid as to bring it when you know you will be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who was the person referred to as &lsquo;the
+man?&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;but I
+strongly suspect he is, in reality, a nominee of
+Prigg&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is exactly my opinion,&rdquo; said my wife.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;And if so, between them, they will ruin that poor
+man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t tell,&rdquo; said I, lighting my
+pipe.&nbsp; &ldquo;I know no more about the future of my dream
+than you do; maybe when I sleep again something else will
+transpire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But can no one do anything to alter this state of
+things?&nbsp; I plainly perceive that they are all against this
+poor Bumpkin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you see, in a tinkering sort of way, a good many
+try their hands at reforming the law; but it&rsquo;s to no
+one&rsquo;s interest, that I can see, to reform it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope you&rsquo;ll write this dream and publish it, so
+that someone&rsquo;s eyes may be opened.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It may make me enemies.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not among honest people; they will all be on your side,
+and the dishonest ones, who seem to me to be the only persons
+benefited by such a dilatory and shocking mode of procedure, are
+the very persons whose enmity you need not fear.&nbsp; But can
+the Judges do nothing?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; their duty is merely to administer the law, not to
+change it.&nbsp; But if the people would only give them full
+power and fair play, Old Fogeyism would be buried
+to-morrow.&nbsp; They struggle might and main to break through
+the fetters, but to no purpose while they are hampered by musty
+old precedents, ridiculous forms and bad statutes.&nbsp; They are
+not masters of the situation.&nbsp; I <!-- page 95--><a
+name="page95"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 95</span>wish they
+were for the sake of suitors.&nbsp; I would only make one
+condition with regard to them.&nbsp; If they were to set about
+the task of reform, I would not let the Equity Judges reform the
+Common Law nor the Common Law Judges the Equity.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought they were fused.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, only transposed.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 97--><a name="page97"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+97</span>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Commencement of London life and
+adventures.</p>
+<p>And I dreamt again, and methought there were three things with
+reference to London that Joe had learnt at school.&nbsp; First,
+that there was a Bridge, chiefly remarkable for the fact that
+Captain Cook, the Navigator, shot his servant because he said he
+was under London Bridge when he was in the South Pacific Ocean;
+secondly, that there was a famous Tower, where the Queen&rsquo;s
+Crown was kept; thirdly, that there was a Monument built to show
+where the Great Fire began, and intimately connected in its cause
+with Guy Faux, whom Joe had helped to carry on the Fifth of
+November.&nbsp; Now when the young man woke in the morning at
+&ldquo;The Goose,&rdquo; in Millbank Street, Westminster, his
+attention was immediately attracted by these three historic
+objects; and it was not till after he had made inquiries that he
+found that it was not London Bridge that crossed the water in a
+line with the Horseferry Road, but a very inferior structure
+called Lambeth Suspension Bridge.&nbsp; Nor was the Tower on the
+left the Tower of London, but the Lollards&rsquo; tower of
+Lambeth Palace; while the supposed Monument was only the handsome
+column of Messrs. Doulton&rsquo;s Pottery.</p>
+<p>But they were all interesting objects nevertheless; and so
+were the huge cranes that were at work opposite the <!-- page
+98--><a name="page98"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 98</span>house
+lifting the most tremendous loads of goods from the lighters to
+the wharves.&nbsp; The &ldquo;Shipping,&rdquo; too, with its
+black and copper-coloured sails, gave some idea of the extent of
+England&rsquo;s mercantile marine.&nbsp; At all events, it
+excited the country lad&rsquo;s wonder and astonishment.&nbsp;
+But there was another matter that gave quite an agricultural and
+countrified look to the busy scene, and that was the prodigious
+quantity of straw that was being unloaded from the barges
+alongside.&nbsp; While Mr. Bumpkin went to see his solicitor at
+Westminster Hall, Joe wandered about the wharves looking at the
+boats and barges, the cranes and busy workmen who drove their
+barrows from barge to wharf, and ran along with loads on their
+backs over narrow planks, in the most lively manner.&nbsp; But
+looking on, even at sights like these, day by day, becomes a
+wearisome task, and Joe, being by no means an idle lad,
+occasionally &ldquo;lent a hand&rdquo; where he saw an
+opportunity.&nbsp; London, no doubt, was a very interesting
+place, but when he had seen Page Street, and Wood Street, and
+Church Street, and Abingdon Street, and Millbank Prison, and the
+other interesting objects referred to, his curiosity was
+gratified, and he began to grow tired of the sameness of the
+place.&nbsp; Occasionally he saw a soldier or two and the
+military sight fired his rustic imagination.&nbsp; Not that Joe
+had the remotest intention of entering the army; it was the last
+thing he would ever dream of; but, in common with all mankind he
+liked to look at the smart bearing and brilliant uniform of the
+sergeant, who seemed to have little else to do than walk about
+with his cane under his arm, or tap the stone parapet with it as
+he looked carelessly at some interesting object on the river.</p>
+<p><!-- page 99--><a name="page99"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+99</span>The evenings in the taproom at &ldquo;The Goose&rdquo;
+were among the most enjoyable periods of the lad&rsquo;s London
+existence.&nbsp; A select party usually gathered there,
+consisting chiefly of a young man who never apparently had had
+anything to do in his life.&nbsp; His name was Harry Highlow, a
+clever sort of wild young scapegrace who played well at
+&ldquo;shove-ha&rsquo;penny,&rdquo; and sang a good comic
+song.&nbsp; Another of the party was a youth who earned a
+precarious livelihood by carrying two boards on his shoulders
+advertising a great pickle, or a great singer, as the case might
+be.&nbsp; Another of the company was a young man who was either a
+discharged or a retired groom; I should presume the former, as he
+complained bitterly that the authorities at Scotland Yard would
+not grant him a licence to drive a cab.&nbsp; He appeared to be a
+striking instance of how every kind of patronage in this country
+is distributed by favouritism.&nbsp; There were several others,
+all equally candidates for remunerative situations, but equally
+unfortunate in obtaining them: proving conclusively that life is
+indeed a lottery in which there may be a few prizes, usually
+going, by the caprice of Fortune, to the undeserving, while the
+blanks went indiscriminately to all the rest.</p>
+<p>Bound together by the sympathy which a common misfortune
+engenders, these young men were happy in the pursuit of their
+innocent amusements at &ldquo;The Goose.&rdquo;&nbsp; And while,
+at first, they were a little inclined to chaff the rustic youth
+on account of his apparent simplicity, they soon learned to
+respect him on account of his exceedingly good temper and his
+willingness to fall in with the general views of the company on
+all occasions.&nbsp; They learnt all about Joe&rsquo;s business
+in London, and it was a common greeting when they met <!-- page
+100--><a name="page100"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 100</span>in
+the evening to ask &ldquo;how the pig was?&rdquo;&nbsp; And they
+would enquire what the Lord Chancellor thought about the case,
+and whether it wouldn&rsquo;t be as well to grease the
+pig&rsquo;s tail and have a pig-hunt.&nbsp; To all which jocular
+observations Joe would reply with excellent temper and sometimes
+with no inappropriate wit.&nbsp; And then they said they would
+like to see Joe tackle Mr. Orkins, and believed he would shut him
+up.&nbsp; But chaff never roused his temper, and he laughed at
+the case as much as any man there.&nbsp; Fine tales he would have
+to tell when he got back to Yokelton; and pleasant, no doubt,
+would be in after-life, his recollections of the evenings at
+&ldquo;The Goose.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As a great general surveys the field where the intended action
+is to be fought, so Mr. Bumpkin was conducted by Horatio to
+Westminster Hall, and shown the various Courts of Justice, and
+some of the judges.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be this Chancery?&rdquo; he enquired.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O my eye, no!&rdquo; said Horatio; &ldquo;the cause has
+been transferred from Chancery to these &rsquo;ere Common Law
+Courts.&nbsp; It was only brought in Chancery because the costs
+there are upon a higher scale; we didn&rsquo;t mean to try her
+there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where will she be tried then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In one of these Courts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who be the judge?&rdquo; whispered Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>At this moment there was a loud shout of
+&ldquo;Silence!&rdquo; and although Mr. Bumpkin was making no
+noise whatever, a gentleman approached him, looking very angry,
+and enquired if Mr. Bumpkin desired to be committed for contempt
+of Court.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin thought the most prudent answer was silence; so he
+remained speechless, looking the gentleman <!-- page 101--><a
+name="page101"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 101</span>full in the
+face; while the gentleman looked him full in the face for at
+least a minute and a half, as if he were wondering whether he
+should take him off to prison there and then, or give him another
+chance, as the judge sometimes does a prisoner when he sentences
+him to two years imprisonment with hard labour.</p>
+<p>Now the gentleman was a very amiable man of about forty, with
+large brown mutton-chop whiskers, and a very well trained
+moustache; good-looking and, I should think, with some humour,
+that is for a person connected with the Courts.&nbsp; He was
+something about the Court, but in what capacity he held up his
+official head, I am unable to say.&nbsp; He was evidently
+regarded with great respect by the crowd of visitors.&nbsp; It
+was some time before he took his gaze off Mr. Bumpkin; even when
+he had taken his eyes off, he seemed looking at him as if he
+feared that the moment he went away Bumpkin would do it
+again.</p>
+<p>And then methought I heard someone whisper near me: &ldquo;His
+lordship is going to give judgment in the case of <i>Starling</i>
+v. <i>Nightingale</i>,&rdquo; and all at once there was a great
+peace.&nbsp; I lost sight of Bumpkin, I lost sight of the
+gentleman, I lost sight of the crowd; an indefinable sensation of
+delight overpowered my senses.&nbsp; Where was I?&nbsp; I had but
+a moment before been in a Court of Justice, with crowds of gaping
+idlers; with prosaic-looking gentlemen in horsehair wigs; with
+gentlemen in a pew with papers before them ready to take down the
+proceedings.&nbsp; Now it seemed as if I must be far away in the
+distant country, where all was calm and heavenly peace.</p>
+<p>Surely I must be among the water-lilies!&nbsp; What a lullaby
+sound as of rippling waters and of distant music <!-- page
+102--><a name="page102"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 102</span>in
+the evening air; of the eddying and swirl of the mingling
+currents; of the chime of bells on the evening breeze; of the
+zephyrs through fir-tops; of woodland whispers; of the cadence of
+the cathedral organ; of the soft sweet melody of the
+maiden&rsquo;s laugh; of her gentlest accents in her sweetest
+mood; of&mdash;but similitudes fail me.&nbsp; In this delicious
+retreat, which may be compared to the Garden of Eden before the
+tempter entered, are the choicest flowers of rhetoric.&nbsp; I
+hear a voice as from the far-off past, and I wonder will that be
+the voice which will utter the &ldquo;last syllable of recorded
+time?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then methought the scene changed, and I heard the
+question&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you move, Mr. Jones?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>O the prosaic Jones!&mdash;&ldquo;don&rsquo;t you
+move?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Yes, he does; he partly rises, ducks his head, and elevates
+the hinder portion of his person, and his movement ceases.&nbsp;
+And the question is repeated to Mr. Quick.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you
+move, Mr. Quick?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then I saw Mr. Bumpkin again, just as Mr. Quick ducked his
+head and elevated his back.</p>
+<p>And then some gentleman actually moved in real earnest upon
+these interesting facts:&mdash;A farmer&rsquo;s bull&mdash;just
+the very case for Mr. Bumpkin&mdash;had strayed from the road and
+gone into another man&rsquo;s yard, and upset a tub of meal; was
+then driven into a shed and locked up.&nbsp; The owner of the
+bull came up and demanded that the animal should be
+released.&nbsp; &ldquo;Not without paying two pounds,&rdquo; said
+the meal-owner.&nbsp; The bull owner paid it under protest, and
+summoned the meal-owner to the County Court for one pound
+seventeen shillings and sixpence, the difference between the
+damage done (which was really about twopence) and the money paid
+to redeem <!-- page 103--><a name="page103"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 103</span>the bull.&nbsp; Judgment for the
+plaintiff.&nbsp; Motion for new trial, or to enter verdict for
+the defendant, on the ground that the meal man could charge what
+he liked.</p>
+<p>One of the learned Judges asked:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you mean to tell me, Mr. Smiles, that if a man has a
+bull, and that bull goes into a yard and eats some meal out of a
+meal-tub, and the damage amounts to twopence, and the owner of
+the bull says &lsquo;here&rsquo;s your twopence,&rsquo; that the
+owner of the meal can say, &ldquo;No, I want a hundred pounds,
+and shall take your bull damage feasant,&rdquo; and then takes
+him and locks him up, and the owner of the bull pays the hundred
+pounds, he cannot afterwards get the money back?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is so,&rdquo; says the learned counsel,
+&ldquo;such is the law.&rdquo;&nbsp; And then he cited cases
+innumerable to prove that it was the law.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the Judge, &ldquo;unless you show me
+a case of a bull and a meal-tub, I shall not pay attention to any
+case&mdash;must be a meal-tub.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Second Judge: &ldquo;It is extortion, and done for the purpose
+of extortion; and I should say he could be indicted for obtaining
+money by false pretences.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not sure he could not, my lord,&rdquo; said the
+counsel; &ldquo;but he can&rsquo;t recover the money
+back.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said the Judge, &ldquo;if he obtains money
+by an indictable fraud cannot he get it back?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;that be rum law; if
+it had bin my bull, he&rsquo;d a gin &rsquo;em summat afore they
+runned him in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was interesting to see how the judges struggled against
+this ridiculous law; and it was manifest even to the unlettered
+Bumpkin, that a good deal of old law is very much like old
+clothes, the worse for wear, and <!-- page 104--><a
+name="page104"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 104</span>totally
+inapplicable to the present day.&nbsp; A struggle against old
+authorities is often a struggle of Judges to free themselves from
+the fetters of antiquated dicta and decisions no longer
+appropriate to or necessary for the modern requirements of
+civilisation.</p>
+<p>In this case precedents running over <i>one hundred and eight
+years</i> were quoted, and so far from impressing the Court with
+respect, they simply evoked a smile of contempt.</p>
+<p>The learned Judges, after patiently listening to the
+arguments, decided that extortion and fraud give no title, and
+thus were the mists and vapours that arose from the accumulated
+mudbanks of centuries dispelled by the clear shining of common
+sense.&nbsp; In spite of arguments by the hour, and the
+pettifogging of one hundred and eight years, justice prevailed,
+and the amazed appellant was far more damaged by his legal
+proceedings than he was by the bull.&nbsp; The moral surely is,
+that however wise ancient judges were in their day, their wisdom
+ought not to be allowed to work injustice.&nbsp; He may be a wise
+Judge who makes a precedent, but he is often a much wiser who
+sweeps it away.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 105--><a name="page105"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 105</span>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">How the great Don O&rsquo;Rapley became an
+usher of the Court of Queen&rsquo;s Bench and explained the
+ingenious invention of the round square&mdash;how Mr. Bumpkin
+took the water and studied character from a penny steamboat.</p>
+<p>Some years ago there lived in a little village near
+Bridgewater a young man who was the bowler of his village
+eleven&mdash;one of the first roundhand bowlers in point of time,
+and by no means the last in point of merit.&nbsp; Indeed, so
+great was the local fame of this young man that it produced a
+sensation for miles around when it was announced that Don
+O&rsquo;Rapley (such was his name) was going to bowl.&nbsp; All
+the boys of the village where the match was to take place were in
+a state of the utmost excitement to see the Don.&nbsp; At times
+it was even suggested that he was unfairly &ldquo;smugged
+in&rdquo; to play for a village to which he had no pretensions to
+belong.&nbsp; In process of time the youth became a man, and by
+virtue of his cricket reputation he obtained a post in the Court
+of Queen&rsquo;s Bench.&nbsp; The gentleman whom I have referred
+to as looking with such austerity at Mr. Bumpkin is that very Don
+O&rsquo;Rapley; the requirements of a large family necessitated
+his abandonment of a profession which, although more to his
+taste, was not sufficiently remunerative to admit of his
+indulging it <!-- page 106--><a name="page106"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 106</span>after the birth of his sixth
+child.&nbsp; But it was certain that he never lost his love for
+the relinquished pursuit, as was manifest from his habit when
+alone of frequently going through a kind of dumb motion with his
+arm as if he were delivering one of his celebrated
+&ldquo;twisters.&rdquo;&nbsp; He had even been seen in a quiet
+corner of the Court to go through the same performance in a
+somewhat modified form.&nbsp; He was once caught by the Judge in
+the very act of delivering a ball, but found a ready apology in
+the explanation that he had a touch of &ldquo;rheumatiz&rdquo; in
+his right shoulder.</p>
+<p>Now I saw in my dream that Don O&rsquo;Rapley was in earnest
+conversation with Horatio, and it was clear Mr. Bumpkin was the
+subject of it, from the very marked manner in which the Don and
+the youth turned occasionally to look at him.&nbsp; It may be
+stated that Horatio was the nephew of Don O&rsquo;Rapley, and,
+perhaps, it was partly in consequence of this relationship, and
+partly in consequence of what Horatio told him, that the latter
+gentleman rose from his seat under the witness-box and came
+towards Mr. Bumpkin, shouting as he did so in a very solemn and
+prolonged tone, &ldquo;Si-lence!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin saw him, and, conscious that he was innocent this
+time of any offence for which he could be committed, stood his
+ground with a bold front, and firmly held his white beaver with
+both hands.&nbsp; O&rsquo;Rapley contemplated him for a few
+minutes with an almost affectionate interest.&nbsp; Bumpkin felt
+much as a pigeon would under the gaze of an admiring owl.</p>
+<p>At last O&rsquo;Rapley spoke:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, it&rsquo;s never Mr. Bumpkin, is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It be a good imitation, sir,&rdquo; said Bumpkin,
+&ldquo;and I bean&rsquo;t asheamed of un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 107--><a name="page107"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+107</span>&ldquo;Silence!&rdquo; cried the Don.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+don&rsquo;t remember me, I s&rsquo;pose?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wall, not rightly, I doan&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I dissay you recollect Don O&rsquo;Rapley, the demon
+bowler of Bridgewater?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve &rsquo;eered tell on &rsquo;im,&rdquo; said
+Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m that man!&rdquo; said the Don, &ldquo;and
+this is my nephew, Mr. Snigger.&nbsp; He tells me you&rsquo;ve
+got a case comin&rsquo; on?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just step outside,&rdquo; said the Don, &ldquo;we
+mustn&rsquo;t talk &rsquo;ere.&rdquo;&nbsp; So they went into
+Westminster Hall, and the good-natured O&rsquo;Rapley asked if
+Mr. Bumpkin would like to look round, and if so he said he would
+be happy to show him, for he was very pleased to see anyone from
+the scene of his youthful exploits.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thankee, sir&mdash;thankee, sir,&rdquo; answered
+Bumpkin, delighted to find another &ldquo;native&rdquo; among
+&ldquo;furriners.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;And this &rsquo;ere
+genleman be thy nevvy, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is, and very proud of him I am; he&rsquo;s my
+sister&rsquo;s son.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Seems a nice quiet boy,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Now how old might he be?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Old,&rdquo; said Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley, looking deedily at
+the floor and pressing his hand to his forehead, &ldquo;why
+he&rsquo;ll be seventeen come March.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hem! his &rsquo;ed be a good deal older nor thic: his
+&rsquo;ed be forty&mdash;it&rsquo;s my way o&rsquo;
+thinkin&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Don laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, he has his head screwed on the right way, I
+think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why that air lad,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;might
+make a judge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 108--><a name="page108"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+108</span>O&rsquo;Rapley laughed and shook his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In old times,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;he might ha&rsquo;
+made a Lord Chancellor; a man as was clever had a chance then,
+but lor&rsquo; blesh you, Mr. Bumpkin, now-a-days it&rsquo;s so
+very different; the raw material is that plentiful in the law
+that you can find fifty men as would make rattlin good Lord
+Chancellors for one as you could pick out to make a
+rattlin&rsquo; good bowler.&nbsp; But come, we&rsquo;ll have a
+look round.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So round they looked again, and Mr. Bumpkin was duly impressed
+with the array of wigs and the number of books and the solemnity
+of the judges and the arguments of counsel, not one word of which
+was intelligible to him.&nbsp; Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley explained
+everything and pointed out where a judge and jury tried a case,
+and then took him into another court where two judges tried the
+judge and jury, and very often set them both aside and gave new
+trials and altered verdicts and judgments or refused to do so
+notwithstanding the elaborate arguments of the most eloquent and
+long-winded of learned counsel.</p>
+<p>Then the Don asked if Mr. Bumpkin would like to see the
+Chancery Judges&mdash;to which Mr. Bumpkin answered that
+&ldquo;he hadn&rsquo;t much opinion o&rsquo; Chancery from all
+he&rsquo;d &rsquo;eeard, and that when a man got into them there
+Cooarts maybe he&rsquo;d never coome out agin, but he
+shouldn&rsquo;t mind seein&rsquo; a Chancery Judge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; said the distinguished bowler,
+&ldquo;now-a-days we needn&rsquo;t go to Chancery, for
+they&rsquo;ve invented the &lsquo;Round Square.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin stared.&nbsp; Could so great a man as the
+O&rsquo;Rapley be joking?&nbsp; No; the Don seldom laughed.&nbsp;
+He was a great admirer of everything relating to the law, but had
+a marked prejudice against the new system; <!-- page 109--><a
+name="page109"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 109</span>and when he
+spoke of the &ldquo;Round Square&rdquo; he meant, as he
+afterwards explained, that confusion of Law and Equity which
+consists in putting Chancery Judges to try common law cases and
+Common Law Judges to unravel the nice twistings of the elaborate
+system of Equity; &ldquo;as though,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you
+should fuse the butcher and the baker by getting the former to
+make bread and the latter to dress a calf.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin could only stare by way of reply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you want to see Chancery Judges,&rdquo; added the
+Don, &ldquo;come to the Old Bailey!&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 111--><a name="page111"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 111</span>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">An interesting gentleman&mdash;showing how
+true it is that one half the world does not know how the other
+half lives.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Old Bailey,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin, as they
+crossed Palace Yard on their way to the steamboat pier,
+&ldquo;bean&rsquo;t that where all these &rsquo;ere chaps be
+tried for ship stealin&rsquo;?&rdquo; (sheep stealing).</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know about ship stealing,&rdquo; said
+O&rsquo;Rapley, &ldquo;but it&rsquo;s a place where they can cure
+all sorts of diseases.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Zounds!&rdquo; exclaimed Bumpkin, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+&rsquo;eeard tell of un.&nbsp; A horsepital you
+means&mdash;dooan&rsquo;t want to goo there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Horse or donkey, it don&rsquo;t matter what,&rdquo;
+said Don O&rsquo;Rapley.&nbsp; &ldquo;They&rsquo;ve got a stuff
+that&rsquo;s so strong a single drop will cure any disease
+you&rsquo;ve got.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder if it &rsquo;ud cure my old
+&rsquo;ooman&rsquo;s roomatiz.&nbsp; It &rsquo;ud be wuth
+tryin&rsquo;, maybe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll warrant it,&rdquo; replied the Don.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;She&rsquo;d never feel &rsquo;em after takin&rsquo; one
+drop,&rdquo; and he drew his hand across his mouth and
+coughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to try un,&rdquo; said the farmer,
+&ldquo;for she be a terrible suffrer in these &rsquo;ere east
+winds.&nbsp; &rsquo;As &rsquo;em like all up the
+grine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the Don, &ldquo;it don&rsquo;t matter
+where she &rsquo;as &rsquo;em, it will cure her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do &rsquo;em sell it&mdash;in bottles?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 112--><a name="page112"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+112</span>&ldquo;No, it isn&rsquo;t in bottles&mdash;you take it
+by the foot; about nine feet&rsquo;s considered a goodish
+dose.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin looked straight before him, somewhat puzzled at
+this extraordinary description of a medicine.&nbsp; At length he
+got a glimmering of the Don&rsquo;s meaning, and, looking
+towards, but not quite at him, said:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I be up to &rsquo;ee, sir!&rdquo; and the Don laughed,
+and asked whether his description wasn&rsquo;t right?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That be right enough.&nbsp; Zounds! it be right
+enough.&nbsp; Haw! haw! haw!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You never want a second dose,&rdquo; said the Don,
+&ldquo;do you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir&mdash;never wants moore &rsquo;an one dose; but
+&rsquo;ow comes it, if you please, sir, that these &rsquo;ere
+Chancery chaps have changed their tack; be it they&rsquo;ve tried
+&rsquo;onest men so long that they be gwine to &rsquo;ave a slap
+at the thieves for a change?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look &rsquo;ere,&rdquo; said the worthy O&rsquo;Rapley,
+&ldquo;you will certainly see the inside of a jail before you set
+eyes on the outside of a haystack, if you go on like that.&nbsp;
+It&rsquo;s contempt of court to speak of Her Majesty&rsquo;s
+Judges as &lsquo;chaps&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beg pardon, sir,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;but we
+must all &rsquo;ave a larnin&rsquo;.&nbsp; I didn&rsquo;t mane no
+disruspect to the Lord Judge; but I wur only a axin&rsquo; jist
+the same as you might ax me about anythink on my farm.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And I saw that they proceeded thus in edifying conversation
+until they came to the Thames embankment.&nbsp; It was somewhat
+difficult to preserve his presence of mind as Mr. Bumpkin
+descended the gangway and stepped on board the boat, which was
+belching forth its volumes of black smoke and rocking under the
+influence of the wash of a steamer that had just left the
+pier.</p>
+<p><!-- page 113--><a name="page113"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+113</span>&ldquo;I doant much like these &rsquo;ere
+booats,&rdquo; said he.&nbsp; &ldquo;Doant mind my old punt, but
+dang these &rsquo;ere ships.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no danger,&rdquo; said the
+O&rsquo;Rapley, springing on board as though he had been a pilot:
+and then making a motion with his arm as if he was delivering a
+regular &ldquo;length ball,&rdquo; his fist unfortunately came
+down on Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s white hat, in consequence of a sudden
+jerk of the vessel; a rocking boat not being the best of places
+for the delivery of length balls.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin looked round quite in the wrong direction for
+ascertaining what was the cause of the sudden shock to his
+nervous system and his hat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Zounds!&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;what were
+thic?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was what?&rdquo; asked O&rsquo;Rapley.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Summut gie me a crack o&rsquo; the top o&rsquo; my
+&rsquo;ead like a thunderbolt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t see anything fall,&rdquo; said the
+Don.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Noa; but I felt un, which I allows wur more&rsquo;n
+seein&rsquo;&mdash;lookee &rsquo;ere.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And taking off his huge beaver he showed the dent of Mr.
+O&rsquo;Rapley&rsquo;s fist.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bless me,&rdquo; said the roundhand bowler,
+&ldquo;it&rsquo;s like a crack with a cricket ball.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But there was no time for further examination of the
+extraordinary circumstance, for the crowd of passengers poured
+along and pushed this way and that, so that the two friends were
+fairly driven to the fore part of the boat, where they took their
+seats.&nbsp; It was quite a new world to Mr. Bumpkin, and more
+like a dream than a reality.&nbsp; As he stared at the different
+buildings he was too much amazed even to enquire what was this or
+what was that.&nbsp; But when they passed under the Suspension
+Bridge, and the chimney ducked her head and the smoke <!-- page
+114--><a name="page114"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+114</span>came out of the &ldquo;stump,&rdquo; as Mr. Bumpkin
+termed it, he thought she had struck and broken short off.&nbsp;
+Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley explained this phenomenon, as he did many
+others on their route; and when they came to Cleopatra&rsquo;s
+Needle he gave such information as he possessed concerning that
+ancient work.&nbsp; Mr. Bumpkin looked as though he were not to
+be taken in.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I be up to &rsquo;ee, sir,&rdquo; said he.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I s&rsquo;pose that air thing the t&rsquo;other side were
+the needle-case?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The O&rsquo;Rapley informed him that it was a shot tower where
+they made shot.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin laughed heartily at this; he was not to be taken
+in by any manner of means; was far too sharp for that.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I spoase,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;they makes the
+guns&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In Gunnersbury,&rdquo; said Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley; it was
+no use to be serious.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought thee were gwine to say in a gun pit, but I
+don&rsquo;t mind thy chaff, Master Rapley, and shall be mighty
+proud to see thee down at Southood for a day&rsquo;s
+shoot-in&rsquo;: and mind thee bring some o&rsquo; these ere shot
+with thee that be made at yon tower, haw! haw! haw!&nbsp;
+Thee&rsquo;ll kill a white-tailed crow then, I shouldn&rsquo;t
+wonder; thee knows a white-tailed crow, doan&rsquo;t thee, Master
+Rapley, when thee sees un&mdash;and danged if I doan&rsquo;t gie
+thee a quart bottle o&rsquo; pigeon&rsquo;s milk to tak&rsquo;
+wi&rsquo; thee; haw! haw! haw!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The O&rsquo;Rapley laughed heartily at these witty sallies,
+for Bumpkin was so jolly, and took everything in such good part,
+that he could not but enjoy his somewhat misplaced sarcasms.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now you&rsquo;ve heard of Waterloo, I dare say,&rdquo;
+said Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley.</p>
+<p><!-- page 115--><a name="page115"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+115</span>&ldquo;Yes, I&rsquo;ve &rsquo;eeard tell on un, and
+furder, my grand-feather wur out theer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, this that we are coming to is Waterloo
+Bridge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;it be a bridge, but it
+bean&rsquo;t Worterloo more &rsquo;an I be my
+grandfearther&mdash;what de think o&rsquo; that&mdash;haw! haw!
+haw!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good,&rdquo; said O&rsquo;Rapley; &ldquo;that&rsquo;s
+quite right, but this is the bridge named after the
+battle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Zo&rsquo;t be neamed artur un because it worn&rsquo;t
+named afore un, haw! haw! haw!&nbsp; Good agin, Maister Rapley,
+thee got it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley found that any attempt to convey
+instruction was useless, so he said:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Joking apart, Mr. Bumpkin, you see that man sitting
+over there with the wideawake hat?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;D&rsquo;ye mane near the noase o&rsquo; the
+ship?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, the nose if you like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I zee un&mdash;chap wi&rsquo; red faace, blue
+&rsquo;ankercher, and white spots?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the man.&nbsp; Well, now, you&rsquo;d
+never guess who he is?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin certainly would have been a sharp man if he
+could.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; continued the Don, &ldquo;that man gets
+his living by bringing actions.&nbsp; No matter who it is or
+what, out comes the writ and down he comes for
+damages.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hem! that be rum, too, bean&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, he&rsquo;s always looking out for accidents; if he
+hears o&rsquo; one, down he comes with his pocket-book, gets
+&rsquo;old o&rsquo; some chap that&rsquo;s injured, or thinks he
+is, and out comes the writ.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 116--><a name="page116"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+116</span>&ldquo;What be he then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A scamp&mdash;works in the name of some broken-down
+attorney, and pays him for the use of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So he can work the lor like wirout being a
+loryer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it&mdash;and, lor&rsquo; bless you,
+he&rsquo;s got such a way with him that if he was to come and
+talk to you for five minutes, he&rsquo;d have a writ out against
+you in the morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ain&rsquo;t it rayther cold at this eend o&rsquo; the
+booat,&rdquo; asked Mr. Bumpkin, &ldquo;I feel a little chilly
+loike.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the Don, &ldquo;we just caught the wind
+at that corner, that was all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Mr. Bumpkin kept his eye on the artful man, with a full
+determination to &ldquo;have no truck wi&rsquo; un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As I was saying, this Ananias never misses a chance:
+he&rsquo;s on the look-out at this moment; if they was to push
+that gangway against his toe, down he&rsquo;d go and be laid up
+with an injured spine and concussion of the brain, till he got
+damages from the company.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Must be a reg&rsquo;ler rogue, I allows; I should like
+to push un overboard.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just what he would like; he isn&rsquo;t born to be
+drowned, that man; he&rsquo;d soon have a writ out against
+you.&nbsp; There was a railway accident once miles away in the
+country; ever so many people were injured and some of &rsquo;em
+killed.&nbsp; Well, down he goes to see if he could get hold of
+anybody&mdash;no, nobody would have him&mdash;so what does he do
+but bring an action himself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What for?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, just the same as if he&rsquo;d been in the
+accident.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ought to be hanged.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, the doctors were very pleased to find that no
+bones were broken, and, although there were no bruises, <!-- page
+117--><a name="page117"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+117</span>they discovered that there were internal injuries: the
+spine was wrong, and there was concussion of the brain, and so
+on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If ever I &rsquo;eerd tell o&rsquo; sich a thing in my
+borned days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, but it&rsquo;s true.&nbsp; Well, he was laid up a
+long time under medical treatment, and it was months before he
+could get about, and then he brings his action: but before it
+came on he prosecutes his servant for stealing some trumpery
+thing or other&mdash;a very pretty girl she was too&mdash;and the
+trial came on at Quarter Sessions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where Squoire Stooky sits.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never laughed so in all my life; there was the
+railway company with the red light, and there was Fireaway, the
+counsel for the girl, and then in hobbled the prosecutor, with a
+great white bandage round his head.&nbsp; He was so feeble
+through the injuries he had received that he could hardly
+walk.&nbsp; &lsquo;Now then,&rsquo; says the counsel, &lsquo;is
+he sworn?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; says the crier.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;He must be sworn on the Koran,&rsquo; says
+Fireaway; &lsquo;he&rsquo;s a Mommadon.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Where&rsquo;s the Jorum?&rsquo; says the
+crier.&nbsp; &lsquo;Must be swore on the Jorum.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O dear, dear, you should ha&rsquo; heard &rsquo;em
+laugh&mdash;it was more like a theayter than a court.&nbsp; It
+was not only roars, but continnerus roars for several
+minutes.&nbsp; And all the time the larfter was going on there
+was this man throwin&rsquo; out his arms over the witness-box at
+the counsel like a madman; and the more he raved the more they
+laughed.&nbsp; He was changed from a hobblin&rsquo; invalid, as
+the counsel said, into a hathletic pugilist.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I &rsquo;ope she got off.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Got off with flying colours&mdash;we&rsquo;re
+magnanimous said the jury, &lsquo;not guilty.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 118--><a name="page118"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+118</span>&ldquo;Well, I likes upright and down-straight,&rdquo;
+said Bumpkin, &ldquo;it&rsquo;ll goo furdest in th&rsquo; long
+run.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said O&rsquo;Rapley, &ldquo;and the longer
+the run the furder it&rsquo;ll go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So &rsquo;t wool; but if you doan&rsquo;t mind, sir,
+I&rsquo;d like to get nearer that &rsquo;ere
+fireplace.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The funnel&mdash;very well.&rdquo;&nbsp; And as they
+moved Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley, in the exuberance of his spirits,
+delivered another ball at the chimney, which apparently took the
+middle stump, for the chimney again broke in half.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Got him!&rdquo; said he.&nbsp; &ldquo;I quite agree,
+and I&rsquo;ll tell you for why.&nbsp; You can play a straight
+ball if you mind what you are about&mdash;just take your bat so,
+and bring your left elbow well round so, and keep your bat, as
+you say, upright and down-straight, so&mdash;and there you
+are.&nbsp; And there, indeed, Mr. Bumpkin was, on his back, for
+the boat at that moment bumped so violently against the side of
+the pier that many persons were staggering about as if they were
+in a storm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Zounds!&rdquo; said the farmer, as he was being picked
+up&mdash;&ldquo;these &rsquo;ere booats, I doan&rsquo;t like
+&rsquo;em&mdash;gie me the ole-fashioned uns.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now came the usual hullabaloo, &ldquo;Stand back!&mdash;pass
+on!&mdash;out of the way! now, then, look sharp there!&rdquo; and
+the pushing of the gangway against people&rsquo;s shins as though
+they were so many skittles to be knocked over, and then came the
+slow process of &ldquo;passing out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s one thing,&rdquo; whispered
+O&rsquo;Rapley, &ldquo;if you do break your leg the
+company&rsquo;s liable&mdash;that&rsquo;s one comfort.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thankee, sir,&rdquo; answered Bumpkin, &ldquo;but I
+bean&rsquo;t a gwine to break my leg for the sake o&rsquo; a
+haction&mdash;and mebbee ha&rsquo; to pay the costs.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 119--><a name="page119"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 119</span>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">THE OLD BAILEY&mdash;ADVANTAGES OF THE NEW
+SYSTEM ILLUSTRATED.</p>
+<p>And I saw in my dream that Don O&rsquo;Rapley and worthy
+Master Bumpkin proceeded together until they came to the Old
+Bailey; that delightful place which will ever impress me with the
+belief that the Satanic Personage is not a homeless
+wanderer.&nbsp; As they journeyed together O&rsquo;Rapley asked
+whether there was any particular kind of case which he would
+prefer&mdash;much the same as he would enquire what he would like
+for lunch.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, thankee, sir,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;what he
+there?&rdquo;&mdash;just the same as a hungry guest would ask the
+waiter for the bill of fare.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley,
+&ldquo;there&rsquo;s no murder to-day, but there&rsquo;s sure to
+be highway robberies, burglaries, rapes, and so on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wall, I thinks one o&rsquo; them air as good as
+anything,&rdquo; said Bumpkin.&nbsp; &ldquo;I wur on the jury
+once when a chap were tried.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did he get off?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Got off as clane as a whusle.&nbsp; Not guilty, we all
+said: sarved her right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s rather early in the morning,
+p&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps,&rdquo; said O&rsquo;Rapley; &ldquo;but
+there&rsquo;s sure to be something interesting <!-- page 120--><a
+name="page120"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 120</span>before
+lunch&mdash;crimes are very pop&rsquo;lar, and for my own part, I
+think they&rsquo;re as nice as anything: divorces,
+p&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps, are as good, and the female intellect
+prefers &rsquo;em as a more digestable food for their
+minds.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As a what, sir!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, since they did away with <i>crim. cons</i>,
+there&rsquo;s nothing left for females but murders and divorces,
+worth speaking of.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, how&rsquo;s that, then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, they&rsquo;re not considered sufficiently moral,
+that&rsquo;s all.&nbsp; You see, Master Bumpkin, we&rsquo;re
+getting to be a very moral and good people.&nbsp; They&rsquo;re
+doin&rsquo; away with all that&rsquo;s naughty, such as music and
+dancing, peep-shows and country fairs.&nbsp; This is a religious
+age.&nbsp; No pictur galleries on a Sunday, but as many
+public-houses as you like; it&rsquo;s wicked to look at picturs
+on a Sunday.&nbsp; And now I&rsquo;ll tell you another thing,
+Master Bumpkin, although p&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps I ought to keep my
+mouth closed; but &rsquo;ere you&rsquo;ll see a Chancery Judge as
+knows everything about land and titles to property, and all that,
+and never had any training in Criminal Courts, and may be never
+been inside of one before, you&rsquo;ll see &rsquo;im down
+&rsquo;ere tryin&rsquo; burglaries and robberies, and down at the
+Assizes you&rsquo;ll see &rsquo;im tryin&rsquo; men and women for
+stealing mutton pies and a couple of ounces of bacon;
+that&rsquo;s the way the Round Square&rsquo;s worked, Master
+Bumpkin; and very well it acts.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s a moral
+atmosphere, too, about the Courts which is very curious.&nbsp; It
+seems to make every crime look bigger than it really is.&nbsp;
+But as I say, where&rsquo;s the human natur of a Chancery
+barrister?&nbsp; How can you get it in Chancery?&nbsp; They only
+sees human natur in a haffidavit, and although I don&rsquo;t say
+you can&rsquo;t <!-- page 121--><a name="page121"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 121</span>put a lot of it into a haffidavit,
+such as perjury and such like, yet it&rsquo;s so done up by the
+skill of the profession that you can hardly see it.&nbsp;
+Learning from haffidavits isn&rsquo;t like learning from the
+witness-box, mark my words, Mr. Bumpkin; and so you&rsquo;ll find
+when you come to hear a case or two.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Having thus eloquently delivered himself, Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley
+paused to see its effect: but there was no answer.&nbsp; There
+was no doubt the Don could talk a-bit, and took especial pride in
+expressing his views on law reform, which, to his idea, would
+best be effected by returning to the &ldquo;old style.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And I saw that they pushed their way through a crowd of people
+of all sorts and degrees of unwashedness and crime, and proceeded
+up a winding stair, through other crowds of the most evil-looking
+indictable persons you could meet with out of the Bottomless
+Pit.</p>
+<p>And amongst them were pushing, with eager, hungry, dirty
+faces, men who called themselves clerks, evil-disposed persons
+who traded under such names as their owners could use no longer
+on their own account.&nbsp; These prowlers amongst thieves, under
+the protection of the Law, were permitted to extort what they
+could from the friends of miserable prisoners under pretence of
+engaging counsel to defend them.&nbsp; Counsel they would engage
+after a fashion&mdash;sometimes: but not unfrequently they
+cheated counsel, client and the law at the same time, which is
+rather better than killing two birds with one stone.</p>
+<p>And the two friends, after threading their way through the
+obnoxious crowd, came to the principal Court of the Old Bailey,
+called the &ldquo;Old Court,&rdquo; and a very evil-looking <!--
+page 122--><a name="page122"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+122</span>place it was.&nbsp; All the ghosts of past criminals
+seemed floating in the dingy atmosphere.&nbsp; Crowds of men,
+women and children were heaped together in all directions, except
+on the bench and in a kind of pew which was reserved for such
+ladies as desired to witness the last degradation of human
+nature.</p>
+<p>Presently came in, announced with a loud cry of
+&ldquo;Silence!&rdquo; and &ldquo;Be uncovered in Court!&rdquo; a
+gorgeous array of stout and berobed gentlemen, with massive
+chains and purple faces.&nbsp; These, I learned, were the noble
+Aldermen of the Corporation.&nbsp; What a contrast to the meagre
+wretches who composed the crowd!&nbsp; Here was a picture of what
+well-fed honesty and virtue could accomplish for human nature on
+the one part, as opposed to what hungry crime could effect, on
+the other.&nbsp; Blessings, say I, on good victuals!&nbsp; It is
+a great promoter of innocence.&nbsp; And I thought how many of
+the poor, half-starved, cadaverous wretches who crowded into the
+dock in all their emaciated wretchedness and rags would, under
+other conditions, have become as portly and rubicund and as moral
+as the row of worthy aldermen who sat looking at them with
+contempt from their exalted position.</p>
+<p>The rich man doesn&rsquo;t steal a loaf of bread; he has no
+temptation to do so: the uneducated thief doesn&rsquo;t get up
+sham companies, because <i>he</i> has no temptation to do
+so.&nbsp; Temptation and Opportunity have much to answer for in
+the destinies of men.&nbsp; Honesty is the best policy, but it is
+not always the most expedient or practicable.</p>
+<p>Now there was much arraignment of prisoners, and much swearing
+of jurymen, and proclamations about &ldquo;informing my Lords
+Justices and the Queen&rsquo;s Attorney-General of any crimes,
+misdemeanours, felonies, &amp;c., committed <!-- page 123--><a
+name="page123"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 123</span>by any of
+the prisoners,&rdquo; and &ldquo;if anybody could so inform my
+Lords Justices,&rdquo; &amp;c, he was to come forward and do so,
+and he would be heard.&nbsp; And then the crowd of prisoners,
+except the one about to be tried, were told to stand down.&nbsp;
+And down they all swarmed, some laughing and some crying, to the
+depths below.&nbsp; And the stout warders took their stand beside
+the remaining prisoner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley, &ldquo;this Judge
+is quite fresh to the work, and I&rsquo;ll warrant he&rsquo;ll
+take a moral view of the law, which is about the worst view a
+Judge <i>can</i> take.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The man left in the dock was a singular specimen of humanity:
+he was a thin, wizen-looking man of about seventy, with a wooden
+leg: and as he stood up to plead, leant on two crutches, while
+his head shook a good deal, as if he had got the palsy.&nbsp; A
+smile went round the bar, and in some places broke out into a
+laugh: the situation was, indeed, ridiculous; and before any but
+a Chancery Judge, methought, there must be an acquittal on the
+view.&nbsp; However, I saw that the man pleaded not guilty, and
+then Mr. Makebelieve opened the case for the Crown.&nbsp; He put
+it very clearly, and, as he said, fairly before the jury; and
+then called a tall, large-boned woman of about forty into the
+witness-box.&nbsp; This was the &ldquo;afflicted widow,&rdquo; as
+Makebelieve had called her; and the way she gave her evidence
+made a visible impression on the mind of the learned Judge.&nbsp;
+His Lordship looked up occasionally from his note-book and fixed
+his eyes on the prisoner, whose appearance was that of one
+trembling with a consciousness of guilt&mdash;that is, to one not
+versed in human nature outside an affidavit.</p>
+<p><!-- page 124--><a name="page124"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+124</span>Mr. Nimble, the prisoner&rsquo;s counsel, asked if the
+prisoner might sit down as he was very &ldquo;infirm.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you an affidavit of that fact, Mr. Nimble?&rdquo;
+asked the Judge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, my lord; it is not usual on such an application to
+have an affidavit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is not usual,&rdquo; said his lordship, &ldquo;to
+take notice of any fact not upon affidavit; but in this case the
+prisoner may sit down.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The prosecutrix gave her evidence very flippantly, and did not
+seem in the least concerned that her virtue had had so narrow an
+escape.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; asked Mr. Nimble, &ldquo;what are
+you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The learned Judge said he could not see what that had to do
+with the question.&nbsp; Could Mr. Nimble resist the facts?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, my lord,&rdquo; answered the learned counsel;
+&ldquo;and I intend, in the first place, to resist them by
+showing that this woman is entirely unworthy of
+credit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you really going to suggest perjury, Mr.
+Nimble?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Assuredly, my lord!&nbsp; I am going to show that there
+is not a word of truth in this woman&rsquo;s statement.&nbsp; I
+have a right to cross-examine as to her credit.&nbsp; If your
+lordship will allow me, I will&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cross-examination, Mr. Nimble, cannot be allowed, in
+order to make a witness contradict all that she has said in her
+examination-in-chief; it would be a strange state of the law, if
+it could.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Nimble looked about the desk, and then under it, and felt
+in his bag, and at last exclaimed in a somewhat petulant
+tone:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s my Taylor?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 125--><a name="page125"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+125</span>&ldquo;What do you want your tailor for?&rdquo; asked
+the Judge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish to point out to your lordship that my
+proposition is correct, and that I can cross-examine to the
+credit of a witness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here the clerk of arraigns, who sat just under the learned
+Judge, and was always consulted on matters of practice when there
+was any difficulty, was seen whispering to his lordship: after
+which his lordship looked very blank and red.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We always consult him, my lord,&rdquo; said Mr. Nimble,
+with a smile, &ldquo;in suits at Common Law.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Everybody tried not to laugh, and everybody failed.&nbsp; Even
+the Judge, being a very good-tempered man, laughed too, and
+said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O yes, Taylor on Evidence, Mr. Nimble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At last the book, about the size of a London Directory, was
+handed up by a tall man who was Mr. Nimble&rsquo;s clerk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, my lord, at page nineteen hundred and seventy-two
+your lordship will find that when the credibility of a witness is
+attacked&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Judge: &ldquo;That will be near the end of the
+book.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Nimble: &ldquo;No, my lord, near the beginning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall not stop you,&rdquo; said the learned Judge;
+&ldquo;your question may be put for what it is worth: but now,
+suppose in answer to your question she says she is an ironer,
+what then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I am, my lordship,&rdquo; said the
+woman, with an obsequious curtsey.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There, now you have it,&rdquo; said the Judge,
+&ldquo;she is an ironer; stop, let me take that down, &lsquo;I am
+an ironer.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The cross-examination continued, somewhat in an <!-- page
+126--><a name="page126"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+126</span>angry tone no doubt, and amid frequent interruptions;
+but Mr. Nimble always thumped down the ponderous Taylor upon any
+objection of the learned Judge, and crushed it as though it were
+a butterfly.</p>
+<p>Next the policeman gave his evidence, and was duly
+cross-examined.&nbsp; Mr. Nimble called no witnesses; there were
+none to call: but addressed the jury in a forcible and eloquent
+speech, stigmatizing the charge as an utterly preposterous one,
+and dealing with every fact in a straightforward and manly
+manner.&nbsp; After he had finished, the jury would undoubtedly
+have acquitted; but the learned Judge had to sum up, which in
+this, as in many cases at Quarter Sessions, was no more a summing
+up than counting ten on your fingers is a summing up.&nbsp; It
+was a desultory speech, and if made by the counsel for the
+prosecution, would have been a most unfair one for the Crown:
+totally ignoring the fact that human nature was subject to
+frailties, and testimony liable to be tainted with perjury.&nbsp;
+It made so great an impression upon me in my dream that I
+transcribed it when I awoke; and this is the manner in which it
+dealt with the main points:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">Gentlemen of the Jury</span>,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is a case of a very serious character (the nature
+of the offence was then read from Roscoe), and I am bound to tell
+you that the evidence is all one way: namely, on the side of the
+prosecution.&nbsp; There is not a single affidavit to the
+contrary.&nbsp; Now what are the facts?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Nimble: &ldquo;Would your lordship pardon me&mdash;whether
+they are facts or not is for the jury.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am coming to that, Mr. Nimble; unless contradicted
+they are facts, or, at least, if you believe them, <!-- page
+127--><a name="page127"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+127</span>gentlemen.&nbsp; If the evidence is uncontradicted,
+what is the inference?&nbsp; The inference is for you, not for
+me; I have simply to state the law: it is for you to find the
+facts.&nbsp; You must exercise your common sense: if the prisoner
+could have contradicted this evidence, is it reasonable to
+suppose he would not have done so with so serious a charge
+hanging over his head?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord, may I ask how could the prisoner have called
+evidence? there was no one present.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Nimble,&rdquo; said his Lordship solemnly,
+&ldquo;he might have shown he was elsewhere.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, my lord; but the prisoner admits being present: he
+doesn&rsquo;t set up an <i>alibi</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gentlemen, you hear what the learned counsel says: he
+admits that the prisoner was present; that is corroborative of
+the story told by the prosecutrix.&nbsp; Now, if you find a
+witness speaking truthfully about one part of a transaction, what
+are you to infer with regard to the rest?&nbsp; Gentlemen, the
+case is for you, and not for me: happily I have not to find the
+facts: they are for you&mdash;and what are they?&nbsp; This
+woman, who is an ironer, was going along a lonely lane,
+proceeding to her home, as she states&mdash;and again I say there
+is no contradiction&mdash;and she meets this man; he accosts her,
+and then, according to her account, assaults her, and in a manner
+which I think leaves no doubt of his intention&mdash;but that is
+for you.&nbsp; I say he assaults her, if you believe her story:
+of course, if you do not believe her story, then in the absence
+of corroboration there would be an end of the case.&nbsp; But is
+there an absence of corroboration?&nbsp; What do we find,
+gentlemen?&nbsp; Now let me read to you the evidence of Police
+Constable Swearhard.&nbsp; What does he say?&nbsp; &lsquo;I was
+coming along the Lover&rsquo;s Lane at nine <!-- page 128--><a
+name="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+128</span>twenty-five, and I saw two persons, whom I afterwards
+found to be the prosecutrix and the prisoner.&rsquo;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;You will mark that, gentlemen, the prisoner himself does
+not suggest an <i>alibi</i>, that is to say, that he was
+elsewhere, when this event occurred.&nbsp; Then he was upon the
+spot: and the policeman tells you&mdash;it is for you to say
+whether you believe the policeman or not; there is no suggestion
+that he is not a witness of truth&mdash;and he says that he heard
+a scream, and caught the defendant in the act.&nbsp; Now, from
+whom did that scream proceed?&nbsp; Not from the prisoner, for it
+was the scream of a woman.&nbsp; From whom then could it proceed
+but from the prosecutrix?&nbsp; Now, in all cases of this kind,
+one very material point has always been relied on by the Judges,
+and that point is this: What was the conduct of the woman?&nbsp;
+Did she go about her ordinary business as usual, or did she make
+a complaint?&nbsp; If she made no complaint, or made it a long
+time after, it is some evidence&mdash;not conclusive by any
+means&mdash;but it is some evidence against the truth of her
+story.&nbsp; Let us test this case by that theory.&nbsp; What is
+the evidence of the policeman?&nbsp; I will read his words:
+&lsquo;The moment I got up,&rsquo; he says, now mark that,
+gentlemen, &lsquo;the woman complained of the conduct of the
+prisoner: she screamed and threw herself in my arms and then
+nearly fainted.&rsquo;&nbsp; Gentlemen, what does all that
+mean?&nbsp; You will say by your verdict.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Consider your verdict,&rdquo; said the Clerk of
+Arraigns, and almost immediately the Jury said: &ldquo;Guilty of
+attempt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Call upon him,&rdquo; said the Judge: and he was called
+upon accordingly, but only said &ldquo;the prosecutrix was a
+well-known bad woman.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then the Judge said very solemnly:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Prisoner at the bar, you have been convicted upon <!--
+page 129--><a name="page129"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+129</span>the clearest possible evidence of this crime: what you
+say about the character of the prosecutrix the more convinces me
+that you are a very bad man.&nbsp; You not only assail the virtue
+of this woman, but, happily prevented in your design, you
+endeavour to destroy it afterwards in this Court.&nbsp; No one
+who has heard this case can doubt that you have been guilty of
+this very grave offence; and in my judgment that offence is
+aggravated by the fact that you committed it against her will and
+without her consent.&nbsp; The sentence is that you be sent to
+prison for eighteen calendar months.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rather warm,&rdquo; said Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never heeard such a thing in my life,&rdquo; said
+Master Bumpkin, &ldquo;she wur a consentin&rsquo; party if ever
+there wur one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But that makes no difference now-a-days,&rdquo; said
+Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley.&nbsp; &ldquo;Chancery Judges studies the
+equity of the thing more.&nbsp; But perhaps, Mr. Bumpkin, you
+don&rsquo;t know what that means?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;I
+doan&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You must be quiet,&rdquo; said Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley;
+&ldquo;recollect you are in a Court of Justice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be I!&nbsp; It &rsquo;ud take moore un thic case to
+make I believe it; but lookee here: I be hanged if there
+ain&rsquo;t that Snooks feller down along there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who?&rdquo; enquired O&rsquo;Rapley.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That there feller,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;be sure
+to find his way where there&rsquo;s anything gooin on o&rsquo;
+this ere natur.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Next an undefended prisoner was placed on trial, and as he was
+supposed to know all the law of England, he was treated as if he
+did.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t put that question, you know,&rdquo;
+said the learned Judge; &ldquo;and now you are making a
+statement; <!-- page 130--><a name="page130"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 130</span>it is not time to make your
+statement yet; you will have ample opportunity by-and-by in your
+speech to the jury.&rdquo;&nbsp; And afterwards, when the Judge
+was summing up, the unhappy prisoner called his lordship&rsquo;s
+attention to a mistake; but he was told that he had had his turn
+and had made his speech to the jury, and must not now interrupt
+the Court.&nbsp; So he had to be quite silent until he was
+convicted.&nbsp; Then the two companions went into another court,
+where a very stern-looking Common Law Judge was trying a
+ferocious-looking prisoner.&nbsp; And Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley was
+delighted to explain that now his friend would see the
+difference.&nbsp; They had entered the court just as the learned
+Judge had begun to address the jury; and very careful his
+lordship was to explain (not in technical language), but in
+homely, common-place and common-sense English, the nature of the
+crime with which the prisoner was charged.&nbsp; He was very
+careful in explaining this, for fear the jury should improperly
+come to the conclusion that, because they might believe the
+prisoner had in fact committed the act, he must necessarily be
+guilty.&nbsp; And they were told that the act was in that case
+only one element of the crime, and that they must ascertain
+whether there was the guilty intent or no.&nbsp; Now this old Mr.
+Justice Common Sense, I thought, was very well worth listening
+to, and I heartily wished Mr. Justice Technical from the Old
+Court had been there to take a lesson; and I take the liberty of
+setting down what I heard in my dream for the benefit of future
+Justices Technical.</p>
+<p>His lordship directed the jury&rsquo;s attention to the
+evidence, which he carefully avoided calling facts: not to the
+verbatim report of it on his note-book as some Recorders do, and
+think when they are reading it over <!-- page 131--><a
+name="page131"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 131</span>they are
+summing it up; but pointing out statements which, if believed,
+become facts and if facts, lead to certain <i>inferences</i> of
+guilt or innocence.</p>
+<p>It was while the learned Mr. Justice Common Sense was thus
+engaged, that the warder in the dock suddenly checked the
+prisoner with these words:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t interrupt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why may he not interrupt?&rdquo; asks Mr. Justice
+Common Sense.&nbsp; &ldquo;What do you want to say,
+prisoner?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; answered the prisoner, &ldquo;I wanted
+to say as how that there witness as your lordship speaks on
+didn&rsquo;t say as he seen me there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, didn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo; said the Judge.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I thought he did&mdash;now let us see,&rdquo; turning over
+his notes.&nbsp; &ldquo;No, you are quite right, prisoner, he did
+not see you at the spot but immediately after.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then his lordship proceeded until there was another
+interruption of the same character, and the foolish warder again
+told the prisoner to be quiet.&nbsp; This brought down Mr.
+Justice Common Sense with a vengeance:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Warder! how dare you stop the prisoner? he is on his
+trial and is undefended.&nbsp; Who is to check me if I am
+misstating the evidence if he does not?&nbsp; If you dare to
+speak like that to him again I will commit you.&nbsp; Prisoner,
+interrupt me as often as you think I am not correctly stating the
+evidence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thankee, my lord.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That be the sort o&rsquo; Judge for me,&rdquo; said
+Bumpkin; &ldquo;but I&rsquo;ve &rsquo;ad enough on it, Maister
+O&rsquo;Rapley, so if you please, I&rsquo;ll get back t&rsquo;
+the &lsquo;Goose.&rsquo;&nbsp; Why didn&rsquo;t that air Judge
+try t&rsquo;other case, I wonder?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because,&rdquo; replied the Don, &ldquo;the new system
+is to work the &lsquo;Round Square&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 133--><a name="page133"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 133</span>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s experience of London life,
+enlarged.</p>
+<p>On leaving the Old Bailey the two friends proceeded to a
+neighbouring public-house and partook of some light refreshment
+at the counter.&nbsp; Now Mr. Bumpkin had never yet examined the
+viands displayed on a counter.&nbsp; His idea of refreshment,
+when from home, had always been a huge round of beef smoking at
+one end of the table and a large leg of mutton smoking at the
+other, with sundry dishes of similar pretensions between, and an
+immense quantity of vegetables.&nbsp; When, therefore he saw some
+stale-looking sandwiches under the ordinary glass cover, he
+exclaimed: &ldquo;Wittals must be mighty scarce to clap &rsquo;em
+under a glass case.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s to keep the flies off;&rdquo; said his
+companion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They need well keep un off, for there bean&rsquo;t
+enough for a couple if they was ony wise ongry like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>However, our friends made the best of what there was, and Mr.
+O&rsquo;Rapley, wishing success to his companion, enquired who
+was to be his counsel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I doan&rsquo;t rightly know, but I&rsquo;ll warrant Mr.
+Prigg&rsquo;ll have a good un&mdash;he knows what he be about;
+and all I hopes is, he&rsquo;ll rattle it into that there Snooks,
+for if ever there wur a bad un it be him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He looks a bad un,&rdquo; replied O&rsquo;Rapley.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;When do you think the case is likely to come
+on?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 134--><a name="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+134</span>&ldquo;Well, it is supposed as it ull be on to-morrer;
+but I bleeve there&rsquo;s no sartinty about thic.&nbsp; Now
+then, just give us a little moore, will &rsquo;ee sir?&rdquo;
+(this to the waiter).</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll pay for the next,&rdquo; said
+O&rsquo;Rapley, feeling in his pocket.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Noa, noa, I&rsquo;ll pay; and thankee, sir, for
+comin&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And then O&rsquo;Rapley drank his friend&rsquo;s health again,
+and wished further success to the case, and hoped Mr. Bumpkin
+would be sure to come to him when he was at Westminster; and
+expressed himself desirous to assist his friend in every way that
+lay in his power&mdash;declaring that he really must be going for
+he didn&rsquo;t know what would happen if the Judge should find
+he was away; and was not at all certain it would not lead to some
+officious member of the House of Commons asking a question of the
+Prime Minister about it.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin drank his good health, again and again, declaring
+he was &ldquo;mighty proud to have met with un;&rdquo; and that
+when the case was over and he had returned to his farm, he should
+be pleased if Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley would come down and spend a few
+days with him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Nancy,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;&rsquo;ll be rare and pleased to see thee.&nbsp; I got as
+nice a little farm as any in the county, and as pooty pigs as
+thee ever clapped eyes on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley, without being too condescending, expressed
+himself highly gratified with making Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s
+acquaintance, and observed that the finest pigs ever he saw were
+those of the Lord Chief Justice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dade, sir, now what sort be they?&rdquo;&nbsp; Mr.
+O&rsquo;Rapley was not learned in pigs, and not knowing the name
+of any breed whatever, was at a loss how to describe them.&nbsp;
+Mr. Bumpkin came to his assistance.</p>
+<p><!-- page 135--><a name="page135"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+135</span>&ldquo;Be they smooth like and slim?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the Don.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hardly any hair?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Scarce a bit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They be Chichesters then&mdash;the werry best breed as
+a man ever had in his stye.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never see anything so pretty,&rdquo; replied Mr.
+O&rsquo;Rapley.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! and they be the smallest-boned pigs as ever could
+be&mdash;they bean&rsquo;t got a bone bigger nor your little
+finger.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; said the Don, finishing his glass,
+&ldquo;the smaller the bone the more the meat, that&rsquo;s what
+I always say; and the Lord Chief Justice don&rsquo;t care for
+bone, he likes meat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An&rsquo; so do I&mdash;the Lud Judge be right, and if
+he tries my case he&rsquo;ll know the difference betwixt thic pig
+as Snooks tooked away and one o&rsquo; them
+there&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Jackass-looking pigs,&rdquo; said O&rsquo;Rapley,
+seeing that his friend paused.&nbsp; &ldquo;I hate them jackass
+pigs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So do I&mdash;they never puts on fat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I must go, really,&rdquo; said O&rsquo;Rapley.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;What do you make the right time?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Master Bumpkin pulled out his watch with great effort, and
+said it was just a quarter past four by Yokelton time.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s your good health again, Mr.
+Bumpkin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And yours, sir; and now I think on it, if it&rsquo;s a
+fair question Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley, and I med ax un wirout
+contempt, when do you think this &rsquo;ere case o&rsquo; mine be
+likely to come on, for you ought to know summut about
+un?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; said the Don, partially closing one eye, and
+looking profoundly into the glass as though he were <!-- page
+136--><a name="page136"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+136</span>divining the future, &ldquo;law, sir, is a mystery and
+judges is a mystery; masters is a mystery and &rsquo;sociates is
+a mystery; ushers is a mystery and counsel is a
+mystery;&mdash;the whole of life (here he tipped the contents of
+the glass down his throat) is a mystery.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So it be,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin, drawing the back of
+his hand across his mouth.&nbsp; &ldquo;So it be sir, but do
+&rsquo;ee think&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, really,&rdquo; answered the Don, &ldquo;I should
+say in about a couple of years if you ask me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How the h&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Excuse me, Master Bumpkin, but contempt follers us like
+a shadder: if you had said that to a Judge it would have been a
+year at least: it&rsquo;s three months as it is if I liked to go
+on with the case; but I&rsquo;m not a wicious man, I
+hope.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t mean no offence,&rdquo; said the
+farmer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, I dare say not; but still there is a way of
+doing things.&nbsp; Now if you had said to me, &lsquo;Mr.
+O&rsquo;Rapley, you are a gentleman moving in judicial circles,
+and are probably acquainted with the windings of the,&rsquo;
+&amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.&nbsp; &lsquo;Can you inform me why my
+case is being so unduly prolonged?&rsquo;&nbsp; Now if you had
+put your question in that form I should in all probability have
+answered: &lsquo;I do not see that it is unduly prolonged, Master
+Bumpkin&mdash;you must have patience.&nbsp; Judges are but human
+and it&rsquo;s a wonder to me they are as much as that,
+seein&rsquo; what they have to go through.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if there be a Court why can&rsquo;t us get in and
+try un, Mr. Rapley?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, now that is putting it pointedly;&rdquo; and
+O&rsquo;Rapley closed one eye and looked into his tumbler with
+the other before he answered:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You see this is how it goes under the continerous <!--
+page 137--><a name="page137"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+137</span>sittings&mdash;off and on we sits continerously at Nisy
+Prisy in London three months in the year.&nbsp; Now that
+ain&rsquo;t bad for London: but it&rsquo;s nothing near so much
+time as they gives to places like Aylesbury, Bedford, and many
+others.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin looked like a terrier dog watching a hole out of
+which he expected a rat: at present he saw no sign of one.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take Aylesbury; well now, if a Judge went there once in
+seven years he&rsquo;d find about every other assize enough work
+to last him till lunch.&nbsp; But in course two Judges must go to
+Aylesbury four times a year, to do nothing but admire the
+building where the Courts are held; otherwise you&rsquo;d soon
+have Aylesbury marching on to London to know the reason
+why.&nbsp; P&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps the Judges have left five hundred
+cases untried in London to go to this Aylesbury.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be it a big plaace, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not so big as a good-sized hotel,&rdquo; said the
+Don.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;there&rsquo;s
+Bedford ditto again&mdash;septennel would do for that; then comes
+Northampton&mdash;they don&rsquo;t want no law there at
+all.&rdquo;&nbsp; (I leave the obvious pun to anyone who likes to
+make it).&nbsp; &ldquo;Then Okeham again&mdash;did you ever hear
+of anyone who came from Okeham?&nbsp; I never did.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Don paused, as though on the answer to this question
+depended his future course.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Noa,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;can&rsquo;t rightly
+say as ever I did.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And nobody ever did come from there except the
+Judges.&nbsp; Well, to Okeham they go four times a year, whereas
+if they was to go about once in every hundred years it
+wouldn&rsquo;t pay.&nbsp; Why raly, Mr. Bumpkin, the Judges goes
+round like travellers arfter orders, and can&rsquo;t <!-- page
+138--><a name="page138"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+138</span>get none.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m not talkin&rsquo;, as you are
+aware, about great centres like Liverpool, where if they had
+about fifty-two assizes in the year it wouldn&rsquo;t be one too
+many; but I&rsquo;m talking about circumfrences on the confines
+of civilization.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh dear!&rdquo; sighed Bumpkin.&nbsp; The hole seemed
+to him too choked up with &ldquo;larnin&rsquo;&rdquo; for the rat
+ever to come out&mdash;he could glean nothing from this highly
+wrought and highly polished enthusiasm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And, notwithstanding and accordingly,&rdquo; continued
+the Don, &ldquo;they do say, goodness knows how true it is, that
+they&rsquo;re going to have two more assizes in the year.&nbsp;
+All that I can say is, Mr. Bumpkin&mdash;and, mark my words,
+there&rsquo;ll be no stopping in London at all, but it will be
+just a reg&rsquo;ler Judge&rsquo;s merry-go-round.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+<a name="citation138"></a><a href="#footnote138"
+class="citation">[138]</a></p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin dropped a look into his glass, and the two
+companions came out of the door and proceeded along under the
+archway until they came to the corner of Bridge Street,
+Blackfriars.&nbsp; Exactly at that point a young woman with a
+baby in her arms came in contact with Mr. Bumpkin, and in a very
+angry tone said,&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell you what it is, don&rsquo;t you take them
+liberties with me or I&rsquo;ll give you in charge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the young woman passed on with her baby.&nbsp; <!-- page
+139--><a name="page139"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+139</span>Just at that moment, and while Master Bumpkin was
+meditating on this strange conduct of the young female, he felt a
+smart tug at his watch, and, looking down, saw the broken chain
+hanging from his pocket.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Zounds!&rdquo; he exclaimed, &ldquo;I never zeed
+anything claner than thic; did thee zee thic feller?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There he goes,&rdquo; said O&rsquo;Rapley.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There ur gooes,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin, and, as fast
+as he could, pursued the thief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stop un!&rdquo; he cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Stop thic there
+thief; he got my watch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But it was a long time before Master Bumpkin&rsquo;s mandate
+was obeyed; the value of a policeman, like that of every other
+commodity, depends upon his rarity.&nbsp; There was no policeman
+to be found.&nbsp; There was a fire escape in the middle of the
+street, but that was of no use to Master Bumpkin.&nbsp; Away went
+thief, and away went Bumpkin, who could &ldquo;foot it,&rdquo; as
+he said, &ldquo;pooty well, old as he wur.&rdquo;&nbsp; Nor did
+either the thief or himself stop until they got nearly to the
+bridge, when, to Bumpkin&rsquo;s great astonishment, up came the
+thief, walking coolly towards him.&nbsp; This was another
+mystery, in addition to those mentioned by Mr.
+O&rsquo;Rapley.&nbsp; But the fact was, that the hue and cry was
+now raised, and although Master Bumpkin did not perceive it,
+about a hundred people, men, women, and boys, were in full chase;
+and when that gentleman was, as Bumpkin thought, coolly coming
+towards him, he was simply at bay, run down, without hope of
+escape; and fully determined to face the matter out with all the
+coolness he could command.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take un,&rdquo; said Bumpkin; &ldquo;take un oop; thee
+dam scoundrel!&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 140--><a name="page140"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+140</span>&ldquo;Take care what you&rsquo;re saying,&rdquo; said
+the thief.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;m a respectable man, and
+there&rsquo;s law in the land.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, and thee shall have un, too, thee willin; thee
+stole my watch, thee knows that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a liar,&rdquo; said the captive.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why thee&rsquo;s got un on, dang if thee bean&rsquo;t,
+and a wearin&rsquo; on un.&nbsp; Well, this bates all; take un
+oop, pleeceman.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this moment, which is always the nick of time chosen by the
+force, that is to say, when everything is done except the
+handcuffs, a policeman with a great deal of authority in his
+appearance came up, and plunged his hands under his heavy
+coat-tails, as though he were about to deliver them of the bower
+anchor of a ship.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you give him in charge?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure enough do ur,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>So the handcuffs were put on, and the stalwart policeman, like
+a hero with the captive of his bow and spear, marched him along
+at a great rate, Bumpkin striding out manfully at the side, amid
+a great crowd of small boys, with all their heads turned towards
+the prisoner as they ran, in the highest state of delight and
+excitement.&nbsp; Even Bumpkin looked as if he had made a good
+thing of it, and seemed as pleased as the boys.</p>
+<p>As they came again to the corner of Ludgate Hill, there stood
+Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley, looking very pompous and dignified, as became
+so great a man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got him then,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay; come on, Master Rapley, come on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One moment,&rdquo; said the official; &ldquo;I must
+here leave you for the present, Mr. Bumpkin; we are not allowed
+to give evidence in Criminal Courts any more than Her
+Majesty&rsquo;s Judges themselves; we are a part of the
+Court.&nbsp; <!-- page 141--><a name="page141"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 141</span>But, besides all that, I did not see
+what happened; what was it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin, &ldquo;that be rum too,
+sir; thee see thic feller steal my watch, surely.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, Mr. Bumpkin, it was so quickly done that I
+really did <i>not</i> see it, if you ask me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, he dragged un out o&rsquo; thic pocket.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No doubt, Master Bumpkin; but it does not follow that I
+see it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee can come and say I wur with thee,
+anyhow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t give evidence, Mr. Bumpkin, as I told you
+before; and, besides, I must not appear in this matter at
+all.&nbsp; You know I was absent to oblige you, and it&rsquo;s
+possible I may be of some further service to you yet; but please
+don&rsquo;t mention me in this matter.&nbsp; I assure you it will
+do harm, and perhaps I should lose my place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Master Rapley,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, taking his
+hand, &ldquo;I won&rsquo;t do thee no harm if I knows it, and
+there be plenty of evidence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Evidence!&nbsp; You say you found the watch upon
+him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sartinly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The case then is clear.&nbsp; You don&rsquo;t want any
+evidence besides that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sir, you&rsquo;re a man o&rsquo;
+larnin&rsquo;.&nbsp; I bean&rsquo;t much of a scollard,
+I&rsquo;ll tak&rsquo; thy advice; but I must get along; they be
+waitin&rsquo; for I.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will see you at Westminster to-morrow, Mr.
+Bumpkin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right, zir, all right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And with that Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley proceeded on his way down
+Fleet Street, and Mr. Bumpkin proceeded on his up Ludgate Hill in
+the midst of an excited crowd.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 143--><a name="page143"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 143</span>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">The coarse mode of procedure in Ahab <i>v.</i>
+Naboth ruthlessly exposed and carefully contrasted with the
+humane and enlightened form of the present day.</p>
+<p>Here I awoke, and my wife said unto me, &ldquo;Dear, you have
+been dreaming and talking in your sleep.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now fearing for what I may have said, although of a tolerably
+clear conscience, I enquired if she could tell me what words I
+had uttered.&nbsp; She replied that I had mentioned the names of
+many eminent men: such as Mr. Justice Common Sense.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed,&rdquo; quoth I; and then I told my dream.&nbsp;
+Upon which she observed, that it seemed there must be much
+exaggeration.&nbsp; To this I made answer that dreams do
+generally magnify events, and impress them more vividly upon the
+senses, inasmuch as the imagination was like a microscope: it
+enabled you to see many things which would escape the naked
+eye.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said my partner, &ldquo;if they are
+distorted?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If they are distorted, they are not reliable; but a
+clear imagination, like a good lens, faithfully presents its
+objects, although in a larger form, in order that those who have
+no time for scientific observation, may see what the scientist
+desires to direct their attention to.&nbsp; There are creatures
+almost invisible to the naked eye, which, <!-- page 144--><a
+name="page144"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+144</span>nevertheless, cause great irritation to the
+nerves.&nbsp; So, also, there are matters affecting the body
+corporate of these kingdoms which the public are blind to and
+suffer from, but which, if thoroughly exposed, they may be
+inclined to take a hand in removing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe that Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley,&rdquo;
+said she: &ldquo;he seems a cantankerous, conceited
+fellow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why so he is; but cantankerous and conceited fellows
+sometimes speak the truth.&nbsp; They&rsquo;re like those
+cobwebbed, unwholesome-looking bottles which have lain a long
+time in cellars.&nbsp; You would hardly like to come in contact
+with them, and yet they often contain a clear and beautiful
+wine.&nbsp; This Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley is a worthy man who knows a
+great deal, and although a bit of a toady to his superiors,
+expresses his opinions pretty freely behind their
+backs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what of this Master Bumpkin&mdash;this worthy
+Master Bumpkin I hear you speak of so often?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A very shrewd man in some respects and a silly one in
+others.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not an unusual combination.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By no means.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And then I told her what I have already related; to which she
+observed it was a pity some friend had not interposed and stopped
+the business.&nbsp; I answered, that friends were no doubt
+useful, but friends or no friends we must have law, and whether
+for sixpence or a shilling it ought to be readily attainable:
+that no one would be satisfied with having no other authority
+than that of friendship to settle our disputes; and besides that,
+friends themselves sometimes fell out and were generally the most
+hard to reconcile without an appeal to our tribunals.</p>
+<p><!-- page 145--><a name="page145"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+145</span>&ldquo;Well, it does seem a pity,&rdquo; said she,
+&ldquo;that judges cannot sit as they did in Moses&rsquo; time at
+all seasons so as to decide expeditiously and promptly between
+the claims of parties.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why so they do sit &lsquo;continuously,&rsquo;&rdquo;
+quoth I, &ldquo;but the whole difficulty consists in getting at
+them.&nbsp; What is called procedure is so circuitous and
+perplexing, that long before you get to your journey&rsquo;s end
+you may faint by the way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is there no one with good sense who will take this
+matter up and help this poor man to come by his rights.&nbsp; It
+must be very expensive for him to be kept away from his business
+so long, and his poor wife left all alone to manage the
+farm.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, so it is, but then going to law, which means
+seeking to maintain your rights, is a very expensive thing: a
+luxury fit only for rich men.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why then do people in moderate circumstances indulge in
+it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because they are obliged to defend themselves against
+oppressive and unjust demands; although I think, under the
+present system, if a man had a small estate, say a few acres, and
+a rich man laid claim to it, it would be far better for the small
+man to give up the land without any bother.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But no man of spirit would do that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, that is exactly where it is, it&rsquo;s the spirit
+of resistance that comes in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Resistance! a man would be a coward to yield without a
+fight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why so he would, and that is what makes law such a
+beautiful science, and its administration so costly.&nbsp; Men
+will fight to the last rather than give in.&nbsp; If Naboth had
+lived in these times there would have been no need <!-- page
+146--><a name="page146"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 146</span>of
+his death in order to oust him from his vineyard.&nbsp; Ahab
+could have done a much more sensible thing and walked in by
+process of law.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In what way?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the first place he could have laid claim to a right
+of way, or easement as it is called, of some sort: or could have
+alleged that Naboth had encroached on his land by means of a
+fence or drain or ditch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, but if he hadn&rsquo;t?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he hadn&rsquo;t, so much the better for the
+Plaintiff, and so much the worse for Naboth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand; if Naboth had done no wrong,
+surely it would be far better for him than if he had.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not in the long run, my dear: and for this reason, if
+he had encroached it would have taken very little trouble to
+ascertain the fact, and Naboth being a just and honest man, would
+only require to have it pointed out to him to remedy the
+evil.&nbsp; Maps and plans of the estate would doubtless have
+shown him his mistake, and, like a wise man, he would have
+avoided going to law.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see clearly that the good man would have said,
+&lsquo;Neighbour Ahab, we have been on neighbourly terms for a
+long lime, and I do not wish in any way to alter that excellent
+feeling which has always subsisted between us.&nbsp; I see
+clearly by these maps and plans which worthy Master Metefield
+hath shown me that my hedge hath encroached some six inches upon
+thy domain, wherefore, Neighbour Ahab, take, I pray thee, as much
+of the land as belongeth unto thee, according to just
+admeasurement.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why certainly, so would the honest Naboth have communed
+with Ahab, and there would have been an end of the
+business.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 147--><a name="page147"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+147</span>&ldquo;But show me, darling, how being in the wrong was
+better for good Naboth than being in the right in this
+business?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Most willingly,&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;you see, my dear,
+there was quickly an end of the matter by Naboth yielding to the
+just demands of neighbour Ahab.&nbsp; But now let us suppose
+honest Naboth in the right concerning his vineyard, and neighbour
+Ahab to be making an unjust demand.&nbsp; You have already most
+justly observed that in that case it would be cowardly on the
+part of Naboth to yield without a struggle?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Assuredly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well then, that means a lawsuit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But surely,&rdquo; said my wife, &ldquo;it ought to be
+soon seen who is in the wrong.&nbsp; Where is Master Metefield
+who you said just now was so accurate a surveyor, and where are
+those plans you spoke of which showed the situation of the
+estates?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, my dear, I see you know very little of the
+intricacies of the law; that good Master Metefield, instead of
+being a kind of judge to determine quickly as he did for Master
+Naboth what were the boundaries of the vineyard, hath not now so
+easy a task of it, because Ahab being in the wrong he is not
+accepted by him as his judge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if the plans are correct, how can he alter
+them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He cannot alter them, but the question of correctness
+of boundary as shown, is matter of disputation, and will have to
+be discussed by surveyors on both sides, and supported and
+disputed by witnesses innumerable on both sides: old men coming
+up with ancient memories, hedgers and ditchers, farmers and
+bailiffs and people of all <!-- page 148--><a
+name="page148"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 148</span>sorts and
+conditions, to prove and disprove where the boundary line really
+divides Neighbour Naboth&rsquo;s vineyard from Neighbour
+Ahab&rsquo;s park.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But surely Naboth will win?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All that depends upon a variety of things, such as,
+first, the witnesses; secondly, the counsel; thirdly, the judge;
+fourthly, the jury,&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O,&rdquo; said my wife, &ldquo;pray don&rsquo;t go on
+to a fifthly&mdash;it seems to me poor Naboth is like to have a
+sorry time of it before he establish his boundary
+line.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, if he ever do so: but he first is got into the
+hands of his Lawyers, next into the hands of his Counsel,
+thirdly, into Chancery, fourthly, into debt&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pray, do not let us have a fifthly here either; I like
+not these thirdlys and fourthlys, for they seem to bring poor
+Naboth into bad case; but what said you about debt?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I say that Naboth, not being a wealthy man, but, as I
+take it, somewhat in the position of neighbour Bumpkin, will soon
+be forced to part with a good deal of his little property in
+order to carry on the action.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But will not the action be tried in a reasonable time,
+say a week or two?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I perceive,&rdquo; cried I, &ldquo;that you are yet in
+the very springtide and babyhood of innocence in these
+matters.&nbsp; There must be summonses for time and for further
+time; there must be particulars and interrogatories and
+discoveries and inspections and strikings out and puttings in and
+appeals and demurrers and references and&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, please don&rsquo;t.&nbsp; I perceive that poor
+Naboth is already ruined a long way back.&nbsp; I think when you
+came to the interrogatories he was in want of funds to carry on
+the action.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 149--><a name="page149"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+149</span>&ldquo;A Chancery action sometimes takes years,&rdquo;
+said I.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Years! then shame to our Parliament.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I pray you do not take on so,&rdquo; said I.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Naboth, according to the decree of Fate, is to be
+ruined.&nbsp; Jezebel did it in a wicked, clumsy and brutal
+manner.&nbsp; Anyone could see she was wrong, and her name has
+been handed down to us with infamy and execration.&nbsp; I now
+desire to show how Ahab could have accomplished his purpose in a
+gentle, manly and scientific manner and saved his wife&rsquo;s
+reputation.&nbsp; Naboth&rsquo;s action, carried as it would be
+from Court to Court upon every possible point upon which an
+appeal can go, under our present system, would effectually ruin
+him ages before the boundary line could be settled.&nbsp; It
+would be all swallowed up in costs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor Naboth!&rdquo; said my wife.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And,&rdquo; continued I, &ldquo;the law reports would
+hand down the <i>cause celebre</i> of <i>Ahab</i> v.
+<i>Naboth</i> as a most interesting leading case upon the subject
+of goodness knows what: perhaps as to whether a man, under
+certain circumstances, may not alter his neighbour&rsquo;s
+landmark in spite of the statute law of Moses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And so you think poor Naboth would be sold
+up?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That were about the only certain event in his case,
+except that Ahab would take possession and so put an end for ever
+to the question as to where the boundary line should
+run.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here again I dozed.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 151--><a name="page151"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 151</span>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Shewing that lay tribunals are not exactly
+Punch and Judy shows where the puppet is moved by the man
+underneath.</p>
+<p>It was particularly fortunate for Mr. Bumpkin that his case
+was not in the list of causes to be tried on the following
+day.&nbsp; It may seem a curious circumstance to the general
+reader that a great case like <i>Bumpkin</i> v. <i>Snooks</i>,
+involving so much expense of time, trouble, and money should be
+in the list one day and out the next; should be sometimes in the
+list of one Court and sometimes in the list of another; flying
+about like a butterfly from flower to flower and caught by no one
+on the look-out for it.&nbsp; But this is not a phenomenon in our
+method of procedure, which startles you from time to time with
+its miraculous effects.&nbsp; You can calculate upon nothing in
+the system but its uncertainty.&nbsp; Most gentle and innocent
+reader, I saw that there was no Nisi Prius Court to sit on the
+following day, so <i>Bumpkin</i> v. <i>Snooks</i> could not be
+taken, list or no list.&nbsp; The lucky Plaintiff therefore found
+himself at liberty to appear before that August Tribunal which
+sits at the Mansion House in the City of London.&nbsp; A palatial
+and imposing building it was on the outside, but within, so far
+as was apparent to me, it was a narrow ill ventilated den, full
+of all unclean people and unpleasant smells.&nbsp; I say full of
+<!-- page 152--><a name="page152"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+152</span>unclean people, but I allude merely to that portion of
+it which was appropriated to the British Public; for, exalted on
+a high bench and in a huge and ponderous chair or throne sat the
+Prince of Citizens and the King of the Corporation, proud in his
+dignity, grand in his commercial position, and highly esteemed in
+the opinion of the world.&nbsp; There he sat, the representative
+of the Criminal Law, and impartial, as all will allow, in its
+administration.&nbsp; Wonderful being is my Lord Mayor, thought
+I, he must have the Law at his fingers&rsquo; ends.&nbsp; Yes,
+there it is sitting under him in the shape and person of his
+truly respectable clerk.&nbsp; The Common Law resides in the
+breasts of the Judges, but it is here at my Lord Mayor&rsquo;s
+fingers&rsquo; ends.&nbsp; He has to deal with gigantic
+commercial frauds; with petty swindlers, common thieves; mighty
+combinations of conspirators; with extradition laws; with
+elaborate bankruptcy delinquencies; with the niceties of the
+criminal law in every form and shape.&nbsp; Surely, thought I, he
+should be one of those tremendous geniuses who can learn the
+criminal law before breakfast, or at least before dinner!&nbsp;
+So he was.&nbsp; His lordship seemed to have learned it one
+morning before he was awake.&nbsp; But it is not for me to
+criticise tribunals or men: I have the simple duty to perform of
+relating the story of the renowned Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>After the night charges are disposed of up comes the man
+through the floor, not Mr. Bumpkin, but Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s
+prisoner.&nbsp; He comes up through the floor like the imp in the
+pantomime: and then the two tall warders prevent his going any
+farther.</p>
+<p>He was a pale, intelligent looking creature, fairly dressed in
+frock coat, dark waistcoat and grey trousers, with a glove on his
+left hand and another in his right; <!-- page 153--><a
+name="page153"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 153</span>looked
+meekly and modestly round, and then politely bowed to the Lord
+Mayor.&nbsp; The charge was then read to him and with a smile he
+indignantly repudiated the idea of theft.</p>
+<p>And I saw in my dream that he was represented by a learned
+Counsel, who at this moment entered the Court, shook hands with
+the Lord Mayor, and saying, &ldquo;I appear, my lord, for the
+prisoner,&rdquo; took his seat upon the bench, and entered for a
+minute or so into some private and apparently jocular
+conversation with his Lordship.</p>
+<p>The name of the learned Counsel was Mr. Nimble, whom we have
+before seen.&nbsp; He was a very goodly-shaped man, with a thin
+face and brown hair.&nbsp; His eyes were bright, and always
+seemed to look into a witness rather than at him.&nbsp; His
+manner was jaunty, good-natured, easy, and gay; not remarkable
+for courtesy, but at the same time, not unpleasantly rude.&nbsp;
+I thought the learned Counsel could be disagreeable if he liked,
+but might be a very pleasant, sociable fellow to spend an hour
+with&mdash;not in the witness-box.</p>
+<p>He was certainly a skilful and far-seeing Counsel, if I may
+make so bold as to judge from this case.&nbsp; And methought that
+nothing he did or said was said or done without a purpose.&nbsp;
+Nor could I help thinking that a good many Counsel, young and
+old, if their minds were free from prejudice, might learn many
+lessons from this case.&nbsp; It is with this object that, in my
+waking moments, I record the impressions of this dream.&nbsp; I
+do not say Mr. Nimble was an example to follow on all points, for
+he had that common failing of humanity, a want of absolute
+perfection.&nbsp; But he was as near to perfection in defending a
+prisoner as any man I ever saw, and the proceedings in <!-- page
+154--><a name="page154"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+154</span>this very case, if carefully analysed, will go a long
+way towards proving that assertion.</p>
+<p>After the interchange of courtesies between his Lordship and
+Mr. Nimble, the learned Counsel looked down from the Bench on to
+the top of Mr. Keepimstraight&rsquo;s bald head and nodded as if
+he were patting it.&nbsp; Mr. Keepimstraight was the Lord
+Mayor&rsquo;s Clerk.&nbsp; He was very stout and seemed puffed up
+with law: had an immense regard for himself and consequently very
+little for anybody else: but that, so far as I have been able to
+ascertain, is a somewhat common failing among official
+personages.&nbsp; He ordered everybody about except the Lord
+Mayor, and him he seemed to push about as though he were wheeling
+him in a legal Bath-chair.&nbsp; His Lordship was indeed a great
+invalid in respect to matters of law; I think he had overdone it,
+if I may use the expression; his study must have been tremendous
+to have acquired a knowledge of the laws of England in so short a
+time.&nbsp; But being somewhat feeble, and in his modesty much
+misdoubting his own judgment, he did nothing and said nothing,
+except it was prescribed by his physician, Dr.
+Keepimstraight.&nbsp; Even the solicitors stood in awe of Dr.
+Keepimstraight.</p>
+<p>And now we are all going to begin&mdash;Walk up!</p>
+<p>The intelligent and decent-looking prisoner having been told
+what the charge against him was, namely, Highway Robbery with
+violence, declares that he is as &ldquo;innercent as the unborn
+babe, your lordship:&rdquo; and then Mr. Keepimstraight asks,
+where the Prosecutor is&mdash;&ldquo;Prosecutor!&rdquo; shout a
+dozen voices at once&mdash;all round, everywhere is the cry of
+&ldquo;Prosecutor!&rdquo;&nbsp; There was no answer, but in the
+midst of the unsavoury crowd there was seen to be a severe
+scuffle&mdash;whether it was a fight or <!-- page 155--><a
+name="page155"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 155</span>a man in a
+fit could not be ascertained for some time; at length Mr. Bumpkin
+was observed struggling and tearing to escape from the
+throng.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you come when you are called?&rdquo;
+asks the Junior Clerk, handing him the Testament, as Mr. Bumpkin
+stood revealed in the witness-box.</p>
+<p>And I saw that he was dressed in a light frock, not unlike a
+pinafore, which was tastefully wrought with divers patterns of
+needlework on the front and back thereof; at the openings thus
+embroidered could be seen a waistcoat of many stripes, that
+crossed and recrossed one another at various angles and were
+formed of several colours.&nbsp; He wore a high calico shirt
+collar, which on either side came close under the ear; and round
+his neck a red handkerchief with yellow ends.&nbsp; His linen
+certainly did credit to Mrs. Bumpkin&rsquo;s love of
+&ldquo;tidiness,&rdquo; and altogether the prosecutor wore a
+clean and respectable appearance.&nbsp; His face was broad, round
+and red, indicating a jovial disposition and a temperament not
+easily disturbed, except when &ldquo;whate&rdquo; was down too
+low to sell and he wanted to buy stock or pay the rent: a state
+of circumstances which I believe has sometimes happened of late
+years.&nbsp; A white short-clipped beard covered his chin, while
+his cheeks were closely shaven.&nbsp; He had twinkling oval eyes,
+which I should say, he invariably half-closed when he was making
+a bargain.&nbsp; If you offered less than his price the first
+refusal would come from them.&nbsp; His nose was inexpressive and
+appeared to have been a dormant feature for many a year.&nbsp; It
+said nothing for or against any thing or any body, and from its
+tip sprouted a few white hairs.&nbsp; His mouth, without
+utterance, said plainly enough that he owed &ldquo;nobody
+nothink&rdquo; and was a thousand pound man every morning <!--
+page 156--><a name="page156"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+156</span>he rose.&nbsp; It was a mouth of good bore, and not by
+any means intended for a silver spoon.</p>
+<p>Such was the Prosecutor as he stood in the witness-box at the
+Mansion House on this memorable occasion; and no one could doubt
+that truth and justice would prevail.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Name?&rdquo; said Mr. Keepimstraight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bumpkin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Down it goes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After a pause, which Mr. Nimble makes a note of.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where?&rdquo; repeats Keepimstraight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Westminister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Goose&rsquo; publichouse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Down it goes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; says Keepimstraight.</p>
+<p>Bumpkin stares.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, go on,&rdquo; says the clerk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; says the crier; &ldquo;go on,&rdquo; say
+half-a-dozen voices all round.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t you go on?&rdquo; says the clerk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell your story,&rdquo; says his Lordship, putting his
+arms on the elbows of the huge chair.&nbsp; &ldquo;Tell it in
+your own way, my man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wur gwine down thic place when&mdash;&rdquo;
+&ldquo;my man&rdquo; began.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What time was this?&rdquo; asks the clerk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Arf arter four, as near as I can tell.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do you know?&rdquo; asks the clerk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I heard&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I object,&rdquo; says the
+Counsel&mdash;&ldquo;can&rsquo;t tell us what he
+heard.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then I perceived that the Lord Mayor leant forward <!-- page
+157--><a name="page157"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+157</span>towards Mr. Keepimstraight, and the latter gentleman
+turned his head and leaned towards the Lord Mayor, so that his
+Lordship could obtain a full view of Mr. Keepimstraight&rsquo;s
+eyes.</p>
+<p>Then I perceived that Mr. Keepimstraight winked his left eye
+and immediately turned to his work again, and his Lordship
+said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think what you heard, witness, is
+evidence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t have that,&rdquo; said Mr. Keepimstraight,
+as though he took his instructions and the Law from his
+Lordship.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You said it was half-past four.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Heard the clock strike th&rsquo; arf hour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here his Lordship leant again forward and Mr. Keepimstraight
+turned round so as to bring his eyes into the same position as
+heretofore.&nbsp; And I perceived that Mr. Keepimstraight winked
+his right eye, upon which his Lordship said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think that&rsquo;s evidence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Clerk whispered, behind his hand, &ldquo;Can hardly exclude
+that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can hardly exclude that,&rdquo; repeats his Lordship;
+then&mdash;turning to the Learned
+Counsel&mdash;&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t shut that out, Mr.
+Nimble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You seldom can shut a church clock out, my Lord,&rdquo;
+replies the Counsel.</p>
+<p>At this answer his Lordship smiled and the Court was convulsed
+with laughter for several minutes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, then,&rdquo; said Mr. Keepimstraight, &ldquo;we
+must have order in Court.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We must have order in Court,&rdquo; says his
+Lordship.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Order in Court,&rdquo; says the Junior Clerk, and
+&ldquo;Order!&rdquo; shouts the Policeman on duty.</p>
+<p>Then Mr. Bumpkin stated in clear and intelligible <!-- page
+158--><a name="page158"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+158</span>language how the man came up and took his watch and ran
+away.&nbsp; Foolishly enough he said nothing about the woman with
+the baby, and wisely enough Mr. Nimble asked nothing about
+it.&nbsp; But what an opportunity this would have been for an
+unskilful Counsel to lay the foundation for a conviction.&nbsp;
+Knowing, as he probably would from the prisoner but from no other
+possible source about the circumstance, he might have shown by a
+question or two that it was a conspiracy between the prisoner and
+the young woman.&nbsp; Not so Mr. Nimble, he knew how to make an
+investment of this circumstance for future profit: indeed Mr.
+Bumpkin had invested it for him by not mentioning it.&nbsp;
+Beautiful is Advocacy if you do not mar it by unskilful
+handling.</p>
+<p>When, after describing the robbery, the prosecutor
+continued:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I ses to my companion, ses I&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I object,&rdquo; says Mr. Nimble.</p>
+<p>And I perceived that his Lordship leant forward once more
+towards Mr. Keepimstraight, and Mr. Keepimstraight turned as
+aforetime towards the Lord Mayor, but not quite, I thought, so
+fully round as heretofore; the motion seemed to be performed with
+less exactness than usual, and that probably was why the
+operation miscarried.&nbsp; Mr. Keepimstraight having given the
+correct signal, as he thought, and the Enginedriver on the Bench
+having misunderstood it, an accident naturally would have taken
+place but for the extreme caution and care of his Lordship, who,
+if he had been a young Enginedriver, would in all probability
+have dashed on neck or nothing through every obstacle.&nbsp; Not
+so his Lordship.&nbsp; Not being sure whether he was on the up or
+down line, he pulled up.</p>
+<p><!-- page 159--><a name="page159"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+159</span>Mr. Keepimstraight sat pen in hand looking at his
+paper, and waiting for the judicial voice which should convey to
+his ear the announcement that &ldquo;I ses, ses I,&rdquo; is
+evidence or no evidence.&nbsp; Judge then of Mr.
+Keepimstraight&rsquo;s disappointment when, after waiting in
+breathless silence for some five minutes, he at last looks up and
+sees his Lordship in deep anxiety to catch his eye without the
+public observing it.&nbsp; His Lordship leant forward, blushing
+with innocence, and whispered something behind his hand to Mr.
+Keepimstraight.&nbsp; And in my dream I heard his Lordship
+ask:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Which eye</i>?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To which Mr. Keepimstraight as coolly as if nothing had
+happened, whispered behind his hand:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Left</i>!&rdquo; and then coughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O then,&rdquo; exclaimed his Lordship, &ldquo;it is
+clearly not evidence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not evidence,&rdquo; repeated the clerk; and
+then to the discomfiture of Mr. Nimble, he went on, &ldquo;You
+say you had a companion.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was more than the learned Counsel wanted, seeing as he
+did that there was another investment to be made if he could only
+manage it.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin blushed now, but said nothing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would you excuse me,&rdquo; said Mr. Nimble; &ldquo;I
+shall not cross-examine this witness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, very good,&rdquo; says Keepimstraight, thinking
+probably it was to be a plea of guilty hereafter; &ldquo;very
+good.&nbsp; Then I think that is all&mdash;is that the
+watch?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It be,&rdquo; said the witness; &ldquo;I ken swear to
+un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It certainly would be from no want of metal if Mr. Bumpkin
+could not identify the timepiece, for it was a ponderous-looking
+watch, nearly as large as a tea-saucer.</p>
+<p><!-- page 160--><a name="page160"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+160</span>Then said Mr. Nimble:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You say that is your watch, do you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It spakes for itself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think that&rsquo;s evidence,&rdquo; says
+Mr. Keepimstraight, with a smile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s clearly not evidence,&rdquo; says the Lord
+Mayor, gravely.&nbsp; Whereupon there was another burst of
+laughter, in which the clerk seemed to take the lead.&nbsp; The
+remarkable fact, however, was, that his Lordship was perfectly at
+a loss to comprehend the joke.&nbsp; He was &ldquo;as grave as a
+Judge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After the laughter had subsided, the learned Keepimstraight
+leaned backward, and the learned Lord Mayor leaned forward, and
+it seemed to me they were conversing together about the cause of
+the laughter; for suddenly a smile illuminated the rubicund face
+of the cheery Lord Mayor, and at last he had a laugh to
+himself&mdash;a solo, after the band had ceased.&nbsp; And then
+his Lordship spoke:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What your watch may say is not evidence, because it has
+not been sworn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then the band struck up again to a lively tune, his Lordship
+playing the first Fiddle; and the whole scene terminated in the
+most humorous and satisfactory manner for all
+parties&mdash;<i>except</i>, perhaps, the prisoner&mdash;who was
+duly committed for trial to the next sittings of the Central
+Criminal Court, which were to take place in a fortnight.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin naturally asked for his watch, but that request
+was smilingly refused.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bin in our famly forty years,&rdquo; exclaimed the
+prisoner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you be quiet?&rdquo; said Mr. Nimble petulantly,
+for it was a foolish observation for the prisoner to make,
+inasmuch <!-- page 161--><a name="page161"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 161</span>as, if Mr. Bumpkin had been
+represented by professional skill, the remark would surely be met
+at the trial with abundant evidence to disprove it.&nbsp; Mr.
+Bumpkin at present, however, has no professional skill.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>Here something disturbed me, and I awoke.&nbsp; While
+preparing to enjoy my pipe as was my custom in these intervals,
+my wife remarked:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not approve of that Master O&rsquo;Rapley by any
+means, with his cynicisms and sarcasms and round squares.&nbsp;
+Did ever anyone hear of such a contradiction?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have patience,&rdquo; quoth I, &ldquo;and we shall see
+how worthy Master O&rsquo;Rapley makes it out.&nbsp; I conjecture
+that he means the same thing that we hear of under the term,
+&lsquo;putting the round peg into the square
+hole.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But why should such a thing be done when it is easy
+surely to find a square peg that would fit?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Granted; but the master-hand may be under obligations
+to the round peg; or the round peg may be a disagreeable peg, or
+a hundred things: one doesn&rsquo;t know.&nbsp; I am but a humble
+observer of human nature, and like not these ungracious
+cavillings at Master O&rsquo;Rapley.&nbsp; Let us calmly follow
+this dream, and endeavour to profit by its lessons without
+finding fault with its actors.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I would like to have a better explanation of that
+Round Square, nevertheless,&rdquo; muttered my wife as she went
+on with her knitting.&nbsp; So to appease her I discoursed as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The round square,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;means the
+inappropriate combination of opposites.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, not too long words,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;and
+not too much philosophy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well, my dear,&rdquo; I continued; &ldquo;Don
+O&rsquo;Rapley <!-- page 162--><a name="page162"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 162</span>is right, not in his particular
+instance, but in the general application of his meaning.&nbsp;
+Look around upon the world, or so much of it as is comprised
+within our own limited vision, and what do you find?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I find everything,&rdquo; said my wife,
+&ldquo;beautifully ordered and arranged, from the Archbishop of
+Canterbury to the Parish Beadle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you find?&rdquo; I repeated.&nbsp; &ldquo;Mark
+the O&rsquo;Rapley&rsquo;s knowledge of human nature, you not
+only find Waterloos won in the Cricket-field of Eton, but
+Bishopricks and Secretaryships and many other glorious victories;
+so that you might&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be foolish; Trafalgar was not won in the
+Cricket-field.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, but it was fought on the Isis or the Cam, I forget
+which.&nbsp; But carry the O&rsquo;Rapley&rsquo;s theory into
+daily life, and test it by common observation, what do you
+find?&nbsp; Why, that this round square is by no means a modern
+invention.&nbsp; It has been worked in all periods of our
+history.&nbsp; Here is a Vicar with a rich benefice, intended by
+nature for a Jockey or a Whipper-in&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, the benefice?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, the Vicar!&nbsp; Here is a barrister who ought to
+have been a curate, and become enthusiastic over worked slippers:
+there is another thrust into a Government appointment, not out of
+respect to him, the Minister doesn&rsquo;t know him, but to serve
+a political friend, or to place an investment in the hands of a
+political rival, who will return it with interest on a future
+day.&nbsp; The gentleman thus provided for at the country&rsquo;s
+expense would, if left to himself, have probably become an
+excellent billiard-marker or pigeon-shooter.&nbsp; Here is
+another, <!-- page 163--><a name="page163"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 163</span>who, although a member of
+Parliament, was elected by no constituency under Heaven or above
+it; and it is clear he was intended by Nature for a position
+where obsequiousness and servility meet with their appropriate
+reward.&nbsp; Another fills the post of some awful Commissioner
+of something, drawing an immense salary, and doing an immense
+amount of mischief for it, intended naturally for a secretary to
+an Autocratic Nobleman, who would trample the rights of the
+people under foot.&nbsp; Here is another&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O pray, my dear, do not let us have
+another&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only one more,&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;here is another,
+thrust into the Cabinet for being so disagreeable a fellow, who
+ought to have been engaged in making fireworks for Crystal Palace
+f&ecirc;tes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But this is only an opinion of yours; how do you know
+these gentlemen are not fitted for the posts they occupy? surely
+if they do the work&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The public would have no right to grumble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And as for obsequiousness and servility, I am afraid
+those are epithets too often unjustly applied to those gentlemen
+whose courteous demeanour wins them the respect of their
+superiors.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so,&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;and I don&rsquo;t see
+that it matters what is the distinguishing epithet you apply to
+them: this courteous demeanour or obsequiousness is no doubt the
+very best gift Nature can bestow upon an individual as an outfit
+for the voyage of life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear me, you were complaining but just now of its
+placing men in positions for which they were not
+qualified.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not complaining, my love; only remarking.&nbsp; I go in
+for obsequiousness, and trust I shall never be found <!-- page
+164--><a name="page164"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+164</span>wanting in that courteous demeanour towards my
+superiors which shall lead to my future profit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But would you have men only courteous?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By no means, I would have them talented
+also.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But in what proportion would you have the one to the
+other?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would have the same proportion maintained that exists
+between the rudder and the ship: you want just enough tact to
+steer your obsequiousness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here again I dozed.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 165--><a name="page165"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 165</span>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">A comfortable evening at the Goose</p>
+<p>When Mr. Bumpkin left the Mansion House, he was in a state of
+great triumph not to say ecstasy: for it seemed to him that he
+had had everything his own way.&nbsp; He was not cross-examined;
+no witnesses were called, and it had only been stated by the
+prisoner himself, not proved, although he said he should prove it
+at the trial, that the watch had been in the family for upwards
+of forty years.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The biggest lie,&rdquo; muttered Master Bumpkin,
+&ldquo;that ever wur told.&rdquo;&nbsp; And then he reasoned in
+this wise: &ldquo;how could it a bin in his family forty year
+when he, Bumpkin, only lost it the day afore in the most
+barefaced manner?&nbsp; He was a pooty feller as couldn&rsquo;t
+tell a better story than thic.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And then methought in my dream, &ldquo;Ah, Bumpkin, thou
+may&rsquo;st triumph now, but little dreamest thou what is in
+store for thee at the trial.&nbsp; Wait till all those little
+insignificant points, hardly visible at present, shall rise, like
+spear-heads against thee at the Old Bailey and thrust thee
+through and through and make thee curse the advocate&rsquo;s
+skill and the thief&rsquo;s impudence and the inertness of the
+so-called Public Prosecutor: and mayhap, I know not yet, show
+thee how wrong and robbery may triumph over right and
+innocence.&nbsp; Thou <!-- page 166--><a name="page166"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 166</span>hast raised thyself, good Bumpkin,
+from the humblest poverty to comparative wealth and a lawsuit:
+but boast not overmuch lest thou find Law a taskmaster instead of
+a Protector!</p>
+<p>Thus, moralizing in my dream I perceived that Mr. Bumpkin
+after talking to some men betook himself to a Bus and proceeded
+on his way to the &ldquo;Goose&rdquo; at Westminster, whither he
+arrived in due time and in high spirits.</p>
+<p>The Goose was a nice cosy public-house, situated, as I before
+observed, near the river side and commanded a beautiful view of
+the neighbouring wharves and the passing craft.&nbsp; It was a
+favourite resort of waterside men, carters, carriers, labourers
+on the wharf and men out of work.&nbsp; The Military also
+patronized it:&mdash;And many were the jovial tales told around
+the taproom hearth by members of Her Majesty&rsquo;s troops to
+admiring and astonished Ignorance.</p>
+<p>It was a particularly cold and bleak day, this ninth of March
+one thousand eight hundred and something.&nbsp; The wind was due
+East and accompanied ever and anon with mighty thick clouds of
+sleet and snow.&nbsp; The fireside therefore was particularly
+comfortable, and the cheery faces around the hearth were pleasant
+to behold.</p>
+<p>Now Mr. Bumpkin, as the reader knows, was not alone in his
+expedition.&nbsp; He had his witness, named Joseph Wurzel: called
+in the village &ldquo;Cocky,&rdquo; inasmuch as it was generally
+considered that he set much by his wisdom: and was possessed of
+considerable attainments.&nbsp; For instance, he could snare a
+hare as well as any man in the county: or whistle down pheasants
+to partake of a Buckwheat refection which he was in the habit of
+spreading for their repast.</p>
+<p><!-- page 167--><a name="page167"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+167</span>A good many fellows who were envious of Joe&rsquo;s
+abilities avowed that &ldquo;he was a regler cunnin&rsquo;
+feller, as ud some day find out his mistake;&rdquo; meaning
+thereby that Joe would inevitably be sent to prison.&nbsp; Others
+affirmed that he was a good deal too cunning for that; that he
+was a regular artful dodger, and knew how to get round the vicar
+and all in authority under him.&nbsp; The reader knows that he
+was a regular attendant at Church, and by that means was in high
+favour.&nbsp; Nor was his mother behind hand in this respect,
+especially in the weeks before Christmas; and truly her religion
+brought its reward even in this world in the shape of Parish
+Gifts.</p>
+<p>No doubt Joe was fond of the chase, but in this respect he but
+imitated his superiors, except that I believe he occasionally
+went beyond them in the means he employed.</p>
+<p>Assembled in this common room at the Goose on the night in
+question, were a number of persons of various callings and some
+of no calling in particular.&nbsp; Most of them were acquainted,
+and apparently regular customers.&nbsp; One man in particular
+became a great favourite with Joe, and that was Jacob Wideawake
+the Birdcatcher; and it was interesting to listen to his
+conversation on the means of catching and transforming the London
+Sparrow into an article of Commerce.</p>
+<p>Joe&rsquo;s dress no doubt attracted the attention of his
+companions when he first made his appearance, for it was
+something out of the ordinary style: and certainly one might say
+that great care had been bestowed upon him to render his personal
+appearance attractive in the witness-box.&nbsp; He wore a
+wideawake hat thrown back on his head, thus displaying his brown
+country-looking face to full advantage.&nbsp; His coat was a kind
+of dark velveteen <!-- page 168--><a name="page168"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 168</span>which had probably seen better days
+in the Squire&rsquo;s family; so had the long drab
+waistcoat.&nbsp; His corduroy trousers, of a light green colour,
+were hitched up at the knees with a couple of straps as though he
+wore his garters outside.&nbsp; His neckerchief was a bright red,
+tied round his neck in a careless but not unpicturesque
+manner.&nbsp; Take him for all in all he was as fine a specimen
+of a country lad as one could wish to meet,&mdash;tall, well
+built, healthy looking, and even handsome.</p>
+<p>Now Mr. Bumpkin, being what is called &ldquo;a close
+man,&rdquo; and prone to keep his own counsel on all occasions
+when it was not absolutely necessary to reveal it, had said
+nothing about his case before the Lord Mayor; not even Mrs.
+Oldtimes had he taken into his confidence.&nbsp; It is difficult
+to understand his motive for such secrecy, as it is impossible to
+trace in nine instances out of ten any particular line of human
+conduct to its source.</p>
+<p>Acting probably on some vague information that he had
+received, Mr. Bumpkin looked into the room, and told Joe that he
+thought they should be &ldquo;on&rdquo; to-morrow.&nbsp; He had
+learned the use of that legal term from frequent intercourse with
+Mr. Prigg.&nbsp; He thought they should be on but &ldquo;wur not
+sartin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Joe, &ldquo;the sooner the
+better.&nbsp; I hates this ere hangin&rsquo; about.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+At this Jack Outofwork, Tom Lazyman, and Bill Saunter laughed;
+while Dick Devilmecare said, &ldquo;He hated hanging about too;
+it was wus than work.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that&rsquo;s bad enough, Heaven knows,&rdquo; said
+Lazyman.</p>
+<p>Then I saw that at this moment entered a fine tall handsome
+soldier, who I afterwards learned was Sergeant Goodtale of the
+One Hundred and twenty-fourth <!-- page 169--><a
+name="page169"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+169</span>Hussars.&nbsp; A smarter or more compact looking fellow
+it would be impossible to find: and he came in with such a
+genial, good-natured smile, that to look at him would almost make
+you believe there was no happiness or glory on this side the
+grave except in Her Majesty&rsquo;s service&mdash;especially the
+Hussars!</p>
+<p>I also perceived that fluttering from the side of Sergeant
+Goodtale&rsquo;s cap, placed carelessly and jauntily on the side
+of his head, was a bunch of streamers of the most fascinating red
+white and blue you ever could behold.&nbsp; Altogether, Sergeant
+Goodtale was a splendid sight.&nbsp; Down went his cane on the
+table with a crack, as much as to say &ldquo;The Queen!&rdquo;
+and he marched up to the fire and rubbed his hands: apparently
+taking no heed of any human being in the room.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s heart leaped when he saw the military
+sight: his eyes opened as if he were waking from a dream out of
+which he had been disturbed by a cry of &ldquo;fire:&rdquo; and
+giving Joe a wink and an obviously made-up look, beckoned him out
+of the room.&nbsp; As they went out they met a young man,
+shabbily clad and apparently poorly fed.&nbsp; He had an
+intelligent face, though somewhat emaciated.&nbsp; He might be,
+and probably was, a clerk out of employment, and he threw himself
+on the seat in a listless manner that plainly said he was tired
+of everything.</p>
+<p>This was Harry Highlow.&nbsp; He had been brought up with
+ideas beyond his means.&nbsp; It was through no fault of his that
+he had not been taught a decent trade: those responsible for his
+training having been possessed of the notion that manual labour
+lowers one&rsquo;s respectability: an error and a wickedness
+which has been responsible for the ruin of many a promising youth
+before to-day.</p>
+<p><!-- page 170--><a name="page170"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+170</span>Harry was an intelligent, fairly educated youth, and
+nothing more.&nbsp; What is to be done with raw material so
+plentiful as that?&nbsp; The cheapest marketable commodity is an
+average education, especially in a country where even our
+Universities can supply you with candidates for employment at a
+cheaper rate than you can obtain the services of a first-class
+cook.&nbsp; This young man had tried everything that was genteel:
+he had even aspired to literature: sought employment on the
+Press, on the Stage, everywhere in fact where gentility seemed to
+reign.&nbsp; Nor do I think he lacked ability for any of these
+walks; it was not ability but opportunity that failed him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lookee ere, Joe,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin; &ldquo;harken
+to me.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t thee &rsquo;ave nowt to say to that
+there soger.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right, maister,&rdquo; said Joe, laughing;
+&ldquo;thee thinks I be gwine for a soger.&nbsp; Now lookee ere,
+maister, I beant a fool.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, thee beant, Joe.&nbsp; I knowed thee a good while,
+and thee beant no fool.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Joe laughed.&nbsp; It was a big laugh was Joe&rsquo;s, for his
+mouth was somewhat large, and a grin always seemed to twist
+it.&nbsp; On this occasion, so great was his surprise that his
+master should think he would be fool enough to enlist for a
+&ldquo;soger,&rdquo; that his mouth assumed the most irregular
+shape I ever saw, and bore a striking resemblance to a hole such
+as might be made in the head of a drum by the heel of a boot.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I be up to un, maister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have no truck wi&rsquo; un, I tell ee; don&rsquo;t
+speak to un.&nbsp; Thee be my head witness, and doant dare goo
+away; no, no more un if&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No fear,&rdquo; said Joe.&nbsp; &ldquo;&rsquo;Taint
+likely I be gwine to <!-- page 171--><a name="page171"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 171</span>listen to ee.&nbsp; I knows what he
+wants; he&rsquo;s arter listin chaps.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look ee ere, Joe, if ur speaks to thee, jist say I
+beant sich a fool as I looks; that&rsquo;ll ave un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Right,&rdquo; says Joe; &ldquo;I beant sich a fool as I
+looks; that&rsquo;ll ave un straight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, take heed; I&rsquo;m gwine into the parlour
+wi&rsquo; Landlord.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Accordingly, into the little quiet snuggery of Mr. Oldtimes,
+Mr. Bumpkin betook himself.&nbsp; And many and many an agreeable
+evening was passed with Mr. and Mrs. Oldtimes during the period
+when Mr. Bumpkin was waiting for his trial.&nbsp; For Mr. and
+Mrs. Oldtimes being Somersetshire people knew many inhabitants of
+the old days in the village of Yokelton, where Mr. Bumpkin
+&ldquo;were bred and born&rsquo;d.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the &ldquo;head witness&rdquo; had returned to the
+cheerful scene in the taproom, and sat leering out of the corners
+of his eyes upon the Sergeant, as though he expected every moment
+that officer would make a spring at him and have him upon the
+floor.&nbsp; But the Sergeant was not a bullying, blustering sort
+of man at all; his demeanour was quiet in the extreme.&nbsp; He
+scarcely looked at anyone.&nbsp; Simply engaged in warming his
+hands at the cheerful fire, no one had cause to apprehend
+anything from him.</p>
+<p>But a man, Sergeant or no Sergeant, must, out of common
+civility, exchange a word now and then, if only about the
+weather; and so he said, carelessly,&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sharp weather, lads!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now, not even Joe could disagree with this; it was true, and
+was assented to by all; Joe silently acquiescing.&nbsp; After the
+Sergeant had warmed his hands and <!-- page 172--><a
+name="page172"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 172</span>rubbed them
+sufficiently, he took off his cap and placed it on a little shelf
+or rack; and then took out a meerschaum pipe, which he exhibited
+without appearing to do so to the whole company.&nbsp; Then he
+filled it from his pouch, and rang the bell; and when the buxom
+young waitress appeared, he said,&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear, I think I&rsquo;ll have a nice rump steak and
+some onions, if you please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir,&rdquo; said the maid.</p>
+<p>Now I observed that two or three matters were noteworthy at
+this point.&nbsp; First, Joe&rsquo;s mouth so watered that he
+actually went to the fireplace and expectorated.&nbsp; Secondly,
+he was utterly amazed at the familiar manner in which the
+Sergeant was permitted to address this beautiful young person,
+who seemed to be quite a lady of quality.&nbsp; Thirdly, he was
+duly impressed and astounded with the luxurious appetite of this
+Sergeant of Hussars!</p>
+<p>Then the young woman came back and said,&mdash;&ldquo;Would
+you like to have it in the parlour, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O no, my dear,&rdquo; said the Sergeant; &ldquo;I would
+rather have it here.&nbsp; I hate being alone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As he said this, he slightly glanced at Dick
+Devilmecare.&nbsp; Dick, flattering himself that the observation
+was addressed particularly to him, observed that he also hated
+being alone.</p>
+<p>Then the Sergeant lighted his pipe; and I suppose there was
+not one in the company who did not think that tobacco
+particularly nice.</p>
+<p>Next, the Sergeant rang again, and once more the pretty maid
+appeared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucy,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;while my steak is getting
+ready, I <!-- page 173--><a name="page173"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 173</span>think I&rsquo;ll have three of
+whiskey hot, with a little lemon in it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this there was an involuntary smacking of lips all round,
+although no one was conscious he had exhibited any emotion.&nbsp;
+The Sergeant was perfectly easy and indifferent to
+everything.&nbsp; He smoked, looked at the fire, sipped his grog,
+spread out his legs, folded his arms; then rose and turned his
+back to the fire, everyone thinking how thoroughly he enjoyed
+himself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That smells very nice, Sergeant,&rdquo; said Harry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, it&rsquo;s very good,&rdquo; said the Sergeant;
+&ldquo;it&rsquo;s some I got down at Yokelton,
+Somersetshire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here Joe looked up; he hadn&rsquo;t been home for a week, and
+began to feel some interest in the old place, and everything
+belonging to it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I comes from that ere place, Mr. Sergeant,&rdquo; said
+he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, sir,&rdquo; said the Sergeant, in an off-hand
+manner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did thee buy un at a shop by the Pond, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it,&rdquo; replied the Sergeant, pointing
+with his pipe, &ldquo;to the right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The seame plaace,&rdquo; exclaimed Joe.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Why my sister lives there sarvant wi that ooman as keeps
+the shop.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo; said Sergeant Goodtale; &ldquo;how very
+curious!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Jack said, &ldquo;What a rum thing!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Bill said, &ldquo;That is a rum thing!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Harry said it was a strange coincidence.&nbsp; In short,
+they all agreed that it was the most remarkable circumstance that
+ever was.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 175--><a name="page175"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 175</span>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">The subject continued.</p>
+<p>As soon as the conversation on the remarkable circumstance
+recorded in the last chapter had drifted into another subject no
+less remarkable, and the Sergeant had finished his pipe, the
+beautiful being appeared with the rump steak and onions, a snowy
+white cloth having been previously spread at the end of one of
+the tables.&nbsp; When all was ready, it looked as nice and
+appetizing as could well be conceived.&nbsp; The most indifferent
+man there seemed the Sergeant himself, who, instead of rushing to
+the chair provided for him, walked as coolly up to the table as
+though he were going into action.&nbsp; Then he took the knife,
+and seeing it had not quite so sharp an edge as he liked, gave it
+a touch or two on the stone hearth.</p>
+<p>The smell of that tobacco from Yokelton had been sweet; so had
+the perfume from the whiskey toddy and the lemon; but of all the
+delicious and soul-refreshing odours that ever titilated human
+nostrils, nothing surely could equal that which proceeded from
+the rump steak and onions.&nbsp; The fragrance of new mown hay,
+which Cowper has so beautifully mentioned, had palled on
+Joe&rsquo;s senses; but when would the fragrance of that dish
+pall on the hungry soul?</p>
+<p>The Sergeant took no notice of the hungry looks of <!-- page
+176--><a name="page176"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+176</span>the company; he was a soldier, and concentrated his
+mind upon the duties of the moment.&nbsp; Sentimentality was no
+part of his nature.&nbsp; He was a man, and must eat; he was a
+soldier, and must perform the work as a duty irrespective of
+consequences.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you mind my smoke?&rdquo; asked Harry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh dear, no,&rdquo; said the Sergeant; &ldquo;I like
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Joe stared and watched every bit as the Sergeant cut it.&nbsp;
+He looked admiringly on the soldier and so lovingly at the steak,
+that it almost seemed as if he wished he could be cut into such
+delicious morsels and eaten by so happy a man.&nbsp; What
+thoughts passed through his mind no one but a dreamer could tell;
+and this is what I saw passing through the mind of Wurzel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, what a life! what grub! what jollyness! no turmut
+oeing; no dung-cart; no edgin and ditchin; no five o&rsquo;clock
+in the mornin; no master; no bein sweared at; no up afore the
+magistrates; no ungriness; rump steaks and inguns; whiskey and
+water and bacca; if I didn&rsquo;t like that air Polly Sweetlove,
+danged if I wouldn&rsquo;t go for a soger to-morrer!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Joe, very deferentially and as if he were afraid of
+being up afore the magistrate, &ldquo;If you please, sir, med I
+have a bit o&rsquo; that there bacca?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said the Sergeant, tossing his pouch;
+&ldquo;certainly; help yourself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Joe&rsquo;s heart was softened more and more towards the
+military, which he had hitherto regarded, from all he could hear,
+as a devil&rsquo;s own trap to catch Sabbath breakers and
+disobedient to parents.</p>
+<p>And methought, in my dream, I never saw men who were not
+partakers of a feast enjoy it more than the onlookers of that
+military repast.</p>
+<p><!-- page 177--><a name="page177"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+177</span>Then said Harry,&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Sergeant, I&rsquo;m well-nigh tired of my life,
+and I&rsquo;ve come here to enlist.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just wait a bit,&rdquo; said the Sergeant;
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not a man to do things in a hurry.&nbsp; I never
+allow a man to enlist, if I know it, in Her Majesty&rsquo;s
+service, honourable and jolly as it is, without asking him to
+think about it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hear, hear!&rdquo; said Lazyman; &ldquo;that&rsquo;s
+good, I likes that; don&rsquo;t be in a hurry, lad.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hear, hear!&rdquo; says Outofwork, &ldquo;don&rsquo;t
+jump into a job too soon, yer medn&rsquo;t like it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hear, hear!&rdquo; says the Boardman, &ldquo;walk round
+a-bit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Harry, &ldquo;I have considered
+it.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve just had education enough to prevent my
+getting a living, and not enough to make a man of me: I&rsquo;ve
+tried everything and nobody wants me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said Sergeant Goodtale, &ldquo;do you
+think the Queen only wants them that nobody else&rsquo;ll
+have.&nbsp; I can tell you that ain&rsquo;t the Queen of
+England&rsquo;s way.&nbsp; It might do for Rooshia or Germany, or
+them countries, but not for Old England.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s a free
+country.&nbsp; I think, lads, I&rsquo;m right&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here there was tremendous hammering on the table by way of
+assent and applause; amidst which Joe could be observed thumping
+his hard fist with as much vehemence as if he had got a County
+Magistrate&rsquo;s head under it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is a free country, sir,&rdquo; said the Sergeant,
+&ldquo;no man here is kidnapped into the Army, which is a
+profession for men, not slaves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to join,&rdquo; said Harry, &ldquo;say
+what you like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 178--><a name="page178"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+178</span>&ldquo;Wait till the morning;&rdquo; said the Sergeant,
+&ldquo;and meanwhile we&rsquo;ll have a song.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this moment Mr. Bumpkin put in an appearance; for although
+he had been enjoying himself with Mr. and Mrs. Oldtimes, he
+thought it prudent to have a peep and see how &ldquo;thic Joe wur
+gettin on.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 179--><a name="page179"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 179</span>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Mr. Bumpkin sings a good old song&mdash;the
+Sergeant becomes quite a convivial companion and plays
+dominoes.</p>
+<p>The Sergeant, having finished his repast, again had recourse
+to his pipe, and was proceeding to light it when Mr. Bumpkin
+appeared in the room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We be gwine to have a song, maister,&rdquo; said
+Joe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Give us a song, governor,&rdquo; said half-a-dozen
+voices.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, do, maister,&rdquo; says Joe; &ldquo;thee sings a
+good un, I knows, for I ha eerd thee often enough at arvest
+oames: gie us a song, maister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now if there was one thing Mr. Bumpkin thought he was really
+great at besides ploughing the straightest and levellest furrow,
+it was singing the longest and levellest song.&nbsp; He had been
+known to sing one, which, with its choruses, had lasted a full
+half hour, and then had broken down for lack of memory.</p>
+<p>On the present occasion he would have exhibited no reluctance,
+having had a glass or two in the Bar Parlour had he not possessed
+those misgivings about the Sergeant.&nbsp; He looked furtively at
+that officer as though it were better to give him no
+chance.&nbsp; Seeing, however, that he was smoking quietly, and
+almost in a forlorn manner by himself, his apprehensions became
+less oppressive.</p>
+<p><!-- page 180--><a name="page180"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+180</span>Invitations were repeated again and again, and with
+such friendly vehemence that resistance at last was out of the
+question.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I aint sung for a good while,&rdquo; said he,
+&ldquo;but I wunt be disagreeable like, so here goes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But before he could start there was such a thundering on the
+tables that several minutes elapsed.&nbsp; At length there was
+sufficient silence to enable him to be heard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is Church and Crown, lads.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;Gie me the man as loves the Squire,<br
+/>
+The Parson, and the Beak;<br />
+And labours twelve good hours a day<br />
+For thirteen bob a week!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hooroar! hooroar! hooroar!&rdquo; shouted
+Lazyman.&nbsp; &ldquo;What d&rsquo;ye think &rsquo;o
+that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, my eye,&rdquo; said Outofwork, &ldquo;aint it
+jolly?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well done! bravo!&rdquo; shrieked the Boardman.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll carry that ere man through the streets on my
+shoulders instead o&rsquo; the boards, that I will.&nbsp; Bravo!
+he ought to be advertized&mdash;this style thirteen bob a
+week!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thirteen bob a week!&rdquo; laughed Harry;
+&ldquo;who&rsquo;d go for a soldier with such a prospect.&nbsp;
+Can you give us a job, governor?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait a bit, lads,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin, &ldquo;there
+be another werse and then a chorus.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hooray!&rdquo; they shouted, &ldquo;a chorus!
+let&rsquo;s have the chorus&mdash;there ought to be a
+chorus&mdash;thirteen bob a week!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, gentlemen, the chorus if you please,&rdquo; said
+Harry; &ldquo;give it mouth, sir!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then sang Bumpkin&mdash;</p>
+<p class="poetry"><!-- page 181--><a name="page181"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 181</span>&ldquo;O &rsquo;edgin, ditchin,
+that&rsquo;s the geaam,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; All in the open air;<br />
+The poor man&rsquo;s health is all his wealth,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But wealth without a care!</p>
+<p style="text-align: center" class="poetry"><span
+class="smcap">Chorus</span>.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Then shout hurrah for Church and State<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Though &rsquo;eretics may scoff,<br />
+The devil is our head Constable,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To take the willins off.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Give me the man that&rsquo;s poor and
+strong,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Hard working and content;<br />
+Who looks on onger as his lot,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In Heaven&rsquo;s wise purpose sent.<br />
+Who looks on riches as a snare<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To ketch the worldly wise;<br />
+And good roast mutton as a dodge,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To blind rich people&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center" class="poetry"><span
+class="smcap">Chorus</span>.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Give me the man that labours hard<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From mornin&rsquo; until night,<br />
+And looks at errins as a treat<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And bacon a delight.<br />
+O &rsquo;edgin, ditchin, diggin drains,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And emptyin pool and dyke,<br />
+It beats your galloppin to &rsquo;ounds,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Your ball-rooms and the like.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center" class="poetry"><span
+class="smcap">Chorus</span>.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Gi&rsquo; me the man that loves the Squire<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; With all his might and main;<br />
+And with the taxes and the rates<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As never racks his brain.<br />
+Who loves the Parson and the Beak<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As Heaven born&rsquo;d and sent,<br />
+And revels in that blessed balm<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A hongry sweet content.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center" class="poetry"><span
+class="smcap">Chorus</span>.</p>
+<p class="poetry"><!-- page 182--><a name="page182"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 182</span>Gie me the good Shaksperan man<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As wants no other books,<br />
+But them as he no need to spell,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The ever runnin brooks:<br />
+As feeds the pigs and minds the flocks,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And rubs the orses down;<br />
+And like a regler lyal man,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Sticks up for Church and Crown.&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center" class="poetry"><span
+class="smcap">Chorus</span>.</p>
+<p>At the termination of this pastoral song there was such a
+hullabaloo of laughter, such a yelling, thumping, and, I grieve
+to say, swearing, that Mr. Bumpkin wondered what on earth was the
+occasion of it.&nbsp; At the Rent dinner at the Squire&rsquo;s he
+had always sung it with great success; and the Squire himself had
+done him the honour to say it was the best song he had ever
+heard, while the Clergyman had assured him that the sentiments
+were so good that it ought to be played upon the organ when the
+people were coming out of church.&nbsp; And Farmer Grinddown, who
+was the largest gentleman farmer for miles around, had declared
+that if men would only act up to that it would be a happy
+country, and we should soon be able to defy America itself.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin, hearing such shouts of laughter, thought perhaps
+he might have a patch of black on his face, and put his hand up
+to feel.&nbsp; Then he looked about him to see if his dress was
+disarranged; but finding nothing amiss, he candidly told them he
+&ldquo;couldn&rsquo;t zee what there wur to laugh at thic
+fashion.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They all said it was a capital song, and wondered if he had
+any more of the same sort, and hoped he&rsquo;d leave them a lock
+of his hair&mdash;and otherwise manifested tokens of enthusiastic
+approbation.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin, however, could not quite see their <!-- page
+183--><a name="page183"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+183</span>mirth in the same light, so he turned on his heel and,
+beckoning to Joe, left the room in high dudgeon, not to say
+disdain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mind Joe&mdash;no truck wi un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, maister, he knows my sister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Damn thee sister, Joe; it be a lie.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be it? here&rsquo;s some o&rsquo; the bacca he brought
+up from Okleton, I tell ee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell thee, have nowt to do wi un; we shall be on
+t&rsquo;morrer, we be tenth in the list.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Joe, &ldquo;we bin igher in list un
+thic, we bin as near as eight; I shall be mighty glad when it be
+over.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An get back to pigs, aye, Joe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Aye, maister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothin like oame, Joe, be there?&rdquo; and Mr. Bumpkin
+turned away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;no, maister, if so
+be&rdquo; (and this was spoken to himself) &ldquo;if so be you
+got a oame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then I saw that Joe rejoined his companions, amongst whom a
+conversation was going on as to the merits of the song.&nbsp;
+Some said one thing and some another, but all condemned it as a
+regular toading to the Parson and the Squire: and as for the
+Beak, how any man could praise him whose only duty was to punish
+the common people, no one could see.&nbsp; The company were
+getting very comfortable.&nbsp; The Sergeant had called for
+another glass of that delectable grog whose very perfume seemed
+to inspire everyone with goodfellowship, and they all appeared to
+enjoy the Sergeant&rsquo;s liquor without tasting it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you say to a game of dominoes?&rdquo; said
+Harry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They won&rsquo;t allow em ere,&rdquo; said Lazyman.</p>
+<p><!-- page 184--><a name="page184"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+184</span>&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t they,&rdquo; answered
+Outofwork.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll warrant if the Sergeant likes
+to play there&rsquo;s no landlord&rsquo;ll stop him, ay,
+Sergeant?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I believe,&rdquo; said the Sergeant, &ldquo;as
+one of the Queen&rsquo;s servants, I have the privilege of
+playing when I like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good,&rdquo; said Harry, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ll be a
+Queen&rsquo;s man too, so out with the shilling,
+Sergeant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait till the morning,&rdquo; said the Sergeant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Harry.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve had
+enough waiting.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m on, give me the
+shilling.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Sergeant said, &ldquo;Well, let me see, what height are
+you?&rdquo; and he stood up beside him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I think I can get you
+in,&rdquo; saying which he gave him a shilling; such a bright
+coin, that it seemed to have come fresh from the Queen&rsquo;s
+hand.</p>
+<p>Then the Sergeant took out some beautiful bright ribbons which
+he was understood to say (but did <i>not</i> say) the Queen had
+given him that morning.&nbsp; Then he rang the bell, and the
+buxom waitress appearing he asked for the favour of a needle and
+thread, which, the radiant damsel producing, with her own fair
+fingers she sewed the ribbons on to Harry&rsquo;s cap, smiling
+with admiration all the while.&nbsp; Even this little incident
+was not without its effect on the observant &ldquo;head
+witness,&rdquo; and he felt an unaccountable fascination to have
+the same office performed by the same fair hands on his own
+hat.</p>
+<p>Then, without saying more, a box of dominoes was produced, and
+Joe soon found himself, he did not know how, the Sergeant&rsquo;s
+partner, while Lazyman and Outofwork were opposed to them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it pooty good livin in your trade, Mr.
+Sergeant?&rdquo; asked Joe.</p>
+<p><!-- page 185--><a name="page185"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+185</span>&ldquo;Not bad,&rdquo; said the Sergeant; &ldquo;that
+is five-one, I think&rdquo;&mdash;referring to the play.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rump steaks and ingons aint bad living,&rdquo; said
+Outofwork.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the Sergeant, &ldquo;and there&rsquo;s
+nothing I like better than a good thick mutton chop for
+breakfast&mdash;let me see, what&rsquo;s the game?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Joe, smacking his lips, &ldquo;mutton
+chops is the best thing out; I aint had one in my mouth, though,
+for a doocid long time; I likes em with plenty o&rsquo; fat an
+gravy loike.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You see,&rdquo; said the Sergeant, &ldquo;when
+you&rsquo;ve been out for a two or three mile ride before
+breakfast in the fresh country air, a chap wants something good
+for breakfast, and a mutton chop&rsquo;s none too much for
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; answered Joe, &ldquo;I could tackle
+three.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Sergeant Goodtale, &ldquo;but some are
+much larger than others.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So em be,&rdquo; agreed Joe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the game,&rdquo; enquired the
+Sergeant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Two-one,&rdquo; said Joe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One&rsquo;s all,&rdquo; said the soldier.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell ee what,&rdquo; remarked Joe, &ldquo;if I was
+going to list, there&rsquo;s no man as I&rsquo;d liefer list wi
+than you, Mr. Sergeant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Domino!&rdquo; said the Sergeant, &ldquo;that&rsquo;s
+one to us, partner!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then they shuffled the dominoes and commenced again.&nbsp; But
+at this moment the full figure of Mr. Bumpkin again stood in the
+doorway.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Joe!&rdquo; he exclaimed angrily, &ldquo;I want thee,
+come ere thirecly, I tell ee!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, maister; I be comin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 186--><a name="page186"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+186</span>&ldquo;You stoopid fool!&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin in a
+whisper, as Joe went up to him, &ldquo;thee be playin with thic
+feller.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, maister, if I be; what then?&rdquo; Joe said this
+somewhat angrily, and Mr. Bumpkin replied:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll ha thee, Joe&mdash;he&rsquo;ll ha
+thee!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, nay, maister; I be too old in the tooth for he;
+but it beant thy business, maister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, as he turned away, &ldquo;it
+beant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then Joe resumed his play.&nbsp; Now it happened that as the
+Sergeant smacked his lips when he took his occasional sip of the
+fragrant grog, expressive of the highest relish, it awakened a
+great curiosity in Wurzel&rsquo;s mind as to its particular
+flavour.&nbsp; The glass was never far from his nose and he had
+long enjoyed the extremely tempting odour.&nbsp; At last, as he
+was not invited to drink by Sergeant Goodtale, he could contain
+himself no longer, but made so bold as to say:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pardner, med I jist taste this ere?&nbsp; I never did
+taste sich a thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly, partner,&rdquo; said the Sergeant, pushing
+the tumbler, which was about three-parts full.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the game now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ten-one,&rdquo; said Outofwork.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One&rsquo;s all, then,&rdquo; said the Sergeant.</p>
+<p>Joe took the tumbler, and after looking into it for a second
+or two as though he were mentally apostrophizing it, placed the
+glass to his lips.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be afraid,&rdquo; said the Sergeant.</p>
+<p>No one seemed more courageous than Wurzel, in respect of the
+act with which he was engaged, and before he took the glass from
+his lips its contents had disappeared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m mighty glad thee spoke, Maister Sergeant, for
+if <!-- page 187--><a name="page187"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+187</span>thee hadn&rsquo;t I should a drunk un all wirout thy
+leave.&nbsp; I never tasted sich tackle in my life; it&rsquo;s
+enough to make a man gie up everything for sogering.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Domino!&rdquo; said the Sergeant.&nbsp; &ldquo;I think
+that&rsquo;s the game!&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear,&rdquo; said my wife, &ldquo;you have been
+talking again in your sleep.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Really,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I hope I have not
+compromised myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not understand you,&rdquo; cried she.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No more do I, for I am hardly awake.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have been talking of Joe Wurzel again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, to be sure.&nbsp; What about him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you mentioned Mr. Outofwork and Mr. Lazyman and
+Mr. Devilmecare, and another whose name I did not
+catch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; I asked, &ldquo;did they go for
+soldiers?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At present, no, except Harry, for whom I was heartily
+sorry, he seemed such a nice disappointed lad.&nbsp; But pray who
+is this Sergeant Goodtale?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is on recruiting service, a very fine, persuasive
+fellow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But he didn&rsquo;t seem to press these people or use
+any arts to entice them: I like him for that.&nbsp; He rather
+seemed to me to discourage them from enlisting.&nbsp; He might
+have been sure poor Harry meant it, because, as I take it, he was
+half-starved, and yet he desired him to wait till the
+morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;his conduct was artful
+if you examine it with reference to its effect on the others; but
+he is an extraordinary man, this Sergeant Goodtale&mdash;was
+never known to persuade any one to enlist, I believe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 188--><a name="page188"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+188</span>&ldquo;But he seemed to get along very well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very; I thought he got along very
+comfortably.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then there was one Lucy Prettyface!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, I don&rsquo;t remember her,&rdquo; cried I, alarmed
+lest I might have said anything in my dream for which I was not
+responsible.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why she was the girl who sewed the colours on and
+somebody called &lsquo;my dear.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I assure you,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;it was not I: it
+must have been the Sergeant; but I have no recollection&mdash;O
+yes, to be sure, she was the waitress.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You remember her now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said I, determined not to yield if I could
+possibly help it, &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t say that I do.&nbsp; I
+know there was a person who sewed colours on and whom the
+Sergeant called &lsquo;my dear,&rsquo; but further than that I
+should not like to pledge myself.&nbsp; Yes&mdash;yes&mdash;to be
+sure,&rdquo; and here I went on talking, as it were, to myself,
+for I find it is much better to talk to yourself if you find it
+difficult to carry on a conversation with other persons.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She was pretty, wasn&rsquo;t she?&rdquo; said my wife
+with an arch look.</p>
+<p>I gave her a look just as arch, as I replied,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Really I hardly looked at her; but I should say
+<i>not</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; I make a point of never saying any one
+is pretty.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Joe thought her so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did he?&nbsp; Well she may have been, but I never went
+in for Beauty myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You shocking man,&rdquo; said my wife, &ldquo;do you
+perceive what you are saying?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, of course; but you take me up so sharply: if you
+had not cut me off in the flower of my speech you would have been
+gratified at the finish of my sentence.&nbsp; <!-- page 189--><a
+name="page189"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 189</span>I was going
+to say, I never went in for Beauty, but once.&nbsp; That, I
+think, gives the sentence a pretty turn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, now, I think these dreams and this talking in
+your sleep indicate that you require a change; what do you say to
+Bournemouth?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You think I shall sleep better there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think it will do you good.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then we&rsquo;ll go to Bournemouth,&rdquo; cried I,
+&ldquo;for I understand it&rsquo;s a very dreamy
+place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I should like to know what becomes of this action
+of Mr. Bumpkin, and how all his people get on?&nbsp; You may
+depend upon it that Sergeant will enlist those other
+men.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not know,&rdquo; I remarked, &ldquo;what is in the
+future.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But surely you know what you intend.&nbsp; You can make
+your characters do anything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed not,&rdquo; I said.&nbsp; &ldquo;They will have
+their own way whether I write their history or any one
+else.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That Sergeant Goodtale will have every one of them, my
+dear; you mark my words.&nbsp; He&rsquo;s the most artful man I
+ever heard of.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Of course I could offer no contradiction to this statement as
+I was not in the secrets of the future.&nbsp; How the matter will
+work out depends upon a variety of circumstances over which I
+have not the least control.&nbsp; For instance, if Bill were to
+take the shilling, I believe Dick would follow: and if the
+Sergeant were to sing a good song he might catch the rest.&nbsp;
+But who can tell?</p>
+<h2><!-- page 191--><a name="page191"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 191</span>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Joe electrifies the company and surprises the
+reader.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Suppose we have another song,&rdquo; said Sergeant
+Goodtale.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And spoase we has some moore o&rsquo; that there
+stuff,&rdquo; answered Joe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; said Harry, &ldquo;we will too.&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;ll spend my shilling like a man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Saying which he rang the bell and ordered a glass for himself
+and one for Joe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, then,&rdquo; said the latter, &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t
+sing, but I&rsquo;ll gie thee summut as I larned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hooray!&rdquo; said Harry, &ldquo;summut as he
+larned!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bravo!&rdquo; said the Boardman, &ldquo;summut as he
+larned?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s at un,&rdquo; said Joe.</p>
+<p>And then with a mighty provincialism he repeated without a
+break:&mdash;</p>
+<h3>DR.&nbsp; BRIMSTONE&rsquo;S SERMON,<br />
+<span class="smcap">as put into verse by gaffer
+ditcher</span>.</h3>
+<p class="poetry">I bin to Church, I ha&rsquo;, my boy,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And now conwarted be;<br />
+The last time I wur ever there<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; War eighteen farty-three!</p>
+<p class="poetry"><!-- page 192--><a name="page192"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 192</span>And &rsquo;ow I knows it is as
+this,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I didn&rsquo;t goo to pray,<br />
+Nor &rsquo;ear the Word, but went becorse<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; It wur my weddin day!</p>
+<p class="poetry">Zounds! wot a blessed sarmon twur<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I &rsquo;eeard the Sabbath morn;<br />
+&rsquo;Ow I a woful sinner wur<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or ever I wur born.</p>
+<p class="poetry">You sees them wilful igorant pigs<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In mud a wollorin;<br />
+Well, like them pigs, but ten times wus,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We wollers in our sin.</p>
+<p class="poetry">We&rsquo;re coated o&rsquo;er wi&rsquo; sinful
+mud,&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A dreadful sight we be;<br />
+And yet we doant despise ourselves&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For why?&mdash;We doant zee!</p>
+<p class="poetry">I thinks I had yer there, my boy,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; For all your sniggerin&rsquo; jeers;<br />
+Thee&rsquo;re in t&rsquo; mud, I tell &rsquo;ee, lad,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Rightoover &rsquo;ed an&rsquo; ears.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Zounds! what a orful thing it be<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That love should blind us so!<br />
+Why, them there bloomin rosy cheeks<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Be ony masks o&rsquo; woe!</p>
+<p class="poetry">The reddest on &rsquo;em thee could kiss<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Aint &rsquo;ardly wuth the pains;<br />
+At best it&rsquo;s but the husk o&rsquo; bliss,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; It&rsquo;s nuther wuts nor banes.</p>
+<p class="poetry">There aint a pleasure you can name,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From coourtin down to skittles,<br />
+But wot there&rsquo;s mischief in the same,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Like pisen in your wittles.</p>
+<p class="poetry">The Reverend Brimstone says, &ldquo;Beloved,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Be allays meek an umble;<br />
+A saint should never ax for moor,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; An never larn to grumble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry"><!-- page 193--><a name="page193"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 193</span>We ain&rsquo;t to tork o&rsquo;
+polleticks<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; An&rsquo; things as don&rsquo;t consarn us,<br />
+And wot we wornts to know o&rsquo; lor<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The madgistret will larn us.</p>
+<p class="poetry">We ain&rsquo;t to drink wi&rsquo;
+Methodists,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; No, not a friendly soop;<br />
+We ain&rsquo;t to tork o&rsquo; genteel folks<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Onless to praise un oop.</p>
+<p class="poetry">We ain&rsquo;t to &rsquo;ear a blessed word<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Agin our betters said;<br />
+We&rsquo;re got to lay the butter thick<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Becorse they&rsquo;re sich &rsquo;igh bred!</p>
+<p class="poetry">We got to say &ldquo;Ha! look at he!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A gemman tooth and nail!&rdquo;<br />
+You morn&rsquo;t say, &ldquo;What a harse he&rsquo;d be<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; If he&rsquo;d a got a tail!&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">For why? becorse these monied gents<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Ha&rsquo; got sich birth an&rsquo;
+breedin&rsquo;;<br />
+An&rsquo; down we got to &rsquo;old our &rsquo;eads,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Like cattle, when they&rsquo;re feedin&rsquo;.</p>
+<p class="poetry">The parson put it kindly like&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He sed, says he, as &rsquo;ow<br />
+We&rsquo;re bean&rsquo;t so good as them there grubs<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; We turns up wi&rsquo; the plow.</p>
+<p class="poetry">There&rsquo;s nowt more wretcheder an we,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or worthier an the rich,<br />
+I praises &rsquo;em for bein&rsquo; born,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; An&rsquo; &rsquo;eaven for makin&rsquo; sich.</p>
+<p class="poetry">So wile we be, I daily stares<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That earthquakes doan&rsquo;t fall,<br />
+An&rsquo; swaller up this unconwinced<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Owdashus earthly ball!</p>
+<p class="poetry">An&rsquo; wen I thinks of all our
+sins&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Lay down, says I, my boys,<br />
+We&rsquo;re fittin&rsquo; only for manoor,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; So don&rsquo;t let&rsquo;s make a noise.</p>
+<p class="poetry"><!-- page 194--><a name="page194"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 194</span>Let&rsquo;s spred us out upon the
+ground<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; An&rsquo; make the turmuts grow,<br />
+It&rsquo;s all we&rsquo;re good for in this world<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; O&rsquo; wickedness an&rsquo; woe!</p>
+<p class="poetry">And yet we&rsquo;re &rsquo;llow&rsquo;d to
+brethe the air<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The same as gents from town;<br />
+And &rsquo;llow&rsquo;d to black their &rsquo;appy boots,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And rub their &rsquo;orses down!</p>
+<p class="poetry">To think o&rsquo; blessins sich as these,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Is like ongrateful lust;<br />
+It stuffs us oop wi&rsquo; worldly pride,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As if our &rsquo;arts would bust!</p>
+<p class="poetry">But no, we&rsquo;re &rsquo;umble got to be,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Though privileged so &rsquo;igh:<br />
+Why doan&rsquo;t we feed on grass or grains,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or leastways &rsquo;umbly die!</p>
+<p class="poetry">We got to keep our wicked tongue<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From disrespeckful speakin&rsquo;,<br />
+We han&rsquo;t a got to eat too much,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor yet goo pleasure seekin&rsquo;.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Nor kitch a rabbit or a aire,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor call the Bobby names,<br />
+Nor stand about, but goo to church,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And play no idle games:</p>
+<p class="poetry">To love paroshial orficers,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The squire, and all that&rsquo;s his,<br />
+And never goo wi&rsquo; idle chaps<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As wants their wages riz.</p>
+<p class="poetry">So now conwarted I ha&rsquo; bin<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From igorance and wice;<br />
+It&rsquo;s only &rsquo;appiness that&rsquo;s sin,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And norty things that&rsquo;s nice!</p>
+<p class="poetry">Whereas I called them upstart gents<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The wust o&rsquo; low bred snobs,<br />
+Wi&rsquo; contrite &rsquo;art I hollers out<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &ldquo;My heye, wot bloomin&rsquo; nobs!&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry"><!-- page 195--><a name="page195"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 195</span>I sees the error o&rsquo; my
+ways,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; So, lads, this warnin&rsquo; take,<br />
+The Poor Man&rsquo;s path, the parson says,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Winds round the Burnin&rsquo; Lake.</p>
+<p class="poetry">They&rsquo;ve changed it since the days
+o&rsquo; yore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Them Gospel preachers, drat un;<br />
+They used to preach it to the poor,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; An&rsquo; now they preach it <i>at</i> un.</p>
+<p>Every one was amazed at the astonishing memory of this country
+lad: and the applause that greeted the reciter might well be
+calculated to awaken his latent vanity.&nbsp; It was like being
+called before the curtain after the first act by a young actor on
+his first appearance.&nbsp; And I believe every one understood
+the meaning of the verses, which seemed to imply that the hungry
+prodigal, famishing for food, was fed with husks instead of
+grain.&nbsp; Contentment with wretchedness is not good preaching,
+and this was one lesson of Dr. Brimstone&rsquo;s sermon.&nbsp; As
+soon as Harry could make himself heard amidst the general hubbub,
+which usually follows a great performance, he said:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, look here, lads, it&rsquo;s all very well to be
+converted with such preaching as that; but it&rsquo;s my belie
+it&rsquo;s more calculated to make hypocrites than
+Christians.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hear! hear!&rdquo; said Lazyman.&nbsp; &ldquo;That
+<i>is</i> right.&rdquo;&nbsp; Anything but conversion for
+Lazyman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; continued Harry, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard
+that kind of preaching a hundred times: it&rsquo;s a regular
+old-fashioned country sermon; and, as for the poor being so near
+hell, I put it in these four lines.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hear, hear!&rdquo; cried the company;
+&ldquo;order!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And they prepared themselves for what was to come with as
+great eagerness as, I venture to say, would <!-- page 196--><a
+name="page196"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 196</span>always be
+shown to catch the text, if it came at the end, instead of the
+beginning, of a sermon.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shut up,&rdquo; says Lazyman; &ldquo;let&rsquo;s
+&rsquo;ear this &rsquo;ere.&nbsp; I knows it&rsquo;s summut good
+by the look an him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t make a row,&rdquo; retorts the Boardman;
+&ldquo;who can hear anything while you keeps on like
+that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And there they stood, actually suspending the operation of
+smoking as they waited the summing up of this remarkably orthodox
+&ldquo;preaching of the word.&rdquo;&nbsp; The sergeant only was
+a spectator of the scene, and much amused did he seem at the
+faces that prepared for a grin or a sneer as the forthcoming
+utterance should demand.&nbsp; Then said Harry solemnly and
+dramatically:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;In <span class="smcap">Want</span> full
+many a vice is born,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And Virtue in a <span
+class="smcap">Dinner</span>;<br />
+A well-spread board makes many a <span
+class="smcap">Saint</span>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And <span class="smcap">Hunger</span> many a
+sinner.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>From the explosion which followed this antidote to Mr.
+Brimstone&rsquo;s sermon, I should judge that the more part of
+the company believed that Poverty was almost as ample a virtue as
+Charity itself.&nbsp; They shook their heads in token of assent;
+they thumped the table in recognition of the soundness of the
+teaching; and several uttered an exclamation not to be committed
+to paper, as an earnest of their admiration for the ability of
+Mr. Highlow, who, instead of being a private soldier, ought, in
+their judgment, to be Lord Mayor of London.&nbsp; After this
+recital every one said he thought Mr. Highlow might oblige
+them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m no singer,&rdquo; said Harry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Try, Harry!&rdquo; exclaimed Lazyman: he was a rare one
+to advise other people to try.</p>
+<p><!-- page 197--><a name="page197"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+197</span>&ldquo;Trying to sing when you can&rsquo;t,&rdquo;
+answered Harry, &ldquo;I should think is a rum sort of business;
+but I&rsquo;ll tell you what I&rsquo;ll do if you like.&nbsp;
+When I was down at Hearne Bay I heard an old fisherman tell a
+story which&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it!&rdquo; thumped out Joe, &ldquo;a
+story.&nbsp; I likes a good story, specially if there be a goast
+in it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what there is in it,&rdquo; said
+Harry, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll leave you to make that out; but I tell
+you what I did when I heard it, I made a ballad of it, and so if
+you like I&rsquo;ll try and recollect it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bravo!&rdquo; they said, and Harry gave them the
+following</p>
+<h3>SONG OF THE WAVES.</h3>
+<p class="poetry">Far away on the pebbly beach<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That echoes the sound of the surge;<br />
+As if they were gifted with speech,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The breakers will sing you a dirge.</p>
+<p class="poetry">The fishermen list to it oft,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And love the sweet charm of its spell,<br />
+For sometimes it wispers so soft,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; It seems but the voice of the shell.</p>
+<p class="poetry">It tells of a beautiful child<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That used to come down there and play,<br />
+And shout to the surges so wild<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That burst on the brink of the bay.</p>
+<p class="poetry">She was but a child of the poor,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Whose father had perished at sea;<br />
+&rsquo;Twas strange, that sweet psalm of the shore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Whatever the story might be!</p>
+<p class="poetry">Yes, strange, but so true in its tone<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That no one could listen and doubt;<br />
+The heart must be calm and alone<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To search its deep mystery out.</p>
+<p class="poetry"><!-- page 198--><a name="page198"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 198</span>She came with a smaller than she<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That toddled along at her side;<br />
+Now ran to and fled from the sea,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Now paddled its feet in the tide.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Afar o&rsquo;er the waters so wild,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Grazed Effie with wondering eye;<br />
+What mystery grew on the child<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In all that bright circle of sky?</p>
+<p class="poetry">Her father&mdash;how sweet was the thought!<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Was linked with this childish delight;<br />
+&rsquo;Twas strange what a vision it brought&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As though he still lingered in sight.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Was it Heaven so near, so remote,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Across the blue line of the wave?<br />
+&rsquo;Twas thither he sailed in his boat,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Twas there he went down in his grave!</p>
+<p class="poetry">So the days and the hours flew along,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Like swallows that skim o&rsquo;er the flood;<br />
+Like the sound of a beautiful song,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That echoes and dies in the wood!</p>
+<p class="poetry">One day as they strayed on the strand,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And played with the shingle and shell,<br />
+A boat that just touched on the land<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Was playfully rocked by the swell.</p>
+<p class="poetry">O childhood, what joy in a ride!<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; What eagerness beams in their eyes!<br />
+What bliss as they climb o&rsquo;er the side<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And shout as they tumble and rise!</p>
+<p class="poetry">O sea, with thy pitiful dirge,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Thou need&rsquo;st to be mournful and moan!<br />
+The wrath of thy terrible surge<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Omnipotence curbs it alone!</p>
+<p class="poetry">The boat bore away from the shore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The laughter of childhood so glad!<br />
+And the breakers bring back ever more<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The dirge with its echo so sad!</p>
+<p class="poetry"><!-- page 199--><a name="page199"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 199</span>A widow sits mute on the beach,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And ever the tides as they flow,<br />
+As if they were gifted with speech,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Repeat the sad tale of her woe!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s werry good,&rdquo; said the
+Boardman.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid them there children was
+washed away&mdash;it&rsquo;s a terrible dangerous coast that ere
+Ern Bay.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve &rsquo;eeard my father speak on
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Them there werses is rippin&rsquo;!&rdquo; said
+Joe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stunnin&rsquo;!&rdquo; exclaimed Bob.</p>
+<p>And so they all agreed that it was a pretty song and
+&ldquo;well put together.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Capital,&rdquo; said the sergeant, &ldquo;I never heard
+anything better, and as for Mr. Wurzel, a man with his memory
+ought to do something better than feed pigs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, aye,&rdquo; said the company to a man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you follow my example?&rdquo; said
+Harry; &ldquo;it&rsquo;s the finest life in the world for a young
+fellow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the sergeant, &ldquo;that all
+depends; its very good for some, for others not so
+good&mdash;although there are very few who are not pleased when
+they once join, especially in such a regiment as ours!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And would you mind telling me, sir,&rdquo; asked
+Outofwork, &ldquo;what sort of chaps it don&rsquo;t
+suit?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you see, chaps that have been brought up in the
+country and tied to their mothers&rsquo; apron strings all their
+life: they have such soft hearts, they are almost sure to
+cry&mdash;and a crying soldier is a poor affair.&nbsp; I
+wouldn&rsquo;t enlist a chap of that sort, no, not if he gave me
+ten pounds.&nbsp; Now, for instance, if Mr. Wurzel was to ask my
+advice about being a soldier I should say
+&lsquo;don&rsquo;t!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 200--><a name="page200"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+200</span>&ldquo;Why not, sir?&rdquo; asked Joe;
+&ldquo;how&rsquo;s that there, then?&nbsp; D&rsquo;ye think I be
+afeard?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should say, go home first, my boy, and ask your
+mother!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I be d---d if I be sich a molly-coddle as that, nuther;
+and I&rsquo;ll prove un, Mr. Sergeant; gie me thic bright
+shillin&rsquo; and I be your man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the sergeant, &ldquo;think it over, and
+come to me in a month&rsquo;s time, if your mother will let
+you.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t want men that will let their masters buy
+them off the next day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; an lookee here, Maister Sergeant; I bean&rsquo;t to
+be bought off like thic, nuther.&nbsp; If I goes, I goes for good
+an&rsquo; all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; said the sergeant, shaking him by
+the hand, and pressing into it the bright shilling, &ldquo;if you
+insist on joining, you shall not say I prevented you: my business
+is not to prevent men from entering Her Majesty&rsquo;s
+service.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then the ribbons were brought out, and Joe asked if the young
+woman might sew them on as she had done Harry&rsquo;s; and when
+she came in, Joe looked at her, and tried to put on a military
+bearing, in imitation of his great prototype; and actually went
+so far as to address her as &ldquo;My dear,&rdquo; for which
+liberty he almost expected a slap in the face.&nbsp; But Lucy
+only smiled graciously, and said: &ldquo;Bravo, Mr. Wurzel!&nbsp;
+Bravo, sir; I&rsquo;ve seen many a man inlisted, and sewed the
+Queen&rsquo;s colours on for him, but never for a smarter or a
+finer fellow, there!&rdquo; and she skipped from the room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well done!&rdquo; said several voices.&nbsp; And the
+sergeant said:</p>
+<p><!-- page 201--><a name="page201"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+201</span>&ldquo;What do you think of that, Mr. Wurzel?&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;ll back she&rsquo;s never said that to a soldier
+before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Joe turned his hat about and drew the ribbons through his
+fingers, as pleased as a child with a new toy, and as proud as if
+he had helped to win a great battle.</p>
+<p>Here I awoke.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 203--><a name="page203"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 203</span>CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">The Sergeant makes a loyal speech and sings a
+song, both of which are well received by the company.</p>
+<p>And when I got to Bournemouth I dreamed again; and a singular
+thing during this history was, that always in my dream I began
+where I had left off on the previous night.&nbsp; So I saw that
+there, in the room at &ldquo;The Goose,&rdquo; were Sergeant
+Goodtale, and Harry, and Joe, and the rest, just as I had left
+them when I last awoke.&nbsp; But methought there was an air of
+swagger on the part of the head witness which I had not observed
+previously.&nbsp; His hat was placed on one side, in imitation of
+the sergeant&rsquo;s natty cap, and he seemed already to hold up
+his head in a highly military manner; and when he stooped down to
+get a light he tried to stoop in the same graceful and military
+style as the sergeant himself; and after blowing it out, threw
+down the spill in the most off-hand manner possible, as though he
+said, &ldquo;That&rsquo;s how we chaps do it in the
+Hussars!&rdquo;&nbsp; Everyone noticed the difference in the
+manner and bearing of the young recruit.&nbsp; There was a
+certain swagger and boldness of demeanour that only comes after
+you have enlisted.&nbsp; Nor was this change confined to outward
+appearance alone.&nbsp; What now were pigs in the mind of
+Joe?&nbsp; Merely the producers of pork chops for <!-- page
+204--><a name="page204"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+204</span>breakfast.&nbsp; What was Dobbin that slowly dragged
+the plough compared to the charger that Joe was destined to
+bestride?&nbsp; And what about Polly Sweetlove and her saucy
+looks?&nbsp; Perhaps she&rsquo;d be rather sorry now that she did
+not receive with more favour his many attentions.&nbsp; Such were
+the thoughts that passed through the lad&rsquo;s mind as he
+gradually awakened to a sense of his new position.&nbsp; One
+thought, however, strange to say, did not occur to him, and that
+was as to what his poor old mother would think.&nbsp; Dutiful son
+as Joe had always been, (though wild in some respects), he had
+not given her a single thought.&nbsp; But his reflections, no
+doubt, were transient and confused amid the companions by whom he
+was surrounded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll make a fine soldier,&rdquo; said the
+Boardman, as he saw him swagger across to his seat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the sergeant, &ldquo;any man that has
+got it in him, and is steady, and doesn&rsquo;t eat too much and
+drink too much, may get on in the army.&nbsp; It isn&rsquo;t like
+it used to be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe that,&rdquo; said Bob Lazyman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The only thing,&rdquo; continued the sergeant,
+&ldquo;is, there is really so little to do&mdash;there&rsquo;s
+not work enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That ud suit me,&rdquo; said Bob.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! but stop,&rdquo; added the sergeant, &ldquo;the
+temptations are great&mdash;what with the
+girls&mdash;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hooray!&rdquo; exclaimed Dick; &ldquo;that beats
+all&mdash;I likes them better than mutton chops.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the sergeant; &ldquo;they are all
+very well in their way; but you know, if a man wants to rise in
+the army, he must be steady.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Steady, boys! stea&mdash;dy!&rdquo; shouted Dick</p>
+<p>I don&rsquo;t know how far the sergeant was justified, <!--
+page 205--><a name="page205"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+205</span>morally, in thus holding out the prospect of riotous
+living to these hungry men, but I think, all things considered,
+it was an improvement on the old system of the pressgang, which
+forced men into the navy.&nbsp; These lads were not bound to
+believe the recruiting sergeant, and were not obliged to enter
+into a contract with Her Majesty.&nbsp; At the same time, the
+alluring prospects were such that if they had been represented as
+facts in the commercial transactions of life, such is the purity
+of the law that they would have given rise to much pleading,
+multifarious points reserved, innumerable summonses at Chambers,
+and, at least, one new trial.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Jack Outofwork, &ldquo;I tell yer what
+it is&mdash;I don&rsquo;t take no Queen&rsquo;s shilling, for
+why? it ain&rsquo;t the Queen&rsquo;s&mdash;it belongs to the
+people&mdash;I&rsquo;m for a republic.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the sergeant, &ldquo;I always
+like to meet a chap that calls himself a republican, and
+I&rsquo;ll tell you why.&nbsp; This country is a republic, say
+what you like, and is presided over by our gracious Queen.&nbsp;
+And I should like to ask any man in this country&mdash;now, just
+listen, lads, for this is the real question,
+whether&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, order,&rdquo; said Lazyman, &ldquo;I never
+&rsquo;eerd nothing put better.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s have order, gentlemen,&rdquo; said Harry;
+&ldquo;chair! chair!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All &rsquo;tention, sergeant,&rdquo; said Dick.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I say,&rdquo; continued the sergeant; &ldquo;let us
+suppose we got a republic to-morrow; well, we should want a head,
+or as they say, a president.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s good,&rdquo; said half-a-dozen voices.</p>
+<p><!-- page 206--><a name="page206"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+206</span>&ldquo;Well, what then?&rdquo; said the sergeant;
+&ldquo;Who would you choose?&nbsp; Why, the Queen, to be
+sure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Everybody said &ldquo;The Queen!&rdquo;&nbsp; And there was
+such a thumping on the table that all further discourse was
+prevented for several minutes.&nbsp; At last everyone said it was
+good, and the sergeant had put it straight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, look&rsquo;ee &rsquo;ere, lads&mdash;I was born
+among the poor and I don&rsquo;t owe nothing to the upper
+classes, not even a grudge!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hear! hear!&nbsp; Bravo, Mr. Sergeant!&rdquo; cried
+all.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, then; I&rsquo;ve got on so far as well as I can,
+and I&rsquo;m satisfied; but I&rsquo;ll tell you what I believe
+our Queen to be&mdash;a thorough woman, and loves her people,
+especially the poor, so much that d---d if I wouldn&rsquo;t die
+for her any day&mdash;now what d&rsquo;ye think o&rsquo;
+that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Everybody thought he was a capital fellow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look, here,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;it isn&rsquo;t
+because she wears a gold crown, or anything of that sort, nor
+because a word of her&rsquo;s could make me a field marshal, or a
+duke, or anything o&rsquo; that sort, nor because she&rsquo;s
+rich, but I&rsquo;ll tell you why it is&mdash;and it&rsquo;s
+this&mdash;when we&rsquo;re fighting we don&rsquo;t fight for her
+except as the Queen, and the Queen means the country.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hear! hear! hear! hear!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, we fight for the country&mdash;but she loves the
+soldiers as though they were not the country&rsquo;s but her own
+flesh and blood, and comes to see &rsquo;em in the hospital like
+a mother, and talks to &rsquo;em the same as I do to you, and
+comforts &rsquo;em, and prays for &rsquo;em, and acts like the
+real mother of her people&mdash;that&rsquo;s why I&rsquo;d die
+for her, and not because she&rsquo;s the Queen of England
+only.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 207--><a name="page207"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+207</span>&ldquo;Bravo!&rdquo; said Joe.&nbsp; &ldquo;Hope I
+shall soon see her in th&rsquo; &rsquo;orsepittal.&nbsp; It be
+out &rsquo;ere: beant it St. Thomas&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope you won&rsquo;t, my brave lad,&rdquo; said the
+sergeant; &ldquo;but don&rsquo;t tell me about republicanism when
+we&rsquo;ve got such a good Queen; it&rsquo;s a shame and a
+disgrace to mention it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So it be,&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;I&rsquo;m darned if I
+wouldn&rsquo;t knock a feller into the middle o&rsquo; next week
+as talked like thic.&nbsp; Hooroar for the Queen!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now I&rsquo;m going to say another thing,&rdquo;
+continued the sergeant, who really waxed warm with his subject,
+and struck admiration into his audience by his manner of
+delivery: may I say that to my mind he was even eloquent, and
+ought to have been a sergeant-at-law, only that the country would
+have been the loser by it: and the country, to my mind, has the
+first right to the services of every citizen.&nbsp; &ldquo;Just
+look,&rdquo; said the sergeant, &ldquo;at the kindness of
+that&mdash;what shall I call her? blessed!&mdash;yes, blessed
+Princess of Wales!&nbsp; Was there ever such a woman?&nbsp; Talk
+about Jael in the Bible being blessed above women&mdash;why I
+don&rsquo;t set no value upon her; she put a spike through a
+feller it&rsquo;s true, but it was precious cowardly; but the
+Princess, she goes here and goes there visiting the sick and poor
+and homeless, not like a princess, but like a real woman, and
+that&rsquo;s why the people love her.&nbsp; No man despises a
+toady more than I do&mdash;I&rsquo;d give him up to the tender
+mercies of that wife of Heber the Keenite any day; but if the
+Princess was to say to me, &lsquo;Look &rsquo;ere, Sergeant, I
+feel a little low, and should like some nice little excitement
+just to keep up my spirits and cheer me up a bit&rsquo;&rdquo;
+(several of them thought this style of conversation was a
+familiar habit with the Princess and Sergeant Goodtale, and that
+he <!-- page 208--><a name="page208"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+208</span>must be immensely popular with the Royal Family),
+&ldquo;well, if she was to say, &lsquo;Look here, Sergeant
+Goodtale, here&rsquo;s a precipice, it ud do me good to see you
+leap off that,&rsquo; I should just take off my coat and tuck up
+my shirt sleeves, and away I should go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At such unheard of heroism and loyalty there was a general
+exclamation of enthusiasm, and no one in that company could tell
+whom he at that moment most admired, the Princess or the
+Sergeant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a stunner!&rdquo; said Joe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Princess by name and Princess by nature,&rdquo; replied
+the sergeant; &ldquo;and now look&rsquo;ee here, in proof of what
+I say, I&rsquo;m going to give you a toast.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hear, hear,&rdquo; said everybody.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But stop a minute,&rdquo; said the sergeant,
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not a man of words without deeds.&nbsp; Have we
+got anything to drink to the toast?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>All looked in their respective cups and every one said,
+&ldquo;No, not a drop!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the sergeant &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll have one all rounded
+for the last.&nbsp; You&rsquo;ll find me as good as my
+word.&nbsp; What&rsquo;s it to be before we part?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t beat this &rsquo;ere,&rdquo; said Joe,
+looking into the sergeant&rsquo;s empty glass.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So say all of us,&rdquo; exclaimed Harry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it,&rdquo; said all.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And a song from the sergeant,&rdquo; added
+Devilmecare.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, lads, I&rsquo;ll give you a song.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then came in the pretty maid whom Joe leered at, and the
+sergeant winked at; and then came in tumblers of the military
+beverage, and then the sergeant said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In all companies this is drunk upstanding, and with
+<!-- page 209--><a name="page209"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+209</span>hats off, except soldiers, whose privilege it is to
+keep them on.&nbsp; You need not take yours off, Mr. Wurzel; you
+are one of Her Majesty&rsquo;s Hussars.&nbsp; Now then all say
+after me: &lsquo;Our gracious Queen; long may she live and
+blessed be her reign&mdash;the mother and friend of her
+people!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The enthusiasm was loud and general, and the toast was drunk
+with as hearty a relish as ever it was at Lord Mayor&rsquo;s
+Banquet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now,&rdquo; said the sergeant, &ldquo;once more
+before we part&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! but the song?&rdquo; said the Boardman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh yes, I keep my word.&nbsp; A man, unless he&rsquo;s
+a man of his word, ought never to wear Her Majesty&rsquo;s
+uniform!&rdquo;&nbsp; And then he said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Prince and Princess of Wales and the rest of the
+Royal Family.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This also was responded to in the same unequivocal manner; and
+then amid calls of &ldquo;the sergeant,&rdquo; that officer,
+after getting his voice in tune, sang the following song:</p>
+<h3>GOD BLESS OUR DEAR PRINCESS.</h3>
+<p class="poetry">There&rsquo;s not a grief the heart can bear<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But love can soothe its pain;<br />
+There&rsquo;s not a sorrow or a care<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; It smiles upon in vain.<br />
+And <i>She</i> sends forth its brightest rays<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Where darkest woes depress,<br />
+Where long wept Suffering silent prays&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; God save our dear Princess!</p>
+<p style="text-align: center" class="poetry"><span
+class="smcap">chorus</span>.</p>
+<p class="poetry">She soothes the breaking heart,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; She comforts in distress;<br />
+She acts true woman&rsquo;s noblest part.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; God save our dear Princess<br />
+<!-- page 210--><a name="page210"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+210</span>She bringeth hope to weary lives<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; So worn by hopeless toil;<br />
+E&rsquo;en Sorrow&rsquo;s drooping form revives<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Beneath her loving smile.<br />
+Where helpless Age reluctant seeks<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Its refuge from distress,<br />
+E&rsquo;en there <i>Her</i> name the prayer bespeaks<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; God save our dear Princess!</p>
+<p class="poetry">It&rsquo;s not in rank or princely show<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; True <i>Manhood&rsquo;s</i> heart to win;<br />
+&rsquo;Tis Love&rsquo;s sweet sympathetic glow<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That makes all hearts akin.<br />
+Though frequent storms the State must stir<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; While Freedom we possess,<br />
+Our hearts may all beat true to Her,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Our own beloved Princess.</p>
+<p class="poetry">The violet gives its sweet perfume<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Unconscious of its worth;<br />
+So Love unfolds her sacred bloom<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And hallows sinful earth;<br />
+May God her gentle life prolong<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And all her pathway bless;<br />
+Be this the nation&rsquo;s fervent song&mdash;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; God save our dear Princess!</p>
+<p>Although the language of a song may not always be intelligible
+to the unlettered hearer, the spirit and sentiment are;
+especially when it appeals to the emotions through the charms of
+music.&nbsp; The sergeant had a musical voice capable of deep
+pathos; and as the note of a bird or the cry of an animal in
+distress is always distinguishable from every other sound, so the
+pathos of poetry finds its way where its words are not always
+accurately understood.&nbsp; It was very observable, and much I
+thought to the sergeant&rsquo;s great power as a singer, that the
+first chorus was sung with a tone which seemed to imply that the
+audience was feeling its way: <!-- page 211--><a
+name="page211"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 211</span>the second
+was given with more enthusiasm and vehemence: the third was
+thumped upon the table as though a drum were required to give
+full effect to the feelings of the company; while the fourth was
+shouted with such heartiness that mere singing seemed useless,
+and it developed into loud hurrahs, repeated again and again; and
+emphasized by the twirling of hats, the clapping of hands, and
+stamping of feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What d&rsquo;ye think o&rsquo; that?&rdquo; says the
+Boardman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m on,&rdquo; said Lazyman; &ldquo;give me the
+shilling, sergeant, if you please?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So&rsquo;m I,&rdquo; said Saunter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hooroar!&rdquo; shouted the stentorian voice that had
+erstwhile charmed the audience with Brimstone&rsquo;s sermon.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bravo!&rdquo; said Harry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look&rsquo;ee here,&rdquo; said Jack Outofwork,
+&ldquo;we&rsquo;ve had a werry pleasant evenin&rsquo; together,
+and I ain&rsquo;t goin&rsquo; to part like this &rsquo;ere; no
+more walkin&rsquo; about looking arter jobs for me, I&rsquo;m
+your man, sergeant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the sergeant, eyeing his company,
+&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t expect this; a pluckier lot o&rsquo; chaps
+I never see; and I&rsquo;m sure when the Queen sees you
+it&rsquo;ll be the proudest moment of her life.&nbsp; Why, how
+tall do you stand, Mr. Lazyman?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Six foot one,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha,&rdquo; said the Sergeant, &ldquo;I thought
+so.&nbsp; And you, Mr. Outofwork?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t rightly know,&rdquo; said Jack.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the sergeant, &ldquo;just stand up by
+the side of me&mdash;ha, that will do,&rdquo; he added,
+pretending to take an accurate survey, &ldquo;I think I can
+squeeze you in&mdash;it will be a tight fit though.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 212--><a name="page212"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+212</span>&ldquo;I hope you can, Mr. Sergeant,&rdquo; said
+he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look &rsquo;ere,&rdquo; laughed Joe; &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll
+kitch &rsquo;old of his legs and give him a stretch, won&rsquo;t
+us, Sergeant?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And so the bright shillings were given, and the pretty
+maid&rsquo;s services were again called in; and she said
+&ldquo;she never see sich a lot o&rsquo; plucky fellows in her
+born days;&rdquo; and all were about to depart when, as the
+sergeant was shaking hands with Dick Devilmecare in the most
+pathetic and friendly manner, as though he were parting from a
+brother whom he had not met for years, Devilmecare&rsquo;s eyes
+filled with tears, and he exclaimed,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Danged if I&rsquo;ll be left out of it, sergeant; give
+me the shillin&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this moment the portly figure of Mr. Bumpkin again appeared
+in the doorway!</p>
+<h2><!-- page 213--><a name="page213"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 213</span>CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">The famous Don O&rsquo;Rapley and Mr. Bumpkin
+spend a social evening at the &ldquo;Goose.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When Mr. Bumpkin, on this memorable evening, went into Mrs.
+Oldtimes&rsquo; parlour to console himself after the fatigues and
+troubles of the day there were a cheerful fire and a comfortable
+meal prepared for him.&nbsp; Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley had promised to
+spend the evening with him, so that they might talk over the
+business of the day and the prospects of the coming trial.&nbsp;
+It was a very singular coincidence, and one that tended to cement
+the friendship of these two gentlemen, that their tastes both
+inclined to gin-and-water.&nbsp; And this very house, as appeared
+from a notice on the outside, was the &ldquo;noted house for
+Foolman&rsquo;s celebrated gin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But as yet Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley had not arrived; so after his
+meal Mr. Bumpkin looked into the other room to see how Joe was
+getting on, for he was extremely anxious to keep his &ldquo;head
+witness&rdquo; straight.&nbsp; &ldquo;Joe was his
+mainstay.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I have already related what took place, and the song that
+Bumpkin sang.&nbsp; The statement of the head witness that he was
+all right, and that he was up to Mr. Sergeant, to a great extent
+reassured Mr. Bumpkin: although he felt, keen man that he was,
+that that soldier was there for the purpose of &ldquo;ketchin
+what <!-- page 214--><a name="page214"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 214</span>young men he could to make sogers on
+&rsquo;em; he had &rsquo;eerd o&rsquo; sich things afore:&rdquo;
+such were his thoughts as Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley entered the
+apartment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear me, Mr. Bumpkin,&rdquo; said that official,
+&ldquo;how very cold it is! how are you, Mrs. Oldtimes?&nbsp; I
+haven&rsquo;t seen you for an age.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Don always made that observation when strangers were
+present.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hope you&rsquo;re quite well, sir,&rdquo; said the
+landlady, with much humility.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;ll thee please to take, sir?&rdquo; asked
+Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, now, I daresay you&rsquo;ll think me remarkable
+strange, Mr. Bumpkin, but I&rsquo;m going to say something which
+I very very seldom indulge in, but it&rsquo;s good, I believe,
+for indigestion.&nbsp; I will take a little&mdash;just a very
+small quantity&mdash;of gin, with some hot water, and a large
+lump of sugar, to destroy the alcohol.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; said the knowing Bumpkin;
+&ldquo;that&rsquo;s wot we call gin-and-water in our part of the
+country.&nbsp; So&rsquo;ll I, Mrs. Oldtimes, but not too much hot
+water for I.&nbsp; What&rsquo;ll thee smoke, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you, one of those cheroots that my lord praised
+so much the last time we was &rsquo;ere.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you please, sir,&rdquo; said the landlady, with a
+very good-natured smile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the O&rsquo;Rapley, in his
+patronizing manner; &ldquo;and how have we got on to-day? let us
+hear all about it.&nbsp; Come, your good health, Mr. Bumkin, and
+success to our lawsuit.&nbsp; I call it <i>ours</i> now, for I
+really feel as interested in it as you do yourself; by-the-bye,
+what&rsquo;s it all about, Mr. Bumpkin?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sir, you see,&rdquo; replied the astute man,
+&ldquo;I hardly knows; it beginnd about a pig, but what
+it&rsquo;s <!-- page 215--><a name="page215"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 215</span>about now, be more un I can tell
+thee.&nbsp; I think it be salt and trespass.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have not enquired?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I beant; I left un all in the hands o&rsquo; my
+lawyer, and I believe he&rsquo;s a goodun, bean&rsquo;t
+he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me see; O dear, yes, a capital man&mdash;a very
+good man indeed, a close shaver.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is ur? and that&rsquo;s what I want.&nbsp; I wants thic
+feller shaved as close to his chin as may be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said O&rsquo;Rapley, &ldquo;and Prigg will
+shave him, and no mistake.&nbsp; Well, and how did we get on at
+the Mansion House?&nbsp; First of all, who was against
+you?&mdash;Mrs. Oldtimes, I <i>think</i> I&rsquo;ll just take a
+very small quantity more, it has quite removed my
+indigestion&mdash;who was against you, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Nimble; but, lor, he worn&rsquo;t nowhere; I had un
+to rights,&mdash;jest gi&rsquo;e me a leetle more,
+missus,&mdash;he couldn&rsquo;t axe I a question I couldn&rsquo;t
+answer; and I believe he said as good, for I zeed un talking to
+the Lord Mayor; it worn&rsquo;t no use to question I.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t say anything about me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; answered Bumpkin, in a loud whisper;
+&ldquo;I din&rsquo;t; but I did say afore I could stop the word
+from comin&rsquo; out o&rsquo; my mouth as I had a
+<i>companion</i>, but they didn&rsquo;t ketch it, except that the
+gentleman under the lord mayor were gwine to ax about thee, and
+blowed if the counsellor didn&rsquo;t stop un; so that be all
+right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Capital!&rdquo; exclaimed the great bowler, waving his
+arm as if in the act of delivery; then, in a whisper, &ldquo;Did
+they ask about the woman?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Noa&mdash;they doan&rsquo;t know nowt about
+thic&mdash;not a word; I was mighty plased at un, for although,
+as thee be aware, it be the biggest lie as ever wur heard, I <!--
+page 216--><a name="page216"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+216</span>wouldn&rsquo;t have my wife hear o&rsquo; sich to save
+my life.&nbsp; She be a good wife to I an&rsquo; allays have a
+bin; but there I thee could clear me in a minute, if need be,
+sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, but you see,&rdquo; said the artful Don, &ldquo;if
+I was to appear, it would make a sensational case of it in a
+minute and fill all the papers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would ur now?&nbsp; Morn&rsquo;t do that nuther; but,
+wot d&rsquo;ye think, sir?&nbsp; As I wur leavin&rsquo; the
+Cooart, a gemman comes up and he says, says he, &lsquo;I spoase,
+sir, you don&rsquo;t want this thing put in the
+papers?&rsquo;&nbsp; How the dooce he knowed that, I can&rsquo;t
+make out, onless that I wouldn&rsquo;t say where I lived, for the
+sake o&rsquo; Nancy; no, nor thee couldn&rsquo;t ha&rsquo;
+dragged un out o&rsquo; me wi&rsquo; horses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; said the Don, interrogatively.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Well,&rsquo; says I, &lsquo;no, I don&rsquo;t
+partickler want it in.&rsquo;&nbsp; I thought I&rsquo;d say that,
+don&rsquo;t thee zee (with a wink), &rsquo;cos he shouldn&rsquo;t
+think I were eager like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Exactly,&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, this &rsquo;ere gemman says, says he, &lsquo;It
+don&rsquo;t matter to me, sir, whether it&rsquo;s in or not, but
+if thee don&rsquo;t want it in, I&rsquo;ll keep it out,
+that&rsquo;s all.&nbsp; It will pay I better p&rsquo;raps to put
+un in.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;And who med thee be, sir?&rsquo; I axed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Only the <i>Times</i>&rsquo;, said the gemman,
+&lsquo;that&rsquo;s all.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then, turning to his
+friend, he said, &lsquo;Come on, Jack, the gemman wants it in, so
+we&rsquo;ll have it in, every word, and where he comes from too,
+and all about the gal; we know all about it, don&rsquo;t us,
+Jack?&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; said the O&rsquo;Rapley, blowing out a large
+cloud, and fixing his eye on the middle stump.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; continued Bumpkin, &ldquo;thee could
+ha&rsquo; knocked I down wi&rsquo; a feather.&nbsp; How the doose
+they knowed where I comed from I can&rsquo;t make out; but here
+wur I <!-- page 217--><a name="page217"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 217</span>as cloase to the man as writes the
+<i>Times</i> as I be to thee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The O&rsquo;Rapley nodded his head knowingly several
+times.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Well, and how much do thee charge to keep un
+out?&rsquo; seys I.&nbsp; &lsquo;Don&rsquo;t be too hard upon me,
+I be only a poor man.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;We have only one charge,&rsquo; says the
+<i>Times</i>, &lsquo;and that is half a guinea.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Spoase we say seven and six,&rsquo; sess I.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;That,&rsquo; seys the <i>Times</i>,
+&lsquo;wouldn&rsquo;t keep your name out, and I suppose you
+don&rsquo;t want that in?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Very well,&rsquo; I
+sess, takin&rsquo; out my leather bag and handin&rsquo; him the
+money; &lsquo;this&rsquo;ll keep un out, wool ur?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Sartainly,&rsquo; says he; and then his friend
+Jack says, &lsquo;My fee be five shillings, sir.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;And who be thee?&rsquo; says I.&nbsp; &lsquo;I&rsquo;m the
+<i>Telegrarf</i>,&rsquo; seys he.&nbsp; &lsquo;The devil thee
+be?&rsquo; I sess, &lsquo;I&rsquo;ve eerd tell on
+ee.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Largest calculation in the world,&rsquo;
+he says; &lsquo;and, if thee like,&rsquo; he says, &lsquo;I can
+take the <i>Daily Noos</i> and <i>Stanard</i> money, for I
+don&rsquo;t see &rsquo;em here jist now; it&rsquo;ll be five
+shillings apiece.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Well,&rsquo; I sess, &lsquo;this be rum
+business, this; if I takes a quantity like this, can&rsquo;t it
+be done a little cheaper?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;No,&rsquo; he says; &lsquo;we stands too high
+for anything o&rsquo; that sort.&nbsp; Thee can &rsquo;ave it or
+leave it.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Very well,&rsquo; I sess; &lsquo;then, if
+there&rsquo;s no option, there&rsquo;s the money.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And with that I handed un the fifteen shillings.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Then,&rsquo; says the <i>Times</i>,
+&lsquo;we&rsquo;d better look sharp, Jack, or else we
+shan&rsquo;t be in time to keep it out.&rsquo;&nbsp; And
+wi&rsquo; that they hurried off as fast as they could.&nbsp; I
+will say&rsquo;t they didn&rsquo;t let the grass grow under their
+feet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 218--><a name="page218"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+218</span>&ldquo;And why,&rdquo; enquired the Don, with an amused
+smile, &ldquo;were you so anxious to keep it out of the
+<i>Times</i>?&nbsp; Mrs. Bumpkin doesn&rsquo;t read the
+<i>Times</i>, does she?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, no; but then the Squoire tak it in, and when eve
+done wi un he lends un to the Doctor, Mr. Gossip; and when he
+gets hold o&rsquo; anything, away it goes to the Parish Clerk,
+Mr. Jeerum, and then thee med as well hire the town crier at
+once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see; but if you&rsquo;ll excuse me, Mr. Bumpkin, I
+will give you a bit of information that may be of
+service.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thankee, sir; will thee jist tak a little more to wet
+the tother eye like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, really,&rdquo; replied O&rsquo;Rapley, &ldquo;it
+is long past my hour of nocturnal repose.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, sir?&nbsp; I doant ondustand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I mean to say that I generally hook it off to bed
+before this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Zackly; but we&rsquo;ll &rsquo;ave another.&nbsp; Your
+leave, sir, thee was going to tell I zummat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O yes,&rdquo; said Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley, with a wave of
+the hand in imitation of the Lord Chief Justice.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+was going to say that those two men were a couple of
+rogues.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin paused in the act of passing the tumbler to his
+lips, like one who feels he has been artfully taken in.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve been done, sir!&rdquo; said Mr.
+O&rsquo;Rapley emphatically, &ldquo;that man who said he was the
+<i>Times</i> was no more the <i>Times</i> than you&rsquo;re
+<i>Punch</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor thic <i>Telegrarf</i> feller!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&nbsp; And you could prosecute them.&nbsp; And
+I&rsquo;ll tell you what you could prosecute them
+for.&rdquo;&nbsp; Mr. Bumpkin looked almost stupified.</p>
+<p><!-- page 219--><a name="page219"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+219</span>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you what these villains have
+been guilty of; they&rsquo;ve been guilty of obtaining money by
+false pretences, and conspiring to obtain money by false
+pretences.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have um?&rdquo; said Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you can prosecute them.&nbsp; You&rsquo;ve only got
+to go and put the matter in the hands of the police, and then go
+to some first-rate solicitor who attends police courts; now I can
+recommend you one that will do you justice.&nbsp; I should like
+to see these rascals well punished.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And will this fust-rate attorney do un for
+nothin&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, hardly; any more than you would sell him a pig for
+nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I shan&rsquo;t prosekit,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin;
+&ldquo;the devil&rsquo;s in&rsquo;t, I be no sooner out o&rsquo;
+one thing than I be into another&mdash;why I beant out o&rsquo;
+thic watch job yet, for I got to &rsquo;pear at the Old Bailey on
+the twenty-fourth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, committed for trial, was he?&rdquo; exclaimed the
+Don.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure wur ur,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin
+triumphantly&mdash;&ldquo;guilty!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now I perceived that the wily Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley did not
+recommend Bumpkin to obtain the services of a solicitor to
+conduct his prosecution in this case; and I apprehend for this
+reason, that the said solicitor being conscientious, would
+unquestionably recommend and insist that Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s
+evidence at the Old Bailey should be supported by that of the Don
+himself.&nbsp; So Mr. Bumpkin was left to the tender mercies of
+the Public Prosecutor or a criminal tout, or the most
+inexperienced of &ldquo;soup&rdquo; instructed counsel, as the
+case might be, but of which matters at present I have no
+knowledge as I have no dreams of the future.</p>
+<p><!-- page 220--><a name="page220"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+220</span>Then Mr. Bumpkin said, &ldquo;By thy leave, worthy Mr.
+O&rsquo;Rapley, I will just see what my head witness be about: he
+be a sharp lad enow, but wants a dale o&rsquo; lookin
+arter.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 221--><a name="page221"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 221</span>CHAPTER XXIV.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Don O&rsquo;Rapley expresses his views of the
+policy of the legislature in not permitting dominoes to be played
+in public houses.</p>
+<p>When Mr. Bumpkin returned to the cosy parlour, his face was
+red and his teeth were set.&nbsp; He was so much agitated indeed,
+that instead of addressing Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley, he spoke to Mrs.
+Oldtimes, as though in her female tenderness he might find a more
+sincere and sympathetic adviser.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin was never what you would call an eloquent or
+fluent speaker: his Somersetshire brogue was at times difficult
+of comprehension.&nbsp; He certainly was not fluent when he said
+to Mrs. Oldtimes: &ldquo;Why thic&mdash;there&mdash;damn un Mrs.
+Oldtimes if he beant gwine and never zeed zich a thing in my
+bornd days&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why what ever in the name of goodness gracious is the
+matter?&rdquo; asked the landlady.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why thic there head witness o&rsquo; mine: a
+silly-brained&mdash;Gor forgive me that iver I should spake so
+o&rsquo; un, for he wor allays a good chap; and I do
+b&rsquo;leeve he&rsquo;ve got moore sense than do any thing
+o&rsquo; that kind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter? what&rsquo;s the
+matter?&rdquo; again enquired Mrs. Oldtimes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why he be playin&rsquo; dominoes wi thic
+Sergeant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O,&rdquo; said the landlady, &ldquo;I was afraid
+something had <!-- page 222--><a name="page222"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 222</span>happened.&nbsp; We&rsquo;re not
+allowed to know anything about dominoes or card-playing in our
+house&mdash;the Law forbids our knowing it, Mr. Bumpkin; so, if
+you please, we will not talk about it&mdash;I wish to conduct my
+house as it always has been for the last five-and-twenty years,
+in peace and quietness and respectability, Mr. Bumpkin, which
+nobody can never say to the contrairy.&nbsp; It was only the last
+licensing day Mr. Twiddletwaddle, the chairman of the Bench, said
+as it were the best conducted house in Westminster.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now whether it was that the report of this domino playing was
+made in the presence of so high a dignitary of the law as Mr.
+O&rsquo;Rapley, or from any other cause, I cannot say, but Mrs.
+Oldtimes was really indignant, and positively refused to accept
+any statement which involved the character of her
+establishment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; she continued, addressing Mr.
+O&rsquo;Rapley, &ldquo;you have known this house for some time,
+sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have,&rdquo; said O&rsquo;Rapley.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have
+passed it every evening for the last ten years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah now, to be sure&mdash;you hear that, Mr.
+Bumpkin.&nbsp; What do you think of that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never saw anything wrong, I will say that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never a game in my house, if I knows it; and
+what&rsquo;s more, I won&rsquo;t believe it until I sees
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ockelar demonstration, that&rsquo;s the law,&rdquo;
+said the Don.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s excitement was absolutely merged in that
+of the landlady, whom he had so innocently provoked.&nbsp; He
+stared as the parties continued their wordy justification of this
+well-ruled household like one dreaming with his eyes open.&nbsp;
+No woman could have made more ado about her own character than
+Mrs. Oldtimes did respecting that of her house.&nbsp; But then,
+<!-- page 223--><a name="page223"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+223</span>the one could be estimated in money, while the other
+possessed but an abstract value.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe,&rdquo; she repeated, &ldquo;that cards or
+dominoes has never been played in my house since here I&rsquo;ve
+been, or since the law has been what it is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I be wery sorry,&rdquo; said the penitent Bumpkin;
+&ldquo;I warn&rsquo;t aweare I wur doing anythin&rsquo;
+wrong.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s unlawful, you see, to play,&rdquo; said the
+Don; &ldquo;and consequently they dursn&rsquo;t play.&nbsp; Now,
+why is it unlawful?&nbsp; Because Public Houses is for drinking,
+not for amusement.&nbsp; Now, sir, Drink is the largest tax-payer
+we&rsquo;ve got&mdash;therefore Drink&rsquo;s an important
+Industry.&nbsp; Set people to work drinking and you get a good
+Rewenue, which keeps up the Army and Navy&mdash;the Navy swims in
+liquor, sir&mdash;but let these here Perducers of the Rewenue
+pause for the sake o&rsquo; playing dominoes, or what not, and
+what&rsquo;s the consequence?&nbsp; You check this important
+industry&mdash;therefore don&rsquo;t by any manner of means
+interrupt drinking.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s an agreeable ockepation and
+a paying one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well done, sir,&rdquo; said Oldtimes, from the corner
+of the fireplace, where he was doing his best with only one mouth
+and one constitution to keep up the Army and Navy.&nbsp; A
+patriotic man was Oldtimes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Drink,&rdquo; continued O&rsquo;Rapley, &ldquo;is the
+most powerful horgsilery the Government has.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin, not knowing what a
+horgsilery was; &ldquo;now thee&rsquo;ve gone a-head o&rsquo; me,
+sir.&nbsp; Thee&rsquo;re a larned man, Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley, and I
+beant much of a schollard; will thee please to tell I what a
+horgs&mdash;what wur it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Horgsilery,&rdquo; said Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Horsgilly&mdash;ah! so twur.&nbsp; Well, by thy leave,
+<!-- page 224--><a name="page224"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+224</span>worthy sir, will thee be so kind as to tell I be it
+anything like a hogshead?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley, &ldquo;its more
+like a corkscrew: the taxes of the country would be bottled up as
+tight as champagne and you couldn&rsquo;t get &rsquo;em out
+without this corkscrew.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I worn&rsquo;t spakin&rsquo; about taxes when I
+spak of dominoes; what I wur alludin&rsquo; to wur thic Joe been
+drawed in to goo for a soger.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lor, bless you,&rdquo; said Mrs. Oldtimes, &ldquo;many
+a man as good as Joe have listed before now and will
+again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mayhap,&rdquo; said Bumpkin; &ldquo;but he wurn&rsquo;t
+my &rsquo;ead witness and didn&rsquo;t work for I.&nbsp; Joe be
+my right hand man, although I keeps un down and tells un he beant
+fit for nothin&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha,&rdquo; said the Don, &ldquo;he&rsquo;s not likely
+to go for a soldier, I think, if it&rsquo;s that good-looking
+young chap I saw with the kicking-straps on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Kickin&rsquo;-straps,&rdquo; said Bumpkin; &ldquo;haw!
+haw! haw!&nbsp; That be a good un.&nbsp; Well he told I he wur up
+to un and I think ur be: he&rsquo;ll be a clever feller if ur
+gets our Joe.&nbsp; Why Nancy ud goo amost out o&rsquo; her
+mind.&nbsp; And now, sir, will thee &rsquo;ave any
+moore?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley, in the most decisive but polite manner,
+refused.&nbsp; He had quite gone out of his way as it was in the
+hope of serving Mr. Bumpkin.&nbsp; He was sure that the thief
+would be convicted, and as he rose to depart seized his
+friend&rsquo;s hand in the most affectionate manner.&nbsp;
+Anything he could do for him he was sure he would do cheerfully,
+at any amount of self-sacrifice&mdash;he would get up in the
+night to serve him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thankee,&rdquo; said Bumpkin; but he had hardly spoken
+when he was startled by the most uproarious cheers from <!-- page
+225--><a name="page225"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+225</span>the taproom.&nbsp; And then he began again about the
+folly of young men getting into the company of recruiting
+sergeants.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look here,&rdquo; said the Don, confidentially,
+&ldquo;take my advice&mdash;say nothing&mdash;a still tongue
+makes a wise head; to persuade a man not to enter the army is
+tantamount to advising him to desert.&nbsp; If you don&rsquo;t
+mind, you may lay yourself open to a prosecution.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Zounds!&rdquo; exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin, &ldquo;it seem to
+me a man in Lunnon be every minit liable to a prosecution for
+zummat.&nbsp; I hope sayin&rsquo; that beant contempt o&rsquo;
+Coourt, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley was silent&mdash;his head drooped towards
+Mr. Bumpkin in a semi-conscious manner, and he nodded three
+consecutive times: called for another &ldquo;seroot,&rdquo; lit
+it after many efforts, and again assuring Mr. Bumpkin that he
+would do all he could towards facilitating his triumph over
+Snooks, was about to depart, when his friend asked him,
+confidentially, whether he had not better be at the Old Bailey
+when the trial came on, in case of its being necessary to call
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shurel not!&rdquo; hiccupped the Don.&nbsp; Then he
+pointed his finger, and leering at Bumpkin, repeated,
+&ldquo;Shurel not;&mdash;jus swell cll Ch.
+Jussiself&rdquo;&mdash;which being interpreted meant,
+&ldquo;Certainly not, you might just as well call the Chief
+Justice himself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pr&rsquo;aps he&rsquo;ll try un?&rdquo; said
+Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Noer won&rsquo;t&mdash;noer won&rsquo;t: Chansy Juge
+mos likel Massr Rolls.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 227--><a name="page227"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 227</span>CHAPTER XXV.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">In spite of all warnings, Joe takes his own
+part, not to be persuaded on one side or the
+other&mdash;affecting scene between Mr. Bumpkin and his old
+servant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whatever can that there shoutin&rsquo; be for, Mrs.
+Oldtimes&mdash;they be terrible noisy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O,&rdquo; said the landlady, &ldquo;somebody else has
+listed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope it beant that silly Joe.&nbsp; I warned un two
+or three times agin thic feller.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There have been several to-night,&rdquo; said the
+landlady, who had scarcely yet recovered from the insinuations
+against the character of her house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How does thee know thic, my dear lady?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, because Miss Prettyface have been in and out
+sewin&rsquo; the colours on all the evening, that&rsquo;s
+all.&nbsp; Sergeant Goodtale be the best recrootin&rsquo;
+sergeant ever come into a town&mdash;he&rsquo;d list his own
+father!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would ur, now?&rdquo; said Bumpkin.&nbsp; &ldquo;Beant
+thee afeard o&rsquo; thy husband bein&rsquo; took?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Oldtimes shrieked with laughter, and said she wished he
+would list Tom, for he wasn&rsquo;t any good except to sit in the
+chimney corner and smoke and drink from morning to night.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And keep up th&rsquo; Army,&rdquo; growled the
+husband</p>
+<p><!-- page 228--><a name="page228"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+228</span>&ldquo;Ha, keep up the Army, indeed,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Oldtimes; &ldquo;you do your share in that way, I
+grant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now it was quite manifest that that last cheer from the
+taproom was the herald of the company&rsquo;s departure.&nbsp;
+There was a great scuffling and stamping of feet as of a general
+clearing out, and many &ldquo;good nights.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then the
+big manly voice of the Sergeant said: &ldquo;Nine o&rsquo;clock,
+lads; nine o&rsquo;clock; don&rsquo;t oversleep yourselves; we
+shall have chops at eight.&nbsp; What d&rsquo;ye say to that,
+Mrs. Oldtimes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As you please, Sergeant; but there&rsquo;s a nice piece
+of ham, if any would like that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; said the Sergeant; &ldquo;now, how many
+would like ham?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;se for a chop,&rdquo; said Joe, working his
+mouth as if he would get it in training.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Right,&rdquo; said the Sergeant, &ldquo;we&rsquo;ll see
+about breakfast in the morning.&nbsp; But you know, Mrs.
+Oldtimes, we like to start with a good foundation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And with three cheers for the Sergeant the recruits left the
+house: all except Joe, who occupied his old room.</p>
+<p>After they were gone, and while Mr. Bumpkin was confidentially
+conversing with the landlord in the chimney corner, he was
+suddenly aroused by the indomitable Joe bursting into the room
+and performing a kind of dance or jig, the streamers, meanwhile,
+in his hat, flowing and flaunting in the most audaciously
+military manner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Halloa! halloa! zounds!&nbsp; What be th&rsquo; meaning
+o&rsquo; all this?&nbsp; Why, Joe!&nbsp; Joe! thee&rsquo;s never
+done it, lad!&nbsp; O dear! dear!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There were the colours as plain as possible in Joe&rsquo;s
+<!-- page 229--><a name="page229"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+229</span>hat, and there was a wild unmeaning look in his
+eyes.&nbsp; It seemed already as if the old intimacy between him
+and his master were at an end.&nbsp; His memory was more a thing
+of the future than the past: he recollected the mutton chops that
+were to come.&nbsp; And I verily believe it was brightened by the
+dawn of new hopes and aspirations.&nbsp; There was an awakening
+sense of individuality.&nbsp; Hitherto he had been the property
+of another: he had now exercised the right of ownership over
+himself; and although that act had transferred him to another
+master, it had seemed to give him temporary freedom, and to have
+conferred upon him a new existence.</p>
+<p>Man is, I suppose, what his mind is, and Joe&rsquo;s mind was
+as completely changed as if he had been born into a different
+sphere.&nbsp; The moth comes out of the grub, the gay Hussar out
+of the dull ploughman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Joe, Joe,&rdquo; said his old master.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Thee&rsquo;s never gone an&rsquo; listed, has thee,
+Joe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lookee &rsquo;ere, maister,&rdquo; said the recruit,
+taking off his hat and spreading out the
+colours&mdash;&ldquo;Thee sees these here, maister?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee beant such a fool, Joe, I knows thee
+beant&mdash;thee&rsquo;s been well brought oop&mdash;and I knows
+thee beant gwine to leave I and goo for a soger!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I be listed, maister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never!&rdquo; exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+wunt b&rsquo;lieve it, Joe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then thee must do tother thing, maister.&nbsp; I tellee
+I be listed; now, what&rsquo;s thee think o&rsquo;
+that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That thee be a fool,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin, angrily;
+&ldquo;thee be a silly-brained&mdash;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stop a bit, maister, no moore o&rsquo; that.&nbsp; I
+beant thy <!-- page 230--><a name="page230"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 230</span>sarvant now.&nbsp; I be a
+Queen&rsquo;s man&mdash;I be in the Queen&rsquo;s
+sarvice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A pooty Queen&rsquo;s man thee be, surely.&nbsp; Why
+look at thic hair all down over thy face, and thee be as red as a
+poppy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now I perceived that although neither master nor man was in
+such a state as could be described as &ldquo;intoxicated,&rdquo;
+yet both were in that semi-beatific condition which may be called
+sentimental.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lookee &rsquo;ere, maister,&rdquo; continued Joe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And lookee here,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin,
+&ldquo;didn&rsquo;t I come out to thee two or three times, and
+call thee out and tell &rsquo;ee to tak&rsquo; heed to thic soger
+feller, for he wur up to no good?&nbsp; Did I Joe, or did I
+not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee did, maister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, an&rsquo; now look where thee be; he&rsquo;ve
+regler took thee in, thee silly fool.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, he beant; for he wouldn&rsquo;t &rsquo;ave I at
+fust, and told I to goo and ax my mither.&nbsp; No ses I,
+I&rsquo;ll goo to the divil afore I be gwine to ax mither.&nbsp;
+I beant a child, I ses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But thee&rsquo;s fond o&rsquo; thy poor old mither,
+Joe; I knows thee be, and sends her a shillin&rsquo; a week out
+o&rsquo; thy wages; don&rsquo;t thee, Joe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was an awkward thrust, and pricked the lad in his most
+sensitive part.&nbsp; His under-lip drooped, his mouth twitched,
+and his eyes glistened.&nbsp; He was silent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where&rsquo;ll thy poor old mither get a shilling a
+week from noo, Joe?&nbsp; That&rsquo;s what I wants to
+know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Joe drew his sleeve over his face, but bore up bravely
+withal.&nbsp; <i>He</i> wasn&rsquo;t going to cry, not he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee beest a silly feller to leave a good ooame and
+nine shillin&rsquo; a week to goo a sogerin; and when thee was
+<!-- page 231--><a name="page231"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+231</span>out o&rsquo; work, there were allays a place for thee,
+Joe, at the fireside: now, warnt there, Joe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lookee &rsquo;ere, maister, I be for betterin&rsquo;
+myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Betterin&rsquo; thyself? who put that into thy silly
+pate? thic sergeant, I bleeve.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So ur did; not by anything ur said, but to see un wi
+beef steaks and ingons for supper, while I doan&rsquo;t
+&rsquo;ave a mouthful o&rsquo; mate once a week, and work like a
+oarse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor silly feller&mdash;O dear, dear! whatever wool I
+tell Nancy and thy poor mither.&nbsp; What redgimen be thee in,
+Joe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hooroars!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hooroars! hoo-devils!&rdquo; and I perceived that Mr.
+Bumpkin&rsquo;s eyes began to glisten as he more and more
+realized the fact that Joe was no more to him&mdash;&ldquo;thee
+manest the oosors, thee silly feller; a pooty oosor thee&rsquo;ll
+make!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tellee what,&rdquo; said Joe, whose pride was now
+touched, &ldquo;Maister Sergeant said I wur the finest made chap
+he ever see.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s ow ur gulled thee, Joe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Noa didn&rsquo;t; I went o&rsquo; my own free
+will.&nbsp; No man should persuade I&mdash;trust Joe for thic:
+couldn&rsquo;t persuade I to goo, nor yet not to goo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s right,&rdquo; chimed in Miss Prettyface,
+with her sweet little voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And thee sewed the colours on; didn&rsquo;t thee,
+Miss?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I did,&rdquo; answered the young lady.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Joe,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin, &ldquo;I be mortal sorry
+for thee; what&rsquo;ll I do wirout thy evidence?&nbsp; Lawyer
+Prigg say thee&rsquo;s the most wallible witness for
+I.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lookee &rsquo;ere, maister, ere we bin &rsquo;anging
+about for weeks and weeks and no forrerder so far as I can
+see.&nbsp; <!-- page 232--><a name="page232"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 232</span>When thy case&rsquo;ll come on I
+don&rsquo;t bleeve no man can tell; but whensomdever thee wants
+Joe, all thee&rsquo;ve got to do is to write to the Queen, and
+she&rsquo;ll gie I leave.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O thee silly, igerant ass!&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin;
+&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t help saying it, Joe&mdash;the Queen
+doan&rsquo;t gie leave, it be the kernel.&nbsp; I know zummut
+o&rsquo; sogerin, thee see; I were in th&rsquo; militia farty
+year agoo: but spoase thee be away&mdash;abraird?&nbsp; How be I
+to get at thee then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha! if I be away in furren parts, and thy case be in
+the list, I doant zee&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee silly feller, thee&rsquo;ll ha to goo
+fightin&rsquo; may be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Joe, &ldquo;I loikes
+fightin&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee loikes fightin&rsquo;! what&rsquo;s thee know
+about fightin&rsquo;? never fit anything in thy life but thic
+boar-pig, when he got I down in the yard.&nbsp; O, Joe, I
+can&rsquo;t bear the thought o thee goin&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Noa, but Maister Sergeant says thee jist snicks off the
+&rsquo;eads of the enemy like snickin&rsquo; off the tops
+o&rsquo; beans.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, but ow if thee gets thine snicked off?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, if mine be snicked off, it wunt be no use to I,
+and I doan&rsquo;t care who has un when I ha&rsquo; done wi un:
+anybody&rsquo;s welcome as thinks he can do better with un than
+I, or &rsquo;as moore right to un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Joe, Joe, whatever&rsquo;ll them there pigs do wirout
+thee, and thic there bull &rsquo;ll goo out of his mind&mdash;he
+wur mighty fond o&rsquo; thee, Joe&mdash;thee couldst do anything
+wi un: couldn&rsquo;t ur, Joe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; said the recruit; &ldquo;that there bull ud
+foller I about anywhere, and so ur would Missis.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then there be Polly!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha, that there Polly, she cocked her noase at I,
+maister, becos she thought I worn&rsquo;t good enough; but <!--
+page 233--><a name="page233"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+233</span>wait till she sees me in my cloase; she wunt cock her
+noase at I then, I&rsquo;ll warrant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Joe, as thee maks thy bed so thee must lie on un,
+lad.&nbsp; I wish thee well, Joe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never wronged thee, did I, maister?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never; no, never.&rdquo;&nbsp; And at this point master
+and man shook hands affectionately.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gie my love to thic bull,&rdquo; said Joe.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I shall come down as soon as evir I can: I wish
+they&rsquo;d let me bring my oarse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Joe, thee ha&rsquo; had too much to drink, I know thee
+has; and didn&rsquo;t I warn thee, Joe?&nbsp; Thee can&rsquo;t
+say I didn&rsquo;t warn thee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee did, maister, I&rsquo;ll allays say it; thee
+warned I well&mdash;but lor that there stuff as the Sergeant had,
+it jist shoots through thee and livins thee oop for all the world
+as if thee got a young ooman in thee arms in a dancin&rsquo;
+booth at the fair.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha, Joe, it were drink done it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Noa, noa, never!&mdash;good-night, maister, and God
+bless thee&mdash;thee been a good maister, and I been a good
+sarvant.&nbsp; I shall allays think o&rsquo; thee and Missis,
+too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here I saw that Mr. Bumpkin, what with his feelings and what
+with his gin-and-water, was well nigh overcome with
+emotion.&nbsp; Nor was it to be wondered at; he was in London a
+stranger, waiting for a trial with a neighbour, with whom for
+years he had been on friendly terms; his hard savings were fast
+disappearing; his stock and furniture were mortgaged; some of it
+had been sold, and his principal witness and faithful servant was
+now gone for a soldier.&nbsp; In addition to all this, poor Mr.
+Bumpkin could not help recalling the happiness of his past life,
+his early struggles, his rigid self-denial, his <!-- page
+234--><a name="page234"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+234</span>pleasure as the modest savings accumulated&mdash;not so
+much occasioned by the sordid desire of wealth, as the nobler
+wish to be independent.&nbsp; Then there was Mrs. Bumpkin, who
+naturally crossed his mind at this miserable moment in his
+existence&mdash;at home by herself&mdash;faithful, hardworking
+woman, who believed not only in her husband&rsquo;s wisdom, but
+in his luck.&nbsp; She had never liked this going to law, and
+would much rather have given Snooks the pig than it should have
+come about; yet she could not help believing that her husband
+must be right come what may.&nbsp; What would she think of
+Joe&rsquo;s leaving them in this way?&nbsp; All this passed
+through the shallow mind of the farmer as he prepared for
+bed.&nbsp; And there was no getting away from his thoughts, try
+as he would.&nbsp; As he lay on his bed there passed before his
+mind the old farm-house, with its elm tree; and the barnyard,
+newly littered down with the sweet smelling fodder; the orchard
+blossoms smiling in the morning sunshine; the pigs routing
+through the straw; the excited ducks and the swifter fowls
+rushing towards Mrs. Bumpkin as she came out to shake the
+tablecloth; the sleek and shining cows; the meadows dotted all
+over with yellow buttercups; the stately bull feeding in the
+distance by himself; the lazy stream that pursued its even course
+without a quarrel or a lawsuit; all these, and a thousand other
+remembrances of home, passed before the excited and somewhat
+distempered vision of the farmer on this unhappy night.&nbsp; Had
+he been a criminal waiting his trial he could not have been more
+wretched.&nbsp; At length he endeavoured to console himself by
+thinking of Snooks: tried to believe that victory over that
+ill-disposed person would repay the trouble and anxiety it cost
+him to achieve.&nbsp; But no, not even revenge was sweet under
+his <!-- page 235--><a name="page235"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 235</span>present circumstances.&nbsp; It is
+always an apple of ashes at the best; but, weighed now against
+the comforts and happiness of a peaceful life, it was worse than
+ashes&mdash;it was poison.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>Here I awoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said my wife, &ldquo;is it not just as I
+told you?&nbsp; I knew that artful Sergeant would enlist poor
+stupid Joe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O,&rdquo; quoth I, &ldquo;have I been talking
+again?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;More than ever; and I am very sorry Joe has deserted
+his kind master.&nbsp; I am afraid now he will lose his
+case.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not concerned about that at present; my work is
+but to dream, not to prophesy events.&nbsp; I hope Mr. Bumpkin
+will win, but nothing is so uncertain as the Law.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And why should that be?&nbsp; Law should be as certain
+as the Multiplication Table.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; sighed I, &ldquo;but&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A man who brings an action must be right or
+wrong,&rdquo; interrupted my wife.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;and sometimes he&rsquo;s
+both; and one judge will take one view of his case&mdash;his
+conduct out of Court, and his demeanour in&mdash;while another
+judge will take another; why, I have known a man lose his case
+through having a wart upon his nose.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gracious!&rdquo; exclaimed my wife, &ldquo;is it
+possible?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; quoth I; &ldquo;and another through having
+a twitch in his eye.&nbsp; Then you may have a foolish jury, who
+take a prejudice against a man.&nbsp; For instance, if a lawyer
+brings an action, he can seldom get justice before a common jury;
+and so if he be sued.&nbsp; A blue ribbon <!-- page 236--><a
+name="page236"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 236</span>man on the
+jury will be almost sure to carry his extreme virtue to the
+border of injustice against a publican.&nbsp; Masters decide
+against workmen, and so on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Mr. Bumpkin is not a lawyer, or a publican, or a
+blue ribbon man, so I hope he&rsquo;ll win.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t hope anything about it,&rdquo; I
+replied.&nbsp; &ldquo;I shall note down what takes place; I
+don&rsquo;t care who wins.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When will his case at the Old Bailey come on?&nbsp; I
+think that&rsquo;s the term you use.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will be tried next week.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is sure to punish that wicked thief who stole his
+watch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One would think so: much will depend upon the way Mr.
+Bumpkin gives his evidence; much on the way in which the thief is
+defended; a good deal on the ability of the Counsel for the
+Prosecution; and very much on the class of man they get in the
+jury box.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But the case is so clear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, to us who know all about it; but you have to make
+it clear to the jury.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s the watch found upon the man.&nbsp; Why,
+dear me, what can be clearer or plainer than that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;True; that&rsquo;s Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s
+evidence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And Mr. Bumpkin saw him take it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s Bumpkin again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley was with him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you not hear that he is not to be called; the Don
+doesn&rsquo;t want to be seen in the affair.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I feel certain he will win.&nbsp; I shall not
+believe in trial by jury if they let that man off.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t know what a trial at the Old Bailey or
+Quarter Sessions is.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t mean at the Old Bailey
+<!-- page 237--><a name="page237"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+237</span>before a real Common Law judge, but a Chancery
+judge.&nbsp; I once heard a counsel, who was prosecuting a man
+for passing bad money, interrupt a recorder in his summing up,
+and ask him to tell the jury there was evidence of seven bad
+florins having been found in the prisoner&rsquo;s boot.&nbsp; As
+guilty knowledge was the gist of the offence, this seemed
+somewhat important.&nbsp; The learned young judge, turning to the
+jury, said, in a hesitating manner, &lsquo;Well, really,
+gentlemen, I don&rsquo;t know whether that will affect your
+judgment in any way; there is the evidence, and you may consider
+it if you please.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One more thing I should like to ask.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By all means.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why can&rsquo;t they get Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s case
+tried?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because there is no system.&nbsp; In the County Court,
+where a judge tries three times as many cases in a day as any
+Superior judge, cases are tried nearly always on the day they are
+set down for.&nbsp; At the Criminal Courts, where every case is
+at least as important as any Civil case, everyone gets tried
+without unnecessary delay.&nbsp; In the Common Law Courts
+it&rsquo;s very much like hunt the slipper&mdash;you hardly ever
+know which Court the case is in for five minutes together.&nbsp;
+Then they sit one day and not another, to the incalculable
+expense of the suitors, who may come up from Devonshire to-night,
+and, after waiting a week, go back and return again to town at
+the end of the following month.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, now that O&rsquo;Rapley has taken the matter up,
+is there not some hope?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, he seems to have as much power as
+anyone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I hope he&rsquo;ll exert it; for it&rsquo;s a
+shame that this poor man should be kept waiting about so
+long.&nbsp; I <!-- page 238--><a name="page238"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 238</span>quite feel for him: there really
+ought not to be so much delay in the administration of
+justice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A dilatory administration of justice amounts too often
+to a denial of it altogether.&nbsp; It always increases the
+expense, and often results in absolute ruin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder men don&rsquo;t appoint someone when they fell
+out to arbitrate between them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They often do, and too frequently, after all the
+expense of getting ready for trial has been incurred, the case is
+at last sent to the still more costly tribunal called a
+reference.&nbsp; Many matters cannot be tried by a jury, but many
+can be that are not; one side clamouring for a reference in order
+to postpone the inevitable result; the other often obliged to
+submit and be defeated by mere lapse of time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It seems an endless sort of business.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not quite; the measure of it is too frequently the
+length of the purse on the one side or the other.&nbsp; A Railway
+Company, who has been cast in damages for &pound;1,000, can soon
+wear out a poor plaintiff.&nbsp; One of the greatest evils of
+modern litigation is the frequency with which new trials are
+granted.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lawyers,&rdquo; said my wife, &ldquo;are not apparently
+good men of business.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are not organizers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It wants such a man as General Wolseley.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Precisely.&rdquo;&nbsp; And here I felt the usual
+drowsiness which the subject invariably produces.&nbsp; So I
+dreamed again.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 239--><a name="page239"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 239</span>CHAPTER XXVI.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Morning reflections&mdash;Mrs. Oldtimes proves
+herself to be a great philosopher&mdash;the departure of the
+recruits to be sworn in.</p>
+<p>And as I dreamed, methought what a strange paradox is human
+nature.&nbsp; How often the night&rsquo;s convivialities are
+followed by despondent morning reflections!&nbsp; In the evening
+we grow valiant over the inspiriting converse and the inspiring
+glass; in the morning we are tame and calculating.&nbsp; The
+artificial gaslight disappears, and the sober, grey morning
+breaks in upon our reason.&nbsp; If the sunshine only ripened
+one-half the good resolves and high purposes formed at night over
+the social glass, what a harvest of good deeds there would
+be!&nbsp; Yes, and if the evening dissipations did not obliterate
+the good resolves of the morning, which we so often form as a
+protection against sin and sorrow, what happy creatures we should
+be!</p>
+<p>Methought I looked into a piece of three-cornered glass, which
+was resting on a ledge of the old wall in the room where Joe was
+sleeping, and that I read therein the innermost thoughts of this
+country lad.&nbsp; And I saw that he awoke to a very dreadful
+sense of the realities of his new position; that, one after
+another, visions of other days passed before his mind&rsquo;s eye
+as he lay gazing at the dormer window of his narrow
+chamber.&nbsp; What a <!-- page 240--><a name="page240"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 240</span>profound stillness there was!&nbsp;
+How different from the roystering glee of the previous
+night!&nbsp; It was a stillness that seemed to whisper of home;
+of his poor old mother; of the green sward lane that led to the
+old farm; of the old oak tree, where the owls lived, and ghosts
+were said to take up their quarters; of the stile where, of a
+Sunday morning, he used to smoke his pipe with Jack, and Ned, and
+Charley; where he had often stood to see Polly go by to church;
+and he knew that, notwithstanding she would not so much as look
+at him, he loved her down to the very sole of her boot; and would
+stand and contemplate the print of her foot after she had passed;
+he didn&rsquo;t know why, for there was nothing in it, after
+all.&nbsp; No, Joe, nothing in it&mdash;it was in you; that makes
+all the difference.&nbsp; And the voice whispered to him of sunny
+days in the bright fields, when he held the plough, and the sly
+old rook would come bobbing and pecking behind him; and the
+little field-mouse would flit away from its turned up nest,
+frightened to death, as if it were smitten with an earthquake;
+and the skylark would dart up over his head, letting fall a song
+upon him, as though it were Heaven&rsquo;s blessing.&nbsp; Then
+the voice spoke of the noontide meal under the hedge in the warm
+sunshine, or in the shade of the cool spreading tree; of the
+horses feeding close up alongside the hedge; of the going home in
+the evening, and the warm fireside, and the rustic song, and of
+the thousand and one beloved associations that he was leaving and
+casting behind him for ever.&nbsp; But then, again, he thought of
+&ldquo;bettering his condition,&rdquo; of getting on in the
+world, of the smart figure he should look in the eyes of Polly,
+who would be sure now to like him better <!-- page 241--><a
+name="page241"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 241</span>than she
+liked the baker.&nbsp; He never could see what there was in the
+baker that any girl should care for; and he thought of what the
+Sergeant had said about asking his mother&rsquo;s leave.&nbsp;
+And then he pondered on the beef steaks and onions and mutton
+chops, and other glories of a soldier&rsquo;s life; so he got up
+with a brave, resolute heart to face the world like a man,
+although it was plainly visible that sorrow struggled in his
+eyes.</p>
+<p>There was just one tear for old times, the one tear that
+showed how very human Joe was beneath all the rough incrustations
+with which ignorance and poverty had enveloped him.</p>
+<p>As he was sousing his head and neck in a pail of cold water in
+the little backyard of the Inn, the thought occurred to
+him,&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder whether or no we &rsquo;gins these &rsquo;ere
+mutton chops for brakfast to-day or arter we&rsquo;re sweared
+in.&nbsp; I expects not till arter we&rsquo;re sweared
+in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then his head went into the pail with a dash, as if that was
+part of the swearing-in process.&nbsp; As it came out he was
+conscious of a twofold sensation, which it may not be out of
+place to describe: the sensation produced by the water, which was
+refreshing in the highest degree, and the sensation produced by
+what is called wind, which was also deliciously refreshing; and
+it was in this wise.&nbsp; Borne along upon the current of air
+which passed through the kitchen, there was the most odoriferous
+savour of fried bacon that the most luxurious appetite could
+enjoy.&nbsp; It was so beautifully and voluptuously fragrant that
+Joe actually stopped while in the act of soaping his face that he
+might enjoy it.&nbsp; No one, I think, will deny that it must
+have been an <!-- page 242--><a name="page242"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 242</span>agreeable odour that kept a man
+waiting with his eyes fall of soap for half a minute.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That beant amiss,&rdquo; thought Joe; &ldquo;I wonder
+whether it be for I.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The problem was soon solved, for as he entered the kitchen
+with a face as bright and ruddy almost as the sun when he comes
+up through a mist, he saw the table was laid out for five, and
+all the other recruits had already assembled.&nbsp; There was not
+one who did not look well up to his resolution, and I must say a
+better looking lot of recruits were never seen: they were tall,
+well made, healthy, good-looking fellows.</p>
+<p>Now Mrs. Oldtimes was busy at the kitchen fire; the frying-pan
+was doing its best to show what could be done for Her
+Majesty&rsquo;s recruits.&nbsp; He was hissing bravely, and
+seemed every now and then to give a louder and heartier welcome
+to the company.&nbsp; As Joe came in I believe it fairly gave a
+shout of enthusiasm, a kind of hooray.&nbsp; In addition to the
+rashers that were frying, there was a large dish heaped up in
+front of the fire, so that it was quite clear there would be no
+lack, however hungry the company might be.</p>
+<p>Then they sat down and every one was helped.&nbsp; Mrs.
+Oldtimes was a woman of the world; let me also state she had a
+deep insight into human nature.&nbsp; She knew the feelings of
+her guests at this supreme moment, and how cheaply they could be
+bought off at their present state of soldiering.&nbsp; She was
+also aware that courage, fortitude, firmness, and the higher
+qualities of the soul depend so much upon a contented stomach,
+that she gave every one of her guests some nice gravy from the
+pan.</p>
+<p>It was a treat to see them eat.&nbsp; The Boardman was <!--
+page 243--><a name="page243"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+243</span>terrific, so was Jack.&nbsp; Harry seemed to have a
+little more on his mind than the others, but this did not
+interfere with his appetite; it simply affected his manner of
+appeasing it.&nbsp; He seemed to be in love, for his manner was
+somewhat reserved.&nbsp; At length the Sergeant came in, looking
+so cheerful and radiant that one could hardly see him and not
+wish to be a soldier.&nbsp; Then his cheery &ldquo;Well, lads;
+good morning, lads,&rdquo; was so home-like that you almost
+fancied soldiering consisted in sitting by a blazing kitchen fire
+on a frosty morning and eating fried bacon.&nbsp; What a spirit
+his presence infused into the company!&nbsp; He detected at a
+glance the down-heartedness of Harry, and began a story about his
+own enlistment years ago, when the chances for a young man of
+education were nothing to what they are now.&nbsp; The story
+seemed exactly to fit the circumstances of the case and cheered
+Harry up wonderfully.&nbsp; Breakfast was nearly finished when
+the Sergeant, after filling his pipe, said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Comrades, what do you say; shall I wait till
+you&rsquo;ve quite finished?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, Sergeant; no, no,&rdquo; said all.</p>
+<p>Oh! the fragrance of that pipe!&nbsp; And the multiplied
+fragrance of all the pipes!&nbsp; Then came smiling Miss
+Prettyface to see if their ribbons were all right; and the
+longing look of all the recruits was quite an affecting sight;
+and the genial motherly good-natured best wishes of Mrs. Oldtimes
+were very welcome.&nbsp; All these things were pleasant, and
+proved Mrs. Oldtimes&rsquo; philosophy to be correct&mdash;if you
+want to develop the higher virtues in a man, feed him.</p>
+<p>Then came the word of command in the tone of an invitation to
+a pleasure party: &ldquo;Now, lads, what do you <!-- page
+244--><a name="page244"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+244</span>say?&rdquo;&nbsp; And off went Harry, upright as if he
+had been drilled; off went Bill, trying to shake off the deal
+boards in which he had been sandwiched for a year and a half; off
+went Bob as though he had found an agreeable occupation at last;
+off went Devilmecare as though the war was only just the other
+side of the road; off went Jack as though it mattered nothing to
+him whether it was the Army or the Church; and, just as Mr.
+Bumpkin looked out of the parlour window, off went his
+&ldquo;head witness,&rdquo; swaggering along in imitation of the
+Sergeant, with the colours streaming from his hat as though any
+honest employment was better than hanging about London for a case
+to &ldquo;come on.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 245--><a name="page245"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 245</span>CHAPTER XXVII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">A letter from home.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder,&rdquo; said Mrs. Oldtimes, &ldquo;who this
+letter be for; it have been &rsquo;ere now nigh upon a week, and
+I&rsquo;m tired o&rsquo; seein&rsquo; it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Miss Prettyface took the letter in her hand and began, as best
+she could, for the twentieth time to endeavour to decipher the
+address.&nbsp; It was very much blotted and besmeared, and
+presented a very remarkable specimen of caligraphy.&nbsp; The
+most legible word on it seemed &ldquo;Gouse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s nobody here of that name,&rdquo; said the
+young lady.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you know anybody, Mr. Bumpkin, of the
+name of Gouse?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Devil a bit,&rdquo; said he, taking the letter in his
+hands, and turning it over as if it had been a skittle-ball.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The postman said it belonged here,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Oldtimes, &ldquo;but I can&rsquo;t make un out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t read the postmark,&rdquo; said Miss
+Prettyface.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin put on a large pair of glasses and examined the
+envelope with great care.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think you&rsquo;ve got un upside down,&rdquo; said
+Mrs. Oldtimes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! so ur be,&rdquo; replied the farmer, turning it
+over several times.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; he continued,
+&ldquo;here be a <i>b</i>&mdash;<!-- page 246--><a
+name="page246"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 246</span>and a
+<i>u</i>, beant it?&nbsp; See if that beant a <i>u</i>, Miss,
+your eyes be better un mine; they be younger.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O yes, that&rsquo;s a <i>u</i>,&rdquo; said Miss
+Prettyface, &ldquo;and an <i>m</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that spell <i>bum</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But stop,&rdquo; said Miss Prettyface,
+&ldquo;here&rsquo;s a <i>p</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s <i>bump</i>,&rdquo; said Mrs. Oldtimes;
+&ldquo;we shall get at something presently.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; exclaimed Bumpkin, &ldquo;I be danged if I
+doant think it be my old &rsquo;ooman&rsquo;s writin&rsquo;: but
+I beant sure.&nbsp; That be the way ur twists the tail of ur
+<i>y</i>&rsquo;s and <i>g</i>&rsquo;s, I&rsquo;ll swear; and
+lookee &rsquo;ere, beant this <i>k i n</i>?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think it is,&rdquo; said the maid.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, then, thee med be sure that be Bumpkin, and the
+letter be for I.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the young lady, &ldquo;and that other
+word which looks more like Grouse is meant for Goose, the sign of
+the house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure be un,&rdquo; exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin, &ldquo;and
+Nancy ha put Bumpkin and Goose all in one line, when ur ought to
+ha made two lines ov un.&nbsp; Now look at that, that letter
+might ha been partickler.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So it may be as it is,&rdquo; said Mrs. Oldtimes;
+&ldquo;it&rsquo;s from Mrs. Bumpkin, no doubt.&nbsp; Aren&rsquo;t
+you going to open it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think I wool,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, turning the letter
+round and round, and over and over, as though there was some
+special private entrance which could only be discovered by the
+closest search.&nbsp; At length Mrs. Oldtimes&rsquo; curiosity
+was gratified, for he found a way in, and drew out the many
+folded letter of the most difficult penmanship that ever was
+subjected to mortal gaze.&nbsp; It was not that the writing was
+illegible, but that the spelling was so extraordinary, and the
+terms of expression <!-- page 247--><a name="page247"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 247</span>so varied.&nbsp; Had I to interpret
+this letter without the aid of a dream I should have a long and
+difficult task before me.&nbsp; But it is the privilege of
+dreamers to see things clearly and in a moment: to live a
+lifetime in a few seconds, and to traverse oceans in the space of
+a single respiration.&nbsp; So, in the present instance, that
+which took Mr. Bumpkin, with the help of Mrs. Oldtimes and the
+occasional assistance of Lucy an hour to decipher, flashed before
+me in a single second.&nbsp; I ought perhaps to translate it into
+a more civilized language, but that would be impossible without
+spoiling the effect and disturbing the continuity of character
+which is so essential in a work made up of various actors.&nbsp;
+Mr. Bumpkin himself in his ordinary costume would be no more out
+of place in my Lord Mayor&rsquo;s state carriage than Mrs.
+Bumpkin wielding the Queen&rsquo;s English in its statelier and
+more fashionable adornment.&nbsp; So I give it as it was
+written.&nbsp; It began in a bold but irregular hand, and clearly
+indicated a certain agitation of mind not altogether in keeping
+with the even temperament of the writer&rsquo;s daily life.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Deer Tom&rdquo; (the letter began), &ldquo;I ope thee
+be well for it be a long time agoo since thee left ere&nbsp; I
+cant mak un out wot be all this bother about a pig but Tom
+thee&rsquo;ll be glad to ear as I be doin weel the lamin be over
+and we got semteen as pooty lams as ever thee clapped eyes
+on&nbsp; The weet be lookin well and so be the barly an wuts
+thee&rsquo;ll be glad Tom to ear wot good luck I been avin wi
+sellin&nbsp; Mister Prigg have the kolt for twenty pun a pun more
+an the Squoire ofered&nbsp; Sam broked er in and ur do look well
+in Mrs. Prigg faten I met un the tother day&nbsp; Mr. Prigg wur
+drivin un an he tooked off his at jist th&rsquo; sam as if
+I&rsquo;d been a lady&nbsp; <!-- page 248--><a
+name="page248"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 248</span>Missis
+Prigg din&rsquo;t see me as her edd wur turned th&rsquo; tother
+way&nbsp; I be glad to tell ee we sold the wuts ten quorter these
+was bort by Mister Prigg and so wur the stror ten load as clane
+and brite as ever thee seed&nbsp; Mr. Prigg be a rale good
+custumer an a nice man&nbsp; I wish there was moore like im it ud
+be the makin o&rsquo; th&rsquo; Parish we shal ave a nice lot o
+monie to dror from un at Miklemes he be the best customer we ever
+ad an I toold th&rsquo; Squoire wen ur corled about the wuts as
+Mister Prigg ad orfered ten shillin a quorter for un more un
+ee&nbsp; Ur dint seem to like un an rod away but we dooant o un
+anythink Tom so I dont mind we must sell ware we ken mak moast
+monie&nbsp; I spose Sampson be stronger an grander than ever
+it&rsquo;s my belief an I thinks we shal do well wi un this
+Spring tell t&rsquo; Joe not to stop out o&rsquo; nites or keep
+bad kumpany and to read evere nite wat the Wicker told un the
+fust sarm an do thee read un Tom for its my bleef ur cant
+&rsquo;urt thee nuther.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Humph!&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;fust sarms
+indade.&nbsp; I got a lot o&rsquo; time for sarms, an&rsquo; as
+for thic Joe&mdash;lor, lor, Nancy, whatever will thee say, I
+wonder, when thee knows he&rsquo;s gone for a soger&mdash;a sarm
+beant much good to un now; he be done for.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And then Mr. Bumpkin went and looked out of the window, and
+thought over all the good news of Mrs. Bumpkin&rsquo;s letter,
+and mentally calculated that even up to this time Mr.
+Prigg&rsquo;s account would come to enough to pay the
+year&rsquo;s rent.</p>
+<p>Going to law seemed truly a most advantageous business.&nbsp;
+Here he had got two shillings a quarter more for the oats than
+the Squire had offered, and a pound more for the colt.&nbsp;
+Prigg was a famous customer, and no doubt would buy the
+hay.&nbsp; And, strange to say, just as <!-- page 249--><a
+name="page249"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 249</span>Mr. Bumpkin
+thought this, he happened to turn over the last page of the
+letter, and there he saw what was really a Postscript.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Halloo!&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;my dear, here be moore
+on&rsquo;t; lookee &rsquo;ere.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So there is,&rdquo; answered Lucy; &ldquo;let&rsquo;s
+have a look.&rdquo;&nbsp; And thus she read:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The klover cut out well it made six lode the little rik
+an four pun nineteen&nbsp; The Squoire ony offered four pun ten
+so in corse I let Mister Prigg ave un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well done, Nancy, thee be famous.&nbsp; Now, thic big
+rik&rsquo;ll fetch moore&rsquo;n thic.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Such cheering intelligence put Mr. Bumpkin in good heart in
+spite of his witness&rsquo;s desertion.&nbsp; Joe was a good
+deal, but he wasn&rsquo;t money, and if he liked to go for a
+soger, he must go; but, in Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s judgment, he would
+very soon be tired of it, and wish himself back at his
+fireside.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, you must write to Mrs. Bumpkin,&rdquo; said
+Lucy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee&rsquo;ll write for I, my dear; won&rsquo;t
+thee?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you like,&rdquo; said Lucy.&nbsp; And so, after
+dinner, when she had changed her dress, she proceeded to write an
+epistle for Mrs. Bumpkin&rsquo;s edification.&nbsp; She had
+<i>carte blanche</i> to put in what she liked, except that the
+main facts were to be that Joe had gone for a horse soger; that
+he expected &ldquo;the case would come on every day;&rdquo; and
+that he had the highest opinion of the unquestioned ability of
+honest Lawyer Prigg.</p>
+<p>And now another surprise awaited the patient Bumpkin.&nbsp; As
+he sat, later in the day, smoking his pipe, in company with Mrs.
+Oldtimes, two men, somewhat <!-- page 250--><a
+name="page250"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 250</span>shabbily
+dressed, walked into the parlour and ordered refreshment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A fine day, sir,&rdquo; said the elder of the two, a
+man about thirty-five.&nbsp; This observation was addressed to
+Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It be,&rdquo; said the farmer.</p>
+<p>The other individual had seated himself near the fire, and was
+apparently immersed in the study of the <i>Daily
+Telegraph</i>.&nbsp; Suddenly he observed to his companion, as
+though he had never seen it before,&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hallo! Ned, have you seen this?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that?&rdquo; asked the gentleman called
+Ned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never read such a thing in my life.&nbsp; Just
+listen.&rdquo;</p>
+<blockquote><p style="text-align: center">&ldquo;&lsquo;A YOUNG
+MAN FROM THE COUNTRY.&rsquo;<br />
+&ldquo;<span class="smcap">extraordinary story</span>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A man, apparently about sixty-eight, who gave the name
+of Bumpkin, appeared as the prosecutor in a case under the
+following extraordinary circumstances.&nbsp; He said he was from
+the country, but declined to give any more particular address,
+and had been taken by a friend to see the Old Bailey and to hear
+the trials at that Court.&nbsp; After leaving the Central
+Criminal Court, he deposed, that, walking with his friend, he was
+accosted in the Street in the open daylight and robbed of his
+watch; that he pursued the thief, and when near Blackfriars
+Bridge met a man coming towards him; that he seized the supposed
+thief, and found him wearing the watch which he affirmed had been
+stolen.&nbsp; The manner and appearance of &lsquo;the young man
+from the country&rsquo; excited great laughter in Court, and the
+Lord Mayor, in <!-- page 251--><a name="page251"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 251</span>the absence of any evidence to the
+contrary, thought there was a <i>prim&acirc; facie</i> case under
+the circumstances, and committed the accused for trial to the
+Central Criminal Court.&nbsp; The prisoner, who was respectably
+dressed, and against whom nothing appeared to be known, was most
+ably defended by Mr. Nimble, who declined to put any questions in
+cross-examination, and did not address his Lordship.&nbsp; The
+case created great sensation, and it is expected that at the
+trial some remarkable and astounding disclosures will be
+made.&nbsp; &lsquo;The young man from the country&rsquo; was very
+remarkably dressed: he twirled in his hand a large old-fashioned
+white-beaver hat with a black band round it; wore a very peculiar
+frock, elaborately ornamented with needlework in front and
+behind, while a yellow kerchief with red ends was twisted round
+his neck.&nbsp; The countryman declined to give his town address;
+but a remarkable incident occurred during the hearing, which did
+not seem to strike either the Lord Mayor or the counsel for the
+defence, and that was that no appearance of the
+countryman&rsquo;s companion was put in.&nbsp; Who he is and to
+what region he belongs will probably transpire at the ensuing
+trial, which is expected to be taken on the second day of the
+next Sessions.&nbsp; It is obvious that while the case is <i>sub
+judice</i> no comments can properly be made thereon, but we are
+not prevented from saying that the evidence of this extraordinary
+&lsquo;young man from the country&rsquo; will be subjected to the
+most searching cross-examination of one of the ablest counsel of
+the English Bar.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The two men looked at Mr. Bumpkin; while the latter coloured
+until his complexion resembled beetroot.&nbsp; Miss Prettyface
+giggled; and Mrs. Oldtimes winked at <!-- page 252--><a
+name="page252"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 252</span>Mr.
+Bumpkin, and shook her head in the most significant manner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a rum case, sir,&rdquo; said Ned.</p>
+<p>Silence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe a word of the story,&rdquo; said
+his companion.</p>
+<p>Silence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you believe,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;that that
+man could have been wearing that watch if he&rsquo;d stole
+it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not I.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lor! won&rsquo;t Jemmy Nimble make mincemeat of
+&rsquo;im!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Oldtimes looked frequently towards Mr. Bumpkin as she
+continued her sewing, making the most unmistakeable signals that
+under no circumstances was he to answer.&nbsp; It was apparent to
+everyone, from Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s manner, that the paragraph
+referred to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The best thing that chap can do,&rdquo; said Ned,
+&ldquo;is not to appear at the trial.&nbsp; He can easily keep
+away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t, you&rsquo;re sure,&rdquo; answered the
+other man; &ldquo;he knows a trick worth two of that.&nbsp; They
+say the old chap deserted his poor old wife, after beating her
+black and blue, and leaving her for dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It be a lie!&rdquo; exclaimed Bumpkin, thumping his
+fist on the table.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said Ned, &ldquo;do you know anything about
+it, sir?&nbsp; It&rsquo;s no odds to me, only a man can&rsquo;t
+shut his ears.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;P&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps I do and p&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps I
+doant; but it beant no bi&rsquo;niss o&rsquo; thine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t mean no offence, but anybody can read
+the paper, surely; it&rsquo;s a free country.&nbsp;
+P&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps you&rsquo;re the man himself; I didn&rsquo;t
+think o&rsquo; that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 253--><a name="page253"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+253</span>&ldquo;P&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps I be, and
+p&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps I beant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And p&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps your name is
+Bumpkin?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And p&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps it beant, and what
+then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, you&rsquo;ve nothing to do with it, that&rsquo;s
+all; and I don&rsquo;t see why you should interfere.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t have no quarrelling in my house,&rdquo;
+said the landlady.&nbsp; &ldquo;This gentleman&rsquo;s nothing to
+do with it; he knows nothing at all about it; so, if you please,
+gentlemen, we needn&rsquo;t say any more.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t want to talk about it,&rdquo;
+said Ned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No more do I,&rdquo; chimed in his companion;
+&ldquo;but it&rsquo;s a pity that he should take up our
+conversation when he hasn&rsquo;t anything to do with it, and his
+name isn&rsquo;t Bumpkin, and he hasn&rsquo;t lost his
+watch.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s no odds to me; I don&rsquo;t care, do
+you, Ned?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not I,&rdquo; said Ned; &ldquo;let&rsquo;s be off; I
+don&rsquo;t want no row; anybody mustn&rsquo;t open his mouth
+now.&nbsp; Good day, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the two young men went away.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 255--><a name="page255"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 255</span>CHAPTER XXVIII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Mr. Bumpkin determines to maintain a discreet
+silence about his case at the Old Bailey&mdash;Mr. Prigg confers
+with him thereon.</p>
+<p>And I saw that Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s case did not come on.&nbsp;
+Day by day passed away, and still it was not in the paper.&nbsp;
+The reason, however, is simple, and need not be told to any
+except those of my readers who are under the impression that the
+expeditious administration of justice is of any
+consequence.&nbsp; It was obvious to the most simple-minded that
+the case could not be taken for a day or two, because there was a
+block in every one of the three Courts devoted to the trial of
+Nisi Prius actions.&nbsp; And you know as well as anyone, Mr.
+Bumpkin, that when you get a load of turnips, or what not, in the
+market town blocked by innumerable other turnip carts, you must
+wait.&nbsp; Patience, therefore, good Bumpkin.&nbsp; Justice may
+be slow-footed, but she is sure handed; she may be blind and
+deaf, but she is not dumb; as you shall see if you look into one
+of the &ldquo;blocked Courts&rdquo; where a trial has been going
+on for the last sixteen days.&nbsp; A case involving a dispute of
+no consequence to any person in the world, and in which there is
+absolutely nothing except&mdash;O rare phenomenon!&mdash;plenty
+of money.&nbsp; It was interesting only on account of the
+bickerings between the learned counsel, and the occasionally
+friendly <!-- page 256--><a name="page256"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 256</span>altercations between the Bench and
+the Bar.&nbsp; But the papers had written it into a <i>cause
+c&eacute;l&egrave;bre</i>, and made it a dramatic entertainment
+for the beauty and the chivalry of England.&nbsp; So Mr. Bumpkin
+had still to wait; but it enabled him to attend comfortably the
+February sittings of the Old Bailey, where his other case was to
+be tried.</p>
+<p>When Mr. Prigg read the account of the proceedings before the
+Lord Mayor, he was very much concerned, not to say annoyed,
+because he was under the impression that he ought to have been
+consulted.&nbsp; Not knowing what to do under the circumstances,
+he resolved, after due consideration, to get into a hansom and
+drive down to the &ldquo;Goose.&rdquo;&nbsp; Mr. Prigg, as I have
+before observed, was swift in decision and prompt in
+action.&nbsp; He had no sooner resolved to see Bumpkin than to
+Bumpkin he went.&nbsp; But his client was out; it was uncertain
+when he would be in.&nbsp; Judge of Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s
+disappointment!&nbsp; He left word that he would call again; he
+did call again, and, after much dodging on the part of the wily
+Bumpkin, he was obliged to surrender himself a captive to honest
+Prigg.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear Mr. Bumpkin,&rdquo; exclaimed he, taking both
+the hands of his client into his own and yielding him a double
+measure of friendship; &ldquo;is it possible&mdash;have you been
+robbed?&nbsp; Is it you in the paper this morning in this
+<i>very</i> extraordinary case?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Bumpkin looked and blushed.&nbsp; He was not a liar, but truth
+is not always the most convenient thing, say what you will.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg; &ldquo;quite
+so&mdash;quite so!&nbsp; Now <i>how</i> did this
+happen?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Bumpkin still looked and blushed.</p>
+<p><!-- page 257--><a name="page257"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+257</span>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg; &ldquo;just so.&nbsp;
+But who was this companion?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Bumpkin muttered &ldquo;A friend!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O! O! O!&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg, drawing a long face and
+placing the fore-finger of his left hand perpendicularly from the
+tip of his nose to the top of his forehead.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Noa,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;&rsquo;taint none
+o&rsquo; that nuther; I beant a man o&rsquo; that
+sort.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg, &ldquo;I only
+thought I&rsquo;d call, you know, in case there should be
+anything which might in any way affect our action.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin, conscious of his moral rectitude, like all good
+men, was fearless: he knew that nothing which he had done would
+affect the merits of his case, and, therefore, instead of
+replying to the subtle question of his adviser, he merely
+enquired of that gentleman when he thought the case would be
+on.&nbsp; The usual question.</p>
+<p>Mr. Prigg rubbed his hands and glanced his eyes as though just
+under his left elbow was a very deep well, at the bottom of which
+lay that inestimable jewel, truth.&nbsp; &ldquo;Really,&rdquo;
+Mr. Bumpkin, &ldquo;I expect every hour to see us in the
+paper.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s very extraordinary; they have no less
+than three Courts sitting, as I daresay you are aware.&nbsp; No
+less than&mdash;let me see, my mind&rsquo;s so full of business,
+I have seven cases ready to come on.&nbsp; Where was I?&nbsp; O,
+I know; I say there are no less than three Courts, under the
+continuous sittings system, and yet we seem to make no progress
+in the diminution of the tremendous and overwhelming mass of
+business that pours in upon us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin said &ldquo;Hem!&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 258--><a name="page258"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+258</span>&ldquo;You see,&rdquo; continued Mr. Prigg,
+&ldquo;there&rsquo;s one thing, we shall not last long when we do
+come on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shan&rsquo;t ur?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You see there&rsquo;s only one witness, besides
+yourself, on our side.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And &rsquo;eve gone for a soger,&rdquo; said Mr.
+Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A soldier!&rdquo; exclaimed Prigg.&nbsp; &ldquo;A
+soldier, my dear Bumpkin.&nbsp; No&mdash;no&mdash;you don&rsquo;t
+say so, really!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, sure &rsquo;ave ur; and wot the devil I be to do
+agin that there Snooks, as &rsquo;ll lie through a brick wall, I
+beant able to say.&nbsp; I be pooty nigh off my chump wot
+wi&rsquo; one thing and another.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Off what, sir?&rdquo; enquired Mr. Prigg.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Chump,&rdquo; shouted Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, indeed, yes; dear me, you don&rsquo;t say so.&nbsp;
+Well, now I&rsquo;m glad I called.&nbsp; I must see about
+this.&nbsp; What regiment did you say he&rsquo;d
+joined?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hoosors!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha! dear me, has he, indeed?&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg,
+noting it down in his pocket-book.&nbsp; &ldquo;What a pity for a
+young man like that to throw himself away&mdash;such an
+intelligent young fellow, too, and might have done so well; dear
+me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha,&rdquo; answered Bumpkin, &ldquo;there worn&rsquo;t
+a better feller at plough nor thic there; and he could mend a
+barrer or a &rsquo;arrer, and turn his &rsquo;and to pooty nigh
+anything about t&rsquo; farm.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And is there any reason that can be assigned for this
+extraordinary conduct?&nbsp; Wasn&rsquo;t in debt, I
+suppose?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin laughed one of his old big fireside laughs such as
+he had not indulged in lately.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Debt! why they wouldn&rsquo;t trust un a
+shoe-string.&nbsp; <!-- page 259--><a name="page259"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 259</span>Where the devil wur such a chap as
+thic to get money to get into debt wi&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear sir, we don&rsquo;t want money to get into debt
+with; we get into debt when we have none.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do ur, sir.&nbsp; Then if I hadn&rsquo;t &rsquo;ad any
+money I&rsquo;d like to know &rsquo;ow fur thee&rsquo;d ha&rsquo;
+trusted I.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear me,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg, &ldquo;what a very
+curious way of putting it!&nbsp; But, however, soldier or no
+soldier, we must have his evidence.&nbsp; I must see about it: I
+must go to the d&eacute;p&ocirc;t.&nbsp; Now, with regard to your
+case at the Old Bailey.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin, rather testily; &ldquo;I
+be bound over to proserkit, and that be all I knows about
+un.&nbsp; I got to give seam evidence as I guv afore the Lord
+Mayor, and the Lord Mayor said as the case wur clear, and away it
+went for trial.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed! dear me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I got to tak no trouble at all about un, but to
+keep my mouth shut till the case comes on, that&rsquo;s what the
+pleeceman told I.&nbsp; I bean&rsquo;t to talk about un, or to
+tak any money not to proserkit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O dear, no,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg.&nbsp; &ldquo;O dear,
+dear, no; you would be compounding a felony.&rdquo;&nbsp; (Here
+Mr. Prigg made a note in his diary to this
+effect:&mdash;&ldquo;Attending you at &lsquo;The Goose&rsquo; at
+Westminster, when you informed me that you were the prosecutor in
+a case at the Old Bailey, and in which I advised you not, under
+any circumstances, to accept a compromise or money for the
+purpose of withdrawing from the prosecution, and strongly
+impressed upon you that such conduct would amount in law to a
+misdemeanor.&nbsp; Long conference with you thereon, when you
+promised to abide by my advice, &pound;1 6<i>s.</i>
+0<i>d.</i>&rdquo;).</p>
+<p><!-- page 260--><a name="page260"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+260</span>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;it seem to me
+that turn which way I wool, there be too much law, too many
+pitfalls; I be gettin&rsquo; sick on&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg, &ldquo;we have only to do
+our duty in that station of life in which we are called, and we
+have no cause to fear.&nbsp; Now you know you would <i>not</i>
+have liked that unprincipled man, Snooks, to have the laugh of
+you, would you now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin clenched his fist as he said, &ldquo;Noa,
+I&rsquo;d sooner lose every penny I got than thic there feller
+should ha&rsquo; the grin o&rsquo; me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so,&rdquo; said the straightforward
+moralist.&nbsp; &ldquo;Quite so! dear me!&nbsp; Well, well, I
+must wish you good morning, for really I am so overwhelmed with
+work that I hardly know which way to turn&mdash;bye, bye.&nbsp; I
+will take care to keep you posted up in&mdash;.&rdquo;&nbsp; Here
+Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s cab drove off, and I could not ascertain
+whether the posting up was to be in the state of the list or in
+the lawyer&rsquo;s ledger.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What a nice man!&rdquo; said the landlady.</p>
+<p>Yes, that was Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s character, go where he would:
+&ldquo;A nice man!&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 261--><a name="page261"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 261</span>CHAPTER XXIX.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">The trial at the Old Bailey of Mr. Simple
+Simonman for highway robbery with violence&mdash;Mr. Alibi
+introduces himself to Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>I next saw Mr. Bumpkin wandering about the precincts of that
+Grand Institution, the Old Bailey, on a drizzly morning about the
+middle of February, 187&mdash;, waiting to go before the Grand
+Jury.&nbsp; As the famous prison in Scotland was called the
+&ldquo;Heart of Midlothian&rdquo; so the Old Bailey may be
+considered the Heart of Civilization.&nbsp; Its commanding
+situation, in the very centre of a commercial population,
+entitles it to this distinction; for nothing is supposed to have
+so civilizing an influence as Commerce.&nbsp; I was always
+impressed with its beautiful and picturesque appearance,
+especially on a fine summer morning, during its sittings, when
+the sun was pouring its brightest beams on its lively
+portals.&nbsp; What a charming picture was presented to your
+view, when the gates being open, the range of sheds on the left
+met the eye, especially the centre one where the gallows is kept
+packed up for future use.&nbsp; The gallows on the one side might
+be seen and the stately carriages of my Lord Mayor and Sheriffs
+on the other!&nbsp; Gorgeous coachmen and footmen in resplendent
+liveries; magnificent civic dignitaries in elaborate liveries
+too, rich with gold and bright with <!-- page 262--><a
+name="page262"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 262</span>colour,
+stepping forth from their carriages, amid loud cries of
+&ldquo;Make way!&rdquo; holding in their white-gloved hands large
+bouquets of the loveliest flowers, emblems of&mdash;what?</p>
+<p>Crime truly has its magnificent accompaniments, and if it does
+not dress itself, as of old, in the rich costumes of a Turpin or
+a Duval, it is not without its beautiful surroundings.&nbsp;
+Here, where the channels and gutters of crime converge, is built,
+in the centre of the greatest commercial city in the world, the
+Bailey.&nbsp; Mr. Bumpkin wandered about for hours through a
+reeking unsavoury crowd of thieves and thieves&rsquo; companions,
+idlers of every type of blackguardism, ruffians of every degree
+of criminality; boys and girls receiving their finishing lessons
+in crime under the dock, as they used to do only a few years ago
+under the gallows.&nbsp; The public street is given over to the
+enemies of Society; and Civilisation looks on without a shudder
+or regret, as though crime were a necessity, and the Old Bailey,
+in the heart of London, no disgrace.</p>
+<p>And a little dirty, greasy hatted, black whiskered man, after
+pushing hither and thither through this pestiferous crowd as
+though he had business with everybody, but did not exactly know
+what it was, at length approached Mr. Bumpkin; and after standing
+a few minutes by his side eyeing him with keen hungry looks,
+began that interesting conversation about the weather which seems
+always so universally acceptable.&nbsp; Mr. Bumpkin was
+tired.&nbsp; He had been wandering for hours in the street, and
+was wondering when he should be called before the Grand
+Jury.&nbsp; Mr. Alibi, that was the dark gentleman&rsquo;s name,
+knew all about Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s case, his condition of mind,
+and his impatience; and he said deferentially:</p>
+<p><!-- page 263--><a name="page263"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+263</span>&ldquo;You are waiting to go before the Grand Jury, I
+suppose, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I be,&rdquo; answered Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s your policeman?&rdquo; enquired
+Alibi.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I doant know,&rdquo; said Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s his number?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sev&rsquo;n hunderd and sev&rsquo;nty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, I know,&rdquo; said Alibi; &ldquo;why not let me get
+you before the Grand Jury at once, instead of waiting about here
+all day, and perhaps to-morrow and the next day, and the day
+after that; besides, the sooner you go before the Grand Jury, the
+sooner your case will come on; that stands to common sense, I
+think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So ur do,&rdquo; answered the farmer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will be here a month if you don&rsquo;t look
+out.&nbsp; Have you got any counsel or solicitor?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Noa, I beant; my case be that plaain, it spaks for
+itself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Mr. Alibi; &ldquo;they won&rsquo;t
+always let a case speak for itself&mdash;they very often stop
+it&mdash;but if you can get a counsel for nothing, why not have
+one; that stands to reason, I think?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For nothing? well that be the fust time I ever eeard
+o&rsquo; a loryer as chape as thic.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>How it could pay was the wonder to Mr. Bumpkin.&nbsp; And what
+a strange delusion it must seem to the mind of the general
+reader!&nbsp; But wait, gentle peruser of this history, you shall
+see this strange sight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you like to have a counsel and a lawyer to conduct
+your case, sir, it shall not cost you a farthing, I give you my
+word of honour!&nbsp; What do you think of that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>What could Mr. Bumpkin think of that?&nbsp; What a pity that
+he had not met this gentleman before!&nbsp; Probably he <!-- page
+264--><a name="page264"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+264</span>would have brought several actions if he had; for if
+you could work the machinery of the law for nothing, you would
+always stand to win.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O,&rdquo; said Mr. Alibi, &ldquo;here is seven hundred
+and seventy!&nbsp; This gentleman wants a counsel, and I&rsquo;ve
+been telling him he can have one, and it won&rsquo;t cost him
+anything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s right enough,&rdquo; said the Policeman;
+&ldquo;but it ain&rsquo;t nothin&rsquo; to do with me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just step this way, sir, we&rsquo;ll soon have this
+case on,&rdquo; said Alibi; and he led the way to the back room
+of a public-house, which seemed to be used as a
+&ldquo;hedge&rdquo; lawyer&rsquo;s office.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Med I mak so bold, sir; be thee a loryer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; answered Alibi, &ldquo;I am clerk to Mr.
+Deadandgone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And don&rsquo;t Mr. Deadandam charge
+nothin&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O dear, no!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>What a very nice man Mr. Deadandam must be!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You see,&rdquo; said Alibi, &ldquo;the Crown pays
+us!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Crown!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And here Mr. Alibi slipped a crown-piece into the artfully
+extended palm of the policeman, who said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It ain&rsquo;t nothin&rsquo; to do wi&rsquo; me; but
+the gentleman&rsquo;s quite right, the Crown pays.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And he dropped the money into his leather purse, which he rolled
+up carefully and placed in his pocket.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You see,&rdquo; said Alibi, &ldquo;I act as the Public
+Prosecutor, who can&rsquo;t be expected to do
+everything&mdash;you can&rsquo;t grind all the wheat in the
+country in one mill, that stands to common sense.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That be right, that&rsquo;s werry good,&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And,&rdquo; continued Mr. Alibi, &ldquo;the Government
+<!-- page 265--><a name="page265"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+265</span>allows two guineas for counsel, a guinea for the
+solicitor, and so on, and the witnesses, don&rsquo;t you
+see?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Zactly!&rdquo; said Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that&rsquo;s quite enough,&rdquo; continued Alibi;
+&ldquo;we don&rsquo;t want anything from the
+prosecutor&mdash;that&rsquo;s right, policeman!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It ain&rsquo;t nothink to do wi&rsquo; me,&rdquo; said
+the policeman; &ldquo;but what this &rsquo;ere gentleman says is
+the law.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There,&rdquo; said Alibi, &ldquo;I told you
+so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I spose,&rdquo; said the policeman, &ldquo;you
+don&rsquo;t want me, gentlemen; it ain&rsquo;t nothink to do with
+me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, Leary,&rdquo; replied Alibi; &ldquo;we
+don&rsquo;t want you; the case is pretty straight, I
+suppose.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, sir; I expects it&rsquo;ll be a plea of
+guilty.&nbsp; There ain&rsquo;t no defence, not as I&rsquo;m
+aware of.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said Alibi, &ldquo;that&rsquo;s all
+right&mdash;keep your witnesses together, Leary&mdash;don&rsquo;t
+be out of the way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; says Leary; &ldquo;I thinks I knows my
+dooty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And with this he slouched out of the room, and went and
+refreshed himself at the bar.</p>
+<p>In two or three minutes the policeman returned, and was in the
+act of drawing the back of his hand across his mouth, when Alibi
+said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beg pardin, sir; but there&rsquo;s another gentleman
+wants to see you&mdash;I thinks he wants you to defend ---; but
+it ain&rsquo;t nothink to do wi&rsquo; me, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very good,&rdquo; answered Alibi, &ldquo;very good; now
+let me see&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You got the Baker&rsquo;s case?&rdquo; said Leary.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Alibi; &ldquo;O,
+yes&mdash;embezzlement.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Everything was thus far satisfactorily settled, and Mr. <!--
+page 266--><a name="page266"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+266</span>Bumpkin&rsquo;s interests duly represented by Mr.
+Deadandgone, an eminent practitioner.&nbsp; No doubt the services
+of competent counsel would be procured, and the case fully
+presented to the consideration of an intelligent jury.</p>
+<p>Who shall say after this that the Old Bailey is <i>not</i> the
+Heart of Civilization?</p>
+<p>I pass over the preliminary canter of Mr. Bumpkin before the
+Grand Jury; the decision of that judicial body, the finding of
+the true bill, the return of the said bill in Court, the bringing
+up of the prisoner for arraignment, and the fixing of the case to
+be taken first on Thursday in deference to the wishes of Mr.
+Nimble.&nbsp; I pass by all those preliminary proceedings which I
+have before attempted to describe, and which, if I might employ a
+racing simile, might be compared to the saddling of Mr. Bumpkin
+in the paddock, where, unquestionably, he was first favourite for
+the coming race, to be ridden by that excellent jockey, Alibi;
+and come at once to the great and memorable trial of Regina on
+the prosecution of Thomas Bumpkin against Simon Simpleman for
+highway robbery with violence.</p>
+<p>As the prisoner entered the dock there was a look of
+unaffected innocence in his appearance that seemed to make an
+impression on the learned Judge, Mr. Justice Technical, a
+recently appointed Chancery barrister.&nbsp; I may be allowed to
+mention that his Lordship had never had any experience in
+Criminal Courts whatever: so he brought to the discharge of his
+important duty a thoroughly unprejudiced and impartial
+mind.&nbsp; He did not suspect that a man was guilty because he
+was charged: and the respectable and harmless manner of the
+accused was not interpreted by his Lordship as a piece of
+consummate acting, as it would be by some Judges <!-- page
+267--><a name="page267"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+267</span>who have seen much of the world as it is exhibited in
+Criminal Courts.</p>
+<p>Many ladies of rank were ushered in by the Sheriff, all
+looking as smiling and happy as if they were about to witness the
+performance of some celebrated actress for the first time; they
+had fans and opera-glasses, and as they took their places in the
+boxes allotted to rank and fashion, there was quite a pleasant
+sensation produced in Court, and they attracted more notice for
+the time being than the prisoners themselves.</p>
+<p>Now these ladies were not there to witness the first piece,
+the mere trial of Simpleman for highway robbery, although the
+sentence might include the necessary brutality of flogging.&nbsp;
+The afterpiece was what they had come to see&mdash;namely, a
+fearful tragedy, in which two men at least were sure of being
+sentenced to death.&nbsp; This is the nearest approach to
+shedding human blood which ladies can now witness in this
+country; for I do not regard pigeon slaughtering, brutal and
+bloodthirsty as it is, as comparable to the sentencing of a
+fellow-creature to be strangled.&nbsp; And no one can blame
+ladies of rank if they slake their thirst for horrors in the only
+way the law now leaves open to them.&nbsp; The Beauty of Spain is
+better provided for.&nbsp; What a blessed thing is humanity!</p>
+<p>It is due to Mr. Newboy, the counsel for the prosecution in
+the great case of <i>Regina</i> v. <i>Simpleman</i>, to say that
+he had only lately been called to the Bar, and only
+&ldquo;<i>instructed</i>,&rdquo; as the prisoner was placed in
+the dock.&nbsp; Consequently, he had not had time to read his
+brief.&nbsp; I do not know that that was a disadvantage, inasmuch
+as the brief consisted in what purported to be a copy of the
+depositions so illegibly scrawled that it would have <!-- page
+268--><a name="page268"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+268</span>required the most intense study to make out the meaning
+of a single line.</p>
+<p>Mr. Newboy was by no means devoid of ability; but no amount of
+ability would give a man a knowledge of the facts of a case which
+were never communicated to him.&nbsp; In its simplicity the
+prosecution was beautifully commonplace, and five minutes&rsquo;
+consideration would have been sufficient to enable counsel to
+master the details and be prepared to meet the defence.&nbsp;
+Alas, for the lack of those five minutes!&nbsp; The more Mr.
+Newboy looked at the writing (?) the more confused he got.&nbsp;
+All he could make out was his own name, and <i>Reg.</i> v.
+<i>Somebody</i> on the back.</p>
+<p>Now it happened that Mr. Alibi saw the difficulty in which Mr.
+Newboy was, and knowing that his, Alibi&rsquo;s, clerk, was not
+remarkable for penmanship, handed to the learned counsel at the
+last moment, when the last juryman was being bawled at with the
+&ldquo;well and truly try,&rdquo; a copy of the depositions.</p>
+<p>The first name at the top of the first page which caught the
+eye of the learned counsel, was that of the prisoner; for the
+depositions commence in such a way as to show the name of the
+prisoner in close proximity to, if not among the names of
+witnesses.</p>
+<p>So Mr. Newboy, in his confusion, taking the name of the
+prisoner as his first witness, shouted out in a bold voice, to
+give himself courage, &ldquo;<i>Simon Simpleman</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Ere!&rdquo; answered the prisoner.</p>
+<p>The learned Judge was a little astonished; and, although, he
+had got his criminal law up with remarkable rapidity, his
+lordship knew well enough that you cannot call the prisoner as a
+witness either for or against himself.&nbsp; Mr. Newboy perceived
+his mistake and apologised.&nbsp; <!-- page 269--><a
+name="page269"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 269</span>The laugh,
+of course, went round against him; and when it got to Mr. Nimble,
+that merry gentleman slid it into the jury-box with a turn of his
+eyes and a twist of his mouth.&nbsp; The counsel for the
+prosecution being by this time pretty considerably confused, and
+not being able to make out the name of a single witness on the
+depositions (there were only two) called out, &ldquo;The
+Prosecutor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here, I be,&rdquo; said a voice from the crowd in a
+tone which provoked more laughter, all of which was turned into
+the jury-box by Mr. Nimble.&nbsp; &ldquo;Here I be&rdquo;
+struggled manfully with all his might and main to push through
+the miscellaneous crowd of all sorts and conditions that hemmed
+him in.&nbsp; All the arrangements at the Old Bailey, like the
+arrangements at most Courts, are expressly devised for the
+inconvenience of those who have business there.</p>
+<p>All eyes were turned towards &ldquo;<i>Here I be</i>,&rdquo;
+as, after much pushing and struggling as though he were in a
+football match, he was thrust headlong forward by three policemen
+and the crier into the body of the Court.&nbsp; There he stood
+utterly confounded by the treatment he had undergone and the
+sight that presented itself to his astonished gaze.&nbsp;
+Opera-glasses were turned on him from the boxes, the gentlemen on
+the grand tier strained their necks in order to catch a glimpse
+of him; the pit, filled for the most part with young barristers,
+was in suppressed ecstasies; while the gallery, packed to the
+utmost limit of its capacity, broke out into unrestrained
+laughter.&nbsp; I say, unrestrained; but as the Press truly
+observed in the evening papers, &ldquo;it was immediately
+suppressed by the Usher.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin climbed into the witness-box (as though <!-- page
+270--><a name="page270"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 270</span>he
+were going up a rick), which was situated between the Judge and
+the jury.&nbsp; His appearance again provoked a titter through
+the Court; but it was not loud enough to call for any further
+measure of suppression than the usual
+&ldquo;Si&mdash;lence!&rdquo; loudly articulated in two widely
+separated syllables by the crier, who had no sooner pronounced it
+than he turned his face from the learned Judge and pressed his
+hand tightly against his mouth, straining his eyes as if he had
+swallowed a crown-piece.&nbsp; Mr. Bumpkin wore his long drab
+frock overcoat, with the waist high up and its large flaps; his
+hell-fire waistcoat, his trousers of corduroy, and his
+shirt-collar, got up expressly for the occasion as though he had
+been a prime minister.&nbsp; The ends of his neckerchief bore no
+inconsiderable likeness to two well-grown carrots.&nbsp; In his
+two hands he carefully nursed his large-brimmed well-shaped white
+beaver hat; a useful article to hold in one&rsquo;s hands when
+there is any danger of nervousness, for nothing is so hard to get
+rid of as one&rsquo;s hands.&nbsp; I am not sure that Mr. Bumpkin
+was nervous.&nbsp; He was a brave self-contained man, who had
+fought the world and conquered.&nbsp; His maxim was, &ldquo;right
+is right,&rdquo; and &ldquo;wrong is no man&rsquo;s
+right.&rdquo;&nbsp; He was of the upright and down-straight
+character, and didn&rsquo;t care &ldquo;for all the counsellors
+in the kingdom.&rdquo;&nbsp; And why should he?&nbsp; His cause
+was good, his conscience clear, and the story he had to tell
+plain and &ldquo;straightforrard&rdquo; as himself.&nbsp; No
+wonder then that his face beamed with a good old country smile,
+such as he would wear at an exhibition where he could show the
+largest &ldquo;turmut as ever wur growed.&rdquo;&nbsp; That was
+the sort of smile he turned upon the audience.&nbsp; And as the
+audience looked at the &ldquo;turmut,&rdquo; it felt that it was
+indeed the most extraordinary <!-- page 271--><a
+name="page271"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 271</span>specimen of
+field culture it had ever beheld, and worthy of the first
+prize.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is your name?&rdquo; inquired Mr. Newboy; &ldquo;I
+mustn&rsquo;t lead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bumpkin, and I bearned asheamed on &rsquo;im,&rdquo;
+answered the bold farmer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind whether you are ashamed or not,&rdquo;
+interposed Mr. Nimble; &ldquo;just answer the
+question.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You must answer,&rdquo; remarked the learned Judge,
+&ldquo;not make a speech.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Zackly, sir,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, pulling at his
+hair.</p>
+<p>Another titter.&nbsp; The jury titter and hold down their
+heads.&nbsp; Evidently there&rsquo;s fun in the case.</p>
+<p>Then Mr. Newboy questioned him about the occurrence; asked him
+if he recollected such a day, and where he had been, and where he
+was going, and a variety of other questions; the answer to every
+one of which provoked fresh laughter; until, after much
+floundering on the part of both himself and Mr. Newboy, as though
+they were engaged in a wrestling match, he was asked by the
+learned Judge &ldquo;to tell them exactly what happened.&nbsp;
+Let him tell his own story,&rdquo; said the Judge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; said everybody; &ldquo;now we shall hear
+something!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wur a gwine,&rdquo; began Bumpkin,
+&ldquo;hoame&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s not evidence,&rdquo; said Mr. Nimble.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How so?&rdquo; asks the Judge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It doesn&rsquo;t matter where he was going to, my lord,
+but where he was!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, that is so,&rdquo; says the Judge; &ldquo;you
+mustn&rsquo;t tell us, Mr. Bumpkin, whither you were going, but
+where you were!&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 272--><a name="page272"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+272</span>Bumpkin scratched his head; there were too many
+where&rsquo;s for him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t yon tell us,&rdquo; says Mr. Newboy,
+&ldquo;where you were?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where I were?&rdquo; says Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>A roar of laughter greeted this statement.&nbsp; Mr. Nimble
+turning it into the jury-box like a flood.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wur in Lunnun&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes&mdash;yes,&rdquo; says his counsel; &ldquo;but what
+locality?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>You might just as well have put him under a mangle, as to try
+to get evidence out of him like that.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look,&rdquo; says the Judge, &ldquo;attend to me; if
+you go on like that, you will not be allowed your
+expenses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What took place?&rdquo; asks his counsel;
+&ldquo;can&rsquo;t you tell us, man?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why the thief cotch&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I object,&rdquo; says Mr. Nimble; &ldquo;you
+mustn&rsquo;t call him a thief; it is for the jury, my lord, to
+determine that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is so,&rdquo; says my lord; &ldquo;you
+mustn&rsquo;t call him a thief, Mr. Bumpkin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beg pardon, your lord; but ur stole my
+watch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;no,&rdquo; says Mr. Newboy; &ldquo;took your
+watch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An if ur took un, ur stole un, I allows,&rdquo; says
+Bumpkin; &ldquo;for I never gin it to un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was so much laughter that for some time nothing further
+was said; but every audience knows better than to check the
+source of merriment by a continued uproar; so it waited for
+another supply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You must confine yourself,&rdquo; says the Judge,
+&ldquo;to telling us what took place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll spak truth and sheam t&rsquo; devil,&rdquo;
+says Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now go on,&rdquo; says Newboy.</p>
+<p><!-- page 273--><a name="page273"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+273</span>&ldquo;The thief stole my watch, and that be t&rsquo;
+plain English on &rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall have to commit you to prison,&rdquo; says the
+Judge, &ldquo;if you go on like that; remember you are upon your
+oath, and it&rsquo;s a very serious thing&mdash;serious for you
+and serious for the young man at the bar.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At these touching words, the young man at the bar burst out
+crying, said &ldquo;he was a respectable man, and it was all got
+up against him;&rdquo; whereupon Mr. Nimble said &ldquo;he must
+be quiet, and that his lordship and the gentlemen in the box
+would take care of him and not allow him to be trampled
+on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are liable,&rdquo; said the Judge, &ldquo;to be
+prosecuted for perjury if you do not tell the truth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, then, your lord, if a man maun goo to prison for
+losin&rsquo; his watch, I&rsquo;ll goo that&rsquo;s all; but that
+ere man stole un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Newboy: &ldquo;He took it, did he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I object,&rdquo; said Mr. Nimble; &ldquo;that is a
+leading question.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the Judge; &ldquo;I think that is
+rather leading,&rdquo; Mr. Newboy; &ldquo;you may vary the form
+though, and ask him whether the prisoner stole it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Really, my lord,&rdquo; said Mr. Nimble, &ldquo;that,
+with very great respect, is as leading as the other
+form.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not quite, I think, Mr. Nimble.&nbsp; You see in the
+other form, you make a positive assertion that he did steal it;
+in this, you merely ask the question.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And I saw that this was a very keen and subtle distinction,
+such as could only be drawn by a Chancery Judge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would it not be better, my lord, if he told us what
+took place?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 274--><a name="page274"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+274</span>&ldquo;That is what he is doing,&rdquo; said the Judge;
+&ldquo;go on, witness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I say as &rsquo;ow thic feller comed out and hugged up
+aginst I and took &rsquo;t watch and runned away.&nbsp; I
+arter&rsquo;d him, and met him coomin&rsquo; along wi&rsquo; it
+in &rsquo;s pocket; what can be plaainer an thic?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was great laughter as Mr. Bumpkin shook his head at the
+learned counsel for the defence, and thumped one hand upon the
+ledge in front of him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That will do,&rdquo; said Mr. Newboy, sitting down
+triumphantly.</p>
+<p>Then the counsel for the defence arose, and a titter again
+went round the Court, and there was a very audible adjustment of
+persons in preparation for the treat that was to come.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;May the prisoner have a seat, my lord?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, certainly,&rdquo; said his lordship; &ldquo;let an
+easy-chair be brought immediately.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now then, Mr. Bumpkin, or whatever your name is,
+don&rsquo;t lounge on the desk like that, but just stand up and
+attend to me.&nbsp; Stand up, sir, and answer my
+questions,&rdquo; says Mr. Nimble.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I be standin&rsquo; oop,&rdquo; said Bumpkin,
+&ldquo;and I can answer thee; ax away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just attend,&rdquo; said the Judge.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+must not go on like that.&nbsp; You are here to answer questions
+and not to make speeches.&nbsp; If you wish those gentlemen to
+believe you, you must conduct yourself in a proper manner.&nbsp;
+Remember this is a serious charge, and you are upon your
+oath.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Poor Bumpkin!&nbsp; Never was there a more friendless position
+than that of Ignorance in the witness-box.</p>
+<p><!-- page 275--><a name="page275"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+275</span>&ldquo;Just attend!&rdquo; repeated Mr. Nimble; this
+was a favourite expression of his.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How may aliases have you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ow many who?&rdquo; asked Bumpkin.&nbsp; (Roars of
+laughter.)</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How many different names?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naames! why I s&rsquo;pose I got two, like moast
+people.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How many more?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;None as iver I knowed of.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait a bit, we shall see.&nbsp; Now, sir, will you
+swear you have never gone by the name of Pumpkin?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Loud laughter, in which the learned judge tried not to
+join.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you swear it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord, would you kindly let me see the
+depositions.&nbsp; Now look here, sir, is that your
+signature?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I ain&rsquo;t much of a scollard.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; but you can make a cross, I suppose.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, I can make a cross, or zummut in imitation as well
+as any man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look at that, is that your cross?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It look like un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now then, sir; when you were before the Lord Mayor, I
+ask you, upon your oath, did you not give the name of
+Pumpkin?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Noa, I din&rsquo;t!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was this read over to you, and were you asked if it was
+correct?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It med be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Med be; but wasn&rsquo;t it?&nbsp; You know it was, or,
+don&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 276--><a name="page276"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+276</span>Bumpkin seemed spiked, so silent; seemed on fire, so
+red.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, we know it was so.&nbsp; Now, my lord, I call
+your lordship&rsquo;s attention to this remarkable fact; here in
+the depositions he calls himself Pumpkin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His lordship looks carefully at the depositions and says that
+certainly is so.</p>
+<p>Mr. Newboy rises and says he understands that it may be a
+mistake of the clerk&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>Judge: &ldquo;How can you say that, Mr. Newboy, when
+it&rsquo;s in his affidavit?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>(Clerk of Arraigns whispers to his lordship.)&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+mean in his depositions, as I am told they are called in this
+Court; these are read over to him by the clerk, and he is asked
+if they are correct.&rdquo;&nbsp; Shakes his head.</p>
+<p>(So they began to try the prisoner, not so much on the merits
+of the case as on the merits of the magistrate&rsquo;s
+clerk.)</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You certainly said your name was Pumpkin,&rdquo; said
+the Judge, &ldquo;and what is more you swore to it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>(&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve got the round square at work,&rdquo;
+muttered a voice in the gallery.)</p>
+<p>Mr. Nimble: &ldquo;Now just attend; have you ever gone so far
+as to say that this case did not refer to you because your name
+was not Bumpkin?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The witness hesitates, then says &ldquo;he b&rsquo;leeves
+not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let those two gentlemen, Mr. Crackcrib and Mr.
+Centrebit, step forward.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was a bustle in Court, and then, with grinning faces, up
+stepped the two men who had visited Mr. Bumpkin at the
+&ldquo;Goose&rdquo; some days before.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you ever seen these gentlemen before?&rdquo; asks
+the learned counsel.</p>
+<p>The gentlemen alluded to looked up as if they had <!-- page
+277--><a name="page277"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+277</span>practised it together, and both grinned.&nbsp; How can
+Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s confusion be described?&nbsp; His under jaw
+fell, and his head drooped; he was like one caught in a net
+looking at the fowler.</p>
+<p>The question was repeated, and Mr. Bumpkin wiped his face and
+returned his handkerchief into the depths of his hat, into which
+he would have liked to plunge also.</p>
+<p>Question repeated in a tone that conveyed the impression that
+witness was one of the biggest scoundrels in the Heart of
+Civilization.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You must really answer,&rdquo; says the Judge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They be put on, your lordship.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; says the counsel, &ldquo;you
+mustn&rsquo;t say that, I&rsquo;ll have an answer.&nbsp; Have you
+seen them before?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; muttered the prosecutor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let them go out of Court.&nbsp; Now then,&rdquo; says
+the counsel, extending his right hand and his forefinger and
+leaning towards the witness,
+&ldquo;have&mdash;you&mdash;not&mdash;told&mdash;them&mdash;that&mdash;this
+case was nothing to do with you as your name wasn&rsquo;t
+Bumpkin?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; says the witness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no; you must answer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The witness stood confounded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You decline to answer,&rdquo; says the counsel.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Very well; now then, let me see if you will decline to
+answer this.&nbsp; When you were robbed, as you say, was anybody
+with you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be I obligated to answer, my lord?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think you must answer,&rdquo; said his lordship.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There wur.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who was it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A companion, I s&rsquo;poase.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, but who was he? what was his name?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 278--><a name="page278"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+278</span>No answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d rather not answer; very well.&nbsp; Where
+does he live?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I doant know.&nbsp; Westmunster, I believe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is he here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not as I knows on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>(&ldquo;What a lark this is,&rdquo; chuckled the Don, as he
+sat in the corner of the gallery peeping from behind the front
+row.)</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did he see the watch taken?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He did, leastways I s&rsquo;poase so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And has never appeared as a witness?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How is that?&rdquo; asks his lordship.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He axed me, m&rsquo;lud, not to say as &rsquo;ow he wur
+in it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Judge shakes his head.&nbsp; Counsel for the prisoner shakes
+his head at the jury, and the jury shake their heads at one
+another.</p>
+<p>Now in the front row of the gallery sat five young men in the
+undress uniform of the hussars: they were Joe and his brother
+recruits come to hear the famous trial.&nbsp; At this moment Mr.
+Bumpkin in sheer despair lifted his eyes in the direction of the
+gallery and immediately caught sight of his old servant.&nbsp; He
+gave a nod of recognition as if he were the only friend left in
+the wide world of that Court of Justice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind your friends in the gallery,&rdquo; said Mr.
+Nimble; &ldquo;I dare say you have plenty of them about; now
+attend to this question:&rdquo;&mdash;Yes, and a nice question it
+was, considering the tone and manner with which it was
+asked.&nbsp; &ldquo;At the moment when you were being robbed, as
+you say, did a young woman with a baby in her arms come
+up?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The witness&rsquo;s attention was again distracted, but this
+<!-- page 279--><a name="page279"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+279</span>time by no such pleasing object as on the former
+occasion.&nbsp; He was dumbfoundered; a sparrow facing an owl
+could hardly be in a greater state of nervousness and
+discomfiture: for down in the well of the Court, a place where he
+had never once cast his eyes till now, with a broad grin on his
+coarse features, and a look of malignant triumph, sat the
+<i>fiendlike Snooks</i>!&nbsp; His mouth was wide open, and
+Bumpkin found himself looking down into it as though it had been
+a saw-pit.&nbsp; By his side sat Locust taking notes of the
+cross-examination.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What are you looking at, Mr. Bumpkin?&rdquo; inquired
+the learned counsel.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin started.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What are you looking at?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wur lookin&rsquo; doun thic there hole in thic
+feller&rsquo;s head,&rdquo; answered Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>Such a roar of laughter followed this speech as is seldom
+heard even in a breach of promise case, where the most touching
+pathos often causes the greatest amusement to the audience.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What a lark!&rdquo; said Harry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As good as a play,&rdquo; responded Dick.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I be sorry for the old chap,&rdquo; said Joe;
+&ldquo;they be givin&rsquo; it to un pooty stiff.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now attend,&rdquo; said the counsel, &ldquo;and never
+mind the hole.&nbsp; Did a young woman with a baby come
+up?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To the best o&rsquo; my b&rsquo;leef.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say to the best of your belief; did she or
+not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He can only speak to the best of his belief,&rdquo;
+said the Judge.</p>
+<p>(&ldquo;There&rsquo;s the round square,&rdquo; whispered
+O&rsquo;Rapley.)</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did she come up then to the best of your
+belief?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 280--><a name="page280"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+280</span>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And&mdash;did&mdash;she&mdash;accuse&mdash;you&mdash;to
+the best of your belief of assaulting her?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I be a married man,&rdquo; answered the witness.&nbsp;
+(Great laughter.)</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, we know all about you; we&rsquo;ll see who you are
+presently.&nbsp; Did she accuse you, and did you run
+away?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I runned arter thic feller.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no; did she accuse you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She might.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The learned counsel then sat down with the quickest motion
+imaginable, and then the policeman gave his evidence as to taking
+the man into custody; and produced the huge watch.&nbsp; Mr.
+Bumpkin was recalled and asked how long he had had it, and where
+he bought it; the only answers to which were that he had had it
+five years, and bought it of a man in the market; did not know
+who he was or where he came from; all which answers looked very
+black against Mr. Bumpkin.&nbsp; Then the policeman was asked to
+answer this question&mdash;yes or no.&nbsp; &ldquo;Did he know
+the prisoner?&rdquo;&nbsp; He said &ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Nimble said to the jury, &ldquo;Here was a man dressing
+himself up as an old man from the country (laughter) prowling
+about the streets of London in company with an associate whose
+name he dared not mention, and who probably was well-known to the
+police; here was this countryman actually accused of committing
+an assault in the public streets on a young woman with a baby in
+her arms: he runs away as hard as his legs will carry him and
+meets a man who is actually wearing the watch that this Bumpkin
+or Pumpkin charges him with stealing.&nbsp; He, the learned
+counsel, would call witness after witness <!-- page 281--><a
+name="page281"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 281</span>to speak to
+the character of his client, who was an engraver (I believe he
+was an engraver of bank notes); he would call witness after
+witness who would tell them how long they had known him, and how
+long he had had the watch; and, curiously enough, such curious
+things did sometimes almost providentially take place in a Court
+of Justice, he would call the very man that poor Mr. Simpleman
+had purchased it of five years ago, when he was almost, as you
+might say, in the first happy blush of boyhood (that &lsquo;blush
+of boyhood&rsquo; went down with many of the jury who were fond
+of pathos); let the jury only fancy! but really would it be
+safe&mdash;really would it be safe, let him ask them upon their
+consciences, which in after life, perhaps years to come, when
+their heads were on their pillows, and their hands upon their
+hearts, (here several of the jury audibly sniffed), would those
+consciences upbraid, or would those consciences approve them for
+their work to-day? would it be safe to convict after the
+exhibition the prosecutor had made of himself in that box, where,
+he ventured to say, Bumpkin stood self-condemned before that
+intelligent jury.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here the intelligent jury turned towards one another, and
+after a moment or two announced, through their foreman (who was a
+general-dealer in old metal, in a dark street over the water),
+that if they heard a witness or two to the young man&rsquo;s
+character that would be enough for them.</p>
+<p>Witnesses, therefore, were called to character, and the young
+man was promptly acquitted, the jury appending to their verdict
+that he left the Court without a stain upon his character.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bean&rsquo;t I &rsquo;lowed to call witnesses to
+charickter?&rdquo; asks the Prosecutor.</p>
+<p><!-- page 282--><a name="page282"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+282</span>&ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; replied Mr. Nimble; &ldquo;we
+know your character pretty well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that?&rdquo; inquired the Judge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He wants to know, my lord,&rdquo; says Mr. Nimble,
+laughing, &ldquo;if he may call witnesses to
+character!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh dear, no,&rdquo; says the Judge; &ldquo;you were not
+being tried.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now many persons might have been of a different opinion from
+his lordship on this point.&nbsp; Snooks for one, I think; for he
+gave a great loud vulgar haw! haw! haw! and said, &ldquo;I could
+ha&rsquo; gien him a charakter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Si-lence!&rdquo; said the Usher.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;May the prisoner have his watch, my lord?&rdquo; asks
+Mr. Nimble.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, yes,&rdquo; said his lordship, &ldquo;to be
+sure.&nbsp; Give the prisoner his watch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>His</i> watch,&rdquo; groaned a voice.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 283--><a name="page283"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 283</span>CHAPTER XXX.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Mr. Alibi is stricken with a
+thunderbolt&mdash;interview with Horatio and Mr. Prigg.</p>
+<p>The &ldquo;round square,&rdquo; as the facetious Don called
+the new style of putting the round judicial pegs into the square
+judicial holes, had indeed been applied with great effect on this
+occasion; for I perceived that Mr. Alibi, remarkable man, was not
+only engaged on the part of the Crown to prosecute, but also on
+that of the prisoner to defend.&nbsp; And this fact came to my
+knowledge in the manner following:</p>
+<p>When Mr. Bumpkin got into the lower part of that magnificent
+pile of buildings which we have agreed to call the Heart of
+Civilisation, he soon became the centre of a dirty mob of
+undersized beings who were anxious to obtain a sight of him; and
+many of whom were waiting to congratulate their friend, the
+engraver.&nbsp; Amidst the crowd was Mr. Alibi.&nbsp; That
+gentleman had no intention of meeting Mr. Bumpkin any more, for
+certain expenses were due to him as a witness, and it had long
+been a custom at the Old Bailey, that if the representative of
+the Crown did not see the witnesses the expenses due to them
+would fall into the Consolidated Fund, so that it was a clear
+gain to the State if its representative officers did not meet the
+witnesses.&nbsp; On this occasion, however, Mr. Alibi ran against
+his client <!-- page 284--><a name="page284"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 284</span>accidentally, and being a courteous
+gentleman, could not forbear condoling with him on the
+unsuccessful termination of his case.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You, see,&rdquo; began Mr. Alibi, &ldquo;I was
+instructed so late&mdash;really, the wonder is, when gentlemen
+don&rsquo;t employ a solicitor till the last moment, how we ever
+lay hold of the facts at all.&nbsp; Now look at your case,
+sir.&nbsp; Yes, yes, I&rsquo;m coming&mdash;bother my clerks, how
+they worry&mdash;I&rsquo;ll be there directly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But thic feller,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin, &ldquo;who
+had my case din&rsquo;t know nowt about it.&nbsp; I could
+ha&rsquo; done un better mysel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, sir; so we are all apt to think.&nbsp; He&rsquo;s a
+most clever man, that&mdash;a very rising man, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be he?&rdquo; said Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, do you know, sir,&rdquo; continued Mr. Alibi,
+&ldquo;he was very great at his University.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That bean&rsquo;t everything, though, by a long
+way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir, granted, granted.&nbsp; But he was Number Four
+in his boat; and the papers all said his feathering was
+beautiful.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A good boatman, wur he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Magnificent, sir; magnificent!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then he&rsquo;d better keep a ferry; bean&rsquo;t no
+good at law.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! I am afraid you are a little prejudiced.&nbsp;
+He&rsquo;s a very learned man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish he&rsquo;d larned to open his mouth.&nbsp; Why,
+I got a duck can quack a devilish sight better un thic feller can
+talk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha, how d&rsquo;ye do, Mr. Swindle?&rdquo; said a
+shabby-looking gentleman, who came up at this moment.</p>
+<p><!-- page 285--><a name="page285"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+285</span>&ldquo;Excuse me, sir; but you have the advantage of
+me,&rdquo; said Alibi, winking.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear me, how very strange, I thought you were Mr.
+Wideawake&rsquo;s representative.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Mr. Alibi, laughing, &ldquo;we are
+often taken for brothers&mdash;and yet, would you believe me,
+there is no relationship.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No?&rdquo; said the gentleman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;None, whatever.&nbsp; I think you&rsquo;ll find him in
+the Second Court, if not, he&rsquo;ll be there in a short
+time.&nbsp; I saw him only just now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That is how I learned that Mr. Alibi represented the Crown and
+Mr. Deadandgone for the prosecutor; also the prisoner, and Mr.
+Wideawake for the defence.&nbsp; Clever man!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin, &ldquo;Can&rsquo;t un get
+a new trial?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I fear not,&rdquo; said Alibi; &ldquo;but I should not
+be in the least surprised if that Wideawake, who represented the
+prisoner, brought an action against you for false imprisonment
+and malicious prosecution.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, thic thief?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, sir&mdash;law is a very deep pit&mdash;it&rsquo;s
+depth is not to be measured by any moral plummet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Doan&rsquo;t &rsquo;zacly zee&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s this,&rdquo; said Mr. Alibi.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Whether you&rsquo;re right or whether you&rsquo;re wrong,
+if he brings an action you must defend it&mdash;it&rsquo;s not
+your being in the right will save you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then, what wool?&rdquo; asked Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>Mr. Alibi did not know, unless it was instructing him in due
+time and not leaving it to the last moment.&nbsp; That seemed the
+only safe course.</p>
+<p><!-- page 286--><a name="page286"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+286</span>Mr. Bumpkin took off his hat, drew out his
+handkerchief, and wiped the perspiration from his forehead.&nbsp;
+Then he breathed heavily.&nbsp; Now at this moment a strange
+phenomenon occurred, not to be passed over in this truthful
+history.&nbsp; Past Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s ear something shot, in
+appearance like a human fist, in velocity like a thunderbolt, and
+unfortunately it alighted full on the nose and eye of the great
+Mr. Alibi, causing that gentleman to reel back into the arms of
+the faithful thieves around.&nbsp; I cannot tell from what
+quarter it proceeded, it was so sudden, but I saw that in the
+neighbourhood whence it came stood five tall hussars, and I heard
+a voice say:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, look at that.&nbsp; Come on, Maister, don&rsquo;t
+let us git into no row.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin, with the politeness of his nature, said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good marnin&rsquo;, sir,&rdquo; and retired.</p>
+<p>And thus thought the unfortunate prosecutor: &ldquo;This
+&rsquo;ere country be all law, actions grows out o&rsquo;
+actions, like that &rsquo;ere cooch that runs all over
+everywhere&rsquo;s.&rdquo;&nbsp; And then he saw the five
+recruits strutting along with their caps at the side of their
+heads, the straps across their chins, their riding-whips under
+their arms, and walking with such a swagger that one would have
+thought they had just put down a rebellion, or set up a
+throne.</p>
+<p>It was some time before, in the confusion of his mind, the
+disappointed Bumpkin could realize the fact that there was any
+connection between him and the military.&nbsp; But as he looked,
+with half-closed eyes, suddenly the thought crossed his mind:
+&ldquo;Why, that be like our Joe&mdash;that middle un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And so it was: they were walking at a fastish pace, and as
+they strutted along Joe seemed to be marching <!-- page 287--><a
+name="page287"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 287</span>away with
+the whole farm and with all the pleasures of his past life.&nbsp;
+Even Mrs. Bumpkin herself, in some extraordinary manner, seemed
+to be eloping with him.&nbsp; Why was it?&nbsp; And now,
+despondent, disappointed and humiliated, with his blood once more
+up, poor old Bumpkin bethought himself seriously of his
+position.&nbsp; For weeks he had been waiting for his case to
+&ldquo;come on&rdquo;; weeks more might pass idly away unless he
+made a stir.&nbsp; So he would call at the office of Mr.
+Prigg.&nbsp; And being an artful man, he had a reason for calling
+without further delay.&nbsp; It was this: his desire to see Prigg
+before that gentleman should hear of his defeat.&nbsp; Prigg
+would certainly blame him for not employing a solicitor, or going
+to the Public Prosecutor.&nbsp; So to Prigg&rsquo;s he went about
+three o&rsquo;clock on that Thursday afternoon.&nbsp; I do not
+undertake to describe furniture, so I say nothing of
+Prigg&rsquo;s dingy office, except this, that if Prigg had been a
+spider, it was just the sort of corner in which I should have
+expected him to spin his web.&nbsp; Being a man of enormous
+practice, and in all probability having some fifty to sixty
+representatives of county families to confer with, two hours
+elapsed before Mr. Bumpkin could be introduced.&nbsp; The place,
+small as it was, was filled with tin boxes bearing, no doubt,
+eminent names.&nbsp; Horatio was busy copying drafts of marriage
+settlements, conveyances, and other matters of great
+importance.&nbsp; He had little time for gossip because his work
+seemed urgent, and although he was particularly glad to see Mr.
+Bumpkin, yet being a lad of strict adherence to duty, he always
+replied courteously, but in the smallest number of words to that
+gentleman&rsquo;s questions.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will ur be long?&rdquo; asked the client; &ldquo;I
+don&rsquo;t think so,&rdquo; said Horatio.</p>
+<p><!-- page 288--><a name="page288"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+288</span>Then in a whisper, asked Mr. Bumpkin, &ldquo;How does
+thee think, sir, we shall get on: win, shan&rsquo;t
+us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Horatio just raised his face from the paper and winked, as
+though he were conveying a valuable secret.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have ur heard anythink, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Another artful wink.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee know&rsquo;s zummat, I knows thee do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Another artful wink.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee can tell I, surely?&nbsp; I wunt let un goo no
+furder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Horatio winked once more, and made a face at the door where
+the great Prigg was supposed to be.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ain&rsquo;t give in, ave ur?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Horatio put his finger in his mouth and made a popping noise
+as he pulled it out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What the devil does thee mean, lad? there be zummat up,
+I&rsquo;ll swear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush! hush!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, look here,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, taking out his
+purse; &ldquo;thee beest a good chap, and writ out thic brief,
+didn&rsquo;t thee?&nbsp; I got zummat for thee;&rdquo; and
+hereupon he handed Horatio half-a-crown.</p>
+<p>The youth took the money, spun it into the air, caught it in
+the palm of his hand, spat on it for good luck, and put it in his
+pocket</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have a spree with that,&rdquo; said he,
+&ldquo;if I never do again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be careful, lad,&rdquo; said Bumpkin,
+&ldquo;don&rsquo;t fool un away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not I,&rdquo; said Horatio; &ldquo;I&rsquo;m on for the
+Argille tonight, please the pigs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be thic a place o&rsquo; wusship&rdquo; said Bumpkin,
+laughing.</p>
+<p><!-- page 289--><a name="page289"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+289</span>&ldquo;Not exactly,&rdquo; answered Horatio;
+&ldquo;it&rsquo;s a place where you can just do the gentleman on
+the cheap, shoulder it with noblemen&rsquo;s sons, and some of
+the highest.&nbsp; Would you like to go now, just for a
+lark?&nbsp; I&rsquo;m sure you&rsquo;d like it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not I,&rdquo; said the client; &ldquo;this &rsquo;ere
+Lunnun life doan&rsquo;t do for I.&rsquo;.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; but this is a nice quiet sort of place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gals, I spoase.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rather; I believe you my boy; stunners too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee be too young, it&rsquo;s my thinking.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, that&rsquo;s what the Governor says; everybody
+says I&rsquo;m too young; but I hope to mend that fault, Master
+Bumpkin, if I don&rsquo;t get the better of any other.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish I wur as old in the &rsquo;ead; but tell I, lad,
+hast thee &rsquo;eard anything?&nbsp; Thee might just as well
+tell I; it wunt goo no furder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Horatio put his finger to his nose and made a number of dumb
+signs, expressive of more than mere words could convey.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Danged if I can mak&rsquo; thee out,&rdquo; said
+Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You recollect that ride we had in the gig.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha, now it&rsquo;s coming,&rdquo; thought he; &ldquo;I
+shall have un now,&rdquo; so he answered: &ldquo;Well, it wur
+nice, wurn&rsquo;t ur?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never enjoyed myself more in my life,&rdquo; rejoined
+Horatio; &ldquo;what a nice morning it was!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beautiful!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And do you recollect the rum and milk?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin remembered it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I believe that rum and milk was the luckiest
+investment you ever made.&nbsp; Hallo! there&rsquo;s the
+bell&mdash;hush, <i>mither woy</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 290--><a name="page290"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+290</span>&ldquo;Dang thee!&rdquo; said Bumpkin,
+&ldquo;thee&rsquo;s got un;&rdquo; and he followed the youthful
+clerk into Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s room.</p>
+<p>There sat that distinguished lawyer with his respectable head,
+in his easy chair, much worn, both himself and the chair, by
+constant use.&nbsp; There sat the good creature ready to offer
+himself up on the altar of Benevolence for the good of the first
+comer.&nbsp; His collar was still unruffled, so was his temper,
+notwithstanding the severe strain of the county families.&nbsp;
+There was his clear complexion indicating the continued health
+resulting from a well-spent life.&nbsp; His almost angelic
+features were beautiful rather in the amiability of their
+expression than in their loveliness of form.&nbsp; Anyone looking
+at him for the first time must exclaim, &ldquo;Dear me, what a
+<i>nice</i> man!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Mr. Bumpkin,&rdquo; said he, extending his left
+hand lazily as though it were the last effort of exhausted
+humanity, &ldquo;how are we now?&rdquo;&mdash;always identifying
+himself with Bumpkin, as though he should say &ldquo;We are in
+the same boat, brother; come what may, we sink or swim
+together&mdash;how are we now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bean&rsquo;t wery well,&rdquo; answered Mr. Bumpkin,
+&ldquo;I can tell &rsquo;ee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter? dear me, why, what&rsquo;s the
+matter?&nbsp; We must be cool, you know.&nbsp; Nothing like
+coolness, if we are to win our battle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lookee &rsquo;ere,&rdquo; said Bumpkin; &ldquo;lookee
+&rsquo;ere, sir; I bin here dordlin&rsquo; about off an&rsquo; on
+six weeks, and this &rsquo;ere dam trial&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sh&mdash;sh!&rdquo; remonstrated Mr. Prigg with the
+softest voice, and just lifting his left hand on a level with his
+forehead.&nbsp; &ldquo;Let us learn resignation, good Mr.
+Bumpkin.&nbsp; Let us learn it at the feet of disappointment and
+losses and crosses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 291--><a name="page291"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+291</span>&ldquo;Yes, yes,&rdquo; said Bumpkin; &ldquo;but thic
+larnin&rsquo; be spensive, I be payin&rsquo; for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Bumpkin,&rdquo; said the good man sternly,
+&ldquo;the dispensations of Providence are not to be denounced in
+this way.&nbsp; You are a man, Bumpkin; let us act, then, the
+man&rsquo;s part.&nbsp; You see these boxes, these names: they
+represent men who have gone through the furnace; let us be
+patient.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I be sick on it.&nbsp; I wish I&rsquo;d never
+know&rsquo;d what law wur.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, sir, most of us would like to exist in that state
+of wild and uncultured freedom which only savages and beasts are
+permitted to enjoy; but life has higher aims, Mr. Bumpkin;
+grander pursuits; more sublime duties.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sir, I bean&rsquo;t no schollard and so
+can&rsquo;t argify; but if thee plase to tell I, sir, when this
+case o&rsquo; mine be likely to come on&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was just that minute going to write to you, Mr.
+Bumpkin, as your name was announced, to say that it would not be
+taken until next term.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin uttered an exclamation which is not for print, and
+which caused the good Prigg to clap his hands to his ears and
+press them tightly for five minutes.&nbsp; Then he took them away
+and rubbed them together (I mean his hands), as though he were
+washing them from the contaminating influence of Mr.
+Bumpkin&rsquo;s language.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so,&rdquo; he said, mechanically; &ldquo;dear
+me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What be quite so,&rdquo; asked Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes&mdash;yes&mdash;you see,&rdquo; said Prigg,
+&ldquo;Her Majesty&rsquo;s Judges have to go circuit; or, as it
+is technically called, jail delivery.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They be allays gwine suckitt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 292--><a name="page292"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+292</span>&ldquo;Quite so.&nbsp; That is precisely what the
+profession is always observing.&nbsp; No sooner do they return
+from one circuit than they start off on another.&nbsp; Are you
+aware, Mr. Bumpkin, that we pay a judge five thousand a-year to
+try a pickpocket?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hem!&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;I bean&rsquo;t aware
+on it.&nbsp; Never used t&rsquo; have so many o&rsquo; these
+&rsquo;ere&mdash;what d&rsquo;ye call &rsquo;ems?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Circuits.&nbsp; No&mdash;but you see, here now is an
+instance.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s a prisoner away somewhere, I think
+down at Bodmin, hundreds of miles off, and I believe he has sent
+to say that they must come down and try him at once, for he
+can&rsquo;t wait.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d mak&rsquo; un wait.&nbsp; Why should honest
+men wait for sich as he?&nbsp; I bin waitin&rsquo; long
+enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so.&nbsp; And the consequence is that the Lord
+Chief Justice of England is going down to try him, a common
+pickpocket, I believe, and his Lordship is the very head of the
+Judicial Body.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hem!&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin; &ldquo;then I may as well
+goo hoame?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so,&rdquo; answered the amiable Prigg; &ldquo;in
+fact, better&mdash;much better.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An&rsquo; we shan&rsquo;t come on now, sir;
+bean&rsquo;t there no chance?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not the least, my dear sir; but you see we have not
+been idle; we have been advancing, in fact, during the whole time
+that has seemed to you so long.&nbsp; Now, just look, my dear
+sir; we have fought no less than ten appeals, right up, mind you,
+to the Court of Appeal itself; we have fought two demurrers; we
+have compelled them three times to give better answers to our
+interrogatories, and we have had fourteen other <!-- page
+293--><a name="page293"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+293</span>summonses at Chambers on which they have not thought
+proper to appeal beyond the Judge.&nbsp; Now, Mr. Bumpkin, after
+that, I <i>think</i> you ought to be satisfied; but really that
+is one of the most disparaging things in the profession, the most
+disparaging, I may say; we find it so difficult to show our
+clients that we have done enough for them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An&rsquo; thee think, sir, as we shall win un?&rdquo;
+said Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg, &ldquo;I never like to
+prophesy; but if ever a case looked like winning it&rsquo;s
+<i>Bumpkin</i> v. <i>Snooks</i>.&nbsp; And I may tell you this,
+Mr. Bumpkin, only pray don&rsquo;t say that I told
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What be thic, sir?&rdquo; asked the eager client, with
+his eyes open as widely as ever client&rsquo;s can be.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The other side are in a tre-<i>men</i>-dous
+way!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, funkin&rsquo;, be um?&nbsp; I said so.&nbsp; That
+there Snooks be a rank bad un&mdash;now, then, we&rsquo;ll at un
+like steam.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All in good time, Bumpkin,&rdquo; said the worthy
+Prigg, affectionately taking his client&rsquo;s hand.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;All in good time.&nbsp; My kind regards to Mrs.
+Bumpkin.&nbsp; I suppose you return to-night?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, sir, I be off by the fust train.&nbsp; Good day
+t&rsquo; ye, sir; good day and thankee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus comforted and thus grateful did the confiding client take
+leave of his legal adviser, who immediately took down his
+costs-book and booked a long conference, including the two hours
+that Mr. Bumpkin was kept in the &ldquo;outer
+office.&rdquo;&nbsp; This followed immediately after another
+&ldquo;long conference with you when you thought we should be in
+the paper to-morrow from what a certain Mr. O&rsquo;Rapley had
+told you, and I thought we should not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 294--><a name="page294"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+294</span>As he passed through the &ldquo;outer office&rdquo; he
+shook.&nbsp; Horatio by the hand.&nbsp; &ldquo;Good-bye,
+sir.&nbsp; I knows what it wur now&mdash;bean&rsquo;t
+comin&rsquo; on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say I told you,&rdquo; said the pale boy,
+as though he were afraid of communicating some tremendous
+secret.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Noa, thee bean&rsquo;t told I.&nbsp; Now, lookee
+&rsquo;ere, Mr. Jigger, come down when thee like; I shall be rare
+and prood to see thee, and so&rsquo;ll Missus.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thanks,&rdquo; said Horatio; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be sure
+and come.&nbsp; <i>Mither woy</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha! mither woy, lad! that&rsquo;s ur; thee got
+un.&nbsp; Good-bye.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><!-- page 295--><a name="page295"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 295</span>CHAPTER XXXI.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Mr. Bumpkin at home again.</p>
+<p>How peaceful the farm seemed after all the turmoil and worry
+that Farmer Bumpkin had been subjected to in London!&nbsp; What a
+haven of rest is a peaceful Home!&nbsp; How the ducks seemed to
+quack!&mdash;louder, as Mr. Bumpkin thought, than they ever did
+before.&nbsp; The little flock of sheep looked up as he went,
+with his old ash stick under his arm, to look round the
+farm.&nbsp; They seemed to say to one another, &ldquo;Why,
+here&rsquo;s Master; I told you he&rsquo;d come
+back.&rdquo;&nbsp; And the cows turned their heads and bellowed a
+loud welcome.&nbsp; They knew nothing of his troubles, and only
+expressed their extreme pleasure at seeing him again.&nbsp; They
+left off eating the whole time he was with them; for they were
+very well bred Shorthorns and Alderneys.&nbsp; It was quite
+pleasant to see how well behaved they all were.&nbsp; And Mrs.
+Bumpkin pointed out which ones had calved and which were expected
+to calve in the course of a few months.&nbsp; And then the
+majestic bull looked up with an expression of immense delight;
+came up to Mr. Bumpkin and put his nose in his master&rsquo;s
+hand, and gazed as only a bull would gaze on a farmer who had
+spent several weeks in London.&nbsp; It was astonishing with what
+admiration the bull regarded him; and he seemed quite delighted
+as Mrs. Bumpkin told her husband of the bull&rsquo;s good conduct
+in his absence; how he had never broken bounds once, <!-- page
+296--><a name="page296"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+296</span>and had behaved himself as an exemplary bull on all
+occasions.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin, &ldquo;I be
+&rsquo;bliged to say, Tom, that there Mrs. Snooks have belied him
+shamefully.&nbsp; She haven&rsquo;t got a good word to say for
+un; nor, for the matter o&rsquo; that, for anything on the
+farm.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin; &ldquo;he
+bean&rsquo;t the only one as &rsquo;ave been slandered
+hereabouts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Tom, sure enough; but we bean&rsquo;t &rsquo;bliged
+to heed un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, nor wun&rsquo;t.&nbsp; And now here come
+Tim.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To see Tim run and bound and leap and put his paws round Mr.
+Bumpkin&rsquo;s neck and lick him, was a sight which must have
+made up for a great deal of the unkindness which he had
+experienced of late.&nbsp; Nor could any dog say more plainly
+than Tim did, how he had had a row with that ill-natured cur of
+Snooks&rsquo;, called Towser, and how he had driven him off the
+farm and forbade him ever setting foot on it again.&nbsp; Tim
+told all about the snarling of Towser, and said he would not have
+minded his taking Snooks&rsquo; part in the action, if he had
+confined himself to that; but when he went on and barked at Mr.
+Bumpkin&rsquo;s sheep and pigs, against whom he ought to have
+shown no ill-feeling, it was more than Tim could stand; so he
+flew at him and thoroughly well punished him for his malignant
+disposition.</p>
+<p>But in the midst of all this welcoming, there was an
+unpleasant experience, and that was, that all the pigs were gone
+but two.&nbsp; The rare old Chichester sow was no more.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There be only two affidavys left, Nancy!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Tom&mdash;only two; the man fetched two
+yesterday.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 297--><a name="page297"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+297</span>&ldquo;I hope they sold well.&nbsp; Have he sent any
+money yet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not a farthing,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin; &ldquo;nor
+yet for the sheep.&nbsp; He have had six sheep.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Zo I zee; and where be th&rsquo; heifers? we had
+six.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They be all sold, Tom.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And how much did &rsquo;em fetch?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The man ain&rsquo;t brought in the account yet, Tom;
+but I spect we shall have un soon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin, looking at the stackyard,
+&ldquo;another rick be gone!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Tom, it be gone, and fine good hay it wur; it cut
+out as well as any hay I ever zeed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure did ur!&rdquo; answered Tom; &ldquo;it were the
+six ak&rsquo;r o&rsquo; clover, and were got up wirout a drop
+o&rsquo; rain on un; it wur prime hay, thic.&nbsp; Why, I wur
+offered six pun&rsquo; a looad for un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;ow what ur fetched, Tom; but I be mighty
+troubled about this &rsquo;ere lawsuit.&nbsp; I wish we&rsquo;d
+never &rsquo;a had un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Doan&rsquo;t say thic, Nancy; we be bound to bring
+un.&nbsp; As Laryer Prigg say, it bean&rsquo;t so much t&rsquo;
+pig&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Tom, thee said un fust.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, s&rsquo;poase I did&mdash;so ur did, and it
+worn&rsquo;t so much t&rsquo; pig, it wur thic feller&rsquo;s
+cheek.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I don&rsquo;t know nothing about un; I dissay you
+be right, because you&rsquo;ve allays been right, Tom; and
+we&rsquo;ve allays got on well togither these five and thirty
+year: but, some&rsquo;ow, Tom&mdash;down, Tim!&mdash;down,
+Tim!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor old Tim!&rdquo; said Tom.&nbsp; &ldquo;Good
+boy!&nbsp; I wish men wur as good as dogs be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Some&rsquo;ow,&rdquo; continued Mrs. Bumpkin, &ldquo;I
+doan&rsquo;t <!-- page 298--><a name="page298"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 298</span>like that &rsquo;aire Prigg; he seem
+to shake his head too much for I; and &rsquo;olds his &rsquo;at
+up to his face too long in church when ur goes in; and then ur
+shakes his head so much when ur prays.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t like
+un, Tom.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, Nancy, thee knows nothing about un.&nbsp; I can
+tell &rsquo;ee he be a rare good man, and sich a clever lawyer,
+he&rsquo;ll knock that &rsquo;aire Snooks out o&rsquo;
+time.&nbsp; But, come on, let&rsquo;s goo in and &rsquo;ave some
+ta.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So they went in.&nbsp; And a very comfortable tea there was
+set out on the old oak table in front of the large fireplace
+where the dog-irons were.&nbsp; And a bright, blazing log there
+was on the hearth; for a cold east wind was blowing,
+notwithstanding that the sun had shone out bravely in the
+day.&nbsp; Ah! how glad Tom was to see the bright pewter plates
+and dishes ranged in rows all round the homely kitchen!&nbsp;
+They seemed to smile a welcome on the master; and one very large
+family sort of dish seemed to go out of his way to give him
+welcome.&nbsp; I believe he tumbled down in his enthusiasm at
+Tom&rsquo;s return, although it was accounted for by saying that
+Tim had done it by the excessive &ldquo;waggling&rdquo; of his
+tail.&nbsp; I believe that dish fell down in the name of all the
+plates and dishes on the shelves, for the purpose of
+congratulating the master; else why should all their faces
+brighten up so suddenly with smiles as he did so?&nbsp;
+It&rsquo;s ridiculous to suppose plates and dishes have no
+feelings; they&rsquo;ve a great deal more than some people.&nbsp;
+And then, how the great, big, bright copper kettle, suspended on
+his hook, which was in the centre of the huge fireplace, how he
+did sing!&nbsp; Why the nightingale couldn&rsquo;t throw more
+feeling into a song than did that old kettle!&nbsp; And then the
+home-made bread and rashers of bacon, such as you never see out
+of a farmhouse; and tea, such as can&rsquo;t <!-- page 299--><a
+name="page299"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 299</span>be made
+anywhere else!&nbsp; And then the long pipe was brought out of
+his corner, where he had been just as Tom had left it before
+going to town.&nbsp; And the bowl of that pipe gave off circular
+clouds of the bluest smoke, expressive of its joy at the
+master&rsquo;s return: it wasn&rsquo;t very expressive, perhaps,
+but it was all that a pipe could do; and when one does his best
+in this world, it is all that mortal man can expect of him.</p>
+<p>And then said Mrs. Bumpkin,&mdash;still dubious as to the
+policy of the proceedings, but too loving to combat her husband
+upon them,&mdash;&ldquo;When be thee gwine agin, Tom?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I doan&rsquo;t rightly know,&rdquo; said Bumpkin.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Mr. Prigg will let I know; sometime in May, I
+reckon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear, dear!&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin; &ldquo;it may be
+on, then, just as th&rsquo; haymakin&rsquo;s about.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lor, lor! no, dearie; it&rsquo;ll be over long enough
+afore.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Doan&rsquo;t be too sure, Tom; it be a long time now
+since it begun.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Tom, &ldquo;a long time enough; but
+it&rsquo;ll be in th&rsquo; paper afore long now; an&rsquo; we
+got one o&rsquo; the cleverest counsel in Lunnun?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What be his name?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Danged if I know, but it be one o&rsquo; the stunninest
+men o&rsquo; the day; two on &rsquo;em, by Golly; we got two,
+Nancy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who be th&rsquo; tother? p&rsquo;r&rsquo;aps thee med
+mind his name?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Noa, I doan&rsquo;t mind his name nuther.&nbsp; Now,
+what d&rsquo;ye think o&rsquo; thic?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Bumpkin laughed, and said, &ldquo;I think it be a rum
+thing that thee &rsquo;as counsellors and doan&rsquo;t mind their
+names.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 300--><a name="page300"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+300</span>And then the conversation turned upon Joe, whose place
+was vacant in the old chimney corner.</p>
+<p>The tears ran down Mrs. Bumpkin&rsquo;s rosy cheeks as she
+said for the twentieth time since Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s
+return,&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor Joe! why did ur goo for a soger?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He wur a fool!&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;and I told
+un so.&nbsp; So as I warned un about thic Sergeant; the
+artfullest man as ever lived, Nancy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Bumpkin wiped her eyes.&nbsp; &ldquo;He wur a good boy,
+wur Joe, goo where ur wool; but, Tom, couldn&rsquo;t thee
+&rsquo;a&rsquo; kept thine eye on un when thee see thic Sergeant
+hoverin&rsquo; roun&rsquo; like a &rsquo;awk arter a
+sparrer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I did keep eye on un, I tell &rsquo;ee; but what be the
+good o&rsquo; thic; as well keep thee eye on th&rsquo; sparrer
+when th&rsquo; hawk be at un.&nbsp; I tell &rsquo;ee I
+&rsquo;suaded un and warned un, and begged on un to look
+out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An&rsquo; what did ur say?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say, why said ur wur up to un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Up to un,&rdquo; repeated Mrs. Bumpkin.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t think &rsquo;ow ur got &rsquo;old on
+un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, and thee mark I, no more can nobody else&mdash;in
+Lunnon thee&rsquo;re &rsquo;ad afore thee knows where thee
+be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And now Mr. Bumpkin had his &ldquo;little drop of warm gin and
+water before going to bed&rdquo;: and Mrs. Bumpkin had a mug of
+elder wine, for the Christmas elder wine was not quite gone: and
+after that Mrs. Bumpkin, who as the reader knows, was the better
+scholar of the two, took down from a shelf on which the family
+documents and books were kept, a large old bible covered with
+green baize.&nbsp; Then she wiped her glasses, and after turning
+over the old brown leaves until she came to the place where she
+had read last before Tom went away, commenced <!-- page 301--><a
+name="page301"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 301</span>her evening
+task, while her husband smoked on and listened.</p>
+<p>Was it the old tone with which she spelt her way through the
+sacred words?&nbsp; Hardly: here it could be perceived that in
+her secret heart there was doubt and mistrust.&nbsp; Do what she
+would her eyes frequently became so dim that it was necessary to
+pause and wipe her glasses; and when she had finished and closed
+the book, she took Tom&rsquo;s hand and said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, Tom, I hope all &rsquo;ll turn out well, but sure
+enough I ha&rsquo; misgivings.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What be it, my dear?&nbsp; Mr. Prigg say we shall
+win&mdash;how can ur do better &rsquo;an thic?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shall we get back the pigs and sheep, Tom?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Bumpkin looked into her lap, and folding her apron very
+smooth with both hands, answered:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I doan&rsquo;t think, Tom, that man looks like bringing
+anything back.&nbsp; He be very chuffy and masterful, and looks
+all round as he goo away, as though he wur lookin&rsquo; to see
+what ur would take next.&nbsp; I think he&rsquo;ll have un all,
+Tom.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stuff!&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin, &ldquo;he be
+sellin&rsquo; for I, take what ur may.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He be sellin&rsquo; <span class="smcap">thee</span>,
+Tom, I think, and I&rsquo;d stop un from takin&rsquo;
+more.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They rose to go to bed, and as Mrs. Bumpkin looked at the cosy
+old hearth, and put up the embers of the log to make it safe for
+the night, it seemed as if the prosperity of their old home had
+burnt down at last to dull ashes, and she looked sadly at the
+vacant place where Joe had used to sit.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 303--><a name="page303"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 303</span>CHAPTER XXXII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Joe&rsquo;s return to Southwood&mdash;an
+invitation from the Vicar&mdash;what the old oak saw.</p>
+<p>It was a long time after the circumstances mentioned in the
+last chapter.&nbsp; The jails had been &ldquo;delivered&rdquo; of
+their prisoners, and prodigious events had taken place in the
+world; great battles had been fought and won, great laws made for
+the future interpretation of judges, and for the vexation of
+unfortunate suitors.&nbsp; It seemed an age to Mr. Bumpkin since
+his case commenced; and Joe had been in foreign parts and won his
+share of the glory and renown that falls to the lot of privates
+who have helped to achieve victory for the honour and glory of
+their General and the happiness of their country.&nbsp; It was a
+very long time, measured by events, since Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s
+return from town, when on a bright morning towards the end of
+June, a fine sunburnt soldier of Her Majesty&rsquo;s regiment of
+the --- Hussars knocked with the butt-end of his riding whip at
+the old oak door in the old porch of Southwood farm-house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I never! if that there bean&rsquo;t our
+Joe!&rdquo; exclaimed Mrs. Bumpkin, looking out of the window;
+and throwing down the rolling-pin which she had just been using
+in rolling-out the dough for a dumpling&mdash;(Mr. Bumpkin was
+&ldquo;uncommon fond o&rsquo; dumplins&rdquo;)&mdash;&ldquo;well,
+I never!&rdquo; repeated Mrs. Bumpkin, as she opened <!-- page
+304--><a name="page304"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+304</span>the door; &ldquo;who ever would ha&rsquo; thought
+it?&nbsp; Why, how be&rsquo;est thee, Joe?&nbsp; And bless the
+lad, &rsquo;ow thee&rsquo;ve growed!&nbsp; My &rsquo;art alive,
+come along!&nbsp; The master&rsquo;ll be mighty glad to see thee,
+and so be I, sure a ly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And here Mrs. Bumpkin paused to look round him, sticking her
+knuckles in her sides and her elbows in the air as though Joe
+were a piece of handiwork&mdash;a dumpling, say&mdash;which she
+herself had turned out, clothes and all.&nbsp; And then she put
+the corner of her apron to her eye.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Joe, I thought,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;I should
+never see thee agin!&nbsp; Dear, dear, this &rsquo;ere lawsuit be
+the ruin on us, mark my words!&nbsp; But lor, don&rsquo;t say as
+I said so to the master for the world, for he be that wropped up
+in un that nothing goes down night and morning, morning and
+night, but affidavys, and summonses, and counsellors, and
+jussices, and what not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the soldier, slapping his whip on his
+leg as was his custom, &ldquo;you might be sure I should come and
+see yer if they left me a leg to hop with, and I should &rsquo;a
+wrote, but what wi&rsquo; the smoke and what with the cannon
+balls flying about, you haven&rsquo;t got much time to think
+about anything; but I did think this, that if ever I got back to
+Old England, if it was twenty year to come, I&rsquo;d go and see
+the old master and missus and &rsquo;ear &rsquo;ow that lawsuit
+wur going on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that be right, Joe&mdash;I knowed &rsquo;ee would;
+I said as much to master.&nbsp; But &rsquo;ow do thee think
+it&rsquo;ll end? shall us win or lose?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now this was the first time he had ever been called upon to
+give a legal opinion, or rather, an opinion upon a legal matter,
+so he was naturally somewhat put about; <!-- page 305--><a
+name="page305"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 305</span>and looking
+at the rolling-pin and the dough and then at Mrs. Bumpkin,
+said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s like this: a man med win or a man med
+lose, there&rsquo;s no telling about the case; but I be
+dang&rsquo;d well sure o&rsquo; this, missus, he&rsquo;ll lose
+his money: I wish master had chucked her up long agoo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This opinion was not encouraging; and perceiving that the
+subject troubled Mrs. Bumpkin more than she liked to confess, he
+asked a question which was of more immediate importance to
+himself, and that was in reference to Polly Sweetlove.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, thee&rsquo;ll make her look at thee now,
+I&rsquo;ll warrant; thy clothes fit thee as though they growed on
+thee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do she walk with the baker?&rdquo; inquired Joe, with
+trembling accents.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never heeard so, an&rsquo; it&rsquo;s my belief she
+never looked at un wi&rsquo; any meaning.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve seen
+her many a time comin&rsquo; down the Green Lane by herself and
+peepin&rsquo; over th&rsquo; gate.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now look at that!&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;and when I
+was here I couldn&rsquo;t get Polly to come near the
+farm&mdash;allays some excuse&mdash;did you ever speak to her
+about me, missus?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I ain&rsquo;t going to tell tales out of school, Joe,
+so there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now look at that,&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;here&rsquo;s
+a chap comes all this way and you won&rsquo;t tell him
+anything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Bumpkin laughed, and went on rolling the dough, and told
+him what a nice dumpling she was making, and how he would like
+it, and asked how long he was going to stop, and hoped it would
+be a month, and was telling him all about the sheep and the cows
+<!-- page 306--><a name="page306"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+306</span>and the good behaviour of the bull, when suddenly she
+said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here he be, Joe! lor, lor, how glad he&rsquo;ll be to
+see thee!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But it wasn&rsquo;t the Bull that stepped into the room; it
+was Mr. Bumpkin, rosy, stalwart, jolly, and artful as ever.&nbsp;
+Now Mrs. Bumpkin was very anxious to be the bearer of such good
+intelligence as Joe&rsquo;s arrival, so, notwithstanding the fact
+that Mr. Bumpkin and he were face to face, the eager woman
+exclaimed:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here be our Joe, Tom, hearty and well.&nbsp; And
+bean&rsquo;t he a smart fine feller?&nbsp; What&rsquo;ll Polly
+think of un now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shut up thic chatter,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin,
+laughing.&nbsp; &ldquo;Halloa! why, Joe, egad thee looks like a
+gineral.&nbsp; I&rsquo;d take thee for a kernel at the wery
+least.&nbsp; Why, when did thee come, lad?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just now, master.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That be right, an&rsquo; I be glad to see thee.&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;ll warrant Nancy ain&rsquo;t axed thee t&rsquo; have
+nothun.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, thee be welcome to the &rsquo;ouse if thee can eat
+un, thee knows thic,&rdquo; answered Nancy; &ldquo;but
+dinner&rsquo;ll be ready at twelve, and thee best not spoil
+un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A quart o&rsquo; ale wun&rsquo;t spile un, will un,
+Joe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now look at that,&rdquo; said the soldier.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Thankee, master, but not a quart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, thee hasn&rsquo;t got thee head snicked off yet,
+Joe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, master, if my head had been snicked off I
+couldn&rsquo;t ha&rsquo; bin here.&rdquo;&nbsp; And he laughed a
+loud ha! ha! ha!</p>
+<p>And Mr. Bumpkin laughed a loud haw! haw! haw! at this
+tremendous witticism.&nbsp; It was not much of a <!-- page
+307--><a name="page307"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+307</span>witticism, perhaps, after all, when duly considered,
+but it answered the purpose as well as the very best, and
+produced as much pleasure as the most brilliant <i>repartee</i>,
+in the most fashionable circles.&nbsp; We must take people as
+they are.</p>
+<p>So Joe stayed chattering away till dinner-time, and then,
+referring to the pudding, said he had never tasted anything like
+it in his life; and went on telling the old people all the
+wonders of the campaign: how their regiment just mowed down the
+enemy as he used to cut corn in the harvest-field, and how
+nothing could stand aginst a charge of cavalry; and how they
+liked their officers; and how their General, who warn&rsquo;t
+above up to Joe&rsquo;s shoulder, were a genleman, every inch on
+him, an&rsquo; as brave as any lion you could pick out.&nbsp; And
+so he went on, until Mr. Bumpkin said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An&rsquo; if I had my time over agin I&rsquo;d goo for
+a soger too, Joe,&rdquo; which made Mrs. Bumpkin laugh and ask
+what would become of her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha! ha! ha! look at that!&rdquo; said Joe;
+&ldquo;she&rsquo;s got you there, master.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No she bean&rsquo;t, she&rsquo;d a married thic feller
+that wur so sweet on her afore I had ur.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, Jem?&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin, &ldquo;why I
+wouldn&rsquo;t ha&rsquo; had un, Tom, if every &rsquo;air had
+been hung wi&rsquo; dimonds.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now look at that,&rdquo; laughed Joe.</p>
+<p>And so they went on until it was time to take a turn round the
+farm.&nbsp; Everything seemed startled at Joe&rsquo;s fine
+clothes, especially the bull, who snorted and pawed the earth and
+put out his tail, and placed his head to the ground, until Joe
+called him by name, and then, as he told his comrades afterwards
+in barracks, the bull said:</p>
+<p><!-- page 308--><a name="page308"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+308</span>&ldquo;Why danged if it bean&rsquo;t our
+Joe!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I must confess I did not hear this observation in my dream,
+but I was some distance off, and if Mr. Ricochet, Q.C., in
+cross-examination had said, &ldquo;Will you swear, sir, upon your
+oath that the bull did not use those words?&rdquo; I must have
+been bound to answer, &ldquo;I will not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But presently they met old Tim, the Collie, and there was no
+need for Joe to speak to him.&nbsp; Up he came with a bound and
+caressed his old mate in the most loving manner.</p>
+<p>The Queen&rsquo;s uniform was no disguise to him.</p>
+<p>The next day it was quite a treat to see Joe go through the
+village.&nbsp; Such a swagger he put on that you would have
+thought he was the whole regiment.&nbsp; And when he went by the
+Vicarage, where Polly was housemaid, it was remarkable to see the
+air of indifference which he assumed.&nbsp; Whack went his
+riding-whip on his leg: you could hear it a hundred yards
+off.&nbsp; He didn&rsquo;t seem to care a bit whether she was
+staring at him out of the study window as hard as she could stare
+or not.&nbsp; Two or three times he struck the same leg, and
+marched on perfectly indifferent to all around.</p>
+<p>At length came Sunday, as Sunday only comes in a country
+village.&nbsp; No such peace, no such Sabbath anywhere.&nbsp; You
+have only got to look at anything you like to know that it is
+Sunday.&nbsp; Bill&rsquo;s shirt collar; the milkman; even his
+bright milk-can has a Sunday shine about it.&nbsp; The cows
+standing in the shallow brook have a reverent air about
+them.&nbsp; They never look like that on any other day.&nbsp; Why
+the very sunshine is Sabbath sunshine, and seems to bring more
+peace and more pleasantness than on any other day of the
+week.&nbsp; And <!-- page 309--><a name="page309"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 309</span>all the trees seem to whisper
+together, &ldquo;It&rsquo;s Sunday morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Presently you see the people straggling up to the little
+church, whose donging bell keeps on as much as to say, &ldquo;I
+know I&rsquo;m not much of a peal, but in my humble way I do my
+duty to the best of my ability; it&rsquo;s not the sound but the
+spirit of the thing that is required; and if I&rsquo;m not very
+musical, and can&rsquo;t give you many changes, I&rsquo;m sincere
+in what I say.&rdquo;&nbsp; And this was an emblem of the
+sincerity and the simplicity of the clergyman inside.&nbsp; He
+kept on hammering away at the old truths and performing his part
+in God&rsquo;s great work to the best of his ability; and I know
+with very great success.&nbsp; So in they all came to church; and
+Joe, who had been a very good Sunday-school pupil
+(notwithstanding his love of poaching) and was a favourite with
+the vicar, as the reader knows, took his old place in the free
+seats, not very far from the pew where the vicar&rsquo;s servants
+sat.&nbsp; Who can tell what his feelings were as he wondered
+whether Polly would be there that morning?</p>
+<p>The other servants came in.&nbsp; Ah, dear!&nbsp; Polly
+can&rsquo;t come, now look at that!&nbsp; Just as he was thinking
+this in she came.&nbsp; Such a flutter in her heart as she saw
+the bright uniform and the brighter face, bronzed with a foreign
+clime and looking as handsome as ever a face could look.&nbsp; O
+what a flutter too in Joe&rsquo;s heart!&nbsp; But he was
+determined not to care for her.&nbsp; So he wouldn&rsquo;t look,
+and that was a very good way; and he certainly would have kept
+his word if he could.</p>
+<p>I think if I had to choose where and how I would be admired,
+if ever such a luxury could come to me, I would be Joe Wurzel
+under present circumstances.&nbsp; A young hero, handsome, tall,
+in the uniform of the <!-- page 310--><a name="page310"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 310</span>Hussars, with a loved one near and
+all the village girls fixing their eyes on me!&nbsp; That for
+once only, and my utmost ambition would be gratified.&nbsp; Life
+could have no greater pride for me.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t know
+whether the sermon made much impression that day, but of the two,
+I verily believe Joe made the most; and as they streamed out of
+the little church all the young faces of the congregation were
+turned to him: and everywhere when they got outside it was,
+&ldquo;Halloa, Joe!&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Why, Joe, my lad, what
+cheer?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Dang&rsquo;d if here bean&rsquo;t
+Joe!&rdquo; and other exclamations of welcome and surprise.&nbsp;
+And then, how all the pinafored boys flocked round and gazed with
+wondering eyes at this conquering hero; chattering to one another
+and contradicting one another about what this part of his uniform
+was and what that part was, and so on; but all agreeing that Joe
+was about the finest sight that had come into Yokelton since ever
+it was a place.</p>
+<p>And then the old clergyman sent for him and was as kind as
+ever he could be; and Joe was on the enchanted ground where the
+fairy Polly flitted about as noiselessly as a butterfly.&nbsp;
+Ah, and what&rsquo;s this?&nbsp; Now let not the reader be
+over-anxious; for a few lines I must keep you, gentle one, in
+suspense; a great surprise must be duly prepared.&nbsp; If I told
+you at once what I saw, you would not think so much of it as if I
+kept you a little while in a state of wondering curiosity.&nbsp;
+What do you think happened in the Vicarage?</p>
+<p>Now&rsquo;s the moment to tell it in a fresh paragraph.&nbsp;
+Why in came the fairy with a little tray of cake and wine!&nbsp;
+Now pause on that before I say any more.&nbsp; What about their
+eyes?&nbsp; Did they swim?&nbsp; What about their hearts; did
+they flutter?&nbsp; Did Polly blush?&nbsp; Did Joe&rsquo;s
+bronzed face shine?&nbsp; Ah, it all took place, and <!-- page
+311--><a name="page311"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+311</span>much more than I could tell in a whole volume.&nbsp;
+The vicar did not perceive it, for luckily he was looking out of
+the window.&nbsp; It only took a moment to place the tray on the
+table, and the fairy disappeared.&nbsp; But that moment, not then
+considered as of so much importance, exciting as it was, stamped
+the whole lives of two beings, and who can tell whether or no
+such a moment leaves its impress on Eternity?</p>
+<p>All good and all kind was the old vicar; and how attentively
+he listened with Mrs. Goodheart to the eye-witness of
+England&rsquo;s great deeds!&nbsp; And then&mdash;no, he did not
+give Joe a claptrap maudlin sermon, but treated him as a man
+subject to human frailties, and, only hoped in all his career he
+would remember some of the things he had been taught at the
+Sunday School.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Joe, &ldquo;ay, sir, and the best
+lesson I ever larned, and what have done me most good, be the
+kindness I always had from you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So they parted, and a day or two after, strangely enough, just
+as Joe was walking along by the old Oak that is haunted, and
+which the owls and the ghosts occupy between them, who should
+come down the lane in the opposite direction but Polly
+Sweetlove!&nbsp; Where she came from was the greatest mystery in
+the world!&nbsp; And it was so extraordinary that Joe should meet
+her: and he said so, as soon as he could speak.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now look at that!&nbsp; Whoever would have thought of
+meeting anybody here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Polly hung down her head and blushed.&nbsp; Neither of them
+knew what to say for a long time; for Joe was not a spokesman to
+any extent.&nbsp; At last Polly Sweetlove broke silence and
+murmured in the softest voice, and I should think the very
+sweetest ever heard in this world:</p>
+<p><!-- page 312--><a name="page312"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+312</span>&ldquo;Are you going away soon, Joe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Friday,&rdquo; answered the young Hussar.</p>
+<p>Ah me!&nbsp; This was Wednesday already; to-morrow would be
+Thursday, and the next day Friday!&nbsp; I did not hear this, but
+I give you my word it took place.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you coming to see the Vicar again?&rdquo; asked the
+sweet voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Joe.</p>
+<p>They both looked down at the gnarled roots of the old
+tree&mdash;the roots did stick out a long way, and I suppose
+attracted their attention&mdash;and then Polly just touched the
+big root with her tiny toe.&nbsp; And the point of that tiny toe
+touched Joe&rsquo;s heart too, which seemed to have got into that
+root somehow, and sent a thrill as of an electric shock, only
+much pleasanter, right through his whole body, and even into the
+roots of his hair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When are you coming again?&rdquo; whispered the sweet
+lips.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; said the young soldier;
+&ldquo;perhaps never.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you&rsquo;ll come and see&mdash;your
+mother?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O yes,&rdquo; answered Joe, &ldquo;I shall come and see
+mother; but what&rsquo;s it matter to thee, lassie?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lassie blushed, and Joe thought it a good opportunity to
+take hold of her hand.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t know why, but he did;
+and he was greatly surprised that the hand did not run away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think the Vicar likes you, Joe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do he?&rdquo; and he kept drawing nearer and nearer,
+little by little, until his other hand went clean round Polly
+Sweetlove&rsquo;s waist, and&mdash;well an owl flew out of the
+tree at that moment, and drew off my attention; but afterwards
+<!-- page 313--><a name="page313"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+313</span>I saw that they both kept looking at the root of the
+tree, and then Joe said;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you love th&rsquo; baker, Polly?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; whispered Polly; &ldquo;no, no,
+never!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, look at that!&rdquo; said Joe, recovering himself
+a little; &ldquo;I always thought you liked the baker.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never, Joe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well then, why didn&rsquo;t you look at me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Polly blushed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Joe, they said you was so wild.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, look at that,&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;did you ever
+see me wild, Polly?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never, Joe&mdash;I will say that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, and you can ask my mother or Mrs. Bumpkin, or the
+Vicar, or anybody else you like, Polly&mdash;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall go and see your mother,&rdquo; said Polly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you come to-morrow night?&rdquo; asked Joe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I can get away I will; but I must go
+now&mdash;good-bye&mdash;good-bye&mdash;good&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you in a hurry, Polly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I must go, Joe&mdash;good&mdash;; but I will come
+to-morrow, as soon as dinner is
+over&mdash;good&mdash;good&mdash;good-bye.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And then&mdash;&mdash;,&rdquo; but the Old Oak kept his
+counsel.&nbsp; Here I awoke.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; cried my wife, &ldquo;you have broken off
+abruptly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One can&rsquo;t help it,&rdquo; quoth I, rubbing my
+eyes.&nbsp; &ldquo;I cannot help waking any more than I can help
+going to sleep.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 314--><a name="page314"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+314</span>&ldquo;Well, this would be a very pretty little
+courtship if true.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;if I have described all that
+I saw in my dream, you may depend upon it it is true.&nbsp; But
+when I go to Southwood I will ask the Old Oak, for we are the
+greatest friends imaginable, and he tells me everything.&nbsp; He
+has known me ever since I was a child, and never sees me but he
+enters into conversation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What about?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The past, present, and future&mdash;a very fruitful
+subject of conversation, I assure you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wide enough, certainly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;None too wide for a tree of his standing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ask him, dear, if Joe will marry this Polly
+Sweetlove.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He will not tell me that; he makes a special
+reservation in favour of lovers&rsquo; secrets.&nbsp; They would
+not confide their loves to his keeping so often as they do if he
+betrayed them.&nbsp; No, he&rsquo;s a staunch old fellow in that
+respect, and the consequence is, that for centuries lovers have
+breathed their vows under his protecting branches.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry for that&mdash;I mean I am sorry he
+will not tell you about this young couple, for I should like to
+know if they will marry.&nbsp; Indeed, you must find out somehow,
+for everyone who reads your book will be curious on this
+subject.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, as to whether ploughman Joe will marry Polly the
+housemaid.&nbsp; Had he been the eldest son of the Squire now,
+and she the Vicar&rsquo;s daughter, instead of the
+maid&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would not have been a whit more interesting, for
+love is love, and human nature the same in high and <!-- page
+315--><a name="page315"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+315</span>low degree.&nbsp; But, perhaps, this old tree
+doesn&rsquo;t know anything about future events?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He knows from his long experience of the past what will
+happen if certain conditions are given; he knows, for instance,
+the secret whispers, and the silent tokens exchanged beneath his
+boughs, and from them he knows what will assuredly result if
+things take their ordinary course.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So does anyone, prophet or no prophet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But his process of reasoning, based upon the experience
+of a thousand years, is unerring; he saw William the Conqueror,
+and listened to a council of war held under his branches; he knew
+what would happen if William&rsquo;s projects were successful:
+whether they would be successful was not within his
+knowledge.&nbsp; He was intimately acquainted with Herne&rsquo;s
+Oak at Windsor, and they frequently visited.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Visited! how was that possible?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite possible; trees visit one another just the same
+as human beings&mdash;they hold intercourse by means of the
+wind.&nbsp; For instance, when the wind blows from the
+north-east, Southwood Oak visits at Windsor Park, and when the
+wind is in the opposite direction a return visit is paid.&nbsp;
+There isn&rsquo;t a tree of any position in England but the Old
+Oak of Southwood knows.&nbsp; He is in himself the History of
+England, only he is unlike all other histories, for he speaks the
+truth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He must have witnessed many love scenes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thousands!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell me some?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not now&mdash;besides, I must ask leave.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does he ever tell you anything about
+yourself?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A great deal&mdash;it is our principal topic of
+conversation; <!-- page 316--><a name="page316"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 316</span>but he always begins it, lest my
+modesty should prevent any intercourse on the subject.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What has he said?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A great deal: he has inspired me with hope, even
+instilled into me some ambition: he has tried to impart to me an
+admiration of all that is true, and to awaken a detestation of
+all that is mean and pettifogging.&nbsp; I never look at him but
+I see the symbol of all that is noble, grand and brave: he is the
+emblem of stability, friendship and affection; a monument of
+courage, honesty, and fidelity; he is the type of manly
+independence and self-reliance.&nbsp; I am glad, therefore, that
+under his beautiful branches, and within his protecting presence,
+two young hearts have again met and pledged, as I believe they
+have, their troth, honestly resolving to battle together against
+the storms of life, rooted in stedfast love, and rejoicing in the
+sunshine of the Creator&rsquo;s smiles!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After these observations, which were received with marked
+approval, I again gave myself up to the soft influence of a
+dreamy repose.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 317--><a name="page317"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 317</span>CHAPTER XXXIII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">A consultation as to new lodgings.&mdash;Also
+a consultation with counsel.</p>
+<p>It was a subject of grave discussion between the Bumpkins and
+Joe, as to where would be the best place for the plaintiff to
+lodge on his next visit to London.&nbsp; If he had moved in the
+upper ranks of life, in all probability he would have taken Mrs.
+Bumpkin to his town house: but being only a plain man and a
+farmer, it was necessary to decide upon the most convenient, and
+at the same time, inexpensive locality.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Bumpkin, who, of course, knew all about her
+husband&rsquo;s adventures, was strongly opposed to his returning
+to the Goose.&nbsp; Never had created thing lost so much in her
+estimation by mere association as this domestic bird.&nbsp; Joe
+was a fine soldier, no doubt, but it was the Goose that had taken
+him in.</p>
+<p>Curiously enough, as they were discussing this important
+question, who should come in but honest Lawyer Prigg himself.</p>
+<p>What a blessing that man seemed to be, go where he
+would!&nbsp; Why, he spread an air of hope and cheerfulness over
+this simple household the moment he entered it!&nbsp; But the
+greatest virtue he dispensed was resignation; he had a large
+stock of this on hand.&nbsp; He always preached <!-- page
+318--><a name="page318"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+318</span>it: &ldquo;resignation to the will of
+Providence;&rdquo; resignation to him, Prigg!</p>
+<p>So when he came in with his respectable head, professional
+collar, and virtuous necktie, Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin could not
+choose but rise.&nbsp; Mr. Bumpkin meekly pulled his hair, and
+humbly bowed obeisance as to his benefactor.&nbsp; Mrs. Bumpkin
+curtseyed as to a superior power, whom she could not recognize as
+a benefactor.&nbsp; Joe stood up, and looked as if he
+couldn&rsquo;t quite make out what Mr. Prigg was.&nbsp; He knew
+he worked the Law somehow, and &ldquo;summut like as a man works
+a steam-threshing machine, but how or by what means, was a
+mystery unrevealed to the mind of the simple soldier.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good morning! good morning!&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg,
+after the manner of a patriarch conferring a blessing.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Well, Joe, so you are returned, are you?&nbsp; Come, now,
+let me shake hands with one of our brave heroes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>What condescension! and his tone was the tone of a man
+reaching down from a giddy height to the world beneath him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So you were in the thick of the fight, were
+you&mdash;dear me! what a charge that was!&rdquo;&nbsp; Ah, but,
+dear reader, you should see Prigg&rsquo;s charges!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wur someur about, sir,&rdquo; said Joe.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I dunnow where now though.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg, &ldquo;it was a great
+victory; I&rsquo;m told the enemy ran away directly they heard
+our troops were coming.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now look at that,&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;what a lot of
+lies do get about sure-ly!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear me!&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg; &ldquo;but you beat
+them, did you not? we won the battle?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 319--><a name="page319"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+319</span>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s right enough,&rdquo; said Joe;
+&ldquo;but if they&rsquo;d run away we couldn&rsquo;t a beat
+un&mdash;&rsquo;tain&rsquo;t much of a fight when there&rsquo;s
+no enemy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Haw, haw, haw!&rdquo; laughed Bumpkin.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;That be good, Mr. Prigg, that be good!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very good, very good, indeed,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg;
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t wonder at your winning if you could make
+such sallies as that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And that was good for Mr. Prigg.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;to
+business&mdash;business, eh?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We be jist gwine to &rsquo;ave a nice piece o&rsquo;
+pork and greens, Mr. Prigg, would ee please to tak some,&rdquo;
+said Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear me!&rdquo; answered Prigg; &ldquo;how very
+strange, my favourite dish&mdash;if ever Mrs. Prigg is in doubt
+about&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It be wery plain,&rdquo; said Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The plainer the better, my dear sir; as I always say to
+my servants, if you&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin; &ldquo;I be
+&rsquo;ardly fit to wait on a gennleman like you.&nbsp; I
+ain&rsquo;t &rsquo;ad time this morning to change my gown and
+tidy up myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Really, my dear madam&mdash;don&rsquo;t, now; I adjure
+you; make no apologies&mdash;it is not the dress&mdash;or
+the&mdash;or the &mdash;, anything in fact, that makes us what we
+are;&mdash;don&rsquo;t, if you please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And here his profound sentiments died away again and were lost
+to the world; and the worthy man, not long after, was discussing
+his favourite dish with greedy relish.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An when&rsquo;ll this &rsquo;ere thing be on, Mr.
+Prigg, does thee think?&nbsp; It be a hell of a long
+time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tom!&nbsp; Tom!&rdquo; exclaimed Mrs. Bumpkin.&nbsp;
+But Mr. <!-- page 320--><a name="page320"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 320</span>Prigg was too well bred and too much
+occupied with his pork and greens to hear the very wayward
+epithet of the Farmer Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so,&rdquo; said the lawyer; &ldquo;quite so, it
+is so difficult to tell when a case will come on.&nbsp;
+You&rsquo;re in the list to-day and gone to-morrow; a man the
+other day was just worried as you have been; but mark this; at
+the trial, Mr. Bumpkin, the jury gave that man a verdict for a
+thousand pounds!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look at that, Nancy,&rdquo; exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin;
+&ldquo;Will &rsquo;ee tak a little more pork, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s
+uncommonly good; some of your own feeding, I suppose?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Were that a pig case, Mr. Prigg, where the man got the
+thousand pounds?&rdquo; asked Mrs. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me see,&rdquo; answered Prigg, &ldquo;<i>was</i> it
+a pig case?&rdquo;&nbsp; Here he put his finger to the side of
+his nose.&nbsp; &ldquo;I really, at this moment, quite forget
+whether it was or was not a pig case.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll trouble
+you, Mrs. Bumpkin, for a little more greens, if you
+please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, I wur saying,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;jist as
+thee comed in, where be I to lodge when I gooes to Lunnon
+agin?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, now, quite so&mdash;yes; and you must go in a day
+or two.&nbsp; I expect we shall be on shortly.&nbsp; Now, let me
+see, you don&rsquo;t like &lsquo;The Goose&rsquo;?&nbsp; A nice
+respectable hostelry, too!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wunt &rsquo;ave un goo there, Mr. Prigg,&rdquo; said
+Mrs. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so&mdash;quite so.&nbsp; Now what I was thinking
+was, suppose you took lodgings at some nice suburban place,
+say&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 321--><a name="page321"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+321</span>&ldquo;What pleace, sir?&rdquo; inquired Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let us say Camden Town, for instance&mdash;nice healthy
+neighbourhood and remarkably quiet.&nbsp; You could come every
+morning by &rsquo;bus, or if you preferred it, by rail; and if by
+rail, you could take a season ticket, which would be much
+cheaper; a six months&rsquo; ticket, again, being cheaper than a
+three months&rsquo; ticket.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the name o&rsquo; Heaven, sir,&rdquo; exclaimed Mrs.
+Bumpkin, &ldquo;be this &rsquo;ere thing gwine on for
+ever?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Prigg smiled benignly, as much as to say, &ldquo;You
+ladies are so impatient, so innocent of the business of
+life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It seems to me, Mr. Prigg, one need live to be as old
+as thic there Mackthusaler to bring a law-suit
+now-a-days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, look at that!&rdquo; broke in Joe,
+&ldquo;it&rsquo;s made master look forty year older
+aready.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So it have, Joe,&rdquo; rejoined the mistress; &ldquo;I
+wish it could be chucked up altogether.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Prigg benignantly shook his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;D&rsquo;ye think I be gwine to give in to thic
+sniggerin&rsquo; Snooks feller?&rdquo; asked Mr. Bumpkin.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Not if I knows it.&nbsp; Why thic feller goo
+sniggerin&rsquo; along th&rsquo; street as though he&rsquo;d won;
+and he &rsquo;ave told lots o&rsquo; people how he&rsquo;ll laugh
+I out o&rsquo; Coourt&mdash;his counsel be gwine to laugh I out
+o&rsquo; Coourt becors I be a country farmer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Right can&rsquo;t be laughed out of Court, sir,&rdquo;
+said the excellent Prigg, solemnly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Noa, noa, right bean&rsquo;t asheamed, goo where ur
+wool.&nbsp; Upright and down-straight wur allays my motto.&nbsp;
+I be a plain man, but I allays tried to act straight-forrerd, and
+bean&rsquo;t asheamed o&rsquo; no man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This speech was a complete success: it was unanswerable.&nbsp;
+<!-- page 322--><a name="page322"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+322</span>It fixed the lodgings at Camden Town.&nbsp; It stopped
+Mrs. Bumpkin&rsquo;s impatience; diminished her apprehensions;
+and apparently, lulled her misgivings.&nbsp; She was a gentle,
+hard-working, loving wife.</p>
+<p>And so all was settled.&nbsp; It was the month of April, and
+it was confidently expected that by the end of July all would be
+comfortably finished in time to get in the harvest.&nbsp; The
+crops looked well; the meadows and clover-field promised a fair
+crop, and the wheat and barley never looked better.</p>
+<p>The following week found Mr. Bumpkin in his new lodgings at
+Camden Town; and I verily believe, as Mr. Prigg very sagaciously
+observed, if it had not been for the Judges going circuit,
+<i>Bumpkin</i> v. <i>Snooks</i> would have been in the paper six
+weeks earlier than it really was.&nbsp; But even lawsuits must
+come on at last, be they never so tardy: and one day, in bustling
+haste, Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s young man informed Mr. Bumpkin that a
+consultation was actually fixed at his leader&rsquo;s chambers,
+Garden Court, Temple, at seven o&rsquo;clock punctually the next
+day.</p>
+<p>Bumpkin was delighted: he was to be present at the express
+wish of the leading counsel.&nbsp; So to Garden Court he went at
+seven, with Mr. Prigg; and there sure enough was Mr. Dynamite,
+his junior counsel.&nbsp; Mr. Catapult, Q.C., had not yet
+arrived.&nbsp; So while they waited, Mr. Bumpkin had an
+opportunity of looking about him; never in his life had he seen
+so many books.&nbsp; There they were all over the walls; shelves
+upon shelves.&nbsp; The chambers seemed built with books, and Mr.
+Bumpkin raised his eyes with awe to the ceiling, expecting to see
+books there.</p>
+<p><!-- page 323--><a name="page323"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+323</span>&ldquo;What be all these &rsquo;ere books, sir?&rdquo;
+he whispered to Prigg.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;These are law books,&rdquo; answered the intelligent
+Prigg; &ldquo;but these are only a few.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Must be a good dale o&rsquo; law,&rdquo; said
+Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A good deal too much,&rdquo; observed Mr. Dynamite,
+with a smile; &ldquo;if we were to burn nine-tenths of the law
+books we should have better law, eh, Mr. Prigg?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Prigg never contradicted counsel; and if Mr. Dynamite had
+said it&rsquo;s a great pity that our libraries have so few
+authorities, Prigg would have made the same answer, &ldquo;I
+quite agree, quite so! quite so!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Cats-&rsquo;is-name don&rsquo;t seem to
+come,&rdquo; observed Bumpkin, after an hour and a half had
+passed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. <i>Catapult</i>, Mr. <i>Catapult</i>,&rdquo; said
+Mr. Prigg; &ldquo;no, he doesn&rsquo;t seem to come.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And then he rang for the clerk, and the clerk came.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think Mr. Catapult will return to-night?&rdquo;
+inquired Prigg.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think he will,&rdquo; said the clerk,
+looking at his watch; &ldquo;I am afraid not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beant much good to stop then,&rdquo; said Mr.
+Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I fear not,&rdquo; observed the clerk, &ldquo;he has so
+many engagements.&nbsp; Shall we fix another consultation, Mr.
+Prigg?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you please,&rdquo; said that gentleman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say half-past seven to-morrow, then.&nbsp; The case, I
+find, is not in the paper to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so, quite so,&rdquo; returned Prigg,
+&ldquo;half-past seven to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And thus the consultation was at an end and the parties went
+their several ways.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 325--><a name="page325"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 325</span>CHAPTER XXXIV.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Mr. Bumpkin receives compliments from
+distinguished persons.</p>
+<p>One evening as Mr. Bumpkin was sitting in his little parlour,
+ruminating, or as he termed it, &ldquo;rummaging&rdquo; in his
+mind over many things, and especially wondering when the trial
+would come on, Horatio, in breathless impatience, entered the
+room.&nbsp; His excited and cheerful appearance indicated that
+something of an unusually pleasant nature had occurred.&nbsp; A
+strong intimacy had long been established between this boy and
+Mr. Bumpkin, who regarded Horatio as a kind of legal prodigy; his
+very hopes seemed centered in and inspired by this lad.&nbsp; He
+seemed to be the guiding spirit and the flywheel of the whole
+proceedings.&nbsp; Was Snooks to be pulverized? it must be under
+Horatio&rsquo;s heel!</p>
+<p>This legal stripling brought almost as much comfort as Mr.
+Prigg himself; and it was quite a pleasure to hear the familiar
+terms in which he spoke of the bigwigs of the profession.&nbsp;
+He would say of McCannister, the Queen&rsquo;s Counsel, &ldquo;I
+like Mac&rsquo;s style of putting a question, it&rsquo;s so soft
+like&mdash;it goes down like a Pick-me-up.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then he
+would allude to Mr. Heavytop, Q.C., as Jack; to Mr. Bigpot as old
+Kettledrum; to Mr. Swagger, Q.C., as Pat; to B. C. Windbag, Q.C.,
+M.P., as B. C.&mdash;all which indicated to the mind of Mr.
+Bumpkin the particularly <!-- page 326--><a
+name="page326"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 326</span>intimate
+terms upon which Horatio was with these celebrities.&nbsp; Nor
+did his intimacy cease there: instead of speaking of the highest
+legal official of the land in terms of respectful deference, as
+&ldquo;my Lord High Chancellor,&rdquo; or &ldquo;my Lord
+Allworthy,&rdquo;&mdash;he would say, in the most indifferent
+manner &ldquo;Old Allworthy&rdquo; this, and &ldquo;Old
+Allworthy,&rdquo; that; sometimes even, he ventured to call some
+of Her Majesty&rsquo;s Judges by nick-names; an example which, I
+trust, will not be followed by the Horatios of the future.&nbsp;
+But I believe the pale boy, like his great namesake, was
+fearless.&nbsp; It was a comfort to hear him denounce the
+law&rsquo;s delay, and the terrible &ldquo;cumbersomeness&rdquo;
+of legal proceedings: not that he did it in soothing language or
+in happy phraseology: it was rather in a manner that led Mr.
+Bumpkin to believe the young champion was standing up for his
+particular rights; as if he had said to the authorities, whoever
+they might be, &ldquo;Look here!&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll have no more of
+this: it&rsquo;s a shame and disgrace to this country that a
+simple dispute between a couple of neighbours can&rsquo;t be
+tried without months of quarrelling in Judges&rsquo; Chambers and
+elsewhere; if you don&rsquo;t try this case before long
+I&rsquo;ll see what can be done.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then there was
+further consolation in the fact that Horatio declared that, in
+his opinion, Tommy <i>Catpup</i>, Q.C., would knock Snooks into a
+cocked hat, and that Snooks already looked very down in the
+mouth.</p>
+<p>On the evening at which I have arrived in my dream, when the
+pale boy came in, Mr. Bumpkin inquired what was the matter: was
+the case settled?&nbsp; Had Snooks paid the damages?&nbsp;
+Nothing of the kind.&nbsp; Horatio&rsquo;s visit was of a
+common-place nature.&nbsp; He had simply come to inform Mr.
+Bumpkin that the Archbishop of <!-- page 327--><a
+name="page327"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 327</span>Canterbury
+had kindly sent him a couple of tickets for the reserved seats at
+Canterbury Hall.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin was disappointed.&nbsp; He cared nothing for
+Archbishops.&nbsp; He was in hopes it had been something
+better.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wunt goo,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We ought to go, I think,&rdquo; said Horatio; &ldquo;it
+was very kind of old Archy to send em, and he wouldn&rsquo;t like
+it if we didn&rsquo;t go: besides, he and the Rolls are great
+chums.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rolls!&rdquo; said Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Master of the Rolls.&nbsp; I shouldn&rsquo;t wonder
+if he aint got Archy to send em&mdash;don&rsquo;t you be a
+fool.&nbsp; And another thing, Paganani&rsquo;s going to play the
+farmyard on the fiddle to-night.&nbsp; Gemminey, ain&rsquo;t that
+good!&nbsp; You hear the pigs squeak, and the bull roar, and the
+old cock crow, and the sow grunt, and the horse
+kick&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How the devil can thee hear a horse kick, unless he
+kicks zummat?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, he does,&rdquo; said Horatio; &ldquo;that&rsquo;s
+just what he does do.&nbsp; Let&rsquo;s go, I am sure you will
+like it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It beant one o&rsquo; these ere playhouse pleaces, be
+it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lor bless you,&rdquo; said Horatio,
+&ldquo;there&rsquo;s pews just the same as if you was in Church:
+and the singing&rsquo;s beautiful.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No sarmon, I s&rsquo;pooase.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not on week nights, but I&rsquo;ll tell you what there
+is instead: a chap climbs up to the top of a high pole and stands
+on his head for ten minutes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin, although a man who never went out of an evening,
+could not resist the persuasions of his pale young friend.&nbsp;
+He had never been to any place of amusement, except the Old
+Bailey, since he had been in London; <!-- page 328--><a
+name="page328"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 328</span>although he
+had promised himself a treat to the Cattle Show, provided that
+came on, which was very likely, as it only wanted five months to
+it, before his case.</p>
+<p>So they got on the top of a &rsquo;Bus and proceeded on their
+way to Lambeth Palace; for the Canterbury Hall, as everyone
+knows, is in that ancient pile.&nbsp; And truly, when they
+arrived everything was astonishingly beautiful and
+pleasing.&nbsp; Mr. Bumpkin was taken through the Picture
+Gallery, which he enjoyed, although he would have liked to see
+one or two like the Squire had got in his Hall, such as
+&ldquo;Clinker,&rdquo; the prize bull; and &ldquo;Father
+Tommy,&rdquo; the celebrated ram.&nbsp; But the Archbishop
+probably had never taken a prize: not much of a breeder
+maybe.</p>
+<p>Now they entered the Hall amid strains of sweet, soft,
+enchanting music.&nbsp; Never before had the soul of Bumpkin been
+so enthralled: it was as if the region of fairyland had suddenly
+burst upon his astonished view.&nbsp; In presence of all this
+beauty, and this delicious cadence of sweet sounds, what a
+common-place thing <i>Bumpkin</i> v. <i>Snooks</i> seemed!</p>
+<p>Theirs was a very nice pew, commanding a full view of the
+stage and all the angelic looking beings.&nbsp; And evidently our
+friends were considered fashionable people, for many of the
+audience looked round at them as they entered.&nbsp; So awed was
+Mr. Bumpkin when he first sat down, that he wondered whether he
+ought to look into his hat as the Squire did in Church; but,
+resolving to be guided by Horatio, and seeing that the pale youth
+did not even take his billycock off, but spread his elbows out on
+the front ledge and clapped his hands with terrific vehemence,
+and shouted &ldquo;Anchore&rdquo; as loudly as he <!-- page
+329--><a name="page329"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+329</span>could, Mr. Bumpkin, in imitation, clapped his hands and
+said &ldquo;Hooroar!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was glorious.&nbsp; The waiter came and exchanged winks
+with the pale boy, and brought some soda-and-brandy and a
+cigar.&nbsp; Mr. Bumpkin wondered more and more.&nbsp; It was the
+strangest place he had ever heard of.&nbsp; It seemed so strange
+to have smoking and drinking.&nbsp; But then he knew there were
+things occurring every day that the cleverest men could not
+account for: not even Mr. Slater, the schoolmaster at Yokelton,
+could account for them.</p>
+<p>Just in front of the two friends was another pew, a very nice
+one that was, and for some little time it was unoccupied.&nbsp;
+Presently with a great rustling of silks and a great smell of
+Jockey Club, and preceded by one of the servants of the
+establishment, entered two beautiful and fashionably dressed
+ladies of extremely quiet (except the Jockey Club) and retiring
+demeanour.&nbsp; They could not but attract Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s
+attention: they so reminded him of the Squire&rsquo;s daughters,
+only they dressed much better.&nbsp; How he would like Nancy to
+see them: she was very fond of beautiful gowns, was Nancy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder who they be?&rdquo; whispered Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; answered Horatio;
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll ask as soon as I get a chance.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s
+the Archbishop&rsquo;s pew; I believe they are his
+daughters.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wouldn&rsquo;t ur ha come wi em?&rdquo; said
+Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He generally does, but I suppose he can&rsquo;t get
+away to-night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this moment a waiter, or as Bumpkin called him a pew
+opener, was passing, and Horatio whispered something in his ear,
+his companion looking at him the while from the corner of his
+eyes.</p>
+<p><!-- page 330--><a name="page330"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+330</span>&ldquo;The one on the right,&rdquo; whispered the
+waiter, untwisting the wire of a bottle of sodawater, &ldquo;is
+the Countess Squeezem, and the other is Lady Flora, her
+sister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Bumpkin nodded his head as much as to say, &ldquo;Just see
+that: high life, that, if you like!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And really the Countess and Lady Flora were as quiet and
+unassuming as if they had been the commonest bred people in the
+world.</p>
+<p>Now came forward on the stage a sweet young lady dressed in
+yellow satin, with lovely red roses all down the front and one on
+the left shoulder, greeted by a thunder of applause.&nbsp; Her
+voice was thrilling: now it was at the back of the stage; now it
+was just behind your ear; now in the ceiling.&nbsp; You
+didn&rsquo;t know where to have it.&nbsp; After she had done,
+Horatio said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you think of Nilsson?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wery good! wery good!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hallo,&rdquo; says Horatio, &ldquo;here&rsquo;s Sims
+Reeves.&nbsp; Bravo Sims! bravo Reeves!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve eered tell o&rsquo; he,&rdquo; says Bumpkin;
+&ldquo;he be wery young, bean&rsquo;t he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O,&rdquo; says Horatio, &ldquo;they paint up so; but
+ain&rsquo;t he got a tenor&mdash;O gemminey crikery!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A tenner?&rdquo; says Bumpkin, &ldquo;what&rsquo;s thee
+mean, ten pun a week?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O my eye!&rdquo; says the youth, &ldquo;he gets more
+than that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It be good wages.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, but it&rsquo;s nothing to what some of em
+get,&rdquo; says Horatio; &ldquo;why if a man can play the fool
+well he can get as much as the Prime Minister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, and thic Prime Minister can play the fool well <!--
+page 331--><a name="page331"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+331</span>at times; it seem to me&mdash;they tooked the dooty of
+whate and made un too chape.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who&rsquo;s this?&rdquo; asks Horatio of the
+waiter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Patti,&rdquo; says the waiter, &ldquo;at the express
+wish of the Queen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Bumpkin nods again, as though there was no end to the grandeur
+of the company.</p>
+<p>Then comes another no less celebrated, if Horatio was
+correct.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hullo,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;here&rsquo;s
+Trebelli!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now this was too much for the absorbing powers of even a
+Bumpkin.&nbsp; Horatio had carried it too far.&nbsp; Not that his
+friend had ever heard of the great vocalist, but if you are
+inclined for fun pray use names that will go down.&nbsp; Mr.
+Bumpkin looked hard at Horatio&rsquo;s face, on which was just
+the faintest trace of a smile.&nbsp; And then he said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What a name, <i>Bellie</i>! danged if I doan&rsquo;t
+think thee be stickin it into I,&rdquo; and then he laughed and
+repeated, &ldquo;thee be stickin it into I.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now for Pagannini!&rdquo; says Horatio; &ldquo;now
+you&rsquo;ll hear something.&nbsp; By Jove, he&rsquo;ll show
+you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why I&rsquo;ve eerd tell o&rsquo; thic Piganiny when I
+were a boy,&rdquo; says Bumpkin, &ldquo;used to play on one
+leg.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the man,&rdquo; says Horatio.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But this ere man got two legs, how can he be
+Piganiny?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know anything about that,&rdquo; says
+Horatio; &ldquo;what&rsquo;s it matter how many legs he&rsquo;s
+got, just listen to that!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why danged if that bean&rsquo;t as much like thic
+Cochin Chiner cock o&rsquo; mine as ever I eered in my
+life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 332--><a name="page332"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+332</span>&ldquo;Told you so,&rdquo; says Horatio; &ldquo;but
+keep quiet, you&rsquo;ll hear something presently.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And sure enough he did: pig in the straw; sow in the stye;
+bull in the meadow; sheep in the fold; everything was
+perfect.</p>
+<p>Never before had Mr. Bumpkin been so overpowered.&nbsp; He
+never before knew what music was.&nbsp; Truly Piganiny was a
+deserving man, and a clever one too.&nbsp; Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s
+enthusiasm had carried him thus far, when to his great
+satisfaction the Lady Flora looked round.&nbsp; It was very nice
+of her, because it was as if she wished to know if Mr. Bumpkin
+and his friend felt the same rapturous delight as she and her
+sister.&nbsp; What a nice face Lady Flora&rsquo;s was!&nbsp; It
+wasn&rsquo;t unlike the Squire&rsquo;s eldest
+daughter&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Between that, perhaps, and the
+Vicar&rsquo;s youngest daughter&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>Then the Countess slightly turned round, her face wearing a
+smile of great complaisance, and Mr. Bumpkin could have seen at
+once that she was a person of great distinction even if he had
+not been informed of her rank.&nbsp; Well, taken for all in all,
+it was a night he would never forget, and his only feeling of
+regret was that Mrs. Bumpkin was not present to share his
+pleasure&mdash;the roar of that bull would have just pleased her;
+it was so like Sampson.</p>
+<p>And now the scene shifters were preparing for another
+performance, and were adjusting ropes and fixing poles, and what
+not, when, as Mr. Bumpkin was lost in profound meditation, up
+rose from her seat the beautiful Lady Flora, and turning round
+with a bewitching face, and assuming an air of inexpressible
+simplicity, she exclaimed to Mr. Bumpkin in the sweetest of
+voices: &ldquo;O you duck!&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 333--><a name="page333"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+333</span>Mr. Bumpkin started as if a cannon had exploded in his
+face instead of a beautiful young lady.&nbsp; He blushed to the
+deepest crimson, and then the lady Flora poured into him a volley
+of her sweetiest prettiest laughter.&nbsp; Attacked thus so
+suddenly and so effectively, what could he do?&nbsp; He felt
+there must be some mistake, and that he ought to apologize.&nbsp;
+But the Lady Flora gave him no time; leaning forward, she held
+out her hand&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beg pardon,
+m&rsquo;lady&mdash;thic&mdash;I&mdash;I.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then the Countess rose and smiled upon Mr. Bumpkin, and said
+she hoped he wouldn&rsquo;t mind; her sister was of such a
+playful disposition.</p>
+<p>The playful one here just touched Mr. Bumpkin under the chin
+with her forefinger, and again said he was a &ldquo;<i>perfect
+duck</i>!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What be the manin&rsquo; o&rsquo; this?&rdquo; said
+he.&nbsp; &ldquo;I be off; come on, sir.&nbsp; This be quite
+enough for I.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t go like that,&rdquo; said Lady Flora.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Oh, dear, dear, what a cruel man!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not a glass of wine,&rdquo; said the Countess.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not one, Mr. Bumpkin!&rdquo; urged Lady Flora.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin had risen, and was angry: he was startled at his
+name being known: he looked to Horatio, hoping some explanation
+might come; but the pale youth had his back to him, and was
+preparing to leave the Hall.&nbsp; There were many curious eyes
+looking at them, and there was much laughter.&nbsp; Mr.
+Bumpkin&rsquo;s appearance would alone have been sufficient to
+cause this: but his mind was to be farther enlightened as to the
+meaning of this extraordinary scene; and it happened in this
+wise.&nbsp; As he was proceeding between the rows of people,
+followed closely by those illustrious members of the aristocracy,
+the Countess and Lady <!-- page 334--><a name="page334"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 334</span>Flora; while the waiters grinned and
+the people laughed, his eye caught sight of an object away over
+the front seat, which formed a right angle with the one he had
+been occupying; it was an object unattractive in itself but
+which, under the circumstances, fixed and riveted his attention;
+that object was Snooks, in the corner of the third row, with his
+sawpit mouth on the broadest grin.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 335--><a name="page335"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 335</span>CHAPTER XXXV.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">The trial.</p>
+<p>Who shall describe the feelings of joy which animated the
+breast of Mr. Bumpkin when at last, with the suddenness of
+lightning, Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s clerk flashed into his little
+parlour the intelligence, &ldquo;Case in paper; be at Court by
+ten o&rsquo;clock; Bail Court.&rdquo;&nbsp; Such was the telegram
+which Mr. Bumpkin got his landlady to read on that pleasant
+evening towards the end of July.&nbsp; The far-seeing Prigg was
+right.&nbsp; It would come on about the end of July.&nbsp; That
+is what he had predicted.&nbsp; But it would not have been safe
+for Mr. Bumpkin to be away from town for a single day.&nbsp; It
+might have been in the paper at any moment; and here it was, just
+as he was beginning to get tired of &ldquo;Camden Town and the
+whole thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin put on a clean shirt, with a good stiff high
+collar, which he had reserved from Mrs. Bumpkin&rsquo;s wash;
+for, in his opinion, there was no stiffening in the London
+starch, and no getting up like Mrs. Bumpkin&rsquo;s.&nbsp; He put
+on his best neckerchief, and a bran new waistcoat which he had
+bought for Sundays six years ago at the market town.&nbsp; He put
+on his drab coat with the long tails, which he had worn on the
+day of his marriage, and had kept for his best ever since; he put
+on his velvety <!-- page 336--><a name="page336"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 336</span>looking corduroy trowsers and his
+best lace-up watertight boots; and then, after a good breakfast,
+put on his white beaver hat, took his ash-stick, and got into a
+Westminster &lsquo;Bus.&nbsp; What a beautiful morning it
+was!&nbsp; Just the morning for a law suit!&nbsp; Down he got at
+Palace Yard, walked towards the spacious door of the old hall,
+entered its shadowy precincts, and then, in my dream, I lost
+sight of him as he mingled with the crowd.&nbsp; But I saw some
+few moments after in the Bail Court enter, amidst profound
+silence and with impressive dignity, Mr. Justice Stedfast.&nbsp;
+Let me here inform the reader that if by any chance, say by
+settlement, postponement or otherwise, the first case in the list
+&ldquo;goes off,&rdquo; as it is called (from its bearing a
+striking resemblance to the unexpected going off of a gun), and
+the parties in the next case, taken by surprise, are not there at
+the moment, that case goes off by being struck out; and very
+often the next and the next, and so on to the end of the
+list.&nbsp; Parties therefore should be ready, so as to prevent a
+waste of time.&nbsp; The time of the Court is not to be wasted by
+parties not being ready.&nbsp; Now, strangely enough, this is
+what happened in the case of <i>Bumpkin</i> v.
+<i>Snooks</i>.&nbsp; Being number eight, no one thought it would
+be reached; and the leading counsel, and also the junior counsel
+being engaged elsewhere; and Mr. Prigg and Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s
+clerk not having arrived; and Mr. Bumpkin not knowing his way; at
+five minutes after the sitting of the Court, so expeditious are
+our legal proceedings, the celebrated case was actually reached,
+and this is what took place:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are the parties ready?&rdquo; inquired his
+Lordship.</p>
+<p>Mr. Ricochet, Q.C., who appeared with Mr. Weasel for the
+defendant, said he was ready for the defendant.</p>
+<p><!-- page 337--><a name="page337"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+337</span>&ldquo;Call the plaintiff!&rdquo; said a voice.</p>
+<p>Loud cries for Bumpkin, who was just pushing his way down the
+passage outside.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does anyone answer?&rdquo; asked his lordship;
+&ldquo;do you know if any gentleman is instructed, Mr.
+Ricochet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not aware, my lud.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stand up and be sworn, gentlemen,&rdquo; says the
+associate.&nbsp; Up stood the jury; and in less than half a
+minute they found a verdict for the defendant, counterclaim being
+abandoned, just as Mr. Bumpkin had pushed into Court.&nbsp; And
+judgment is given.</p>
+<p>The business having been thus got through, the Court rose and
+went away.&nbsp; And then came in both counsel and Mr. Prigg and
+Horatio; and great complaints were made of everybody except the
+Judge, who couldn&rsquo;t help it.</p>
+<p>But our administration of justice is not so inelastic that it
+cannot adapt itself to a set of circumstances such as
+these.&nbsp; It was only to make a few more affidavits, and to
+appear before his lordship by counsel, and state the facts in a
+calm and respectful manner, to obtain the necessary rectification
+of the matter.&nbsp; All was explained and all forgiven.&nbsp;
+<i>Bumpkin</i> v. <i>Snooks</i> was to be restored to the paper
+upon payment of the costs of the day&mdash;a trifling matter,
+amounting only to about eighteen pounds seventeen
+shillings.&nbsp; But a severe admonition from the Bench
+accompanied this act of grace: &ldquo;The Court cannot be kept
+waiting,&rdquo; said his lordship; &ldquo;and it is necessary
+that all suitors should know that if they are not here when their
+cases are called on they will be struck out, or the party to the
+cause who is here will be entitled to a verdict, if the
+defendant; or to try his case in the other&rsquo;s absence, if he
+be the plaintiff.&nbsp; It was idle to suppose <!-- page 338--><a
+name="page338"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 338</span>that
+parties could not be there in time: it was their business to be
+there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this every junior barrister nodded approvingly, and the
+usher called silence.</p>
+<p>Of course, the cause could not be in the paper again for some
+time: they must suit Mr. Ricochet&rsquo;s convenience now: and
+accordingly another period of waiting had to be endured.&nbsp;
+Mr. Bumpkin was almost distracted, but his peace of mind was
+restored by the worthy Prigg, who persuaded him that a most
+laudable piece of good fortune had been brought about by his
+intervention; and that was the preventing the wily Snooks from
+keeping the verdict he had snatched.</p>
+<p>What a small thing will sometimes comfort us!</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin was, indeed, a lucky man; for if his case had not
+been in the paper when at last it was, it would have &ldquo;gone
+over the Long Vacation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At length I saw Mr. Justice Pangloss, the eminent Chancery
+Judge, take his seat in the Bail Court.&nbsp; He was an immense
+case lawyer.&nbsp; He knew cases that had been tried in the
+reigns of the Edwards and Henries.&nbsp; A pig case could not,
+therefore, come amiss.</p>
+<p>A case lawyer is like Moses and Sons; he can fit anybody, from
+Chang down to a midget.&nbsp; But there is sometimes an
+inconvenience in trying to fit an old precedent on to new
+circumstances: and I am not unfrequently reminded of the boy
+whose corduroy trousers were of the exact length, and looked
+tolerable in front; but if you went round they stuck out a good
+deal on the other side.&nbsp; He might grow to them, no doubt,
+but it is a clumsy mode of tailoring after all.</p>
+<p>Now Mr. Bumpkin, of course, could not be sure that his case
+was &ldquo;coming on.&rdquo;&nbsp; All he knew was, that he <!--
+page 339--><a name="page339"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+339</span>must avoid Snooks&rsquo; snatching another
+verdict.&nbsp; He had been to great expense, and a commission had
+actually been issued to take Joe&rsquo;s evidence while his
+regiment was detained at Malta.&nbsp; Mr. Prigg had taken the
+plaintiff into a crowd, and there had left him early in the
+morning.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s appearance even in the densest crowd was
+attractive, to say the least: and many and various were the
+observations from time to time made by the vulgar roughs around
+as to his personal appearance.&nbsp; His shirtcollar was greatly
+praised, so was the beauty of his waistcoat: while I heard one
+gentleman make an enquiry which showed he was desirous of
+ascertaining what was the name of the distinguished firm which
+had the honour of supplying him with hats.&nbsp; One said it was
+Heath, he could tell by the brim; another that it was Cole, he
+went by the polish; and the particular curl of the brim, which no
+other hatter had ever succeeded in producing.&nbsp; While another
+gentleman with one eye and half a nose protested that it was one
+of Lincoln and Bennett&rsquo;s patent dynamite resisters on an
+entirely new principle.</p>
+<p>The subject of all these remarks listened as one in doubt as
+to whether they were levelled at him or in any other
+direction.&nbsp; He glanced at the many eyes turned upon him, and
+heard the laughter that succeeded every new witticism.&nbsp; His
+uncertainty as to whether he was &ldquo;the party eamed
+at,&rdquo; heightened the amusement of the wits.</p>
+<p>Now came a bolder and less mistakable allusion to his personal
+appearance:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should like Gladstone to see that, Jem; talk about
+<!-- page 340--><a name="page340"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+340</span>a collar! the Grand Old Man&rsquo;s
+nowhere&mdash;he&rsquo;d better take to turndowns after
+this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the gentleman addressed; &ldquo;I
+think this would settle him&mdash;is he liberal or tory, I
+wonder?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tory, you&rsquo;re sure&mdash;wotes for the Squoire,
+I&rsquo;ll warrant.&nbsp; A small loaf and a big jail.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin turned his eyes first towards one speaker and then
+towards another without moving his head, as he thought:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Danged if I doan&rsquo;t bleeve thee means
+I.&rdquo;&nbsp; But he wisely said nothing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I say,&rdquo; said another, &ldquo;I wonder if
+pigeon&rsquo;s milk is good for the complexion.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Jem, &ldquo;it makes your nose red, and
+makes the hair sprout out of the top of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here was a laugh all round, which made the Usher call out
+silence; and the Judge said he would have the Court cleared if
+order was not preserved.&nbsp; Then there was a loud shouting all
+over the Court for &ldquo;Thomas Bumpkin!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here I be!&rdquo; said Bumpkin, amid more
+laughter&mdash;and especially of the wits around him.&nbsp; Then
+a great bustling and hustling, and pushing and struggling took
+place.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Danged if that beant my case,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin;
+&ldquo;but it ain&rsquo;t my counsellor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Make way for the plaintiff,&rdquo; shouted the Usher;
+&ldquo;stand on one side&mdash;don&rsquo;t crowd up this
+passage.&nbsp; This way, sir, make haste; the Court&rsquo;s
+waiting for you, why do you keep the Court waiting in this
+way?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was just going to strike your case out,&rdquo; said
+the Judge, &ldquo;the public time can&rsquo;t be wasted in this
+way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Bumpkin scrambled along through the crowd, and was <!-- page
+341--><a name="page341"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+341</span>hustled into the witness-box.&nbsp; The Judge put up
+his eye-glass, and looked at the plaintiff as though he was
+hardly fit to bring an action in a Superior Court.&nbsp; Up went
+the book into his hand.&nbsp; &ldquo;Take the book in your right
+hand.&nbsp; Kiss the book; now attend and speak up&mdash;speak up
+so that those gentlemen may hear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why weren&rsquo;t you here before?&rdquo; asked the
+Judge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wur, my lord?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t you hear your learned counsel opening your
+case?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know it wur my case,&rdquo; said
+Bumpkin, amid roars of laughter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t wonder at that,&rdquo; said Mr. Ricochet,
+looking at the jury.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now then,&rdquo; said the Judge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now, then,&rdquo; said Mr. Silverspoon; for neither
+of his own counsel was able to be present.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are a farmer, I believe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On the 29th of May, 18--; did the defendant come to
+your farm?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ur did.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did he buy a pig?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ur did not; but ur said he&rsquo;d be d---d if ur
+wouldn&rsquo;t &rsquo;ave un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And did he come and take it away?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ur did; pulled un slick out of the sty; and when I
+tried to stop un in the Lane, took un by main force?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Silverspoon sat down.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was the age of this pig, Mr. Bumpkin,&rdquo;
+enquired the Judge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He wur ten weeks old, your lord.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 342--><a name="page342"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+342</span>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t there a calf case, Mr. Ricochet,
+very similar to this?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, my lord.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; said Mr. Justice Pangloss, &ldquo;it
+was tried in the reign of James the First.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Ricochet, who knew nothing of the calf case, except what
+his Lordship had told him, said he believed it was.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If this was anything,&rdquo; continued Mr. Ricochet,
+&ldquo;upon the plaintiff&rsquo;s own showing it was a felony,
+and the plaintiff should have prosecuted the defendant criminally
+before having recourse to his civil remedy; that is laid down in
+the sheep case reported in Walker&rsquo;s Trumpery
+Cases.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What volume of the Trumpery Cases is that, Mr.
+Ricochet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Six hundred and fifty, my lud.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His Lordship writes it down.&nbsp; &ldquo;Page?&rdquo; says
+his lordship.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nineteen hundred and ninety-five, my lud; about the
+middle of the book.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Judge calls to the Usher to bring the six hundred and fiftieth
+volume of Walker&rsquo;s Trumpery Cases.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But there&rsquo;s a case before that,&rdquo; said his
+lordship.&nbsp; &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a case, if I recollect
+rightly, about the time of Julius C&aelig;sar&mdash;the donkey
+case.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s on all fours with this,&rdquo; said Mr.
+Ricochet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you say, Mr. Silverspoon?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then Mr. Silverspoon proceeded to show that none of those
+cases was on all fours with the present case; and a long and
+interesting argument followed between the Bench and the
+Bar.&nbsp; And it was said by those who were most competent to
+judge, that Mr. Silverspoon quite <!-- page 343--><a
+name="page343"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+343</span>distinguished himself for the wonderful erudition he
+displayed in his knowledge of the donkey case, and several other
+cases of four-footed beasts that were called to his attention by
+Mr. Justice Pangloss.&nbsp; A perfect menagerie was
+&ldquo;adduced.&rdquo;&nbsp; Mr. Bumpkin meanwhile wondering
+where he was, and what on earth they had all got to do with the
+plain fact of Snooks taking his pig without paying for it.</p>
+<p>At length, after four hours had been consumed in these learned
+disquisitions, Mr. Justice Pangloss, reviewing the judgments of
+the various eminent lawyers who had presided over the respective
+cases in the several reigns, and after quoting many observations
+of those eminent jurists, said that in order to save time he
+would hold, for the purposes of to-day, that Mr. Bumpkin was
+entitled to bring his action: but, of course, he would reserve
+the point; he was by no means clear; he considered himself bound
+by authority; and as the point was extremely important, and left
+undecided after no less than twelve hundred years of argument on
+the one side and the other, he thought it ought to be solemnly
+settled.&nbsp; An unsettled state of the law was a very bad thing
+in his lordship&rsquo;s opinion; especially in these modern
+times, when it appeared to him that the public were clamouring
+for further reform, and a still further simplification of legal
+procedure.</p>
+<p>This suited Mr. Ricochet exactly; he could not be said now to
+have lost his case, even if the jury should find against
+him.&nbsp; But he had yet to cut up Bumpkin in
+cross-examination.&nbsp; The old trial was brought up against the
+plaintiff; and every thing that could tend to discredit him was
+asked.&nbsp; Mr. Ricochet, indeed, seemed to think that the art
+of cross-examination consisted <!-- page 344--><a
+name="page344"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 344</span>in bullying
+a witness, and asking all sorts of questions tending to cast
+reflections upon his character.&nbsp; He was especially great in
+insinuating perjury; knowing that that is always open to a
+counsel who has no other defence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you swear that?&rdquo; was asked at almost every
+answer; sometimes prefaced by the warning, &ldquo;Be careful,
+sir&mdash;be careful.&rdquo;&nbsp; If he could get hold of
+anything against a witness&rsquo;s character, be it ever so
+small, and at ever so remote a distance in the man&rsquo;s life,
+he brought it out; and being a Queen&rsquo;s Counsel he did not
+always receive the reproofs that would have crushed a stuff
+gownsman into respectable behaviour.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Were you charged with assaulting a female in the public
+streets, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I worn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be careful, sir&mdash;she may be in Court.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let her come forward then,&rdquo; said the courageous
+Silverspoon, who was by no means wanting in tact.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you be quiet, sir,&rdquo; retorted Ricochet.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Now Mr. Bumpkin, or whatever your name is, will you swear
+she did not accuse you of assaulting her?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She coomed oop, and it&rsquo;s my belief she wur in the
+robbery.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bravo Bumpkin!&rdquo; said one of the men who had
+chaffed him.&nbsp; And the jury looked at one another in a manner
+that showed approval.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you swear, sir, you have never been in
+trouble?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I donnow what thee means.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be careful, sir; you know what I mean perfectly
+well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then Locust whispers to him, and he says:</p>
+<p><!-- page 345--><a name="page345"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+345</span>&ldquo;O, you frequent Music Halls, don&rsquo;t
+you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Donnow what thee means,&rdquo; says Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, you don&rsquo;t, don&rsquo;t you; will you swear
+that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wool.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be careful, sir.&nbsp; Were you at the Canterbury Hall
+with two women, who passed as the Countess and Lady
+Flora?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It be a lie!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And thus every form of torture was ruthlessly employed, till
+Mr. Bumpkin broke down under it, and cried like a child in the
+witness-box.&nbsp; This awakened sympathy for him.&nbsp; There
+had been much humour and much laughter; and Mr. Ricochet having
+no knowledge of human nature, was not aware how closely allied
+are laughter and tears; that in proportion as the jury had
+laughed at the expense of Mr. Bumpkin they would sympathize with
+his unhappy position.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve worked hard,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;for
+sixty year, and let any man come forrard and say I&rsquo;ve
+wronged man, ooman, or child!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That was a point for Bumpkin.&nbsp; Every one said,
+&ldquo;Poor old man!&rdquo; and even his Lordship, who was
+supposed to have no feeling, was quite sympathetic.&nbsp; Only
+Mr. Ricochet was obtuse.&nbsp; He had no heart, and very little
+skill, or he would have managed his case more adroitly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Badgering&rdquo; is not much use if you have no better
+mode of winning your case.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stand down, Mr. Bumpkin,&rdquo; said his counsel, as
+Mr. Ricochet resumed his seat amid the suppressed hisses of the
+gallery.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Joseph Wurzel,&rdquo; said Mr. Silverspoon.</p>
+<p>Joe appeared in the uniform of the Hussars.&nbsp; And he wore
+a medal too.&nbsp; Mr. Ricochet had no sympathy <!-- page
+346--><a name="page346"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+346</span>with heroes any more than he had with men of letters,
+artists, or any other class of talent.&nbsp; He was a dry,
+uncompromising, blunt, unfeeling lawyer, looking at justice as a
+thimblerig looks at his pea; lift which thimble you may, he will
+take care the pea shall not be found if he can help it.&nbsp; He
+smiled a grim, inhuman smile at Bumpkin&rsquo;s tears, and
+muttered that he was an &ldquo;unmanly milksop.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Joe gave his evidence briefly and without hesitation.&nbsp;
+Everyone could see he was speaking the truth; everybody but Mr.
+Ricochet, who commenced his cross-examination by telling him to
+be careful, and that he was upon his oath.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be careful, sir;&rdquo; he repeated.</p>
+<p>Joe looked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are on your oath, sir.&rdquo;&nbsp; Joe faced
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You deserted your master, did you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;I aint no
+deserter?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you enlisted.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know as that&rsquo;s desertion,&rdquo;
+said Joe; &ldquo;and I&rsquo;m here to speak for him now; and I
+give my evidence at Malta, too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you swear that, sir?&rdquo; enquired Mr.
+Ricochet.&nbsp; &ldquo;Were you not with your master when the
+young woman accused him of assaulting her?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why did you enlist, then?&rdquo; enquired Mr.
+Ricochet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cause I choose to,&rdquo; said Joe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, sir, upon your oath; I ask you, did you not enlist
+because of this charge?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; I never heard on it till arter I was
+listed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 347--><a name="page347"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+347</span>&ldquo;When did you hear of it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At the trial at the Old Bailey.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O,&rdquo; said the learned Q.C.; &ldquo;wait a minute,
+you were there, were you?&nbsp; Were you there as a
+witness?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because I warnt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you swear that?&rdquo; asked Ricochet, amid roars
+of laughter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What were you there for?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To hear the trial!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you were not called?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And do you mean on your oath, sir, to say that you had
+enlisted at that time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now look at that,&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;the Sergeant
+there enlisted me, and he knows.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose you had seen your master&rsquo;s watch many
+times?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d seen it,&rdquo; said Joe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And did not give evidence!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; I warnt called, and know&rsquo;d nothing about
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve been paid for coming here, I
+suppose?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not a farden, and wouldn&rsquo;t take un; he bin a good
+maister to me as ever lived.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you left him.&nbsp; Now then, sir, be careful; do
+you swear you heard Bumpkin say Snooks should not have the
+pig?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you been speaking to anyone about this case before
+to-day?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Joe thought a bit.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be careful, sir, I warn you,&rdquo; says Ricochet.</p>
+<p><!-- page 348--><a name="page348"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+348</span>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Joe; &ldquo;I have.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought so.&nbsp; When?&nbsp; To whom?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And here an air of triumph lit up the features of Mr.
+Ricochet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Afore I comed here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When! let&rsquo;s have it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Outside the Court.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To Bumpkin?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; to that there Locust; he axed un&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind what he axed you;&rdquo; said Ricochet,
+whose idea of humour consisted in the repetition of an illiterate
+observation; and he sat down&mdash;as well he might&mdash;after
+such an exhibition of the art of advocacy.</p>
+<p>But on re-examination, it turned out that Mr. Locust had put
+several questions to Joe with a view of securing his evidence
+himself at a reasonable remuneration, and of contradicting Mr.
+Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>This caused the jury to look at one another with grave faces
+and shake their heads.</p>
+<p>Mr. Ricochet began and continued his speech in the same
+common-place style as his cross-examination; abusing everyone on
+the other side, especially that respectable solicitor, Mr. Prigg;
+and endeavouring to undo his own bad performance with the witness
+by a worse speech to the jury.&nbsp; What he was going to show,
+and what he was going to prove, was wonderful; everybody who had
+been called was guilty of perjury; everybody he was going to call
+would be a paragon of all the virtues.&nbsp; He expatiated upon
+the great common sense of the jury (as though they were fools),
+relied on their sound judgment and denounced the conduct of Mr.
+Bumpkin in the witness-box as a piece of artful acting, intended
+to appeal to the weakness of the jury.&nbsp; But all was
+useless.&nbsp; Snooks <!-- page 349--><a name="page349"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 349</span>made a sorry figure in the
+box.&nbsp; He was too emphatic, too positive, too abusive.&nbsp;
+Mr. Ricochet could not get over his own cross-examination.&nbsp;
+The ridiculous counterclaim with its pettifogging innuendoes
+vanished before that common sense of the jury to which Mr.
+Ricochet so dryly appealed.&nbsp; The edifice erected by the
+modern pleader&rsquo;s subtle craftiness was unsubstantial as the
+icy patterns on the window-pane, which a single breath can
+dissipate.&nbsp; And yet these ingenious contrivances were
+sufficient to give an unimportant case an appearance of
+substantiality which it otherwise would not have possessed.</p>
+<p>The jury, after a most elaborate charge from Mr. Justice
+Pangloss, who went through the cases of the last 900 years in the
+most careful manner, returned a verdict for the plaintiff with
+twenty-five pounds damages.&nbsp; The learned Judge did not give
+judgment, inasmuch as there were points of law to be
+argued.&nbsp; Mr. Bumpkin, although he had won his case so far as
+the verdict was concerned, did not look by any means
+triumphant.&nbsp; He had undergone so much anxiety and misery,
+that he felt more like a man who had escaped a great danger than
+one who had accomplished a great achievement.</p>
+<p>Snooks&rsquo; mouth, during the badgering of the witnesses,
+which was intended for cross-examination was quite a study for an
+artist or a physiologist.&nbsp; When he thought a witness was
+going to be caught, the orifice took the form of a gothic window
+in a ruinous condition.&nbsp; When he imagined the witness had
+slipped out of the trap laid for him, it stretched horizontally,
+and resembled a baker&rsquo;s oven.&nbsp; He was of too coarse a
+nature to suspect that his own counsel had damaged his case, and
+believed the result of the trial to have been due to the <!--
+page 350--><a name="page350"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+350</span>plaintiff&rsquo;s &ldquo;snivelling.&rdquo;&nbsp; He
+left the Court with a melancholy downcast look, and his only
+chance of happiness hereafter in this life seemed now to be in
+proportion to his power of making Mr. Bumpkin miserable.&nbsp;
+Mr. Locust was not behind in his advice on their future course;
+and, after joining his client in the hall, at once pointed out
+the utterly absurd conclusion at which the jury had arrived;
+declared that there must be friends of the plaintiff among them,
+and that Mr. Ricochet would take the earliest opportunity of
+moving for a new trial; a piece of information which quite lit up
+the coarse features of his client, as a breath of air will bring
+a passing glow to the mouldering embers of an ash-heap on a dark
+night.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 351--><a name="page351"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 351</span>CHAPTER XXXVI.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Motion for rule nisi, in which is displayed
+much learning, ancient and modern.</p>
+<p>On the following day there was a great array of judicial
+talent and judicial dignity sitting in what is called
+&ldquo;Banco,&rdquo; not to be in any way confounded with
+&ldquo;Sancho;&rdquo; the two words are totally distinct both as
+to their meaning and etymology.&nbsp; In the centre of the Bench
+sat Mr. Justice Doughty, one of the clearest heads perhaps that
+ever enveloped itself in horsehair.&nbsp; On his right was Mr.
+Justice Pangloss, and on his left Mr. Justice Technical.</p>
+<p>Then arose from the Queen&rsquo;s Counsel row, Mr. Ricochet to
+apply for a rule <i>nisi</i> for a new trial in the cause of
+<i>Bumpkin</i> v. <i>Snooks</i> which was tried yesterday before
+Mr. Justice Pangloss.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Before me?&rdquo; says Mr. Justice Pangloss.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, my lud,&rdquo; says Mr. Ricochet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you sure?&rdquo; enquired the learned Judge,
+turning over his notes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, quite, my lud.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; says his lordship: &ldquo;what do you say
+the name of the case was?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Bumpkin</i> against <i>Snooks</i>, my lud,&rdquo;
+says Mr. Ricochet, Q.C.</p>
+<p><!-- page 352--><a name="page352"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+352</span>&ldquo;Coots; what was it,&mdash;a Bill of
+Exchange?&rdquo; asks his lordship.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Snooks, my lud, Snooks;&rdquo; says Mr. Ricochet,
+&ldquo;with the greatest deference, my lud, his name is spelt
+with an S.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Judge, still turning over his book from end to end calls to
+his clerk, and addressing Mr. Ricochet, says: &ldquo;When do you
+say it was tried, Mr. Ricochet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yesterday, my lud; with great submission, my lud, I
+overheard your ludship say Coots.&nbsp; Snooks, my
+lud.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then all the Judges cried &ldquo;Snooks!&rdquo; as if it had
+been a puzzle or a conundrum at a family Christmas party, and
+they had all guessed it at once.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bring me the book for this term,&rdquo; said the Judge
+sharply to his clerk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was the name of the plaintiff?&rdquo; enquired Mr.
+Justice Doughty.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bumpkin, my lud,&rdquo; said Mr. Ricochet, &ldquo;with
+great deference.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, Pumpkin, so it was,&rdquo; said the presiding
+Judge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With great submission, my lud, Bumpkin!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Eh?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bumpkin, my lud;&rdquo; and then all the Judges&rsquo;
+cried &ldquo;Bumpkin!&rdquo; as pleased as the followers of
+Columbus when they discovered America.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, here it is,&rdquo; said Mr. Justice Pangloss,
+passing his forefinger slowly along the page; &ldquo;the name of
+the case you refer to, Mr. Ricochet, is <i>Bumpkin</i> v.
+<i>Snooks</i>, not <i>Coots</i> v. <i>Pumpkin</i>, and it was
+tried before me and a special jury on the twenty-eighth of July
+of the present year.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, my lud, with all submission.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 353--><a name="page353"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+353</span>&ldquo;Why, that was yesterday,&rdquo; said Mr. Justice
+Pangloss.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why did you not say so; I was referring to
+last year&rsquo;s book.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With all deference, my lud&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind, never mind, Mr. Ricochet; let us get
+on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you move for?&rdquo; asked Mr. Justice
+Doughty.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A new trial, my lud.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A new trial&mdash;yes&mdash;?&nbsp; Which way was the
+verdict, Mr. Ricochet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Verdict for the plaintiff, my lud.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And whom do you appear for?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am for the defendant, my lud.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O! you&rsquo;re for the defendant.&nbsp; Stop&mdash;let
+me have my note correct.&nbsp; I find it always of great
+assistance when the rule comes on to be argued.&nbsp; I
+don&rsquo;t say you&rsquo;re going to have a rule.&nbsp; I must
+know a little more of the case before we grant a rule.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If your ludship pleases.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I did not gather what his lordship intended to say when he
+made the observations recorded, and can only regret that his
+lordship should have broken off so abruptly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What ground do you move upon, Mr. Ricochet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Ricochet said, &ldquo;The usual grounds, my lud; that is
+to say, that the verdict was against the weight of
+evidence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stop a minute,&rdquo; said Mr. Justice Doughty;
+&ldquo;let me have my note correct, &lsquo;against the weight of
+evidence,&rsquo; Mr. Ricochet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Misdirection, my lud&mdash;with all respect to Mr.
+Justice Pangloss&mdash;and wrongful admission of
+evidence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 354--><a name="page354"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+354</span>&ldquo;What was the action for?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now this was a question that no man living had been able to
+answer yet.&nbsp; What was in the pleadings, that is, the pattern
+of the lawyer&rsquo;s net, was visible enough; but as regards
+merits, I predict with the greatest confidence, that no man will
+ever be able to discover what the action of <i>Bumpkin</i> versus
+<i>Snooks</i> was about.&nbsp; But it speaks wonders for the
+elasticity of our system of jurisprudence and the ingenuity of
+our lawyers that such a case could be <i>invented</i>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Trespass,&rdquo; said Ricochet, &ldquo;was one
+paragraph; then there was assault and battery; breach of contract
+in not accepting a pig at the price agreed; trespass in seizing
+the pig without paying for it; and then, my lud, there were the
+usual money counts, as they used to be called, to which the
+defendant pleaded, among other pleas, a right of way; an
+easement; leave and license; a right to take the pig; that the
+pig was the property of the defendant, and various other
+matters.&nbsp; Then, my lud, there was a counter-claim for
+slander, for assault and battery; for loss of profit which would
+have been made if the pig had been delivered according to
+contract; breach of contract for the non-delivery of the
+pig.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Justice Doughty: &ldquo;This was pig-iron, I
+suppose?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The two other Judges fell back, shaking their sides with
+laughter; and then forcibly thrust their hands against their hips
+which made their tippets stick out very much, and gave them a
+dignified and imposing appearance.&nbsp; Then, seeing the Judges
+laugh, all the bar laughed, and all the ushers laughed, and all
+the public laughed.&nbsp; The mistake, however, was a very easy
+one to fall into, and when Mr. Justice Doughty, who was an <!--
+page 355--><a name="page355"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+355</span>exceedingly good-tempered man, saw the mistake he had
+made, he laughed as much as any man, and even caused greater
+laughter still by good-humouredly and wittily observing that he
+supposed somebody must be a pigheaded man.&nbsp; To which Mr.
+Ricochet laughingly replied, that he believed the plaintiff was a
+very pigheaded man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Mr. Justice Pangloss, &ldquo;have you
+considered what Vinnius in his &lsquo;Commentary on Urban
+Servitudes&rsquo; says.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Ricochet said, &ldquo;Hem!&rdquo; and that was the very
+best answer he could make to the learned Pangloss, and if he only
+continues to answer in that manner he&rsquo;ll get any rule he
+likes to apply for&mdash;(no, not the Rule of Three,
+perhaps).</p>
+<p>So Mr. Justice Pangloss went on:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are, as Gale says, &lsquo;two classes of
+easements distinctly recognised by the Civil
+Law&mdash;&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hem!&rdquo; said Ricochet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Under the head of &ldquo;Urban
+Servitudes&mdash;&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ricochet: &ldquo;Hem!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;That a man,&rsquo; (continued Mr. Justice
+Pangloss), &lsquo;shall receive upon his house or land the
+<i>flumen</i> or <i>stillicidium</i> of his
+neighbour&mdash;&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hem!&rdquo; coughed Mr. Ricochet, in a very high key; I
+verily believe in imitation of that wonderful comedian, J. C.
+Clarke.</p>
+<p>Then Mr. Justice Pangloss proceeded, to the admiration of the
+whole Bar:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;The difference,&rsquo; says Vinnius, in his
+Commentary on this passage, between the <i>flumen</i> and the
+<i>stillicidium</i> is this&mdash;the latter is the rain falling
+from the roof by drops (<i>guttatim et
+stillatim</i>).&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 356--><a name="page356"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+356</span>&ldquo;Hem!&rdquo; from the whole Bar.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;The <i>flumen</i>&rsquo;&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; said Mr. Justice Doughty, &ldquo;you
+are entitled to a rule on that point, Mr. Ricochet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then Mr. Justice Technical whispered, and I heard Mr. Justice
+Doughty say the principle was the same, although there might be
+some difference of opinion about the facts, which could be argued
+hereafter.&nbsp; &ldquo;But what is the misreception of evidence,
+Mr. Ricochet?&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t quite see that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With all submission, my lud, evidence was admitted of
+what the solicitor for the defendant said to the
+plaintiff.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait a minute, let me see how that stands,&rdquo; said
+Mr. Justice Doughty; &ldquo;the solicitor for the defendant said
+something to the plaintiff, I don&rsquo;t quite follow
+that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Justice Technical observed that it was quite clear that
+what is said by the solicitor of one party to the solicitor of
+another party is not evidence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O,&rdquo; said the learned Pangloss, &ldquo;so far back
+as the time of Justinian it was laid down&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that being so,&rdquo; said the eminent Chancery
+Judge, Mr. Justice Technical, &ldquo;I should go so far as to
+say, that what the solicitor of one party says to the client
+stands upon the same footing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Precisely,&rdquo; said Mr. Ricochet</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think you are entitled to a rule on that
+point,&rdquo; remarked Mr. Justice Doughty, &ldquo;although my
+brother Pangloss seems to entertain some doubt as to whether
+there was any such evidence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, my lud, with all submission, with the greatest
+possible deference and respect to the learned Judge, I <!-- page
+357--><a name="page357"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+357</span>assure your ludship that it was so, for I have a note
+of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was about to say,&rdquo; continued Mr. Justice
+Doughty, &ldquo;as my brother Pangloss says, it may have been
+given while he was considering a point in Justinian.&nbsp; What
+is the misdirection?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, my lud, the misdirection was, I venture respectfully
+and deferentially to submit, and with the utmost deference to the
+learned Judge, in his lordship&rsquo;s telling the jury that if
+they found that the right of way which the defendant set up in
+his answer to the trespass, or easement&mdash;but perhaps, my
+lud, I had better read from the short-hand writer&rsquo;s notes
+of his ludship&rsquo;s summing-up.&nbsp; This is it, my lud, his
+ludship said: &lsquo;In an action for stopping of his
+<i>ancient</i> lights &mdash;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What!&rdquo; said Mr. Justice Doughty, &ldquo;<i>did he
+black the plaintiff&rsquo;s eyes</i>, then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, my lud,&rdquo; said Mr. Ricochet, &ldquo;that was
+never alleged or suggested.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I only used it by way of illustration,&rdquo; said Mr.
+Justice Pangloss.</p>
+<p>Then their lordships consulted together, and after about
+three-quarters of an hour&rsquo;s conversation the learned Mr.
+Justice Doughty said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can take a rule, Mr. Ricochet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On all points, my lud, if your ludships
+please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will be more satisfactory,&rdquo; said his lordship,
+&ldquo;and then we shall see what there is in it.&nbsp; At
+present, I must confess, I don&rsquo;t understand anything about
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And I saw that what there was really in it was very much like
+what there is in a kaleidoscope, odds and ends, which form all
+sorts of combinations when you twist and turn them about in the
+dark tube of a &ldquo;legal argument.&rdquo;&nbsp; <!-- page
+358--><a name="page358"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+358</span>And so poor Bumpkin was deprived of the fruit of his
+victory.&nbsp; Truly the law is very expeditious.&nbsp; Before
+Bumpkin had got home with the cheerful intelligence that he had
+won, the wind had changed and was setting in fearfully from the
+north-east.&nbsp; Juries may find as many facts as they like, but
+the Court applies the law to them; and law is like gunpowder in
+its operation upon them,&mdash;twists them out of all
+recognisable shape.&nbsp; It is very difficult in a Court of law
+to get over &ldquo;<i>guttatims</i>&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;<i>stillatims</i>,&rdquo; even in an action for the price
+of a pig.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 359--><a name="page359"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 359</span>CHAPTER XXXVII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Mr. Bumpkin is congratulated by his neighbours
+and friends in the market place and sells his corn.</p>
+<p>What a lovely peace there was again over the farm!&nbsp; It
+was true Mr. Bumpkin had not obtained as large a measure of
+damages as his solicitor had led him to anticipate, but he was
+triumphant, and that over a man like Snooks was something.&nbsp;
+So the damages were forgotten beneath that peaceful August
+sky.&nbsp; How bright the corn looked!&nbsp; There was not a
+particle of &ldquo;smut&rdquo; in the whole field.&nbsp; And it
+was a good breadth of wheat this year for Southwood Farm.&nbsp;
+The barley too, was evidently fit for malting, and would be sure
+to fetch a decent price: especially as they seemed to say there
+was not much barley this year that was quite up to the mark for
+malting.&nbsp; The swedes, too, were coming on apace, and a
+little rain by and by would make them swell considerably.&nbsp;
+So everything looked exceedingly prosperous, except perhaps the
+stock.&nbsp; There certainly were not so many pigs.&nbsp; Out of
+a stye of eleven there was only one left.&nbsp; The sow was
+nowhere to be seen.&nbsp; She had been sold, it appeared, so no
+more were to be expected from that quarter.&nbsp; When Mr.
+Bumpkin asked where &ldquo;old Jack&rdquo; was (that was the
+donkey), he was informed that &ldquo;the man&rdquo; had fetched
+it.&nbsp; &ldquo;The man&rdquo; <!-- page 360--><a
+name="page360"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 360</span>it appeared
+was always fetching something.&nbsp; Yesterday it was pigs; the
+day before it was ducks; the day before that it was geese; and
+about a week ago it was a stack of this year&rsquo;s hay: a stack
+of very prime clover indeed.&nbsp; Then &ldquo;the man&rdquo;
+took a fancy to some cheeses which Mrs. Bumpkin had in the dairy,
+some of her very finest make.&nbsp; She remonstrated, but
+&ldquo;the man&rdquo; was peremptory.&nbsp; But what most
+surprised Mr. Bumpkin, and drew tears from Mrs. Bumpkin&rsquo;s
+eyes, was when the successful litigant enquired how the bull
+was.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Bumpkin had invented many plans with a view to
+&ldquo;breaking this out&rdquo; to her husband: and now that the
+time had come every plan was a failure.&nbsp; The tears betrayed
+her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, be he dead?&rdquo; enquired Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O, no, Tom&mdash;no, no&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, what then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The man!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The man!&nbsp; The devil&rsquo;s in thic man, who be
+he?&nbsp; Where do ur come from?&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll bring an action
+agin him as sure&rsquo;s he&rsquo;s alive or shoot un dead wi my
+gun;&rdquo; here Mr. Bumpkin, in a great rage, got up and went to
+the beam which ran across the kitchen ceiling, and formed what is
+called the roof-tree of the house, by the side of which the gun
+was suspended by two loops.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, Tom, don&rsquo;t&mdash;don&rsquo;t&mdash;we
+have never wronged any one yet, and don&rsquo;t&mdash;don&rsquo;t
+now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I wool,&rdquo; said Bumpkin; &ldquo;what! be I to
+be stripped naaked and not fight for th&rsquo; cloathes&mdash;who
+be thic feller as took the bull?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Bumpkin was holding her apron to her eyes, and for a long
+while could say nothing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who be he, Nancy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 361--><a name="page361"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+361</span>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know, Tom&mdash;but he held a
+paper in his hand writ all over as close as the stubble-rows in
+the field, and he said thee had signed un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lord! lord!&rdquo; exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin, and then sat
+down on the settle and looked at the fire as though it threw a
+light over his past actions.&nbsp; He couldn&rsquo;t speak for a
+long time, not till Mrs. Bumpkin went up to him and laid her hand
+upon his shoulder, and said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tom!&nbsp; Tom! thee ha winned the case.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Aye, aye,&rdquo; said Bumpkin, starting up as from a
+reverie.&nbsp; &ldquo;I ha winned, Nancy.&nbsp; I ha beat thic
+there Snooks; ur wont snigger now when ur gooes by&mdash;lor,
+lor,&mdash;our counsellor put it into un straight,
+Nancy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did ur, Tom?&mdash;well, I be proud.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Bumpkin, &ldquo;and what d&rsquo;ye
+think?&mdash;it wornt our counsellor, that is the Queen&rsquo;s
+Counsellor nuther; he wornt there although I paid un, but I
+spoase he&rsquo;ll gie up the money, Nancy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Were it much, Tom?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Farty guineas!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Farty guineas, Tom!&nbsp; Why, it wur enough to set up
+housekeepin wi&mdash;and thee only winned twenty-five, Tom; why
+thic winnin were a heavy loss I think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, lookee ere,&rdquo; said Bumpkin; &ldquo;I oughter
+had five undered, as Laryer Prigg said, our case were that good,
+but lor it baint sartain: gie I a little gin and water,
+Nancy&mdash;thee ain&rsquo;t asked I to have a drap since I bin
+oame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lor, Tom, thee knows I be all for thee, and that all be
+thine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It beant much, it strikes me; lor, lor, whatever shall
+us do wirout pigs and sheep, and wirout thic bull.&nbsp; I be fit
+to cry, Nancy, although I winned the case.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 362--><a name="page362"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+362</span>Tom had his gin and water and smoked his pipe, and went
+to bed and dreamed of all that had taken place.&nbsp; He rose
+with the lark and went into the fields and enjoyed once again the
+fresh morning air, and the sweet scent of the new hayrick in the
+yard; and, without regarding it, the song of the lark as it shot
+heavenward and poured down its stream of glad music: but there
+was amidst all a sadness of spirit and a feeling of
+desolation.&nbsp; It was not like the old times when everything
+seemed to welcome him about the farm wherever he went.&nbsp; The
+work of &ldquo;the man&rdquo; was everywhere.&nbsp; But the
+harvest was got in, and a plentiful harvest it was: the corn was
+threshed, and one day Mr. Bumpkin went to market with his little
+bags of samples of the newly-housed grain.&nbsp; Everybody was
+glad to see him, for he was known everywhere as a regular upright
+and down-straight man.&nbsp; Every farmer and every corn-dealer
+and cattle-dealer congratulated him in his homely way on his
+success.&nbsp; They looked at his samples and acknowledged they
+were very bright and weighty.&nbsp; &ldquo;I never liked that
+Snooks feller,&rdquo; was the general cry, and at the
+farmers&rsquo; ordinary, which was held every market day at the
+&ldquo;Plough,&rdquo; every one who knew Bumpkin shook hands and
+wished him well, and after dinner, before they broke up, Farmer
+Gosling proposed his health, and said how proud he &ldquo;were
+that his old neighbour had in the beautiful words o&rsquo; the
+National Anthem, &lsquo;confounded their politicks&rsquo;: and he
+hoped that the backbone o&rsquo; old England, which were the
+farmers, wornt gwine to be broked jist yet awhile.&nbsp; Farmin
+might be bad, but yet wi little cheaper rents and a good deal
+cheaper rates and taxes, there&rsquo;d be good farmin and good
+farmers in England yit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now this speech, I saw in my dream, brought down the <!-- page
+363--><a name="page363"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+363</span>house.&nbsp; Everyone said it was more to the point
+than the half-mile speeches which took up so much of the
+newspapers to the exclusion of murders, burglaries and
+divorces.&nbsp; And in truth, now I come to look at it in my
+waking moments, I respectfully commend it to our legislators, or
+what is better, to their constituencies, as embodying on this
+subject both the principles of true conservatism and true
+liberalism: and I don&rsquo;t see what the most exacting of
+politicians can require more than that.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin made a suitable reply&mdash;that is to say,
+&ldquo;he wur mighty proud o&rsquo; their
+neighbourliness&mdash;he wur a plaain man, as had made his own
+way in the world, or leastwise tried to do un by ard work and
+uprightedness and downstraightedness; tried to be straight
+forrerd, and nobody as he knowed of could ax un for a
+shillin&rsquo;.&nbsp; But,&rdquo; he added: &ldquo;I be praisin
+oop myself, neighbours, I be afeard, and I doant wish to do thic,
+only to put I straaight afore thee.&nbsp; I beant dead yit, and I
+hope we shall all be friends and neighbours, and meet many moore
+times at this ornary together.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And so, delighted with one another, after a glass or two, and
+a song or two, the party broke up, all going to their several
+farms.&nbsp; Mr. Bumpkin was particularly well pleased, for he
+had sold twenty quarters of wheat at forty-nine shillings a
+quarter; which, as times went, was a very considerable increase,
+showing the excellent quality of the samples.</p>
+<p>Sooner or later, however, it must be told, that when Bumpkin
+reached his quiet farm, a strange and sad scene presented
+itself.&nbsp; Evidences of &ldquo;<i>the man</i>&rdquo; were in
+all directions.&nbsp; He had been at work while Mr. Bumpkin in
+his convivial moments was protesting that he did not <!-- page
+364--><a name="page364"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+364</span>owe anyone a shilling.&nbsp; Alas! how little the best
+of as know how much we owe!</p>
+<p>Mrs. Bumpkin, who had borne up like a true woman through all
+the troubles that had come upon her home,&mdash;borne up for his
+sake, hoping for better days, and knowing nothing of the terrible
+net that had been spread around them by the wily fowler, at
+length gave way, as she saw &ldquo;the man&rdquo; loading his
+cart with her husband&rsquo;s wheat; the wheat he had gone that
+day to sell.&nbsp; Bitterly she wrung her hands, and begged him
+to spare her husband that last infliction.&nbsp; Was there
+anything that she could do or give to save him this blow?&nbsp;
+No, no; the man was obstinate in the performance of his duty;
+&ldquo;right was right, and wrong was no man&rsquo;s
+right!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So when Mr. Bumpkin returned, the greater part of his wheat
+was gone, and the rest was being loaded.&nbsp; The beautiful rick
+of hay too, which had not yet ceased to give out the fresh scent
+that a new rick yields, were being cut and bound into
+trusses.</p>
+<p>Poor Tom was fairly beside himself, but Mrs. Bumpkin had taken
+the precaution to hide the gun and the powder-flask, for she
+could not tell what her husband might do in his
+distraction.&nbsp; Possibly she was right.&nbsp; Tom&rsquo;s rage
+knew no bounds.&nbsp; Youth itself seemed to be restored in the
+strength of his fury.&nbsp; He saw dimly the men standing around
+looking on; he saw, as in a dream, the man cutting on the rick,
+and he uttered incoherent sentences which those only understood
+who were accustomed to his provincial accent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tom, Tom,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin, &ldquo;don&rsquo;t
+be in a rage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who be thic feller on my rick?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I beant any more a feller nor thee, Maister Boompkin;
+it aint thy rick nuther.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 365--><a name="page365"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+365</span>&ldquo;Then in the name of h&mdash;, whose be
+it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It be Maister Skinalive&rsquo;s; thee can&rsquo;t have
+t&rsquo; cake an eat un; thee sowled it to un.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It be a lie, a --- lie; come down!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Noa, noa, I beant coomin doon till I coot all t&rsquo;
+hay; it be good hay an all, as sweet as a noot.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is thy master?&rdquo; enquired Mrs. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I dooant rightly knoo, missus, where ur be; but I think
+if thee could see un, he&rsquo;d poot it right if thee wanted
+time loike, and so on, for he be a kind-hearted man
+enoo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can we find un, do ur think?&rdquo; asked Mrs.
+Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If thee do, missus, it wur moor un I bin able to do for
+the last three moonths.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll find some un,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin;
+&ldquo;here, goo and fetch a pleeceman.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was said to a small boy who did the bird-minding, and was
+now looking on with his mouth wide open, and his eyes actually
+shedding tears.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, fetch a pleeceman an all,&rdquo; said the man,
+thrusting the big hay-knife down into the centre of the rick;
+&ldquo;but take a soop o&rsquo; cyder, maister; I dessay thee
+feels a bit out o&rsquo; sorts loike.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee darn thief; it be my cyder, too, I&rsquo;ve a
+notion.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How can it be thine, maister, when thee ha&rsquo;
+sowled un?&rdquo; said the man with his unanswerable logic:
+&ldquo;haw! haw! haw!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Bumpkin held her husband&rsquo;s hand, and tried her
+hardest to keep him from using violence towards the man.&nbsp;
+She felt the convulsive twitches of his strong muscles, and the
+inward struggle that was shaking his stalwart frame.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Come away, Tom; come away; let <!-- page 366--><a
+name="page366"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 366</span>un do as
+they like, we&rsquo;ll have them as will see us righted
+yet.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s law for un, surely.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It beant no use to kick, maister,&rdquo; said the man,
+again ramming the knife down into the rick as though he were
+cutting Mr. Bumpkin himself in half, and were talking to him the
+while; &ldquo;it beant no use to kick, maister.&nbsp; Here thee
+be; thee owes the man the money, and can&rsquo;t pay, so ur does
+this out of kindness to prevent thee being sowled oop
+loike.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here be the pleeceman,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>Mr. Bumpkin turned suddenly, and shouted, &ldquo;Tak thic
+thief into custody.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The policeman, albeit a country constable, was a very sensible
+man; and seeing how matters stood, he very wisely set himself to
+the better task of taking Mr. Bumpkin into custody without
+appearing to do so, and without Mr. Bumpkin knowing it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;if so be as you will come
+indoors, Mr. Bumpkin, I think we can put our heads together and
+see what can be done in this &rsquo;ere case; if it&rsquo;s
+stealing let him steal, and I&rsquo;ll have him nicely; but if it
+ain&rsquo;t stealing, then I woant have him at all.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+(A pause.)</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For why?&rdquo;&nbsp; (A pause.)</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because the law gives you other remedies.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That be right, pleeceman,&rdquo; said Bumpkin;
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll goo wi&rsquo; thee.&nbsp; Now then, Nancy,
+let&rsquo;s goo; and look &rsquo;ere, thee thief, I&rsquo;ll
+ha&rsquo; thee in th&rsquo; jail yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The man grinned with a mouth that seemed to have been cut with
+his own hay-knife, so large was it, and went on with his work,
+merely saying: &ldquo;I dooant charge thee nothin for
+cootin&rsquo; nor yet for bindin, maister; I does it all free
+graatis, loike.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee d--- thief, thee&rsquo;ll be paid.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 367--><a name="page367"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+367</span>So they went in, and the policeman was quite a
+comforter to the poor old man.&nbsp; He talked to him about what
+the law was on this point and that point, and how a trespass was
+one thing, and a breach of the peace another; and how he
+mustn&rsquo;t take a man up for felony just because somebody
+charged him: otherwise, the man on the rick might have charged
+Mr. Bumpkin, and so on; till he got the old man into quite a
+discussion on legal points.&nbsp; But meanwhile he had given him
+another piece of advice, which was also much to his credit, and
+that was to send to his solicitor, Mr. Prigg.&nbsp; Mr. Prigg was
+accordingly sent for; but, like most good men, was very
+scarce.&nbsp; Nowhere could Mr. Prigg be found.&nbsp; But it was
+well known, for it was advertised everywhere on large bills, that
+the excellent gentleman would take the chair at a meeting, to be
+held in the schoolroom in the evening, for the propagation of
+Christianity among the Jews.&nbsp; The policeman would be on duty
+at that meeting, and he would be sure to see Mr. Prigg, and tell
+him Mr. Bumpkin was very desirous to see him as early as possible
+on the following day.&nbsp; Mr. Bumpkin was thankful, and to some
+extent pacified.&nbsp; As the policeman wished them goodnight,
+Mrs. Bumpkin accompanied him to the door, and begged, if he
+wouldn&rsquo;t mind, that he would look in to-morrow, for he
+seemed a kind of protection for them.</p>
+<p>It was about three in the afternoon of the following day when
+good Mr. Prigg drove up to Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s door; he drove up
+with the mare that had been Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s cow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here he be,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin; and if Mr. Prigg
+had been an angel from heaven, his presence could not have been
+more welcome.&nbsp; Oh, what sunshine he seemed to bring!&nbsp;
+Was it a rainbow round his face, or was it only <!-- page
+368--><a name="page368"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+368</span>his genial Christian smile?&nbsp; His collar was
+perfect, so was his tie; his head immoveable, so were his
+principles.&nbsp; &ldquo;Dear, dear!&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin,
+&ldquo;I be so glad thee be come, Mr. Prigg&mdash;here be master
+takin&rsquo; on so as never was; I never see&rsquo;d anything
+like it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter, my dear lady?&rdquo; inquired
+the good man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be that loryer Prigg?&rdquo; shouted a voice from the
+inner room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Aye, aye, Tom, it be Mr. Prigg.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come in, zur,&rdquo; said the voice, &ldquo;come in; I
+be mighty glad to see thee.&nbsp; Why dam&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; remonstrated the diffuser of Christianity
+among the Jews; &ldquo;hush!&rdquo; and his hands were softly
+raised in gentle protest&mdash;albeit his head never turned so
+much as a hair&rsquo;s breadth.&nbsp; &ldquo;Let us be calm, my
+dear sir, let us be calm.&nbsp; We win by being calm.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, we winned the lawsuit; didn&rsquo;t us,
+sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, that thee did, Tom!&rdquo; exclaimed Mrs. Bumpkin,
+delighted at this momentary gleam of gladness in her
+husband&rsquo;s broken heart.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course we won,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Did I ever entertain a doubt from the first about the
+merits of that case?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee did not, sir,&rdquo; said Tom; &ldquo;but lookee
+&rsquo;ere, sir,&rdquo; he continued, in almost a whisper,
+&ldquo;I dreamt last night as we lost un; and I see thic Snooks a
+sniggering as plaain as ever I see&rsquo;d anybody in my
+life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear sir, what matters your dream?&nbsp; We won,
+sir.&nbsp; And as for Snooks&rsquo; sniggering, I am sorry to say
+he is sold up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sold oop!&rdquo; exclaimed Bumpkin.&nbsp; &ldquo;Sorry!
+why beest thee sorry for un&mdash;beant thee sorry for
+I?&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 369--><a name="page369"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+369</span>&ldquo;Sorry you&rsquo;ve won, Mr. Bumpkin?&nbsp; No;
+but, I&rsquo;m sorry for Snooks, because we lose our costs.&nbsp;
+Oh, that Locust is the greatest dodger I ever met.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand thee, sir,&rdquo; said
+Bumpkin.&nbsp; &ldquo;What d&rsquo;ye mean by not getting
+costs&mdash;won&rsquo;t ur pay?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I fear not,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg, rubbing his
+hands.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am surprised, too, that he should not have
+waited until the rule for a new trial was argued.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What the devil be the meaning o&rsquo; all this?&rdquo;
+exclaimed Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Really, really,&rdquo; said the pious diffuser of
+Christianity, &ldquo;we must exercise patience; we may get more
+damages if there should be another trial.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This be trial enough,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin;
+&ldquo;and after all it were a trumpery case about a
+pig.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so, quite so,&rdquo; said the lawyer, rubbing his
+hands; &ldquo;but you see, my dear sir, it&rsquo;s not so much
+the pig.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin, &ldquo;it beant so
+much th&rsquo; pig; it be the hoarses moore, and the hayricks,
+and the whate, and&mdash;where be all my fowls and
+dooks?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The fowls&mdash;quite so!&nbsp; Let me see,&rdquo; said
+the meditative man, pressing the head of his gold pencil-case
+against his forehead, &ldquo;the fowls&mdash;let me see&mdash;oh,
+I know, they did the pleadings&mdash;so they did.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And thic sow o&rsquo; mine?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes; I think she made an affidavit, if I remember
+rightly.&nbsp; Yes, yes&mdash;and the bacon,&rdquo; said he,
+elevating his left hand, &ldquo;six flitches I think there were;
+they used to be in this very room&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, sure did ur,&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p><!-- page 370--><a name="page370"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+370</span>&ldquo;Well I remember; they made a very splendid
+affidavit too: I have a note of all of them in my
+memory.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What coomed o&rsquo; the cows?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cows?&nbsp; Yes&mdash;I have it&mdash;our leading
+counsel had them; and the calf, if I remember rightly, went to
+the junior.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;&ldquo;Who had the cheeses?&rdquo; inquired Mr.
+Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cheeses!&rdquo; said the good man.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh,
+yes, the cheeses; they went in refreshers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the poor old donkey?&rdquo; asked Mrs. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, where be Jock?&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Went for the opinion,&rdquo; answered the lawyer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where be thic bull o&rsquo; mine?&rdquo; said
+Tom.&nbsp; &ldquo;He wur the finest bull in all thic county,
+woren&rsquo;t he, Nancy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; answered Mrs. Bumpkin, &ldquo;and ur
+follered I about, Tom, jist like a Christian.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So ur did, Nancy.&nbsp; Dost thee mind, when ur got
+through thic gap into Squire Stucky&rsquo;s meadow, &rsquo;mong
+the cows?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, Tom; and thee went and whistled un; but ur
+wouldn&rsquo;t come for thy whistlin; and Joe, poor Joe! went and
+got a great stick.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There I mind un,&rdquo; said Bumpkin; &ldquo;what
+coomed of un, Master Prigg?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg; &ldquo;quite so; let
+me see.&rdquo;&nbsp; And again the gold pencil-case was pressed
+against his respectable forehead in placid cogitation.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Yes, that bull argued the appeal.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hem!&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin; &ldquo;argied appeal, did
+ur?&nbsp; Well, I tell ee what, Master Prigg, if that air bull
+&rsquo;ad knowed what I knows now, he&rsquo;d a gi&rsquo;en them
+jusseses a bit o&rsquo; his mind, and thee too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><!-- page 371--><a name="page371"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+371</span>&ldquo;Dear me,&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg; &ldquo;you
+entirely mis-apprehend&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, lookee &rsquo;ere,&rdquo; said Tom, &ldquo;it
+beant no use to mince matters wi&rsquo; ee.&nbsp; What I wants to
+know is as this; I winned my case&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite so,&rdquo; said Prigg.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And &rsquo;ow be it then that all my sheep and things
+be took off the farm?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear me!&rdquo; said Mr. Prigg, in the tone of an
+injured man; &ldquo;I think, of all men, clients are the most
+ungrateful.&nbsp; I have worked night and day to serve you; I
+have sacrificed my pleasures, which I do not reckon&mdash;my home
+comforts&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But who be thic feller that steals my corn an&rsquo;
+hay, and pigs?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Really, Mr. Bumpkin, this is language which I did not
+expect from you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But &rsquo;ow comes my farm stripped, Maister Prigg?
+tell I thic.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose you have given a bill of sale, Mr.
+Bumpkin.&nbsp; You are aware that a lawsuit cannot be carried on
+without means, and you should have calculated the cost before
+going to war.&nbsp; I think there is Scripture authority for
+that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then have this Skinalive feller the right to take
+un?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I presume so,&rdquo; said Prigg; &ldquo;I know
+he&rsquo;s a most respectable man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A friend o&rsquo; thine, I s&rsquo;poase?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Prigg, hesitating, &ldquo;I may even
+go so far as to say that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I be gwine so fur as to say thee be a damned
+rogue!&rdquo; said Mr. Bumpkin, rising, and thumping the table
+with great vehemence.</p>
+<p><!-- page 372--><a name="page372"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+372</span>You might have knocked Mr. Prigg down with a feather,
+certainly with a bludgeon; such a shock he had never received at
+the hands of a client in the whole course of his professional
+experience.&nbsp; He rose and drew from his pocket an envelope, a
+very large official-looking envelope, such as no man twice in his
+life would like to see, even if he could be said to enjoy the
+prospect once.</p>
+<p>It is not usual for respectable solicitors to carry about
+their bills of costs in their pockets, and why Mr. Prigg should
+have done so on this occasion I am not aware.&nbsp; I merely saw
+in my dream that he did so.&nbsp; There was not a change in his
+countenance; his piety was intact; there was not even a suffusion
+of colour.&nbsp; Placid, sweet-tempered, and urbane, as a
+Christian should be, he looked pityingly towards the hot and
+irascible Bumpkin, as though he should say, &ldquo;You have
+smitten me on this cheek, now smite me on that!&rdquo; and placed
+the great envelope on the table before the ungrateful man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What be thic?&rdquo; inquired Mr. Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A list of my services, sir,&rdquo; said Prigg, meekly:
+&ldquo;You will see there, ungrateful man, the sacrifices I have
+made on your behalf; the journeyings oft; the hunger, and, I may
+say, thirst; the perils of robbers, the perils amongst false
+friends, the&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I doant understand, sir,&rdquo; said Bumpkin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because darkness hath blinded your eyes,&rdquo; said
+the pious lawyer; &ldquo;but I leave you, Mr. Bumpkin, and I will
+ask you, since you no longer repose confidence in my judgment and
+integrity, to obtain the services of some other professional
+gentleman, who will conduct your case with more zeal and fidelity
+than you think I have shown; I who have carried your cause to a
+triumphant issue; <!-- page 373--><a name="page373"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 373</span>and may be said to have established
+the grand principle that an Englishman&rsquo;s house is his
+castle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And with this the good man, evidently affected by deep
+emotion, shook hands silently with Mrs. Bumpkin, and disappeared
+for ever from my view.</p>
+<p>Never in any dream have I beheld that man again.&nbsp; Never,
+surely, under any form of humanity have so many virtues been
+concealed.&nbsp; I have looked for him in daily life, about the
+Courts of Justice and in the political arena, but his equal for
+simplicity of character, for unaffected piety, and purity of
+motive, have I never discovered, although I have seen many, who,
+without his talents, have vainly endeavoured to emulate his
+virtues.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Bumpkin examined the document he had left, and found a
+most righteous statement of the services rendered by this great
+and good man; which, after giving credit to Mr. Bumpkin for cash
+received from Mr. Skinalive, Mr. Prigg&rsquo;s friend, of seven
+hundred and twenty-two pounds, six shillings and
+eightpence-half-penny, left a balance due to Honest Lawyer Prigg
+of three hundred and twenty-eight pounds, seven shillings and
+threepence,&mdash;subject, of course, to be reduced on
+taxation.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 375--><a name="page375"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 375</span>CHAPTER XXXVIII.</h2>
+<p class="gutsumm">Farewell.</p>
+<p>The last chapter of a book must always possess a special and
+melancholy interest for the author.&nbsp; He gives his words
+reluctantly, almost grudgingly, like one who is spending his last
+coins and will soon be left penniless upon the world.&nbsp; Or
+like one who is passing his last moments at the house of a friend
+whom he may see no more for ever.&nbsp; The author is taking
+farewell of his characters and his readers, and therefore his
+regret is twofold; added to which is the doubt as to whether,
+judged by the severe standard of Public Opinion, he has been
+faithful to both.&nbsp; Thought is large, and may fill the world,
+permeating every class and every section of society; it may be
+circumscribed, and operate only upon some infinitesimal
+proportion of mankind: but whether great or small, for good or
+evil, it is published, and a corresponding responsibility
+devolves upon the writer.&nbsp; I record my dream faithfully, and
+am therefore exonerated, in my conscience, from responsibility in
+its effect.</p>
+<p>How shall I describe the closing scene of this eventful
+story?&nbsp; I will imagine nothing; I will exaggerate nothing;
+for, during the whole progress of the story, it has been my
+constant care not to give the most captious critic the
+opportunity of saying that I have exaggerated a single
+incident.&nbsp; I will relate faithfully what I saw in <!-- page
+376--><a name="page376"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 376</span>my
+dream, and that only; diminishing nothing, and adding
+nothing.</p>
+<p>In my waking moments my wife said it was very wrong of Mr.
+Bumpkin, after all that Mr. Prigg had done for him, to be so
+rude.&nbsp; I agreed that it was: but said, great allowance must
+be made for Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s want of education.&nbsp; Then
+said my wife, &ldquo;Will not some shallow-minded persons say
+that your story attacks the administration of
+justice?&rdquo;&nbsp; To which I replied that it did not matter
+what shallow-minded persons said, but that in fact I had in no
+way attacked the administration of justice; nor had I in the
+least degree reflected on the great body of respectable
+solicitors who had in their hands the interests of the country,
+and faithfully discharged their duties.&nbsp; And then I stood
+up, and putting forth my hand in imitation of Pitt&rsquo;s statue
+in the corridor of the House of Commons, I said, &ldquo;Justice
+is Divine, not Human; and you cannot detract from anything that
+is Divine, any more than you can lessen the brilliancy of the
+sun.&nbsp; You may obscure its splendour to mortal eyes, but its
+effulgence is the same.&nbsp; Man may so ostensibly assert his
+own dignity, or the dignity of a perishable system, that it may
+temporarily veil the beauty of a Divine attribute; but Justice
+must still remain the untarnished glory of Divine wisdom.&nbsp;
+It is not the pomp of position or the majesty of office that
+imparts dignity to Justice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here, exhausted with my effort, and with my wife&rsquo;s
+applause ringing in my ears, I fell asleep again, and dreamed
+that I saw Bumpkin sadly wandering about the old farm; his
+faithful wife following, and never for one moment ceasing to
+cheer him up.&nbsp; It was a fine bright morning in October as
+they wandered <!-- page 377--><a name="page377"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 377</span>forth.&nbsp; There wasn&rsquo;t a
+living thing about the farm except the birds, and even they
+seemed sad in their twittering.&nbsp; Could it be possible that
+they knew of poor Bumpkin&rsquo;s miserable condition?</p>
+<p>There was an old jackdaw that certainly did; for he hopped and
+hopped along after the master with the saddest expression I ever
+saw bird wear.&nbsp; But the master took no notice.&nbsp; On and
+on he wandered, seemingly unconscious of the presence even of his
+wife.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tom!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;Tom, where beest thee
+gwine?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Bumpkin started; turned round, and said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nancy! what, be it thee, lassie?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, Tom, sure enough it be I.&nbsp; Let&rsquo;s cheer
+up, Tom.&nbsp; If the worst come to the worst&mdash;we can but
+goo to Union.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The wust have come to th&rsquo; wust, Nancy; we be
+ruined!&nbsp; Look at this &rsquo;ere farm&mdash;all be
+bare&mdash;all be lost, Nancy.&nbsp; Hark how silent it all
+be!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind, Tom; never mind.&nbsp; I wish Joe wur
+here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! Joe, yes.&nbsp; I wonder where Joe be; praps he be
+out here in th&rsquo; six akre.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, Tom, he be gwine for a sojer; but I&rsquo;ve a
+mind he&rsquo;ll come back.&nbsp; And who knows, we may be
+&rsquo;appy yet!&nbsp; We&rsquo;ve worked hard, Tom, together
+these five-and-thirty year, and sure we can trudge on t&rsquo;
+th&rsquo; end.&nbsp; Come, let&rsquo;s goo in and ave some
+breakfast.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Tom kept on walking and looking round the fields after his
+old manner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think we&rsquo;ll ave wuts here,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So ur will, Tom, but let&rsquo;s have breakfast
+fust.&nbsp; Come, lad.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They wandered still through the quiet fields, and the old
+man&rsquo;s mind seemed giving way.&nbsp; But I saw that <!--
+page 378--><a name="page378"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+378</span>Mrs. Bumpkin kept up with him and cheered him whenever
+she could put in a word of comfort, cold and hopeless as it
+was.&nbsp; And so the day was spent, and the night came, and they
+entered their home for the last time.&nbsp; It was a terribly sad
+night; but the Vicar came and sat up late with the old people,
+and talked to them and read and cried with them, until at last
+Tom said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I zee it, sir, thee hast showed I; thank God for thy
+words.&nbsp; Yes, yes, we maun leave t&rsquo; morrer, and
+we&rsquo;ll call on thee, and maybe thou&rsquo;lt goo to
+th&rsquo; Squire wi&rsquo; us and explaain to un how we
+can&rsquo;t pay our rent, and may be th&rsquo; Squire&rsquo;ll
+let I work un out.&nbsp; If we could only work un out, I&rsquo;d
+be &rsquo;appy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, Tom,&rdquo; said Mrs. Bumpkin, &ldquo;an I&rsquo;ll
+work too; thee knows that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thee wast allays a good wife, Nancy; and I&rsquo;ll
+allays say&rsquo;t, come what wooll.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the Vicar, &ldquo;to-morrow we will
+go&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want un to forgive I th&rsquo;
+rent,&rdquo; said Tom; &ldquo;only to gie us time, and Nancy and
+I&rsquo;ll work un out.&rdquo;&nbsp; And so it was arranged that
+the next morning the old home was to be left for ever.&nbsp; It
+was no longer home, for every article of furniture, every tool,
+every scrap that was of any value had been ruthlessly seized by
+the heartless money-lender whom the Law permitted to rob under
+the name of a bill of sale.&nbsp; The man was in possession to
+take away their bed and the few other articles that were left for
+their accommodation till the morrow.</p>
+<p>And on the morrow I saw the last of poor Bumpkin that I shall
+ever see.&nbsp; In the beautiful sunshine of that October
+morning, just by the old oak, he was leaning over the gate
+looking his last at the dear old fields and the old farm-house
+where so many happy years had been <!-- page 379--><a
+name="page379"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+379</span>spent.&nbsp; By his side was his wife, with her hand
+shading her eyes; the old dog was between them, looking into the
+face now of Tom and then of his wife.&nbsp; Mr. Bumpkin&rsquo;s
+arms were resting on the gate, and his old ash stick that he used
+to walk with over the fields was in his hand.&nbsp; They stood
+there for a long, long time as though they could never leave
+it.&nbsp; And I saw the tears trickle down the old man&rsquo;s
+face as Mrs. Bumpkin, letting fall the corner of her apron, which
+she had held to her eyes, and placing her arm through his, said
+in a faltering voice:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, Tom, we must goo.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center">THE END.</p>
+<h2><!-- page 381--><a name="page381"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 381</span>THE LAWSUIT.</h2>
+<p class="poetry">Tom Bumpkin was a thriving man,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As all the world could see;<br />
+In forty years he&rsquo;d raised himself<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; From direst poverty.</p>
+<p class="poetry">And now he rented from the Squir<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Some acres, near a score;<br />
+Some people said &rsquo;twas twenty-five,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And some that it was more.</p>
+<p class="poetry">He had a sow of rare brave breed,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And nine good pigs had he;<br />
+A cow and calf, a rick of hay,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And horses he had three.</p>
+<p class="poetry">And Mrs. Bumpkin had a bull,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The finest creature out;<br />
+&ldquo;And, like a Christian,&rdquo; so she said,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &ldquo;It follered her about.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">So Bumpkin was a thriving man,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; As all the world could see;<br />
+A self-made man, but yet not made<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of scholarship was he.</p>
+<p class="poetry">With neighbour Snooks he dealings had<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; About his latest farrow;<br />
+Snooks said he&rsquo;d bought a pig, and so,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To prove it, brought his barrow.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Tom said, &ldquo;It wur to be two
+crowns;&rdquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Snooks said, &ldquo;Twur nine-and-six;&rdquo;<br />
+Then Tom observed, &ldquo;You doan&rsquo;t &rsquo;ave me<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Wi none o&rsquo; them there tricks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">So there was battle; Lawyer Prigg<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Was told this tale of woe;<br />
+The Lawyer rubbed his bony hands<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And said, &ldquo;I see; quite so!&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry"><!-- page 382--><a name="page382"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 382</span>&ldquo;A case of
+trespass,&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Ay zo &rsquo;t be!&rdquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Said Bumpkin, feeling big;<br />
+&ldquo;Now mak un pay vor&rsquo;t, mak un pay;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; It beant so much th&rsquo; pig.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;No, no, it&rsquo;s not so much the
+pig,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That were a matter small;<br />
+Indeed, good Bumpkin, we may say<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; It&rsquo;s not the pig at all!</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;It&rsquo;s more the <i>principle</i>
+involved,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The rights of man, you see&rdquo;&mdash;<br />
+&ldquo;Ay, ay,&rdquo; quoth Tom; &ldquo;the devil&rsquo;s
+in&rsquo;t<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;F I beant as good as he.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">There never was a man more prompt<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Or swift to strike a blow:<br />
+Give but the word, and Charger Prigg<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Was down upon the foe.</p>
+<p class="poetry">The <span class="smcap">Letter</span>, <span
+class="smcap">Writ</span>, and <span
+class="smcap">Statement</span> went<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Like lightning, thunder, rain;<br />
+<span class="smcap">Inspection</span> and <span
+class="smcap">Discovery</span> rode<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Like Uhlans o&rsquo;er the plain!</p>
+<p class="poetry">Then <span class="smcap">Interrogatories</span>
+flew<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Without procrastination:<br />
+As when the ambushed outposts give<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A deadly salutation.</p>
+<p class="poetry">Now Snooks&rsquo;s lawyer was a man<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To wrong would never pander;<br />
+And like a high-souled Pleader drew<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A <span class="smcap">Counterclaim</span> for
+slander;</p>
+<p class="poetry">And then with cautious skill behind<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The legal outworks clambers;<br />
+Until dislodged, he held his own<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Entrenched in Judges&rsquo; Chambers.</p>
+<p class="poetry">At length came battle hot and fierce,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And points reserved as though<br />
+The case must be economized,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Not murdered at a blow.</p>
+<p class="poetry"><!-- page 383--><a name="page383"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 383</span>Then came appeals upon the
+points,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; New trials on the facts;<br />
+More points, more learned arguments,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; More precedents and Acts.</p>
+<p class="poetry">But <span class="smcap">Law</span>, thou art a
+tender plant<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; That needs must droop and die;<br />
+And bear no fruit unless thy root<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Be watered constantly:</p>
+<p class="poetry">And Bumpkin with a generous hand<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Had given thee good supply;<br />
+He drained the well, and yet withal<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The noble Prigg was dry.</p>
+<p class="poetry">With plaintive look would move a stone,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Tom gazed on Lawyer Prigg:<br />
+Who rubbed his hands and said, &ldquo;You see,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; It&rsquo;s not so much the pig.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;Noa, noa, it be th&rsquo; horses
+moore,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The calf and sheep and kine,<br />
+Where be th&rsquo; hay-rick and the straw?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And where thic bull o&rsquo; mine?&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">The Lawyer said, &ldquo;Quite so, quite
+so!&rdquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Looked wise, and wisely grinned;<br />
+For Tom was like a ship becalmed,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He stopped for want of wind.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;You see,&rdquo; said Prigg with
+gravity<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Would almost make you laugh,<br />
+&ldquo;Our leading Counsel had the Cow,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The junior had the Calf.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;The hay and straw <i>Rules nisi</i>
+got,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Made <i>Absolute</i> with corn,<br />
+The pigs made <i>Interrogat&rsquo;ries</i>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Most beautifully drawn.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;The Bacon&mdash;ah, dear Bumpkin, few<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In Law suits ever save it;<br />
+It made together with the sow,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A splendid <i>Affidavit</i>.</p>
+<p class="poetry"><!-- page 384--><a name="page384"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 384</span>&ldquo;The cocks and hens the
+<i>Pleadings</i> did<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Most exquisitely utter;<br />
+And some few pans of cream there were,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Which made the <i>Surre-butter</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;Why, Surrey butter!&nbsp; I&rsquo;d a
+tub<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The best in this ere nation&rdquo;&mdash;<br />
+&ldquo;Quite so!&rdquo; said Prigg; &ldquo;but you forget,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; &rsquo;Twas used in <i>Consultation</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;Well, well, of all the hungry mouths,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; There&rsquo;s nothing like the Law&rsquo;s;<br />
+No wonder they can talk if that<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Be how they iles their jaws.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;Now just look ere; I&rsquo;d twenty
+cheese,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The finest of old Cheshires,&rdquo;&mdash;<br />
+&ldquo;Quite so, quite so!&rdquo; said Prigg; &ldquo;but they<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Just furnished the <i>Refreshers</i>.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;The Ass for the <i>Opinion</i> went;<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The Horses, <i>Costs</i> between us;<br />
+And all the Ducks and Drakes, my boy,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Were turned into <span
+class="smcap">Subp&oelig;nas</span>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;I zee it all; the road to Ruin,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Straight as any furrer:<br />
+That Bull o&rsquo; mine&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Excuse me, Sir,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Went up upon <span
+class="smcap">Demurrer</span>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;Then beant there nothing left for I,<br
+/>
+&nbsp;&nbsp; In all this ere undoin?<br />
+Nay, Nance, our fireside be gone,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; It&rsquo;s emptiness and ruin.</p>
+<p class="poetry">&ldquo;I wish we&rsquo;d fought un out
+ourselves<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Wi&rsquo; fists instead o&rsquo; law;<br />
+Since Samson fit, there never was<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Good fightin wi the jaw.&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="poetry">So <i>now</i> Tom&rsquo;s not a thriving
+man,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; He owns not cow or pig;<br />
+And evermore he&rsquo;ll be in debt<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; To Honest Lawyer Prigg.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span
+class="smcap">bradbury</span>, <span class="smcap">agnew</span>,
+<span class="smcap">&amp; co.</span>, <span
+class="smcap">printers</span>, <span
+class="smcap">whitefriars</span>.</p>
+<h2>Footnotes</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote0a"></a><a href="#citation0a"
+class="footnote">[0a]</a>&nbsp; Since the First Edition, &ldquo;a
+bulky volume&rdquo; of new rules has appeared.&nbsp; No
+independent existence at present, and therefore anatomy
+uncertain.&nbsp; I have peeped at it, and think if it reaches
+maturity it will help the rich litigant very much; and, if it
+abolishes trial by jury, as it threatens, we shall be, in time to
+come, a Judge-ridden people, which God forbid.&nbsp; I am not
+afraid of a Judge now, but I should be then.&nbsp; The choice in
+the future <i>might</i> be between servility and a prison; and I
+sincerely believe that if trial by jury should be abolished, this
+country would not be safe to live in.&nbsp; Much <i>mending</i>,
+therefore, and consequently the more holes.&nbsp; I wonder what
+the Liberalism of the future will say when it learns that the
+Liberalism of Mr. Gladstone&rsquo;s Government struck the first
+blow at <i>Trial by Jury</i>?&nbsp; Truly &ldquo;the axe to laid
+to the root of the tree,&rdquo; and, reversing the Divine order,
+&ldquo;every tree that <i>bringeth forth good fruit is</i>&rdquo;
+in danger of being &ldquo;hewn down.&rdquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">R. H.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote22"></a><a href="#citation22"
+class="footnote">[22]</a>&nbsp; This inscription, with the
+exception of the names, is a literal copy.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote52"></a><a href="#citation52"
+class="footnote">[52]</a>&nbsp; Modern pleaders would say the
+Court would take judicial notice of the existence of Egypt: I am
+aware of this, but at the time I write of the Courts were too
+young to take notice.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote138"></a><a href="#citation138"
+class="footnote">[138]</a>&nbsp; The correctness of Mr.
+O&rsquo;Rapley&rsquo;s views may be vouched for by a newspaper
+report in the <i>Evening Standard</i> of April 17th, 1883, which
+was as follows:&mdash;&ldquo;Mr. Justice Day in charging the
+Grand Jury at the Manchester Spring Assizes yesterday, expressed
+his disagreement with the opinion of other Judges in favour of
+the Commission being so altered that the Judge would have to
+&lsquo;deliver all the prisoners detained in gaol,&rsquo; and
+regarded it as a waste of the Judge&rsquo;s time that he should
+have to try a case in which a woman was indicted for stealing a
+shawl worth three-and-ninepence, or a prisoner charged with
+stealing two mutton pies and two ounces of bacon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HUMOUROUS STORY OF FARMER
+BUMPKIN'S LAWSUIT***</p>
+<pre>
+
+
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Humourous Story of Farmer Bumpkin's
+Lawsuit, by Richard Harris
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Humourous Story of Farmer Bumpkin's Lawsuit
+
+
+Author: Richard Harris
+
+
+
+Release Date: November 27, 2009 [eBook #30551]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HUMOUROUS STORY OF FARMER
+BUMPKIN'S LAWSUIT***
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1883 Stevens and Sons edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ HUMOUROUS STORY
+ OF
+ FARMER BUMPKIN'S LAWSUIT:
+
+
+ BY
+ RICHARD HARRIS,
+
+ BARRISTER-AT-LAW,
+ AUTHOR OF "HINTS ON ADVOCACY," ETC., ETC.
+
+ SECOND EDITION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ LONDON:
+ STEVENS AND SONS, 119, CHANCERY LANE,
+ Law Publishers and Booksellers.
+ 1883.
+
+ LONDON:
+ BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
+
+
+Considering the enormous interest which the Public have in "a more
+efficient and speedy administration of justice," I am not surprised that
+a Second Edition of "Mr. Bumpkin's Lawsuit" should be called for so soon
+after the publication of the first. If any proof were wanting that I had
+not overstated the evils attendant on the present system, it would be
+found in the case of _Smitherman_ v. _The South Eastern Railway Company_,
+which came before the House of Lords recently; and judgment in which was
+delivered on the 16th of July, 1883. The facts of the case were
+extremely simple, and were as follow:--A man of the name of Smitherman
+was killed on a level crossing of the South Eastern Railway Company at
+East Farleigh, in December, 1878. His widow, on behalf of herself and
+four children, brought an action against the Company on the ground of
+negligence on the part of the defendants. The case in due course was
+tried at the Maidstone Assizes, and the plaintiff obtained a verdict for
+400 pounds for herself and 125 pounds for each of the children. A rule
+for a new trial was granted by the Divisional Court: the rule for the new
+trial was discharged by the Court of Appeal. The Lords reversed the
+decision of the Court of Appeal, and ordered a new trial. New trial took
+place at Guildhall, City of London, before Mr. Baron Pollock; jury again
+found for the plaintiff, with 700 pounds _agreed_ damages: Company
+thereby saving 200 pounds. Once more rule for new trial granted by
+Divisional Court: once more rule discharged by Court of Appeal: once more
+House of Lords reverse decision of Court of Appeal, and order _second new
+trial_. So that after more than four years of harassing litigation, this
+poor widow and her children are left in the same position that they were
+in immediately after the accident--except that they are so much the worse
+as being liable for an amount of costs which need not be calculated. The
+case was tried by competent judges and special juries; and yet, by the
+subtleties of the doctrine of contributory negligence, questions of such
+extreme nicety are raised that a third jury are required to give an
+opinion _upon the same state of facts_ upon which two juries have already
+decided in favour of the plaintiff and her children.
+
+Such is the power placed by our complicated, bewildering, and inartistic
+mode of procedure, in the hands of a rich Company.
+
+No one can call in question the wisdom or the learning of the House of
+Lords: it is above criticism, and beyond censure; but the House of Lords
+itself works upon the basis of our system of Procedure, and as that is
+neither beyond criticism nor censure, I unhesitatingly ask, _Can Old
+Fogeyism and Pettifoggism further go_?
+
+ RICHARD HARRIS.
+
+LAMB BUILDING, TEMPLE,
+ _October_, 1883.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION.
+
+
+When Old Fogeyism is being lowered to his last resting place,
+Pettifoggism, being his chief mourner, will be so overwhelmed with grief
+that he will tumble into the same grave. How then to hasten the demise
+of this venerable Humbug is the question. Some are for letting him die a
+natural death, others for reducing him gradually by a system of slow
+starvation: for myself, I confess, I am for knocking him on the head at
+once. Until this event, so long wished for by all the friends of
+Enlightenment and Progress, shall have happened, there will be no
+possibility of a Reform which will lessen the needless expense and
+shorten the unjustifiable delay which our present system of legal
+procedure occasions; a system which gives to the rich immeasurable
+advantages over poor litigants; and amounts in many cases not only to a
+perversion of justice but to a denial of it altogether.
+
+Old Fogeyism only tinkers at reform, and is so nervous and incompetent
+that in attempting to mend one hole he almost invariably makes two. The
+Public, doubtless, will, before long, undertake the much needed reform
+and abolish some of the unnecessary business of "judges' chambers," where
+the ingenuity of the Pettifogging Pleader is so marvellously displayed.
+How many righteous claims are smothered in their infancy at this stage of
+their existence!
+
+I have endeavoured to bring the evils of our system before the Public in
+the story of Mr. Bumpkin. The solicitors, equally with their clients, as
+a body, would welcome a change which would enable actions to be carried
+to a legitimate conclusion instead of being stifled by the "Priggs" and
+"Locusts" who will crawl into an honorable profession. It is impossible
+to keep them out, but it is not impossible to prevent their using the
+profession to the injury of their clients. All respectable solicitors
+would be glad to see the powers of these unscrupulous gentlemen
+curtailed.
+
+The verses at the end of the story have been so often favourably received
+at the Circuit Mess, that I thought an amplified version of them in prose
+would not be unacceptable to the general reader, and might ultimately
+awaken in the public mind a desire for the long-needed reform of our
+legal procedure.
+
+ RICHARD HARRIS.
+
+LAMB BUILDING, TEMPLE,
+ _July_, 1883.
+
+
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT.
+
+
+On the 4th of December, 1882, Our Gracious Queen, on the occasion of the
+opening of the Royal Courts of Justice, said:--
+
+ "I trust that the uniting together in one place of the various
+ branches of Judicature in this my Supreme Court, will conduce to the
+ _more efficient_ and _speedy_ administration of justice to my
+ subjects."
+
+On April 20th, 1883, in the House of Commons, Mr. H. H. Fowler asked the
+Attorney-General whether he was aware of the large number of causes
+waiting for trial in the Chancery Division of the High Court, and in the
+Court of Appeal; and whether the Government proposed to take any steps to
+remedy the delay and increased cost occasioned to the suitors by the
+present administration of the Judicature Acts.
+
+The Attorney-General said the number of cases of all descriptions then
+waiting for trial in the Chancery Division was 848, and in the Court of
+Appeal 270. The House would be aware that a committee of Judges had been
+engaged for some time in framing rules in the hope of getting rid of some
+of the delay that now existed in the hearing of cases; and until those
+rules were prepared, which would be shortly, the Government were not
+desirous of interfering with a matter over which the Judges had
+jurisdiction. The Government were now considering the introduction of a
+short Judicature Act for the purpose of lessening the delay.--_Morning
+Post_.
+
+[No rules or short Judicature Act at present!] {0a}
+
+On the 13th April, 1883, Mr. Glasse, Q.C., thus referred to a statement
+made by Mr. Justice Pearson of the Chancery Division: "The citizens of
+this great country, of which your Lordship is one of the representatives,
+will look at the statement you have made with respectful amazement." The
+statement appears to have been, that his Lordship had intended to
+continue the business of the Court in exactly the same way in which it
+had been conducted by Mr. Justice Fry; but he had been informed that he
+would have to take the interlocutory business of Mr. Justice Kay's Court
+whilst his Lordship _was on Circuit_; and, as it was requisite that he
+should take his own interlocutory business _before the causes set down
+for hearing_, "ALL THE CAUSES IN THE TWO COURTS MUST GO TO THE WALL"!!!
+His Lordship added, that it would be necessary for him to rise at 3
+o'clock every day (not at 3 o'clock in the _morning_, gentle reader),
+because he understood he should have to conduct the business of Mr.
+Justice Kay's Chambers as well as his own.--_Morning Post_.
+
+On the 16th April, 1883, Mr. Justice Day, in charging the Grand Jury at
+the Manchester Spring Assizes, expressed his disagreement with the
+opinion of the other Judges in favour of the Commission being so altered
+that the Judge would have to "_deliver all the prisoners detained in
+gaol_," and regarded it as "a waste of the Judge's time that he should
+have to try a case in which a woman was indicted for _stealing a shawl
+worth_ 3_s._ 9_d._; or a prisoner charged with stealing _two mutton pies_
+and _two ounces of bacon_."--_Evening Standard_.
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+Shows the Beauty of a Farm Yard on a Sabbath-Day, and what a 1
+difference a single letter will sometimes make in the legal
+signification of a Sentence
+ CHAPTER II.
+The Simplicity and Enjoyments of a Country life depicted 11
+ CHAPTER III.
+Showing how true it is that it takes at least Two to make a 17
+Bargain or a Quarrel
+ CHAPTER IV.
+On the extreme Simplicity of Going to Law 27
+ CHAPTER V.
+In which it appears that the Sting of Slander is not always 35
+in the Head
+ CHAPTER VI.
+Showing how the greatest Wisdom of Parliament may be thrown 45
+away on Ungrateful People
+ CHAPTER VII.
+Showing that Appropriateness of Time and Place should be 55
+studied in our Pastimes
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+The Pleasure of a Country Drive on a Summer Evening described 63
+as enhanced by a Pious Mind
+ CHAPTER IX.
+A Farm-house Winter Fire-side--A morning Drive and a mutual 71
+interchange of Ideas between Town and Country, showing how we
+may all learn something from one another
+ CHAPTER X.
+The last Night before the first London Expedition, which 87
+gives occasion to recall pleasant reminiscences
+ CHAPTER XI.
+Commencement of London Life and Adventures 97
+ CHAPTER XII.
+How the great Don O'Rapley became an Usher of the Court of 105
+Queen's Bench, and explained the Ingenious Invention of the
+Round Square--How Mr. Bumpkin took the water and studied
+Character from a Penny Steamboat
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+An interesting Gentleman--showing how true it is that one 111
+half the World does not know how the other half lives
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+The Old Bailey--Advantages of the New System illustrated 119
+ CHAPTER XV.
+Mr. Bumpkin's Experience of London Life enlarged 133
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+The coarse mode of Procedure in Ahab _versus_ Naboth 143
+ruthlessly exposed and carefully contrasted with the humane
+and enlightened form of the Present Day
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+Showing that Lay Tribunals are not exactly Punch and Judy 151
+Shows where the Puppet is moved by the Man underneath
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+A comfortable Evening at the "Goose" 165
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+The Subject continued 175
+ CHAPTER XX.
+Mr. Bumpkin sings a good old Song--The Sergeant becomes quite 179
+a convivial Companion and plays Dominoes
+ CHAPTER XXI.
+Joe electrifies the Company and surprises the Reader 191
+ CHAPTER XXII.
+The Sergeant makes a loyal Speech and sings a Song, both of 203
+which are well received by the Company
+ CHAPTER XXIII.
+The famous Don O'Rapley and Mr. Bumpkin spend a social 213
+Evening at the "Goose"
+ CHAPTER XXIV.
+Don O'Rapley expresses his views of the Policy of the 221
+Legislature in not permitting Dominoes to be played in
+Public-houses
+ CHAPTER XXV.
+In spite of all warnings, Joe takes his own part, not to be 227
+persuaded on one side or the other--Affecting Scene between
+Mr. Bumpkin and his old Servant
+ CHAPTER XXVI.
+Morning Reflections--Mrs. Oldtimes proves herself to be a 239
+great Philosopher--The Departure of the Recruits to be sworn
+in
+ CHAPTER XXVII.
+A Letter from Home 245
+ CHAPTER XXVIII.
+Mr. Bumpkin determines to maintain a discreet silence about 255
+his Case at the Old Bailey--Mr. Prigg confers with him
+thereon
+ CHAPTER XXIX.
+The Trial at the Old Bailey of Mr. Simple Simonman for 261
+Highway Robbery with violence--Mr. Alibi introduces himself
+to Mr. Bumpkin
+ CHAPTER XXX.
+Mr. Alibi is stricken with a Thunderbolt--Interview with 283
+Horatio and Mr. Prigg
+ CHAPTER XXXI.
+Mr. Bumpkin at Home again 295
+ CHAPTER XXXII.
+Joe's Return to Southwood--An Invitation from the Vicar--What 303
+the Old Oak saw
+ CHAPTER XXXIII.
+A Consultation as to new Lodgings--Also a Consultation with 317
+Counsel
+ CHAPTER XXXIV.
+Mr. Bumpkin receives Compliments from distinguished Persons 325
+ CHAPTER XXXV.
+The Trial 335
+ CHAPTER XXXVI.
+Motion for Rule _Nisi_, in which is displayed much Learning, 351
+Ancient and Modern
+ CHAPTER XXXVII.
+Mr. Bumpkin is congratulated by his Neighbours and Friends in 359
+the Market Place and sells his Corn
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+Farewell 375
+THE LAWSUIT 381
+
+ "_He never suffered his private partiality to intrude into the
+ conduct of publick business_. _Nor in appointing to employments did
+ he permit solicitation to supply the place of merit_; _wisely
+ sensible_, _that a proper choice of officers is almost the whole of
+ Government_."--BURKE.
+
+_Extract from Notice of the Work in_ THE SATURDAY REVIEW, _September_
+15_th_, 1883:--
+
+ "He was obviously quite as eager for a good battle in Court as ever
+ was Dandy Dinmont."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+The beauty of a farm yard on a Sabbath day, and what a difference a
+single letter will sometimes make in the legal signification of a
+sentence.
+
+It was during the Long Vacation--that period which is Paradise to the
+Rich and Purgatory to the Poor Lawyer--to say nothing of the client, who
+simply exists as a necessary evil in the economy of our enlightened
+system of Legal Procedure: it was during this delightful or dismal period
+that I returned one day to my old Farm-house in Devonshire, from a long
+and interesting ramble. My excellent thirst and appetite having been
+temperately appeased, I seated myself cosily by the huge chimney, where
+the log was always burning; and, having lighted my pipe, surrendered my
+whole being to the luxurious enjoyment of so charming a situation. I had
+scarcely finished smoking, when I fell into a sound and delicious sleep.
+And behold! I dreamed a dream; and methought:
+
+It was a beautiful Sabbath morning, in the early part of May, 18--, when
+two men might have been seen leaning over a pigstye. The pigstye was
+situated in a farm-yard in the lovely village of Yokelton, in the county
+of Somerset. Both men had evidently passed what is called the "prime of
+life," as was manifest from their white hair, wrinkled brows, and
+stooping shoulders. It was obvious that they were contemplating some
+object with great interest and thoughtful attention.
+
+And I perceived that in quiet and respectful conversation with them was a
+fine, well-formed, well-educated sow of the Chichester breed. It was
+plain from the number of her rings that she was a sow of great
+distinction, and, indeed, as I afterwards learned, was the most famous
+for miles around: her progeny (all of whom I suppose were honourables)
+were esteemed and sought by squire and farmer. How that sow was bred up
+to become so polite a creature, was a mystery to all; because there were
+gentlemen's homesteads all around, where no such thoroughbred could be
+found. But I suppose it's the same with pigs as it is with men: a
+well-bred gentleman may work in the fields for his living, and a cad may
+occupy the manor-house or the nobleman's hall.
+
+The Chichester sow looked up with an air of easy nonchalance into the
+faces of the two men who smoked their short pipes, and uttered ever and
+anon some short ejaculation, such as, "Hem!" "Ah!" "Zounds!" and so
+forth, while the sow exhibited a familiarity with her superiors only to
+be acquired by mixing in the best society. There was a respectful
+deference which, while it betrayed no sign of servility, was in pleasing
+contrast with the boisterous and somewhat unbecoming levity of the other
+inhabitants of the stye. These people were the last progeny of this
+illustrious Chichester, and numbered in all eleven--seven sons and four
+daughters--honourables all. It was impossible not to admire the high
+spirit of this well-descended family. That they had as yet received no
+education was due to the fact that their existence dated only from the
+21st of January last. Hence their somewhat erratic conduct, such as
+jumping, running, diving into the straw, boring their heads into one
+another's sides, and other unceremonious proceedings in the presence of
+the two gentlemen whom it is necessary now more particularly to describe.
+
+Mr. Thomas Bumpkin, the elder of the two, was a man of about seventy
+summers, as tall and stalwart a specimen of Anglo-Saxon peasantry as you
+could wish to behold. And while I use the word "peasantry" let it be
+clearly understood that I do so in no sense as expressing Mr. Bumpkin's
+present condition. He had risen from the English peasantry, and was what
+is usually termed a "self-made man." He was born in a little hut
+consisting of "wattle and dab," and as soon as he could make himself
+heard was sent into the fields to "mind the birds." Early in the
+November mornings, immediately after the winter sowings, he would be seen
+with his little bag of brown bread round his neck, trudging along with a
+merry whistle, as happy as if he had been going home to a bright fire and
+a plentiful breakfast of ham, eggs, and coffee. By degrees he had raised
+himself to the position of ploughman, and never ploughman drove a
+straighter or leveller furrow. He had won prizes at the annual ploughing
+and harrowing matches: and upon the strength of ten and sixpence a week
+had married Nancy Tugby, to whom he had been engaged off and on for
+eleven years. Nancy was a frugal housewife, and worked hard, morning,
+noon and night. She was quite a treasure to Bumpkin; and, what with
+taking in a little washing, and what with going out to do a little
+charing, and what with Tom's skill in mending cart-harness (nearly all
+the cart-harness in the neighbourhood was in a perpetual state of
+"mendin'"), they had managed to put together in a year or two enough
+money to buy a sow. This, Tom always said, was "his first start." And
+mighty proud they both were as they stood together of a Sunday morning
+looking at this wonderful treasure. The sow soon had pigs, and the pigs
+got on and were sold, and then the money was expended in other things,
+which in their turn proved equally remunerative. Then Tom got a piece of
+land, and next a pet ewe-lamb, and so on, until little by little wealth
+accumulated, and he rented at last, after a long course of laborious
+years, from the Squire, a small homestead called "Southwood Farm,"
+consisting of some fifty acres. Let it not be supposed that the
+accession of an extra head of live stock was a small matter. Everything
+is great or little by relation. I believe the statesman himself knows no
+greater pleasure when he first obtains admission to the Cabinet, than Tom
+did when he took possession of his little farm. And he certainly
+experienced as great a joy when he got a fresh pig as any young barrister
+does when he secures a new client.
+
+Southwood Farm was a lovely homestead, situated near a very pretty river,
+and in the midst of the most picturesque scenery. The little rivulet
+(for it was scarcely more) twisted about in the quaintest conceivable
+manner, almost encircling the cosy farm; while on the further side rose
+abruptly from the water's edge high embankments studded thickly with oak,
+ash, and an undergrowth of saplings of almost every variety. The old
+house was spacious for the size of the farm, and consisted of a large
+living-room, ceiled with massive oak beams and oak boards, which were
+duly whitewashed, and looked as white as the sugar on a wedding cake.
+The fireplace was a huge space with seats on either side cut in the wall;
+while from one corner rose a rude ladder leading to a bacon loft.
+Dog-irons of at least a century old graced the brick hearth, while the
+chimney-back was adorned with a huge slab of iron wrought with divers
+quaint designs, and supposed to have been in some way or other connected
+with the Roman invasion, as it had been dug up somewhere in the
+neighbourhood, by whom or when no one ever knew. There was an inner
+chamber besides the one we are now in, which was used as a kitchen; while
+on the opposite side was a little parlour with red-tiled floor and a
+comparatively modern grate. This was the reception room, used chiefly
+when any of the ladies from "t'Squoire's" did Mrs. Bumpkin the honour to
+call and taste her tea-cakes or her gooseberry wine. The thatched roof
+was gabled, and the four low-ceiled bedrooms had each of them a window in
+a gable. The house stood in a well-stocked garden, beyond which was a
+lovely green meadow sloping to the river side. In front was the little
+farm-yard, with its double-bayed barn, its lean-to cow-houses, its
+stables for five horses, and its cosy loft. Then there were the pigstyes
+and the henhouses: all forming together a very convenient and compact
+homestead. Adjoining the home meadow was a pretty orchard, full of
+apple, pear, cherry and plum trees; and if any one could imagine that Mr.
+and Mrs. Bumpkin had no eye or taste for the beautiful, I would have
+advised that ill-conditioned person to visit those good people of a
+Sunday morning after "brakfast" when the orchard was in full blossom.
+This beautiful picture it was not only Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin's special joy
+to behold, but their great and proud delight to show; and if they had
+painted the blossoms themselves they could not have felt more intense
+enjoyment and satisfaction.
+
+There was one other feature about the little farm which I must mention,
+because it is one of the grandest and most beautiful things in nature,
+and that is the magnificent "Old Oak" that stood in the corner of one of
+the home fields, and marked the boundary of the farm in that direction.
+If the measure of its girth would be interesting to the reader to know,
+it was just twenty-seven feet: not the largest in England certainly,
+notwithstanding which the tree was one of the grandest and most
+beautiful. It towered high into the air and spread its stalwart branches
+like giant trees in all directions. It was said to be a thousand years
+old, and to be inhabited by owls and ghosts. Whether the ghosts lived
+there or not I am unable to say, but from generation to generation the
+tradition was handed down and believed to be true. Such was Mr.
+Bumpkin's home, in my dream: the home of Peace and Plenty, Happiness and
+Love.
+
+The man who was contemplating Mr. Bumpkin's pigs on this same Sunday
+morning was also a "self-made man," whose name was Josiah SNOOKS. He was
+not made so well as Bumpkin, I should say, by a great deal, but
+nevertheless was a man who, as things go, was tolerably well put
+together. He was the village coal-merchant, not a Cockerell by any
+means, but a merchant who would have a couple of trucks of "Derby
+Brights" down at a time, and sell them round the village by the
+hundredweight. No doubt he was a very thrifty man, and to the extent, so
+some people said, of nipping the poor in their weight. And once he
+nearly lost the contract for supplying the coal-gifts at Christmas on
+that account. But he made it a rule to attend church very regularly as
+the season came round, and so did Mrs. Josiah Snooks; and it will require
+a great deal of "nipping" to get over that in a country village, I
+promise you. I did not think Snooks a nice looking man, by any means;
+for he had a low forehead, a scowling brow, a nobbly fat nose, small
+eyes, one of which had a cast, a large mouth always awry and distorted
+with a sneer, straight hair that hung over his forehead, and a large scar
+on his right cheek. His teeth were large and yellow, and the top ones
+protruded more, I thought, than was at all necessary. Nor was he
+generally beliked. In fact, so unpopular was this man with the poor,
+that it was a common thing for mothers to say to their children when they
+could not get them in of a summer's evening, "You, Betsy," or "You, Jane,
+come in directly, or old Snooks will have you!" A warning which always
+produced the desired effect.
+
+No one could actually tell whether Snooks had made money or merely
+pretended to possess it. Some said they knew he had, for he lived so
+niggardly; others said the coal trade was not what it was; and there were
+not wanting people who hinted that old Betty Bodger's house and
+garden--which had been given to her years ago by the old squire, what
+for, nobody knew--had been first mortgaged to Josiah and then sold to him
+and "taken out in coals." A very cunning man was Snooks; kept his own
+counsel--I don't mean a barrister in wig and gown on his premises--but in
+the sense of never divulging what was in his sagacious mind. He was
+known as a universal buyer of everything that he could turn a penny out
+of; and he sold everybody whenever he got the chance. Such was the
+character of old Snooks.
+
+How then came our good guileless friend Bumpkin to be associated with
+such a man on this beautiful Sunday morning? I can only answer: there
+are things in this world which admit of no explanation. This, so far as
+I am concerned, was one.
+
+"They be pooty pork," said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"Middlin'," rejoined the artful Snooks.
+
+"They be a mighty dale more an middlin', if you come to thic," said the
+farmer.
+
+"I've seen a good deal better," remarked Snooks. This was always his
+line of bargaining.
+
+"Well, I aint," returned Bumpkin, emphatically. "Look at that un--why,
+he be fit for anything--a regler pictur."
+
+"What's he worth?" said Snooks. "Three arf crowns?" That was Snooks'
+way of dealing.
+
+"Whisht!" exclaimed Bumpkin; "and four arf-crowns wouldn't buy un." That
+was Bumpkin's way.
+
+Snooks expectorated and gave a roar, which he intended for a laugh, but
+which made every pig jump off its feet and dive into the straw.
+
+"I tell 'ee what, maister Bumpkin, I doant want un"--that was his way
+again; "but I doant mind giving o' thee nine shillings for that un."
+
+"Thee wunt 'ave un--not a farden less nor ten if I knows it; ye doant
+'ave we loike that, nuther--ye beant sellin' coals, maister Snooks--no,
+nor buyin' pigs if I knows un."
+
+How far this conversation would have proceeded, and whether any serious
+altercation would have arisen, I know not; but at this moment a
+combination of circumstances occurred to interrupt the would-be
+contracting parties. First, Mrs. Bumpkin, who had been preparing the
+Sunday dinner, came across the yard with her apron full of cabbage-leaves
+and potato-peelings, followed by an immense number of chickens, while the
+ducks in the pond clapped their wings, and flew and ran with as much
+eagerness as though they were so many lawyers seeking some judicial
+appointment, and Mrs. Bumpkin were Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain;
+and they made as much row as a flock of Chancery Barristers arguing about
+costs. Then came along, with many a grunt and squeak, a pig or two, who
+seemed to be enjoying a Sunday holiday in their best clothes, for they
+had just come out of a puddle of mud; then came slouching along, a young
+man whose name was Joe (or, more correctly speaking, Joseph Wurzel), a
+young man of about seventeen, well built, tall and straight, with a
+pleasant country farm-house face, a roguish black eye, even teeth, and a
+head of brown straight hair, that looked as if the only attention it ever
+received was an occasional trimming with a reap-hook, and a brush with a
+bush-harrow.
+
+It was just feeding time; that was why Joe came up at this moment; and in
+addition to all these circumstances, there came faintly booming through
+the trees the ding of the old church bell, reminding Mr. Bumpkin that he
+must "goo and smarten oop a bit" for church. He already had on his
+purple cord trousers, and, as Joe termed it, his hell-fire waistcoat with
+the flames coming out of it in all directions; but he had to put on his
+drab "cooat" and white smock-frock, and then walk half a mile before
+service commenced. He always liked to be there before the Squire, and
+see him and his daughters, Miss Judith and Miss Mary, come in.
+
+So he had to leave the question of the "walley" of the pig and attend to
+the more important interests of his immortal soul. But now as he was
+going comes the point to which the reader's special attention is
+directed. He had got about six yards from the stye, or it may have been
+a little more, when Snooks cried out:
+
+"I've bought un for nine and six."
+
+To which Mr. Bumpkin replied, without so much as turning his head--
+
+"'Ave ur."
+
+Now this expression, according to Chitty on Contracts, would mean, "Have
+you, indeed? Mr. Snooks." But the extreme cunning of Josiah converted it
+into "'Ave un," which, by the same learned authority would signify, "Very
+well, Mr. Snooks, you can have him."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+The simplicity and enjoyments of a country life depicted.
+
+A quiet day was Sunday on Southwood Farm. Joe used to slumber in the
+meadows among the buttercups, or in the loft, or near the kitchen-fire,
+as the season and weather invited. That is to say, until such time as,
+coming out of Sunday School (for to Sunday School he sometimes went) he
+saw one of the fairest creatures he had ever read about either in the
+Bible or elsewhere! It was a very strange thing she should be so
+different from everybody else: not even the clergyman's daughters--no,
+nor the Squire's daughters, for the matter of that--looked half so nice
+as pretty Polly Sweetlove, the housemaid at the Vicar's.
+
+"Now look at that," said Joe, as he went along the lane on that Sunday
+when he first beheld this divine creature. "I'm danged if she beant
+about the smartest lookin o' any on 'em. Miss Mary beant nothing to her:
+it's a dandelion to a toolup."
+
+So ever since that time Joe had slept less frequently in the hay-loft on
+a Sunday afternoon; and, be it said to his credit, had attended his
+church with greater punctuality. The vicar took great notice of the
+lad's religious tendencies, and had him to his night-school at the
+vicarage, in consequence; and certainly no vicar ever knew a boy more
+regular in his attendance. He was there waiting to go in ever so long
+before the school began, and was always the very last to leave the
+premises.
+
+Often he would peep over the quick-set hedge into the kitchen-window,
+just to catch a glance of this lovely angel. And yet, so far as he could
+tell, she had never looked at him. When she opened the door, Joe always
+felt a thrill run through him as if some extraordinary thing had
+happened. It was a kind of jump; and yet he had jumped many times before
+that: "it wasn't the sort of jump," he said, "as a chap gits either from
+bein' frit or bein' pleased." And what to make of it he didn't know.
+Then Polly's cap was about the loveliest thing, next to Polly herself, he
+had ever seen. It was more like a May blossom than anything else, or a
+beautiful butterfly on the top of a water-lily. In fact, all the rural
+images of a rude but not inartistic mind came and went as this country
+boy thought of his beautiful Polly. As he ploughed the field, if he saw
+a May-blossom in the hedgerow, it reminded him of Polly's cap; and even
+the little gentle daisy was like Polly herself. Pretty Polly was
+everywhere!
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin, on a fine Sabbath afternoon, would take their
+pastime in the open air. First Mr. Bumpkin would take down his long
+churchwarden pipe from its rack on the ceiling, where it lay in close
+companionship with an ancient flint-gun; then he would fill it tightly,
+so as to make it last the longer, with tobacco from his leaden jar; and
+then, having lighted it, he and his wife would go out of the back door,
+through the garden and the orchard, and along by the side of the quiet
+river. By their side, as a matter of course, came Tim the Collie (named
+after Mrs. Bumpkin's grandfather Timothy), who knew as well as possible
+every word that was being said. If Mrs. Bumpkin only asked, "Where is
+Betsy?" (that was the head Alderney cow) Tim would bark and fly across to
+the meadow where she was; and then, having said to her and to the five
+other Alderney cows and four heifers, "Why, here's master and missus
+coming round to look at you, why on earth don't you come and see them?"
+up the whole herd would come, straggling one after the other, to the
+meadow where Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin were waiting for them; and all would
+look over the hedge, as much as to say, "How d'ye do, master, and how
+d'ye do, missus; what a nice day, isn't it?" exactly in the same manner
+as men and women greet one another as often as they meet. And then there
+was the old donkey, Jack, whom Tim would chaff no matter when or where he
+saw him. I believe if Tim had got him in church, he would have chaffed
+him. It was very amusing to see Jack duck his head and describe a circle
+as Tim swept round him, barking with all his might, and yet only laughing
+all the while. Sometimes Jack, miscalculating distances--he wasn't very
+great at mathematics--and having no eye for situations, would kick out
+vigorously with his hind legs, thinking Tim was in close proximity to his
+heels; whereas the sagacious and jocular Tim was leaning on his
+outstretched fore-feet immediately in front of Jack's head.
+
+Then there was another sight, not the least interesting on these
+afternoon rambles: in the far meadow, right under "the lids," as they
+were called, lived the famous Bull of Southwood Farm. He was Mrs.
+Bumpkin's pet. She had had him from a baby, and used to feed him in his
+infant days from a bottle by the kitchen fire. And so docile was he
+that, although few strangers would be safe in intruding into his
+presence, he would follow Mrs. Bumpkin about, as she said, "just like a
+Christian." The merits of this bull were the theme, on all appropriate
+occasions, of Mrs. Bumpkin's unqualified praise. If the Vicar's wife
+called, as she sometimes did, to see how Mrs. Bumpkin was getting on,
+Mrs. Bumpkin's "baby" (that is the bull) was sure to be brought up--I
+don't mean by the nurse, but in conversation. No matter how long she
+waited her opportunity, Mrs. Goodheart never left without hearing
+something of the exploits of this remarkable bull. In truth, he was a
+handsome, well-bred fellow. He had come from the Squire's--so you may be
+sure his breed was gentlemanly in the extreme; and his grandmother, on
+the maternal side, had belonged to the Bishop of Winchester; so you have
+a sufficient guarantee, I hope, for his moral character and orthodox
+principles. Indeed, it had been said that no dissenter dared pass
+through the meadow where he was, in consequence of his connection with
+the Establishment. Now, on the occasions when Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin took
+their walks abroad through the meadows to see their lambkins and their
+bull skip, this is what would invariably happen. First, Mrs. Bumpkin
+would go through the little cosy-looking gate in the corner of the
+meadow, right down by the side of the old boat-house; then Mr. Bumpkin
+would follow, holding his long pipe in one hand and his ash-stick in the
+other. Then, away in the long distance, at the far end of the meadow (he
+was always up there on these occasions), stood "Sampson" (that was the
+bull), with his head turned right round towards his master and mistress,
+as if he were having his photograph taken. Thus he stood for a moment;
+then down went his huge forehead to the ground; up went his tail to the
+sky; then he sent a bellow along the earth which would have frightened
+anybody but his "mother," and started off towards his master and mistress
+like a ship in a heavy sea; sometimes with his keel up in the air, and
+sometimes with his prow under water: it not only was playful, it was
+magnificent, and anybody unaccustomed to oxen might have been a little
+terrified by the furious glare of his eyes and the terrible snort of his
+nostrils as he approached.
+
+Not so Mrs. Bumpkin, who held out her hand, and ejaculated,
+
+"My pretty baby; my sweet pet; good Sampson!" and many other expressions
+of an endearing character.
+
+"Good Sampson" looked, snorted, danced, plunged and careered; and then
+came up and let Mrs. Bumpkin stroke and pat him; while Bumpkin looked on,
+smoking his pipe peacefully, and thinking what a fine fellow he, the
+bull, was, and what a great man he, Bumpkin, must be to be the possessor
+of "sich!"
+
+Thus the peaceful afternoon would glide quietly and sweetly away, and so
+would the bull, after the interesting interview was over.
+
+They always returned in time for tea, and then Mrs. Bumpkin would go to
+evening service, while Mr. Bumpkin would wait for her on the little piece
+of green near the church, where neighbours used to meet and chat of a
+Sunday evening; such as old Mr. Gosling, the market gardener, and old
+Master Mott, the head gardener to the Squire, and Master Cole, the
+farmer, and various others, the original inhabitants of Yokelton;
+discussing the weather and the crops, the probability of Mr. Tomson
+getting in again at the vestry as waywarden; what kind of a highway rate
+there would be for the coming year; how that horse got on that Mr. Sooby
+bought at the fair; and various other matters of importance to a village
+community. They would also pass remarks upon any striking personage who
+passed them on his way to church. Mr. Prigg, for instance, the village
+lawyer, who, they said, was a remarkably upright and down-straight sort
+of man; although his wife, they thought, was "a little bit stuck up like"
+and gave herself airs a little different from Mrs. Goodheart, who would
+"always talk to 'em jist the same as if she was one o' th' people." So
+that, on the whole, they entertained themselves very amicably until such
+time as the "organ played the people out of church." Then every one
+looked for his wife or daughter, as the case might be, and wished one
+another good night: most of them having been to church in the morning,
+they did not think it necessary to repeat the performance in the evening.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+Showing how true it is that it takes at least two to make a bargain or a
+quarrel.
+
+The day after the events which I have recorded, while the good farmer and
+his wife were at breakfast, which was about seven o'clock, Joe presented
+himself in the sitting-room, and said:
+
+"Plase, maister, here be t' money for t' pig."
+
+"Money for t' pig," exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin; "what's thee mean, lad? what
+pig?"
+
+"Maister Snooks!" said Joe, "there ur be, gwine wi' t' pig in t' barrer."
+
+Nothing shall induce me to repeat the language of Mr. Bumpkin, as he
+jumped up from the table, and without hat or cap rushed out of the room,
+followed by Joe, and watched by Mrs. Bumpkin from the door. Just as he
+got to the farmyard by one gate, there was Snooks leaving it by another
+with Mr. Bumpkin's pig in a sack in the box barrow which he was wheeling.
+
+"Hulloa!" shouted the farmer; "hulloa here! Thee put un down--dang thee,
+what be this? I said thee shouldn't ave un, no more thee sha'n't. I
+beant gwine to breed Chichster pigs for such as thee at thy own price,
+nuther." Snooks grinned and went on his way, saying;
+
+"I bought un and I'll 'ave un."
+
+"An I'll 'ave thee, dang'd if I doant, afore jussices; t' Squoire'll tell
+thee."
+
+"I doant keer for t' Squire no more nor I do for thee, old Bumpkin; thee
+be a cunnin' man, but thee sold I t' pig and I'll 'ave un, and I got un
+too: haw! haw! haw! an thee got t' money--nine-and-six--haw! haw! haw!"
+
+Mr. Bumpkin by this time came up to him, but was so much out of breath,
+or "winded," that he was unable to carry on the conversation, so he just
+tapped the bag with his stick as if to be certain the pig was there, and
+sure enough it was, if you might judge by the extraordinary wriggling
+that went on inside the bag.
+
+The indomitable Snooks, however, with the largest and most hideous grin I
+ever saw, pushed on with his barrow, and Mr. Bumpkin having now
+sufficiently recovered his breath, said,
+
+"Thee see ur tak un, didn't thee, Joe?"
+
+"Sure did ur," answered the lad. "I seed un took un clane out o' the
+stye, and put un in the sack, and wheeled un away."
+
+"Ha! so ur did, Joe; stick to that, lad--stick to un."
+
+"And thee seed I pay th' money for un, Joe, didn't thee?" laughed Snooks.
+"Seed I put un on t' poast, and thee took un oop--haw! haw! haw! I got
+t' pig and thee got t' money--haw! haw! haw! Thee thowt thee'd done I,
+and I done thee--haw! haw! haw!"
+
+And away went Snooks and away went pig; but Snooks' laugh remained, and
+every now and then Snooks turned his head and showed his large yellow
+teeth and roared again.
+
+The rage of Mr. Bumpkin knew no bounds. There are some things in life
+which are utterly unendurable; and one is the having your pig taken from
+you against your will and without your consent--an act which would be
+described legally as _the rape of the pig_. This offence, in Mr.
+Bumpkin's judgment, Snooks was guilty of; and therefore he resolved to do
+that which is considered usually a wise thing, namely, to consult a
+solicitor.
+
+Now, if I were giving advice--which I do not presume to do--I should say
+that in all matters of difficulty a man should consult his wife, his
+priest, or his solicitor, and in the order in which I have named them.
+In the event of consulting a solicitor the next important question
+arises, "What solicitor?" I could write a book on this subject. There
+are numerous solicitors, within my acquaintance, to whom I would entrust
+my life and my character; there are some, not of my acquaintance, but of
+my knowledge, into whose hands, if I had one spark of Christian feeling
+left, I would not see my enemy delivered. There is little difference
+between one class of men and another as to natural disposition; and
+whether you take one or another, you must find the shady character. But
+where the opportunities for mischief are so great as they are in the
+practice of the Law, it is necessary that the utmost care should be
+exercised in committing one's interests to the keeping of another. Had
+Mr. Bumpkin been a man of the world he would have suspected that under
+the most ostentatious piety very often lurked the most subtle fraud.
+Good easy man, had he been going to buy a hay-stack, he would not have
+judged by the outside but have put his "iron" into it; he could not put
+his iron into Mr. Prigg, I know, but he need not have taken him by his
+appearance alone. I may observe that if Mr. Bumpkin had consulted his
+sensible and affectionate spouse, or a really respectable solicitor, this
+book would not have been written. If he had consulted the Vicar,
+possibly another book might have been written; but, as it was, he
+resolved to consult Mr. Prigg in the first instance. Now Mrs. Bumpkin,
+except as the mother of the illustrious Bull, has very little to do with
+this story. Mr. Prigg is one of its leading characters; but in my
+description of that gentleman I am obliged to be concise: I must minimize
+Prigg, great as he is, and I trust that in doing so I shall prospectively
+minimize all future Priggs that may ever appear on the world's stage. I
+do not attempt to pulverize him, that would require the crushing pestle
+of the legislature; but merely to make him as little as I can, with due
+consideration for the requirements of my story.
+
+I should be thought premature in mentioning Prigg, but that he was a
+gentleman of great pretensions in the little village of Yokelton.
+Gentleman by Act of Parliament, and in his own estimation, you may be
+sure he was respected by all around him. That was not many, it is true,
+for his house was the last of the straggling village. He was a man of
+great piety and an extremely white neck-cloth; attended the parish church
+regularly, and kept his white hair well brushed upwards--as though, like
+the church steeple, it was to point the way at all times. He was the
+most amiable of persons in regard to the distribution of the parish
+gifts; and, being a lawyer it was not considered by the churchwardens, a
+blacksmith and a builder, safe to refuse his kind and generous
+assistance. He involved the parish in a law-suit once, in a question
+relating to the duty to repair the parish pump; and since that time
+everyone knew better than to ignore Mr. Prigg. I have heard that the
+money spent in that action would have repaired all the parish pumps in
+England for a century, but have no means of ascertaining the truth of
+this statement.
+
+Mr. Prigg was a man whose merits were not appreciated by the local
+gentry, who never asked him to dinner. Virtue is thus sometimes
+ill-rewarded in this world. And Mrs. Prigg's virtue had also been
+equally ignored when she had sought, almost with tears, to obtain tickets
+for the County Ball.
+
+Mr. Prigg was about sixty years old, methodical in his habits,
+punctilious in his dress, polite in his demeanour, and precise in his
+language. He wore a high collar of such remarkable stiffness that his
+shoulders had to turn with his head whenever it was necessary to alter
+his position. This gave an appearance of respectability to the head, not
+to be acquired by any other means. It was, indeed, the most respectable
+head I ever saw either in the flesh or in marble.
+
+Mr. Prigg had descended from the well-known family of Prigg, and he
+prided himself on the circumstance. How often was he seen in the little
+churchyard of Yokelton of a Sunday morning, both before and after
+service, pointing with family pride to the tombstone of a relative which
+bore this beautiful and touching inscription:--
+
+ HERE
+ LIE THE ASHES OF
+ MR. JOHN PRIGG,
+ OF SMITH STREET, BRISTOL,
+ ORIGINALLY OF DUCK GREEN, YOKELTON,
+ WHO UNDER PECULIAR DISADVANTAGES
+ WHICH TO COMMON MINDS
+ WOULD HAVE BEEN A BAR TO ANY EXERTIONS
+ RAISED HIMSELF FROM ALL OBSCURE SITUATIONS
+ OF BIRTH AND FORTUNE
+ BY HIS OWN INDUSTRY AND FRUGALITY
+ TO THE ENJOYMENT OF A _MODERATE COMPETENCY_.
+ HE ATTAINED A PECULIAR EXCELLENCE
+ IN PENMANSHIP AND DRAWING
+ WITHOUT THE INSTRUCTIONS OF A MASTER,
+ AND TO EMINENCE IN ARITHMETIC,
+ THE USEFUL AND THE HIGHER BRANCHES OF
+ THE MATHEMATICS,
+ BY GOING TO SCHOOL ONLY A YEAR AND EIGHT MONTHS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ HE
+ DIED A BACHELOR
+ ON THE 24TH DAY OF OCTOBER, 1807,
+ IN THE 55TH YEAR OF HIS AGE;
+ AND WITHOUT FORGETTING
+ RELATIONS FRIENDS AND ACQUAINTANCES
+ BEQUEATHED ONE FIFTH OF HIS PROPERTY
+ TO PUBLIC CHARITY.
+
+ READER
+ THE WORLD IS OPEN TO THEE.
+ "GO THOU AND DO LIKEWISE." {22}
+
+It was generally supposed that this beautiful composition was from the
+pen of Mr. Prigg himself, who, sitting as he did so high on his branch of
+the Family Tree,
+
+ COULD LOOK
+ WITH PRIDE AND SYMPATHY
+ ON
+ THE MANLY STRUGGLES
+ OF A HUMBLER MEMBER
+ LOWER DOWN!
+
+High Birth, like Great Wealth, can afford to condescend!
+
+Mrs. Prigg was worthy of her illustrious consort. She was of the noble
+family of the Snobs, and in every way did honour to her progenitors. As
+the reader is aware, there is what is known as a "cultivated voice," the
+result of education--it is absolutely without affectation: there is also
+the voice which, in imitation of the well-trained one, is little more
+than a burlesque, and is affected in the highest degree: this was the
+only fault in Mrs. Prigg's voice.
+
+Mr. Prigg's home was charmingly small, but had all the pretensions of a
+stately country house--its conservatory, its drawing-room, its study, and
+a dining-room which told you as plainly as any dining-room could speak,
+"I am related to Donkey Hall, where the Squire lives: I belong to the
+same aristocratic family."
+
+Then there was the great heavy-headed clock in the passage. He did not
+appear at all to know that he had come down in the world through being
+sold by auction for two pounds ten. He said with great plausibility, "My
+worth is not to be measured by the amount of money I can command; I am
+the same personage as before." And I thought it a very true observation,
+but the philosophy thereof was a little discounted by his haughty
+demeanour, which had certainly gone up as he himself had come down; and
+that is a reason why I don't as a rule like people who have come down in
+the world--they are sure to be so stuck up. But I do like a person who
+has come down in the world and doesn't at all mind it--much better than
+any man who has got up in the world from the half-crown, and does mind it
+upon all occasions.
+
+Mrs. Prigg, apart from her high descent, was a very aristocratic person:
+as the presence of the grand piano in the drawing-room would testify.
+She could no more live without a grand piano than ordinary people could
+exist without food: the grand piano, albeit a very dilapidated one, was a
+necessity of her well-descended condition. It was no matter that it
+displaced more useful furniture; in that it only imitated a good many
+other persons, and it told you whenever you entered the room: "You see me
+here in a comparatively small way, but understand, I have been in far
+different circumstances: I have been courted by the great, and listened
+to by the aristocracy of England. I follow Mrs. Prigg wherever she goes:
+she is a lady; her connections are high, and she never yet associated
+with any but the best families. You could not diminish from her very
+high breeding: put her in the workhouse, and with me to accompany her, it
+would be transformed into a palace."
+
+Mr. Prigg was by no means a rich man as the world counts richness. No
+one ever heard of his having a "_practice_," although it was believed he
+did a great deal in the way of "lending his name" _and profession_ to
+impecunious and uneducated men; who could turn many a six-and-eightpence
+under its prestige. So great is the moral "power of attorney," as
+contradistinguished from the legal "power of attorney."
+
+But Prigg, as I have hinted, was not only respectable, he was _good_: he
+was more than that even, he was _notoriously_ good: so much so, that he
+was called, in contradistinction to all other lawyers, "_Honest Lawyer
+Prigg_"; and he had further acquired, almost as a universal title, the
+sobriquet of "Nice." Everybody said, "What a very nice man Mr. Prigg
+is!" Then, in addition to all this, he was considered _clever_--why, I
+do not know; but I have often observed that men can obtain the reputation
+of being clever at very little cost, and without the least foundation.
+The cheapest of all ways is to abuse men who really are clever, and if
+your abuse be pungently and not too coarsely worded, it will be accepted
+by the ignorant as _criticism_. Nothing goes down with shallow minds
+like criticism, and the severest criticism is generally based on envy and
+jealousy.
+
+Mr. Prigg, then, was clever, respectable, good, and nice, remarkably
+potent qualities for success in this world.
+
+So I saw in my dream that Mr. Bumpkin, whose feelings were duly aroused,
+turned his eye upon Honest Lawyer Prigg, and resolved to consult him upon
+the grievous outrage to which he had been subjected at the hands of the
+cunning Snooks: and without more ado he resolved to call on that very
+worthy and extremely nice gentleman.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+On the extreme simplicity of going to law.
+
+With his right leg resting on his left, with his two thumbs nicely
+adjusted, and with the four points of his right fingers in delicate
+contact with the fingers of his left hand, sat Honest Lawyer Prigg,
+listening to the tale of unutterable woe, as recounted by Farmer Bumpkin.
+
+Sometimes the good man's eyes looked keenly at the farmer, and sometimes
+they scanned vacantly the ceiling, where a wandering fly seemed, like Mr.
+Bumpkin, in search of consolation or redress. Sometimes Mr. Prigg nodded
+his respectable head and shoulders in token of his comprehension of Mr.
+Bumpkin's lucid statement: then he nodded two or three times in
+succession, implying that the Court was with Mr. Bumpkin, and
+occasionally he would utter with a soft soothing voice,
+
+"Quite so!"
+
+When he said "quite so," he parted his fingers, and reunited them with
+great precision; then he softly tapped them together, closed his eyes,
+and seemed lost in profound meditation.
+
+Here Mr. Bumpkin paused and stared. Was Mr. Prigg listening?
+
+"Pray proceed," said the lawyer, "I quite follow you;--never mind about
+what anybody else had offered you for the pig--the question really is
+whether you actually sold this pig to Snooks or not--whether the bargain
+was complete or inchoate."
+
+Mr. Bumpkin stared again. "I beant much of a scollard, sir," he
+observed; "but I'll take my oath I never sold un t'pig."
+
+"That is the question," remarked the lawyer. "You say you did not?
+Quite so; had this Joe of yours any authority to receive money on your
+behalf?"
+
+"Devil a bit," answered Bumpkin.
+
+"Excuse me," said Mr. Prigg, "I have to put these questions: it is
+necessary that I should understand where we are: of course, if you did
+not sell the pig, he had no right whatever to come and take it out of the
+sty--it was a trespass?"
+
+"That's what I says," said Bumpkin; and down went his fist on Mr. Prigg's
+table with such vehemence that the solicitor started as though aroused by
+a shock of dynamite.
+
+"Let us be calm," said the lawyer, taking some paper from his desk, and
+carefully examining the nib of a quill pen, "Let me see, I think you said
+your name was Thomas?"
+
+"That's it, sir; and so was my father's afore me."
+
+"Thomas Bumpkin?"
+
+"I beant ashamed on him."
+
+And then Mr. Prigg wrote out a document and read it aloud; and Mr.
+Bumpkin agreeing with it, scratched his name at the bottom--very badly
+scratched it was, but well enough for Mr. Prigg. This was simply to
+retain Mr. Prigg as his solicitor in the cause of _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_.
+
+"Quite so, quite so; now let me see; be calm, Mr. Bumpkin, be calm; in
+all these matters we must never lose our self-possession. You see, I am
+not excited."
+
+"Noa," said Bumpkin; "but then ur dint tak thy pig."
+
+"Quite true, I can appreciate the position, it was no doubt a gross
+outrage. Now tell me--this Snooks, as I understand, is the coal-merchant
+down the village?"
+
+"That's ur," said Bumpkin.
+
+"I suppose he's a man of some property, eh?"
+
+Mr. Bumpkin looked for a few moments without speaking, and then said:
+
+"He wur allays a close-fisted un, and I should reckon have a goodish bit
+o' property."
+
+"Because you know," remarked the solicitor, "it is highly important, when
+one wins a case and obtains damages, that the defendant should be in a
+position to pay them."
+
+This was the first time that ever the flavour of damages had got into
+Bumpkin's mouth; and a very nice flavour it was. To beat Snooks was one
+thing, a satisfaction; to make him pay was another, a luxury.
+
+"Yes, sir," he repeated; "I bleeve he ave, I bleeve he ave."
+
+"What makes you think so?"
+
+"Wull, fust and foremust, I knows he lent a party a matter of a hundred
+pound, for I witnessed un."
+
+"Then he hasn't got that," said the lawyer.
+
+"Yes ur ave, sir, or how so be as good; for it wur a morgage like, and
+since then he've got the house."
+
+Mr. Prigg made a note, and asked where the house was.
+
+"It be widder Jackson's."
+
+"Indeed; very well."
+
+"An then there be the bisness."
+
+"Exactly," said the lawyer, "horses and carts, weighing machines, and so
+on?"
+
+"And the house he live in," said Bumpkin, "I know as ow that longs to
+him."
+
+"Very well; I think that will be enough to start with." Now, Mr. Prigg
+knew pretty well the position of the respective parties himself; so it
+was not so much for his own information that he made these inquiries as
+to infuse into Bumpkin's mind a notion of the importance of the case.
+
+"Now," said he, throwing down the pen, "this is a very serious matter,
+Mr. Bumpkin."
+
+This was a comfort, and Bumpkin looked agreeably surprised and vastly
+important.
+
+"A very serious case," and again the tips of the fingers were brought in
+contact.
+
+"I spoase we can't bring un afore jusseses, sir?"
+
+"Well, you see the criminal law is dangerous; you can't get damages, and
+you may get an action for malicious prosecution."
+
+"I think we ought to mak un pay for 't."
+
+"That is precisely my own view, but I am totally at a loss to understand
+the reason of such outrageous conduct on the part of this Snooks. Now
+don't be offended, Mr. Bumpkin, if I put a question to you. You know, we
+lawyers like to search to the bottom of things. I can understand, if you
+had owed him any money--"
+
+"Owe un money!" exclaimed Bumpkin contemptuously; "why I could buy un out
+and out."
+
+"Ah, quite so, quite so; so I should have supposed from what I know of
+you, Mr. Bumpkin."
+
+"Lookee ere, sir," said the farmer; "I bin a ard workin man all my life,
+paid my way, twenty shillins in the pound, and doant owe a penny as fur
+as I knows."
+
+"And if you did, Mr. Bumpkin," said the lawyer with a good-natured laugh,
+"I dare say you could pay."
+
+"Wull, I bleeve there's no man can axe me for nothing; and thank God,
+what I've got's my own; and there aint many as got pootier stock nor
+mine--all good bred uns, Mr. Prigg."
+
+"Yes, I've often heard your cattle praised."
+
+"He be a blagard if ur says I owed un money."
+
+"O, dear, Mr. Bumpkin, pray don't misunderstand me; he did not, that I am
+aware, allege that he took the pig because you owed him money; and even
+if you did, he could not legally have done so. Now this is not a mere
+matter of debt; it's a very serious case of trespass."
+
+"Ay; zo 't be sir; that was my bleef, might jist as wull a tooked baacon
+out o' baacon loft."
+
+"Just the same. Quite so--quite so!"
+
+"And I want thee, Mr. Prigg, to mak un pay for't--mak un pay, sir; it
+beant so much th' pig."
+
+"Quite so: quite so: that were a very trifling affair, and might be
+settled in the County Court; but, in fact, it's not the pig at all, it's
+trespass, and you want to make him answerable in damages."
+
+"That's it, sir; you've got un."
+
+"I suppose an apology and a return of the pig would not be enough."
+
+"I'll make un know he beant everybody," said Bumpkin.
+
+"Quite so; now what shall we lay the damages at?"
+
+"Wull, sir, as for that, I doant rightly know; if so be he'd pay down,
+that's one thing, but it's my bleef as you might jist as wull try to dror
+blood out of a stoane as git thic feller to do what's right."
+
+"Shall we say a hundred pounds and costs?"
+
+Never did man look more astonished than Bumpkin. A hundred pounds! What
+a capital thing going to law must be! But, as the reader knows, he was a
+remarkably discreet man, and never in the course of his dealing committed
+himself till the final moment. Whenever anybody made him a "bid," he
+invariably met the offer with one form of refusal. "Nay, nay; it beant
+good enough: I bin offered moore." And this had answered so well, that
+it came natural to Bumpkin to refuse on all occasions the first offer.
+It was not to be wondered at then that the question should be regarded in
+the light of an offer from Snooks himself. Now he could hardly say "I
+bin _bid moore_ money," because the case wasn't in the market; but he
+could and did say the next best thing to it, namely:--
+
+"I wunt let un goo for that--'t be wuth moore!"
+
+"Very well," observed Prigg; "so long as we know: we can lay our damages
+at what we please."
+
+Now there was great consolation in that. The plaintiff paused and rubbed
+his chin. "What do thee think, sir?"
+
+"I think if he pays something handsome, and gives us an apology, and pays
+the costs, I should advise you to take it."
+
+"As you please, sir; I leaves it to you; I beant a hard man, I hope."
+
+"Very good; we will see what can be done. I shall bring this action in
+the Chancery Division."
+
+"Hem! I've eerd tell, sir, that if ever a case gets into that ere Coourt
+he niver comes out agin."
+
+"O, that's all nonsense; there used to be a good deal of truth in that;
+but the procedure is now so altered that you can do pretty much what you
+like: this is an age of despatch; you bring your action, and your writ is
+almost like a cheque payable on demand!"
+
+"Wull, I beant no lawyer, never had nothing to do wi un in my life; but I
+should like to axe, sir, why thee'll bring this ere case in Chancery?"
+
+"Good; well, come now, I like to be frank; we shall get more costs?"
+
+Mr. Bumpkin again rubbed his chin. "And do I get em?" he asked.
+
+"Well, they go towards expenses; the other side always pays."
+
+This was a stroke of reasoning not to be gainsaid. But Mr. Prigg had a
+further observation to make on the subject, and it was this:
+
+"After the case has gone on up to being ready for trial, and the Judges
+find that it is a case more fitting to be tried in the Common Law Courts,
+then an order is made transferring it, that is, sending it out of
+Chancery to be tried by one of the other Judges."
+
+"Can't see un," said Bumpkin, "I beant much of a scollard, but I tak it
+thee knows best."
+
+Mr. Prigg smiled: a beneficent, sympathizing smile.
+
+"I dare say," he said, "it looks a little mysterious, but we lawyers
+understand it; so, if you don't mind, I shall bring it in the Chancery
+Division in the first instance; and nice and wild the other side will be.
+I fancy I see the countenance of Snooks' lawyer."
+
+This was a good argument, and perfectly satisfactory to the
+unsophisticated mind of Bumpkin.
+
+"And when," he asked, "will ur come on, think'ee?"
+
+"O, in due time; everything is done very quickly now--not like it used to
+be--you'd be surprised, we used to have to wait years--yes, years, sir,
+before an action could be tried; and now, why bless my soul, you get
+judgment before you know where you are."
+
+How true this turned out to be may hereafter appear; but in a dream you
+never anticipate.
+
+"I shall write at once," said "Honest Prigg," "for compensation and an
+apology; I think I would have an apology."
+
+"Make un pay--I doant so much keer for the t'other thing; that beant much
+quonsequence."
+
+"Quite so--quite so." And with this observation Mr. Prigg escorted his
+client to the door.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+In which it appears that the sting of slander is not always in the head.
+
+Mr. Prigg lost no time in addressing a letter to the ill-advised Josiah
+Snooks with the familiar and affectionate commencement of "Dear Sir,'"
+asking for compensation for the "gross outrage" he had committed upon
+"his client;" and an apology to be printed in such papers as he, the
+client, should select.
+
+The "Dear Sir" replied, not in writing, for he was too artful for that,
+but by returning, as became his vulgar nature, Mr. Prigg's letter in a
+very torn and disgusting condition.
+
+To a gentleman of cultivated mind and sensitive nature, this was
+intolerable; and Mr. Prigg knew that even the golden bridge of compromise
+was now destroyed. He no longer felt as a mere lawyer, anxious in the
+interests of his client, which was a sufficient number of horse-power for
+anything, but like an outraged and insulted gentleman, which was more
+after the force of hydraulic pressure than any calculable amount of
+horse-power. It was clear to his upright and sensitive mind that Snooks
+was a low creature. Consequently all professional courtesies were at an
+end: the writ was issued and duly served upon the uncompromising Snooks.
+Now a writ is not a matter to grin at and to treat with contempt or
+levity. Mr. Snooks could not return that document to Mr. Prigg, so he
+had to consider. And first he consulted his wife: this consultation led
+to a domestic brawl and then to his kicking one of his horses in the
+stomach. Then he threw a shovel at his dog, and next the thought
+occurred to him that he had better go and see Mr. Locust. This gentleman
+was a solicitor who practised at petty sessions. He did not practise
+much, but that was, perhaps, his misfortune rather than his fault. He
+was a small, fiery haired man, with a close cut tuft of beard; small
+eyes, and a pimply nose, which showed an ostentatious disdain for
+everything beneath it.
+
+Mr. Locust was not at home, but would return about nine. At nine,
+therefore, the impatient Snooks appeared.
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Locust, as he looked at the writ, "I see this writ is
+issued by Mr. Prigg."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Did he not write to you before issuing it?--dear me, this is very sharp
+practice--very sharp practice: the sharpest thing I ever heard of in all
+my life."
+
+"Wull, he did write, but I giv un as good as he sent."
+
+"Dear me!" exclaimed Mr. Locust; "I am afraid you have committed
+yourself."
+
+"No I beant, sir," said the cunning Snooks, with a grin, "no I beant."
+
+"You should never write without consulting a solicitor--bear that in
+mind, Mr. Snooks; it will be an invaluable lesson--hem!"
+
+"I never writ, sir--I ony sent un his letter back."
+
+"Ah!" said Locust, "come now, that is better; but still you should have
+consulted me. I see this claim is for three hundred and fifty
+pounds--it's for trespass. Now sit down quietly and calmly, and tell me
+the facts." And then he took pen and paper and placed himself in
+position to take his retainer and instructions.
+
+"Wull, sir, it is as this: a Sunday mornin--no, a Sunday mornin week--I
+won't tell no lie if I knows it--a Sunday mornin week--"
+
+"Sunday morning week," writes Locust.
+
+"I buyd a pig off this ere man for nine and six: well, o' the Monday
+mornin I goes with my barrer and a sack and I fetches the pig and gies
+the money to his man Joe Wurzel; leastways I puts it on the poast and he
+takes it up. Then out comes Bumpkin and swears I never bought un at all,
+gets in a rage and hits the bag wi' a stick--"
+
+"Now stop," said the Lawyer; "are you quite sure he did not strike _you_?
+That's the point."
+
+"Well, sir, he would a' done if I adn't a bobbed."
+
+"Good: that's an assault in law. You are sure he would have struck you
+if you hadn't ducked or bobbed your head?"
+
+"In course it would, else why should I bob?"
+
+"Just so--just so. Now then, we've got him there--we've got him nicely."
+
+Snooks' eyes gleamed.
+
+"Next I want to know: I suppose you didn't owe him anything?"
+
+"No, nor no other man," said Snooks, with an air of triumph. "I worked
+hard for what I got, and no man can't ax me for a farden. I allays paid
+twenty shillings in the pound."
+
+The reader will observe how virtuous both parties were on this point.
+
+"So!" said Locust. "Now you haven't told me all that took place."
+
+"That be about all, sir."
+
+"Yes, yes; but I suppose there was something said between you--did you
+have any words--was he angry--did he call you any names or say anything
+in an angry way?"
+
+"Well, not partickler--"
+
+"Not particular: I will judge of that. Just tell me what was said."
+
+"When, sir?"
+
+"Well, begin on the Sunday morning. What was first said?"
+
+Then Snooks told the Solicitor all that took place, with sundry additions
+which his imagination supplied when his memory failed.
+
+"And I member the price wull, becos he said 'You beant sellin coals,
+recollect, so you doant ave me."
+
+"Ho! ho!" exclaimed Locust rubbing his hands, "You are sure he said
+that?" writing down the words carefully.
+
+"I be."
+
+"That will do, we've got him: we've got him nicely. Was anybody present
+when he said this?"
+
+"Yes, sir. Joe were there, and t' best o' my belief, Mrs. Bumpkin."
+
+"Never mind Mrs. Bumpkin. I don't suppose she was there, if you come to
+recollect; it's quite enough if Joe was present and could hear what was
+said. I suppose he could hear it?"
+
+"Stood cloase by."
+
+"Very well--that is slander--and slander of a very gross kind. We've got
+him."
+
+"Be it?" said Snooks.
+
+"I'll show you," said Locust; "in law a man slanders you if he insinuates
+that you are dishonest; now what does this Bumpkin do? he says 'you don't
+have me,' meaning thereby that you don't trick him out of his pig; and,
+'you are not selling coals,' meaning that when you do sell coals you do
+trick people. Do you see?--that you cheat them, in fact rob them."
+
+Snooks thought Mr. Locust the most wonderful man he had ever come across.
+This was quite a new way of putting it.
+
+"But ur didn't say as much," he said, wondering whether that made any
+difference.
+
+"Perfectly immaterial in law," said Mr. Locust: "it isn't what a man
+says, it's what he _means_: you put that in by an innuendo--"
+
+"A what, sir? begging pardon--"
+
+"It's what we lawyers call an innuendo: that is to say, making out that a
+man says so and so when he doesn't."
+
+"I zee," said the artful Snooks, quick at apprehending every point.
+"Then if he called a chap a devilish honest man and the innu--what d'ye
+call it, meant he were a thief, you got him?"
+
+"Well," said Mr. Locust, smiling, "that is going rather far, Mr. Snooks,
+but I see you understand what I mean."
+
+"I thinks so, sir. I thinks I has your meanin."
+
+"It's a very gross slander," observed Mr. Locust, "and especially upon a
+tradesman in your position. I suppose now you have lived in the
+neighbourhood a considerable time?"
+
+"All my life, sir."
+
+"Ah! just so, just so--now let me see; and, if I remember rightly, you
+have a vote for the County."
+
+"I ave, sir, and allus votes blue, and that's moore."
+
+"Then you're on our side. I'm very glad indeed to hear that; a vote's a
+vote, you know, now-a-days."
+
+Any one would have thought, to hear Mr. Locust, that votes were scarce
+commodities, whereas we know that they are among the most plentiful
+articles of commerce as well as the cheapest.
+
+"And you have, I think, a family, Mr. Snooks."
+
+"Four on em, sir."
+
+"Ah! how very nice, how laudable to make a little provision for them: as
+I often say, if a man can only leave his children a few hundreds apiece,
+it's something."
+
+The solicitor watched his client's face as he uttered this profound
+truism, and the face being as open and genuine as was Snooks' character,
+it said plainly enough "Yes, I have a few hundreds."
+
+"Well then," continued Mr. Locust, "having been in business all these
+years, and being, as times go, tolerably successful, being a careful man,
+and having got together by honest industry a nice little independency--"
+
+Here the learned gentleman paused, and here, unfortunately, Snooks' open
+and candid heart revealed itself through his open and candid countenance.
+
+"I _believe_," said Mr. Locust, "I am right?"
+
+"You're about right, sir."
+
+"Very charming, very gratifying to one's feelings," continued Mr. Locust;
+"and then, just as you are beginning to get comfortable and getting your
+family placed in the world, here comes this what shall I call him, I
+never like to use strong language, this intolerable blackguard, and calls
+you a thief--a detestable thief."
+
+"Well, he didn't use that air word, sir--I wool say that," said Mr.
+Snooks.
+
+"In law he did, my good man--he meant it and said it--he insinuated that
+you cheated the poor--you serve a good many of the poor, I think?"
+
+"I do, sir."
+
+"Well, he insinuated that you cheated them by giving short weight and bad
+coals--that is worse than being a thief, to my mind--such a man deserves
+hanging."
+
+"Damn him," said Snooks, "that's it, is it?"
+
+"That's it, my dear sir, smooth it over as you will. I don't want to
+make more of it than necessary, but we must look at it fairly and study
+the consequences. Now I want to ask you particularly, because we must
+claim special damage for this, if possible--have you lost any customers
+through this outrageous slander?"
+
+"Can't say I have, rightly, sir."
+
+"No, but you will--mark my words, as soon as people hear of this they
+will cease to deal with you. They can't deal with you."
+
+"I hope not, sir."
+
+"So do I; but let me tell Mr. Bumpkin" (here the learned man shook his
+forefinger as though it had been the often quoted finger of scorn) "that
+for every customer you lose we'll make him answerable in damages. He'll
+repeat this slander: take my advice and get some one to look out, and
+make a note of it--be on your guard!"
+
+Snooks wiped the perspiration from his forehead and then threw his large
+coloured handkerchief into his hat, which he held by both hands between
+his knees,
+
+"It be a bad case then, sir?"
+
+"A very bad case for Bumpkin!" replied Mr. Locust; "let me have a list of
+your customers as soon as you can, and we shall see who leaves you in
+consequence of this slander. Does my friend, Mr. Overrighteous, deal
+with you? I think he does?"
+
+"He do, sir, and have for five or six years--and a good customer he be."
+
+"Ah! now, there's a man! Whatever you do don't let Mr. Overrighteous
+know of it: he would leave you directly: a more particular man than that
+can't be. Then again, there is my friend Flythekite, does he deal with
+you? Of course he does!"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"And you'll lose him--sure to lose him."
+
+Judging from Mr. Snooks' countenance it would have been small damage if
+he did.
+
+"Ve-ry well," continued Locust, after a pause, "ve-ry well--just so."
+Then he looked at the copy of the writ and perceived that it was dated
+eighteen hundred and ninety something instead of eighteen hundred and
+seventy something. So he said that the writ was wrong and they ought not
+to appear; "by which means," said he, "we shall let them in at the start
+for a lot of costs--we shall let them in."
+
+"And will that stash the action?" asked Snooks.
+
+"It will not stash ours," said Locust. "I suppose you mean to go on
+whether he does or not? Your claim is for assault and slander."
+
+"As you please, sir."
+
+"No, no, as you please. I have not been called a thief--they haven't
+said that I sell short weight and cheat and defraud the poor: _my_
+business will not be ruined--_my_ character is not at stake."
+
+"Let un have it, sir; he be a bad un," and here he rose to depart. Mr.
+Locust gave him a professional shake of the hand and wished him good day.
+But as the door was just about to be closed on his client, he remembered
+something which he desired to ask, so he called, "Mr. Snooks!"
+
+"Sir," said the client.
+
+"Is there any truth in the statement that this Bumpkin beats his wife?"
+
+"I doant rightly know," said Snooks, in a hesitating voice; "it may be
+true. I shouldn't wonder--he's just the sort o' man."
+
+"Just enquire about that, will you?"
+
+"I wool, sir," said Snooks; and thus his interview with his Solicitor
+terminated.
+
+Now the result of the enquiries as to the domestic happiness of Bumpkin
+was this; first, the question floated about in a vague sort of form,
+"_Does Bumpkin beat his wife_?" then it grew into "_Have you heard that
+Bumpkin beats his wife_?" and lastly, it was affirmed that Bumpkin
+"_really did beat his wife_." And the scandal spread so rapidly that it
+soon reached the ears of plaintiff himself, who would have treated it
+with the contempt it deserved, knowing the quarter whence it came, but
+that it was so gross a calumny that he determined to give the lying
+Snooks no quarter, and to press his action with all the energy at his
+command.
+
+After this there could be no compromise.
+
+"I wish," said Snooks to himself, as he smoked his pipe that evening, "I
+could a worked one o' them there innerenders in my trade--I could a made
+summut on him."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+Showing how the greatest wisdom of Parliament may be thrown away on
+ungrateful people.
+
+The first skirmish between the two doughty champions of the hostile
+forces took place over the misdated writ. Judgment was signed for want
+of appearance; and then came a summons to set it aside. The Judge set it
+aside, and the Divisional Court set aside the Judge, and the Court of
+Appeal set aside the Divisional Court upon the terms of the defendant
+paying the costs, and the writ being amended, &c. &c. And I saw that
+when the Judge in Chambers had hesitatingly and "not without grave doubt"
+set aside the judgment, Mr. Prigg said to Mr. Locust, "What a very nice
+point!" And Mr. Locust replied:
+
+"A very nice point, indeed! Of course you'll appeal?" And Mr. Quibbler,
+Mr. Locust's pleader, said, "A very neat point!"
+
+"Oh dear, yes," answered Mr. Prigg.
+
+And then Mr. Prigg's clerk said to Mr. Locust's clerk--"What a very nice
+point!" And Mr. Locust's clerk rejoined that it was indeed a very nice
+point! And then Mr. Locust's boy in the office said to Mr. Prigg's boy
+in the office, "What a very nice point!" And Mr. Prigg's boy, a pale
+tall lad of about five feet six, and of remarkably quiet demeanour,
+replied--
+
+"A dam nice point!"
+
+Next came letters from the respective Solicitors, suggesting a compromise
+in such terms that compromise became impossible; each affirming that he
+was so averse from litigation that almost any amicable arrangement that
+could be come to would be most welcome. Each required a sum of two
+hundred pounds and an apology in six morning papers. And I saw at the
+foot of one of Mr. Prigg's letters, when the hope of compromise was
+nearly at an end, these touching words:
+
+"Bumpkin's blood's up!"
+
+And at the end of the answer thereto, this very expressive retort:
+
+"You say Bumpkin's blood is up; so is Snooks'--do your worst!"
+
+As I desire to inform the lay reader as to the interesting course an
+action may take under the present expeditious mode of procedure, I must
+now state what I saw in my dream. The course is sinuosity itself in
+appearance, but that only renders it the more beautiful. The reader will
+be able to judge for himself of the simple method by which we try actions
+nowadays, and how very delightful the procedure is. The first skirmish
+cost Snooks seventeen pounds six shillings and eight-pence. It cost
+Bumpkin only three pounds seventeen shillings, or _one heifer_. Now
+commenced that wonderful process called "Pleading," which has been the
+delight and the pride of so many ages; developing gradually century by
+century, until at last it has perfected itself into the most beautiful
+system of evasion and duplicity that the world has ever seen. It ranks
+as one of the fine Arts with Poetry and Painting. A great Pleader is
+truly a great Artist, and more imaginative than any other. The number of
+summonses at Chambers is only limited by his capacity to invent them.
+Ask any respectable solicitor how many honest claims are stifled by
+proceedings at Chambers. And if I may digress in all sincerity for the
+purpose of usefulness, I may state that while recording my dream for the
+Press, Solicitors have begged of me to bring this matter forward, so that
+the Public may know how their interests are played with, and their rights
+stifled by the iniquitous system of proceedings at Chambers.
+
+The Victorian age will be surely known as the Age of Pleading, Poetry,
+and Painting.
+
+First, the Statement of Claim. Summons at Chambers to plead and demur;
+summons to strike out; summons to let in; summons to answer, summons not
+to answer; summonses for all sorts of conceivable and inconceivable
+objects; summonses for no objects at all except costs. And let me here
+say Mr. Prigg and Mr. Locust are not alone blameable for this: Mr.
+Quibbler, Mr. Locust's Pleader, had more to do with this than the
+Solicitor himself. And so had Mr. Wrangler, the Pleader of Mr. Prigg.
+But without repeating what I saw, let the reader take this as the line of
+proceeding throughout, repeated in at least a dozen instances:--
+
+ The Judge at Chambers reversed the Master;
+
+ The Divisional Court reversed the Judge;
+
+ And the Court of Appeal reversed the Divisional Court.
+
+And let this be the chorus:--
+
+ "What a very nice point!" said Prigg;
+
+ "What a very nice point!" said Locust;
+
+ "What a very nice point!" said Gride (Prigg's clerk);
+
+ "What a d--- nice point!" said Horatio! (the pale boy).
+
+ Summons for particulars.--Chorus.
+
+ Further and better particulars.--Chorus.
+
+ Interrogatories--Summons to strike out.--Chorus.
+
+ Summons for further and better answers.--Chorus.
+
+ More summonses for more, further, better, and all sorts of
+ things.--Chorus.
+
+All this repeated by the other side, of course; because each has his
+proper innings. There is great fairness and impartiality in the game.
+Something was always going up from the foot of this Jacob's ladder called
+"the Master" to the higher regions called the Court of Appeal. The
+simplest possible matter, which any old laundress of the Temple ought to
+have been competent to decide by giving both the parties a box on the
+ear, was taken before the Master, from the Master to the Judge, from the
+Judge to the Divisional Court, and from the Divisional Court to the Court
+of Appeal, at the expense of the unfortunate litigants; while Judges, who
+ought to have been engaged in disposing of the business of the country,
+were occupied in deciding legal quibbles and miserable technicalities.
+All this I saw in my dream. Up and down this ladder Bumpkin and Snooks
+were driven--one going up the front while the other was coming down the
+back. And I heard Bumpkin ask if he wasn't entitled to the costs which
+the Court gave when he won. But the answer of Mr. Prigg was, "No, my
+dear sir, the labourer is worthy of his hire." And I saw a great many
+more ups and downs on the ladder which I should weary the reader by
+repeating: they are all alike equally useless and equally contemptible.
+Then I thought that poor Bumpkin went up the ladder with a great bundle
+on his back; and his face seemed quite changed, so that I hardly knew
+him, and I said to Horatio, the pale boy--
+
+"Who is that going up now? It looks like Christian in the Pilgrim's
+Progress."
+
+"Oh, no," said Horatio, "that's old Bumpkin--it's a regler sweater for
+him, ain't it?"
+
+I said, "Whatever can it be? will he ever reach the top?"
+
+Here Bumpkin seemed to slip, and it almost took my breath away; whereat
+the pale boy laughed, stooping down as he laughed, and thrusting his
+hands into his breeches pockets,
+
+"By George!" he exclaimed, "what a jolly lark!"
+
+"I hope he won't fall," I exclaimed. "What has he got on his back?"
+
+"A DEMURRER," said Horatio, laughing. "Look at him! That there ladder's
+the Judicatur Act: don't it reach a height? There's as many rounds in
+that there ladder as would take a man a lifetime to go up if it was all
+spread out; it's just like them fire escapes in reaching up, but nobody
+ever escapes by it."
+
+"It will break the poor man's back," said I, as he was a few feet from
+the top. And then in my dream I thought he fell; and the fright was so
+great that I awoke, and found I was sitting in my easy chair by the fire,
+and the pipe I had been smoking had fallen out of my hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"You've been dreaming," said my wife; "and I fear have had a nightmare."
+When I was thoroughly aroused, and had refilled my pipe, I told her all
+my dream.
+
+Then cried she, "I hope good Mr. Bumpkin will get up safely with that
+great bundle."
+
+"It doesn't matter," said I, "whether he do or not; he will have to bear
+its burden, whether he take it up or bring it back. He will have to
+bring it down again after showing it to the gentlemen at the top."
+
+"What do they want to see it for?" cried she.
+
+"They have no wish to see it," I replied; "on the contrary, they would
+rather not. They will simply say he is a very foolish man for his pains
+to clamber up so high with so useless a burden."
+
+"But why don't they check him?"
+
+"Because they have no power; they look and wonder at the folly of
+mankind, who can devise no better scheme of amusement for getting rid of
+their money."
+
+"But the lawyers are wise people, and they should know better."
+
+"The lawyers," said I, "do know better; and all respectable lawyers
+detest the complicated system which brings them more abuse than fees.
+They see men, permitted by the law, without character and conscience,
+bring disgrace on an honourable body of practitioners."
+
+"But do they not remonstrate?"
+
+"They do, but with little effect; no one knows who is responsible for the
+mischief or how to cure it."
+
+"That is strange."
+
+"Yes, but the time will come when the people will insist on a cheaper and
+more expeditious system. Half-a-dozen solicitors and members of the
+junior bar could devise such a system in a week."
+
+"Then why are they not permitted to take it in hand?"
+
+"Because," said I, "Old Fogeyism has, at present, only got the gout in
+one leg; wait till he has it in both, and then Common Sense will rise to
+the occasion."
+
+"But what," quoth she, "is this fine art you spoke of?"
+
+"Pleading!"
+
+"Yes; in what consists its great art?"
+
+"In artfulness," quoth I.
+
+Then there was a pause, and at length I said, "I will endeavour to give
+you an illustration of the process of pleading from ancient history: you
+have heard, I doubt not, of Joseph and his Brethren."
+
+"O, to be sure," cried she; "did they not put him in the pit?"
+
+"Well, I believe they put him in the pit, but I am not referring to that.
+The corn in Egypt is what I mean."
+
+"When they found all their money in their sacks' mouths?"
+
+"Exactly. Now if Joseph had prosecuted those men for stealing the money,
+they would simply have pleaded not guilty, and the case would have been
+tried without any bother, and the defendants have been acquitted or
+convicted according to the wisdom of the judge, the skill of the counsel,
+and the common sense of the jury. But now suppose instead thereof,
+Joseph had brought an action for the price of the corn."
+
+"Would it not have been as simple?"
+
+"You shall see. The facts would have been stated with some accuracy and
+a good deal of inaccuracy, and a good many things which were not facts
+would have been introduced. Then the defendants in their statement of
+defence would have denied that there was any such place as Egypt as
+alleged; {52} denied that Pharaoh was King thereof; denied that he had
+any corn to sell; denied that the said Joseph had any authority to sell;
+denied that they or any of them went into Egypt; denied that they ever
+saw the said Joseph or had any communication with him whatever, either by
+means of an interpreter or otherwise; denied, in fact, everything except
+their own existence; but in the alternative they would go on to say, if
+it should be proved that there was a place called Egypt, a man called
+Pharaoh, an agent of his called Joseph, and that the defendants actually
+did go to Egypt, all of which they one and all absolutely deny (as
+becomes men of honour), then they say, that being large corn-merchants
+and well known to the said Joseph, the factor of the said Pharaoh, as
+purchasers only of corn for domestic purposes, and requiring therefore a
+good sound merchantable article, the said Joseph, by falsely and
+fraudulently representing that certain corn of which he, the said Joseph,
+was possessed, was at that time of a good sound and merchantable quality
+and fit for seed and domestic purposes, by the said false and fraudulent
+representations he, the said Joseph, induced the defendants to purchase a
+large quantity thereof, to wit, five thousand sacks; whereas the said
+corn was not of a good sound and merchantable quality and fit for seed
+and domestic purposes, but was maggoty from damp, and infected with smut
+and altogether worthless, as he, the said Joseph, well knew at the time
+he made the said false representations. The defendants would also
+further allege that, relying on the said Joseph's word, they took away
+the said corn, but having occasion at the inn to look into the said
+sacks, they found that the said wheat was worthless, and immediately
+communicated with the said Joseph by sending their younger brother Simeon
+down to demand a return of the price of the said corn. But when the said
+Simeon came to the said Joseph the said Joseph caught him, and kicked
+him, and beat him with a great stick, and had him to prison, and would
+not restore him to his brethren, the defendants. Whereupon the
+defendants sent other messengers, and at length, after being detained a
+long time at the said inn, the said Joseph came down, and on being shown
+the said corn, admitted that it was in bad condition. Whereupon the
+defendants, fearing to trust the said Joseph with the said sacks until
+they had got a return of their said money, demanded that he, the said
+Joseph, should put the full tale of every man's money in the sack of the
+said man; which thing the said Joseph agreed to, and placed every man's
+money in the mouth of his said sack. And when the said man was about to
+reach forth his hand to take his said money, the said Joseph seized the
+said hand and held him fast--."
+
+"Stop, stop!" cried my wife; "the said Joseph had not ten hands. You
+must surely draw the line somewhere."
+
+"No, no," said I, "that is good pleading; if the other side should omit
+to deny it, it will be taken by the rules of pleading to be admitted."
+
+"But surely you can't admit impossibilities!"
+
+"Can't you, though!" cried I. "You can do almost anything in pleading."
+
+"Except, it seems to me, tell the truth."
+
+"You mustn't be too hard upon us poor juniors," cried I. "I haven't come
+to the Counterclaim yet."
+
+"O don't let us have Counterclaims," quoth she; "they can have no claim
+against Joseph?"
+
+"What, not for selling them smutty wheat?"
+
+"Nonsense."
+
+"I say yes; and he'll have to call a number of witnesses to prove the
+contrary--nor do I think he will be able to do it."
+
+"I fail now," said my wife, "to see how this pleading is a fine art.
+Really, without joking, what is the art?"
+
+"The art of pleading," said I, "consists in denying what is, and inducing
+your adversary to admit what isn't."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+Showing that appropriateness of time and place should be studied in our
+pastimes.
+
+The next night, sitting over the cheerful fire and comfortably resting
+after the labours of the day, I dreamed again, and I saw that Horatio
+Snigger was "the Office Boy" of Mr. Prigg. He had been in the employment
+of that gentleman about two years. He was tall for his money, standing,
+in his shoes, at least five feet six, and receiving for his services,
+five shillings and sixpence a week, (that is, a shilling for every foot
+and a penny for every odd inch), his last rise (I mean in money,) having
+taken place about a month ago.
+
+Horatio was a lad of as much spirit as any boy I ever saw. I do not
+believe he had any liking for the profession, but had entered it simply
+as his first step in life, utterly in the dark as to whither it would
+lead him. It was, I believe, some disappointment to his father that on
+no occasion when he interrogated him as to his "getting on," could he
+elicit any more cheering reply than "very well." And yet Horatio, during
+the time he had been with Mr. Prigg, had had opportunities of studying
+character in its ever-varying phases as presented by Courts of Justice
+and kindred places.
+
+"Kindred places!" Yes, I mean "Judges' Chambers," where any boy may
+speedily be impressed with the dignity and simplicity of the practice of
+the Law, especially since the passing of the Judicature Act. To my lay
+readers who may wish to know what "Judges' Chambers" means, I may observe
+that it is a place where innumerable proceedings may be taken for
+lengthening a case, embarrassing the clients, and spending money. It is,
+to put it in another form, a sort of Grands Mulets in the Mont Blanc of
+litigation, whence, if by the time you get there you are not thoroughly
+"pumped out," you may go on farther and in due time reach the top,
+whence, I am told, there is a most magnificent view.
+
+But even the beauty of the proceedings at Judges' Chambers failed to
+impress Horatio with the dignity of the profession. He lounged among the
+crowds of chattering boys and youths who "cheeked" one another before
+that august personage "the Master," declaring that "Master" couldn't do
+this and "Master" couldn't do that; that the other side was too late or
+too soon; that his particulars were too meagre or too full; or his
+answers to interrogatories too evasive or not sufficiently diffuse, and
+went on generally as if the whole object of the law were to raise as many
+difficulties as possible in the way of its application. As if, in fact,
+it had fenced itself in with such an undergrowth of brambles that no
+amount of ability and perseverance could arrive at it.
+
+From what I perceived of the character of Horatio, I should say that he
+was a scoffer. He was a mild, good-tempered, well-behaved boy enough,
+but ridiculed many proceedings which he ought to have reverenced. He was
+a great favourite with Mr. Prigg, because, if anything in the world
+attracted the boy's admiration, it was that gentleman's pious demeanour
+and profound knowledge. But the exuberance of the lad's spirits when
+away from his employer was in exact proportion to the moral pressure
+brought to bear upon him while in that gentleman's presence. As an
+illustration of this remark and proof of the twofold character of
+Horatio, I will relate what I saw after the "Master" had determined that
+the tail of the 9 was a very nice point, but that there was nothing in
+it. They had all waited a long time at Judge's Chambers, and their
+spirits were, no doubt, somewhat elated by at last getting the matter
+disposed of.
+
+Horatio heard Mr. Prigg say to Mr. Locust, "What a very nice point!" and
+had heard Mr. Locust reply, "A very nice point, indeed!" And Mr. Gride,
+the clerk, say, "What, a very nice point!" and somebody else's clerk say,
+"What a very nice point!" And Horatio felt, as a humble member of the
+profession, he must chime in with the rest of the firm. So, having said
+to Locust's boy, "What a dam nice point!" he went back to his lonely den
+in Bedford Row and then, as he termed it, "let himself out." He
+accomplished this proceeding by first taking off his coat and throwing it
+on to a chair; he next threw but his arms, with his fists firmly
+clenched, as though he had hardly yet to its fullest extent realized the
+"_niceness_" of the point which the Master had determined. The next step
+which Horatio took was what is called "The double shuffle," which, I may
+inform my readers, is the step usually practised by the gentleman who
+imitates the sailor in the hornpipe on the stage. Being a slim and agile
+youth, Horatio's performance was by no means contemptible, except that it
+was no part of his professional duty to dance a Hornpipe. Then I saw
+that this young gentleman in the exuberance of his youthful spirits
+prepared for another exhibition of his talent. He cleared his throat,
+once more threw out his arms, stamped his right foot loudly on the floor,
+after the manner of the Ethiopian dancer with the long shoe, and then to
+my astonishment poured forth the following words in a very agreeable,
+and, as it seemed to me, melodious voice,--
+
+ "What a very nice point, said Prigg."
+
+Then came what I suppose would be called a few bars of the hornpipe; then
+he gave another line,--
+
+ "What a very nice point, said Gride."
+
+(Another part of the hornpipe.) Then he sang the third and fourth lines,
+dancing vigorously the while:
+
+ "It will take a dozen lawyers with their everlasting jaw:
+ It will take a dozen judges with their ever changing law"--
+
+(Vigorous dancing for some moments), and then a pause, during which
+Horatio, slightly stooping, placed two fingers of his left hand to the
+side of his nose, and turning his eyes to the right, sang--
+
+ "And"--
+
+Paused again, and finished vehemently as follows:
+
+ "Twenty golden guineas to decide!"
+
+Then came the most enthusiastic hornpipe that ever was seen, and Horatio
+was in the seventh Heaven of delight, when the door suddenly opened, and
+Mr. Prigg entered!
+
+It was unfortunate for Horatio that his back being towards the door he
+could not see his master enter; and it need scarcely be said that the
+noise produced by the dance prevented him from hearing his approach.
+
+Mr. Prigg looked astounded at the sight that presented itself. The whole
+verse was repeated, and the whole dance gone through again in the sight
+and hearing of that gentleman. Was the boy mad? Had the strain of
+business been too much for him?
+
+As if by instinct Horatio at last became aware of his master's presence.
+A change more rapid, transformation more complete I never saw. The lad
+hung his head, and wandered to the chair where his coat was lying. It
+took him some time to put it on, for the sleeves seemed somehow to be
+twisted; at length, once more arrayed, and apparently in his right mind,
+he stood with three-quarter face towards his astonished master.
+
+Mr. Prigg did not turn his head even on this occasion. He preserved a
+dignified silence for some time, and then spoke in a deep tragic tone:
+
+"Horatio!"
+
+Horatio did hot answer.
+
+"What is the meaning of this exhibition, Horatio?"
+
+"I was only having a little fun, sir," said the youthful clerk.
+
+"I am not averse to youth enjoying itself," said Mr. Prigg; "but it must
+be at proper seasons, and in appropriate places; there is also to be
+exercised a certain discretion in the choice of those amusements in which
+youth should indulge. I am not aware what category of recreation your
+present exhibition may belong to, but I may inform you that in my humble
+judgment--I may be mistaken, and you may know far better than I--but as
+at present advised, I do not see that your late performance is consistent
+with the duties of a solicitor's clerk." And then he muttered to
+himself, "Quite so."
+
+After this magnificent rebuke, Mr. Prigg drew out his cambric
+handkerchief, and most gently applied it to his stately nose.
+
+"Again," said Mr. Prigg, "I heard language, or thought I heard language,
+which I should construe as decidedly derogatory to the Profession which
+you serve and to which I have the honour to belong."
+
+"I was only in fun, sir," said Horatio, gathering confidence as Mr. Prigg
+proceeded.
+
+"Quite so, quite so; that may be, I sincerely hope you were; but never
+make fun of that by which you live; you derive what I may call a very
+competent, not to say handsome, salary from the proceedings which you
+make fun of. This is sad, and manifests a spirit of levity."
+
+"I didn't mean it like that, sir."
+
+"Very well," said the good man, "I am glad to perceive that you are
+brought to a proper sense of the impropriety of your conduct. I will not
+discharge you on this occasion, for the sake of your father, whom I have
+known for so many years: but never let this occur again. Dancing is at
+all times, to my mind, a very questionable amusement; but when it is
+accompanied, as I perceived it was on this occasion, with gestures which
+I cannot characterize by any other term than disgusting; and when further
+you take the liberty of using my name in what I presume you intended for
+a comic song, I must confess that I can hardly repress my feelings of
+indignation. I hope you are penitent."
+
+Horatio hung down his head, and said he was very sorry Mr. Prigg had
+heard it, for he only intended it for his own amusement.
+
+"I shall take care," said Mr. Prigg, "that you have less opportunity for
+such exercises as I have unfortunately witnessed." And having thus
+admonished the repentant youth, Mr. Prigg left him to his reflections. I
+am glad Mr. Prigg did not return while the pale boy was reflecting.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+The pleasure of a country drive on a summer evening described as enhanced
+by a pious mind.
+
+It is only fair to the very able solicitors on both sides in the
+memorable case of _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_ to state that the greatest
+possible despatch was exercised on all occasions. Scarcely a day passed
+without something being done, as Prigg expressed it, "to expedite
+matters." Month after month may have passed away without any apparent
+advance; but this in reality was not the case. Many appeals on what
+seemed trifling matters had been heard; so many indeed that _Bumpkin_ v.
+_Snooks_ had become a household word with the Court of Appeal, and a
+bye-word among the innumerable loafers about Judge's Chambers.
+
+"What! _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_ again!" the President would say. "What is
+it now? It's a pity the parties to this case can't agree: it seems a
+very trifling matter."
+
+"Not so, my lord, as your lordship will quickly apprehend when the new
+point is brought before your notice. A question of principle is here
+which may form a precedent for the guidance of future Judges, as did the
+famous case of _Perryman_ v. _Lister_, which went to the House of Lords
+about prosecuting a man for stealing a gun. This is about a pig, my
+lord--a little pig, no doubt, and although there is not much in the pig,
+there is a good deal outside it."
+
+And often did Prigg say to Locust:
+
+"I say, Locust, whenever _shall_ we be ready to set this case down for
+trial?"
+
+"Really, my dear Prigg," Locust would reply, "it seems interminable--come
+and dine with me." So the gentle and innocent reader will at once
+perceive that there was great impatience on all sides to get this case
+ready for trial. Meanwhile it may not be uninteresting to describe
+shortly some of the many changes that had taken place in the few short
+months since the action commenced.
+
+First it was clearly observable by the inhabitants of Yokelton that Mr.
+Prigg's position had considerably improved. I say nothing of his new
+hat; that was a small matter, but not so his style of living--so great an
+advance had that made that it attracted the attention of the neighbours,
+who often remarked that Mr. Prigg seemed to be getting a large practice.
+He was often seen with his lady on a summer afternoon taking the air in a
+nice open carriage--hired, it is true, for the occasion. And everybody
+remarked how uncommonly ladylike Mrs. Prigg lay back in the vehicle, and
+how very gracefully she held her new aesthetic parasol. And what a proud
+moment it was for Bumpkin, when he saw this good and respectable
+gentleman pass with the ladylike creature beside him; and Mr. Bumpkin
+would say to his neighbours, lifting his hat at the same moment,
+
+"That be my loryer, that air be!"
+
+And then Mr. Prigg would gracefully raise his hat, and Mrs. Prigg would
+lie back perfectly motionless as became a very languid lady of her
+exalted position. And when Mr. Prigg said to Mrs. Prigg, "My dear, that
+is our new client;" Mrs. Prigg would elevate her arched eyebrows and
+expand her delicate nostrils as she answered,--
+
+"Really, my love, what a very vulgar-looking creechar!"
+
+"Not nearly so vulgar as Locust's client," rejoined her husband. "You
+should see him."
+
+"Thank you, my love, it is quite enough to catch a glimpse of the
+superior person of the two."
+
+Mr. Prigg seemed to think it a qualifying circumstance that Snooks was a
+more vulgar-looking man than Bumpkin, whereas a moment's consideration
+showed Mrs. Prigg how illogical that was. It is the intrinsic and
+personal value that one has to measure things by. This value could not
+be heightened by contrast. Mrs. Prigg's curiosity, however, naturally
+led her to inquire who the other creechar was? As if she had never heard
+of _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_, although she had actually got the case on four
+wheels and was riding in it at that very moment; as if in fact she was
+not practically all Bumpkin, as a silkworm may be said to be all mulberry
+leaves. As if she knew nothing of her husband's business! Her ideas
+were not of this world. Give her a church to build, she'd harass people
+for subscriptions; or let it be a meeting to clothe the naked savage,
+Mrs. Prigg would be there. She knew nothing of clothing Bumpkin! But
+she did interest herself sufficiently in her husband's conversation to
+ask, in answer to his reference to Locust's disreputable client,
+
+"And who is he, pray?"
+
+"My darling," said Prigg, "you must have heard of Snooks?"
+
+"Oh," drawled Mrs. Prigg, "do you mean the creechar who sells coals?"
+
+"The same, my dear."
+
+"And are you engaged against _that_ man? How very dreadful!"
+
+"My darling," observed Mr. Prigg, "it is not for us to choose our
+opponents; nor indeed, for the matter of that, our clients."
+
+"I can quite perceive that," returned the lady, "or you would never have
+chosen such men--dear me!"
+
+"We are like physicians," returned Mr. Prigg, "called in in case of
+need."
+
+"And the healing virtues of your profession must not be confined to rich
+patients," said Mrs. Prigg, in her jocular manner.
+
+"By no means," was the good man's reply; "justice is as much the right of
+the poor as the rich--so is the air we breathe--so is everything." And
+he put his fingers together again, as was his wont whenever he uttered a
+philosophical or moral platitude.
+
+So I saw in my dream that the good man and his ladylike wife rode through
+the beautiful lanes, and over the breezy common on that lovely summer
+afternoon, and as they drew up on the summit of a hill which gave a view
+of the distant landscape, there was a serenity in the scene which could
+only be compared to the serenity of Mr. Prigg's benevolent countenance;
+and there was a calm, deeply, sweetly impressive, which could only be
+appreciated by a mind at peace with itself in particular, and with the
+world in general. Then came from a neighbouring wood the clear voice of
+the cuckoo. It seemed to sing purposely in honour of the good man; and I
+fancied I could see a ravenous hawk upon a tree, abashed at Mr. Prigg's
+presence and superior ability; and a fluttering timid lark seemed to
+shriek, "Wicked bird, live and let live;" but it was the last word the
+silly lark uttered, for the hawk was upon him in a moment, and the little
+innocent songster was crushed in its ravenous beak. Still the cuckoo
+sang on in praise of Mr. Prigg, with now and then a little note for Mrs.
+Prigg; for the cuckoo is a very gallant little bird, and Mrs. Prigg was
+such a heavenly creature that no cuckoo could be conscious of her
+presence without hymning her praise.
+
+"Listen," said Mrs. Prigg, "isn't it beautiful? I wonder where cuckoos
+go to?"
+
+"Ah, my dear!" said Prigg, enraptured with the clear notes and the
+beautiful scene; but neither of them seemed to wonder where hawks go to.
+
+"Do you hear the echo, love? Isn't it beautiful?"
+
+O, yes, it was beautiful! Nature does indeed lift the soul on a quiet
+evening from the grovelling occupations of earth to bask in the genial
+sunshine of a more spiritual existence. What was Bumpkin? What was
+Snooks to a scene like this? Suddenly the cuckoo ceased. Wonderful
+bird! I don't know whether it was the presence of the hawk that hushed
+its voice or the sight of Mr. Prigg as he stood up in the carriage to
+take a more extended view of the prospect; but the familiar note was
+hushed, and the evening hymn in praise of the Priggs was over.
+
+So the journey was continued by the beautiful wood of oaks and chestnuts,
+along by the hillside from which you could perceive in the far distance
+the little stream as it wound along by meadow and wood and then lost
+itself beneath the hill that rose abruptly on the left.
+
+The stream was the symbol of life--probably Bumpkin's life; all nature
+presents similes to a religious mind. And so the evening journey was
+continued with ever awakening feelings of delight and gratitude until
+they once more entered their peaceful home. And this brings me to
+another consideration which ought not to be passed over with
+indifference.
+
+I saw in my dream that a great change had taken place in the home of the
+Priggs. The furniture had undergone a metamorphosis almost so striking
+that I thought Mr. Prigg must be a wizard. The gentle reader knows all
+about Cinderella; but here was a transformation more surprising. I saw
+that one of Mr. Bumpkin's pigs had been turned into a very pretty
+walnut-wood whatnot, and stood in the drawing-room, and on it stood
+several of the ducks and geese that used to swim in the pond of Southwood
+farm. They were not ducks and geese now, but pretty silent ornaments.
+An old rough-looking stack of oats had been turned into a very nice
+Turkey carpet for the dining-room. Poor old Jack the donkey had been
+changed into a musical box that stood on a little table made out of a
+calf. One day Mr. Bumpkin called to see how his case was going on, and
+by mistake got into this room among his cows and pigs; but not one of
+them did the farmer know, and when the maid invited him to sit down he
+was afraid of spoiling something.
+
+Now summonses at Chambers, and appeals, and demurrers, are not at all bad
+conjuring wands, if you only know how to use them. Two clever men like
+Prigg and Locust, not only surprise the profession, but alarm the public,
+since no one knows what will take place next, and Justice herself is
+startled from her propriety. Let no clamorous law reformer say that
+interrogatories or any other multitudinous proceedings at Judge's
+Chambers are useless. It is astonishing how many changes you can ring
+upon them with a little ingenuity, and a very little scrupulosity. Mr.
+Prigg turned two sides of bacon into an Indian vase, and performed many
+other feats truly astonishing to persons who look on as mere spectators,
+and wonder how it is done. Wave your magic wand, good Prigg, and you
+shall see a hayrick turn into a chestnut mare; and a four-wheeled waggon
+into a Victoria.
+
+But the greatest change he had effected was in Mr. Bumpkin himself, who
+loved to hear his wife read the interrogatories and answers. The almanac
+was nothing to this. He had no idea law was so interesting. I dare say
+there were two guiding influences working within him, in addition to the
+many influences working without; one being that inherent British pluck,
+which once aroused, "doesn't care, sir, if it costs me a thousand pound,
+I'll have it out wi' un;" the other was the delicious thought that all
+his present outlay would be repaid by the cunning and covetous Snooks.
+So much was Bumpkin's heart in the work of crushing his opponent, that
+expense was treated with ridicule. I heard him one day say jocularly to
+Mr. Prigg, who had come for an affidavit:
+
+"Be it a pig, sir, or a heifer?"
+
+"O," said the worthy Prigg, "we want a pretty good one; I think it must
+be a heifer."
+
+All this was very pleasant, and made the business, dull and prosaic in
+itself, a cheerful recreation.
+
+Then, again, there was a feeling of self-importance whenever these
+affidavits came to be sworn. Mr. Bumpkin would put down his ash-stick by
+the side of the fireplace, and bidding his visitor be seated, would
+compose himself with satisfaction to listen to the oft-repeated words:
+
+"I, Thomas Bumpkin, make oath, and say--"
+
+Fancy, "_I_, _Bumpkin_!" Just let the reader pause over that for a
+moment! What must "I, Bumpkin," be whose statement is required on oath
+before my Lord Judge?
+
+Always, at these words, he would shout. "That be it--now then, sir,
+would you please begin that agin?"--while, if Mrs. Bumpkin were not too
+busy, he would call her in to hear them too.
+
+So there was no wonder that the action went merrily along. Once get up
+enthusiasm in a cause, and it is half won. Without enthusiasm, few
+causes can succeed against opposition. Then, again, the affidavit
+described Bumpkin as a Yeoman. What, I wonder, would Snooks the
+coal-merchant think of that?
+
+So everything proceeded satisfactorily, and the months rolled away; the
+seasons came in their turn, so did the crops, so did the farrows of pigs,
+so did the spring chickens, and young ducks (prettiest little golden
+things in the world, on the water); so did Mr. Prigg, and so did a
+gentleman (hereafter to be called "the man,") with whom a very convenient
+arrangement was made, by which Mr. Bumpkin preserved the whole of his
+remaining stock intact; had not in fact to advance a single penny piece
+more; all advances necessary for the prosecution of the action being made
+by the strange gentleman (whose name I did not catch) under that most
+convenient of all legal forms, "a Bill of Sale."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+A farmhouse winter fireside--a morning drive and a mutual interchange of
+ideas between town and country: showing how we may all learn something
+from one another.
+
+I never saw the home of Farmer Bumpkin without thinking what a happy and
+comfortable home it was. The old elm tree that waved over the thatched
+roof, seemed to bless and protect it. On a winter's evening, when
+Bumpkin was sitting in one corner smoking his long pipe, Mrs. Bumpkin
+darning her stockings, and Joe on the other side looking into the blazing
+fire, while the old Collie stretched himself in a snug corner beside his
+master, it represented a scene of comfort almost as perfect as rustic
+human nature was capable of enjoying. And when the wind blew through the
+branches of the elm over the roof, it was like music, played on purpose
+to heighten the enjoyment. Comfort, thou art at the evening fireside of
+a farm-house, if anywhere!
+
+You should have seen Tim, when an unusual sound disturbed the harmony of
+this peaceful fireside. He growled first as he lay with his head resting
+between his paws, and just turned up his eyes to his master for approval.
+Then, if that warning was not sufficient, he rose and barked
+vociferously. Possessed, I believe, of more insight than Bumpkin, he got
+into the most tremendous state of excitement whensoever anyone came from
+Prigg's, and he cordially hated Prigg. But most of all was he angry when
+"the man" came. There was no keeping him quiet. I wonder if dogs know
+more about Bills of Sale than farmers. I am aware that some farmers know
+a good deal about them; and when they read this story, many of them will
+accuse me of being too personal; but Tim was a dog of strong prejudices,
+and I am sure he had a prejudice against money-lenders.
+
+As the persons I have mentioned were thus sitting on this dreary evening
+in the month of November, suddenly, Tim sprang from his recumbent
+position, and barked furiously.
+
+"Down, Tim! down, Tim!" said the farmer; "what be this, I wonder!"
+
+"Tim, Tim," said Mrs. Bumpkin, "down, Tim! hold thee noise, I tell ee."
+
+"Good Tim!" said Joe; he also had an instinct.
+
+"I'll goo and see what it be," said Mrs. Bumpkin; "whoever can come here
+at this time o' night! it be summat, Tom." And she put down her
+stockings, and lighting a candle went to the front door, whereat there
+was a loud knocking. Tim jumped and flew and thrust his nose down to the
+bottom of the door long before Mrs. Bumpkin could get there.
+
+"Quiet, Tim! I tell thee; who be there?"
+
+"From Mr. Prigg's," answered a voice.
+
+This was enough for Tim; the name of Prigg made him furious.
+
+"Somebody from Mr. Prigg, Tom."
+
+"Wull, let un in, Nance; bless thee soul, let un in; may be the case be
+settled. I hope they ain't took less nor a hundred pound. I told un not
+to." The door was unbolted and unbarred, and a long time it took, and
+then stood before Mrs. Bumpkin a tall pale youth.
+
+"I've come from Mr. Prigg."
+
+"Will er plase to walk in, sir?" said Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+By this time the master had got up from his seat, and advancing towards
+the youth said:--
+
+"How do, sir; how do, sir; wark in, wark in, tak a seat, I be glad to see
+thee."
+
+"I come from Mr. Prigg," said the youth, "and we want another affidavit."
+
+"Hem!" said Bumpkin, "be it a pig or a eifer, sir?" He couldn't forget
+the old joke.
+
+"We want an affidavit of documents," said the youth.
+
+"And what be the manin o' that?--affiday o' what?"
+
+"Documents, sir," said the mild youth; "here it is."
+
+"Oh," said Bumpkin, "I got to swear un, I spoase, that's all."
+
+"That's it, sir," said Horatio.
+
+"Well, thee can't take oaths, I spoase."
+
+"No, sir, not exactly."
+
+"Wull then I spoase I must goo to --- in the marnin. And thee'll stop
+here the night and mak thyself comfortable. We can gie un a bed, can't
+us, Nancy?"
+
+"Two, if ur wishes it," answered Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+"Devil's in it, ur doan't want two beds, I'll warrant? Now then, sir,
+sitten doon and mak theeself comfortable. What'll thee drink?"
+
+"I'm too young to drink," said Horatio, with a smile.
+
+Bumpkin smiled too. "I'll warrant thee be."
+
+"I'm always too young," said Horatio, "for every thing that's nice. Mr.
+Prigg says I'm too young to enjoy myself; but if you don't mind, sir, I'm
+not too young to be hungry. I've walked a long distance."
+
+"Have ur now?" said Mrs. Bumpkin. "We ain't got anything wery grand,
+sir; but there be a nice piece o' pickle pork and pease-puddin, if thee
+doan't mind thic."
+
+"Bring un out," said Bumpkin; and accordingly a nice clean cloth was soon
+spread, and the table was groaning (as the saying is), with a large leg
+of pork and pease-pudding and home-made bread; to which Horatio did ample
+justice.
+
+"Bain't bad pooark," said Bumpkin.
+
+"Best I ever tasted," replied Horatio; "we don't get this sort of pork in
+London--pork there doesn't seem like pork."
+
+"Now look at that," said Joe; "I fed that air pig."
+
+"So ur did, Joe," said the farmer; "I'll gie thee credit, Joe, thee fed
+un well."
+
+"Ah!" said Joe; "and that air pig knowed I as well as I knows thee."
+
+When Horatio had supped, and the things were removed, Mr. Bumpkin assured
+the youth that a little drop of gin-and-water would not hurt him after
+his journey; and accordingly mixed him a tumbler. "Thee doan't smoke, I
+spoase?" he said; to which Mrs. Bumpkin added that she "spoased he wur
+too young like."
+
+"I'll try," answered the courageous youth, nothing daunted by his
+youngness.
+
+"So thee shall--dang if thee shan't," rejoined Mr. Bumpkin; and produced
+a long churchwarden pipe, and a big leaden jar of tobacco of a very dark
+character, called "shag."
+
+Horatio filled his pipe, and puffed away as if he had been a veteran
+smoker; cloud after cloud came forth, and when Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin and
+Joe looked, expecting that the boy should be ill, there was not the least
+sign; so Joe observed with great sagacity:
+
+"Look at that now, maister; I bleeve he've smoked afoore."
+
+"Have ur, sir?" asked Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"A little," said Horatio.
+
+"Why, I never smoked afoore I wur turned twenty," said the farmer.
+
+"I believe the right time now is fourteen," observed the youth; "it used
+to be twenty, I have heard father say; but everything has been altered by
+the Judicature Act."
+
+"Look at that air," said Joe, "he've eeard father say. You knows a thing
+or two, I'll warrant, Mr. --."
+
+Here Joe was baffled, and coming so abruptly to an end of his address,
+Mr. Bumpkin took the matter up, and asked, if he might make so bold, what
+the youth's name might be.
+
+"Horatio Snigger," answered that gentleman.
+
+"When will this ere case be on, think'ee, sir?" inquired Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"We expect it to be in the paper every day now," said the youth; "they've
+tried to dodge us a good deal, but they can't dodge us much longer--we're
+a little too downy for em."
+
+"It have been a mighty long time about, surely," said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"O, that's nothing," said Horatio; "time's nothing in Law! Why, a suit
+to administer a Will sometimes takes 'ears; and Bankruptcy, O my eye,
+ain't there dodging about that, and jockeying too, eh! Crikey!"
+
+Mr. Bumpkin here winked at his wife, as much as to say, "Now you hold
+your tongue, and see me dror un out. I'll have un."
+
+"Will ee tak a little more gin-and-water, sir?"
+
+"No, thankee," said the youth.
+
+"A little more won't hurt ee--it'll do thee good." And again he filled
+the tumbler; while the pale boy refilled his pipe.
+
+"Now, who's my counsellor gwine to be?" asked the farmer.
+
+"Oh," said Horatio, "a regular cruncher--Mr. Catapult."
+
+"He be a cruncher, be he?"
+
+"I believe you; he turned a man inside out the other day; a money-lender
+he was."
+
+"Did ur now?"
+
+"Look at that," said Joe.
+
+"And we're going to have Mr. Dynamite for junior; my eye, don't he make a
+row!"
+
+"Two an em!" exclaimed Bumpkin.
+
+"Must have two for the plaintiff," said Horatio; "that's the law. Why, a
+Queen's Counsel ain't allowed to open a case without a junior starts
+him--it's jist like the engine-driver and the guard. You have the junior
+to shove the leader."
+
+"Look at that," said Joe; expectorating into the fire.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin looked again at Nancy, and gave another wink that you might
+have heard.
+
+"And the tother side?" he asked.
+
+"Ah! I don't know about them," said the boy. "They're artful dodgers,
+they are."
+
+"Is 'em now? but artfulness don't allays win, do ur?"
+
+"No," said Horatio; "but it goes a long way, and sometimes when it's gone
+a long way it beats itself."
+
+"Look at that," said Joe; "that's like that ere--"
+
+"Be quiet, Joe," said Bumpkin; "let I talk, will ur? You said it beats
+itself, sir?"
+
+"If the judge gets 'old of him, it's sure to," said Horatio. "There
+ain't no judge on the Bench as will let artfulness win if he knows it.
+I've sin em watchin like a cat watches a mouse; and directly it comes out
+o' the 'ole, down he is on em--like that:" and he slapped his hand on the
+table with startling effect.
+
+"Good!" said Bumpkin.
+
+"And don't they know who the solicitor is, eh--that's all! My word, if
+he's a shady one--the judge is down on the case like winkin."
+
+"And be this ere Locust a shady un?" (Another wink at Mrs. Bumpkin.)
+
+"Ah! I'm too young to know."
+
+"Thee beest too old, thee meanest," said Mrs. Bumpkin, laughing.
+
+"Now hold thee tongue, Nancy; I wur gwine to say that myself--dang if I
+warnt!"
+
+"Now look at thic," said Joe; "maister were gwine to say thic."
+
+"So I wur," repeated Bumpkin. "Jist got the word o' th' tip o' th'
+tongue."
+
+"And be these Queen's Counsellors," he asked, "summat grand?"
+
+"I believe you," said Horatio; "they wears silk gowns."
+
+"Do em?" said Mrs. Bumpkin, laughing. "Silk gowns--and what kind o'
+petticoats?"
+
+"Shut up," said Bumpkin; "thee be as igorant as a donkey; these Queen's
+Counsellors be made for their larnin and cleverness, beant em, sir?"
+
+"Well," said Horatio, "nobody ever could make out--some of em are pretty
+good, and some of em ain't much--not near so good as the others."
+
+"But this ere Mr. Catapult be a good un, bean't he--a regler crunsher?"
+
+"O, I believe you, my boy: his look's enough for some of em."
+
+"I spoase he be dear?" (Another wink at Mrs. Bumpkin.)
+
+"They're all dear," said Horatio; "some of em are dear because their fees
+are high; and some of em would be dear at a gift, but I'm too young to
+know much about it."
+
+"Now hark at that," said Joe; "like that air old horse o' Morris'."
+
+"Hold thee tongue, Joe, I tell ee, putten thy spoke in; does thee think
+the Queen 'as old 'orses in her stable? It's merit, I tell ee--ain't it,
+Mr. Jigger?"
+
+"Merit, sir; I believe it's merit." And thus in pleasant conversation
+the evening passed merrily away, until the clock striking nine warned the
+company that it was time to retire.
+
+A bright, brisk frosty morning succeeded, and a substantial breakfast of
+bacon, eggs, fresh butter, and home-made bread, at seven o'clock,
+somewhat astonished and delighted the youthful Horatio; and then the old
+horse, with plenty of hair about his heels, was brought round with the
+gig. And Mr. Bumpkin and his guest got up and took their seats. The old
+Market Town was about seven miles off, and the road lay through the most
+picturesque scenery of the county. To ride on such a pleasant morning
+through such a country almost made one think that swearing affidavits was
+the most pleasing occupation of life. It was the first time Horatio had
+ever ridden in a gig: the horse went a good old market pace, and the
+beautiful sunshine, lovely scenery, and crisp air produced in his
+youthful bosom a peculiarly charming and delightful sense of
+exhilaration. He praised the country and the weather and the horse, and
+asked if it was what they called a thoroughbred.
+
+"Chit!" said Bumpkin, "thoroughbred! So be I thoroughbred--did thee ever
+see thoroughbred wi' 'air on his 'eels?'
+
+"Well, he goes well," said Horatio.
+
+"Gooes well enough for I," said Bumpkin.
+
+This answer somewhat abashed Horatio, who was unlearned in horses; for
+some time he remained silent. Then it became Mr. Bumpkin's turn to renew
+the conversation:
+
+"I spoase," said he, "thee be gwine to be a loryer?"
+
+"Not if I know it," answered Horatio.
+
+"Why not, then?"
+
+"Don't care for it; I like the country."
+
+"What wouldst thee like to be then, a farmer?"
+
+"I should--that's the life for me!"
+
+"Thee likes plenty o' fresh air?" said the farmer.
+
+"Yes," answered Horatio, "and fresh butter and fresh eggs."
+
+"I'll go to ---, if thee doen't know what's good for thee, anyhow.
+Thee'd ha' to work 'ard to keep straaight, I can tell thee; thee'd had to
+plough, and danged if I believe thee could hold plough! What's thee say
+to that, lad?"
+
+"I think I could."
+
+"Devil a bit! now spoase thee'st got plough-handles under thy arms, and
+the cord in the 'ands, and thee wanted to keep t'colter from jibbin into
+t' soil, wouldst thee press down wi' might and main, or how?"
+
+"Press down with might and main," said Horatio.
+
+"Right!" exclaimed Bumpkin; "danged if I doant think thee'd make a
+ploughman now. Dost know what th' manin o' mither woiy be?"
+
+This was rather a startling question for the unsophisticated London
+youth. He had never heard such an expression in his life; and although
+he might have puzzled his agricultural interrogator by a good many
+questions in return, yet that possibility was no answer to "mither woiy."
+
+"I don't know that, Mr. Bumpkin," he ingenuously replied.
+
+"No? well, there ain't a commoner word down ere nor 'mither woiy,' and
+there ain't a boy arf your age as doan't know the manin o't, so thee see
+thee got summat to larn. Now it mane this--spoase thee got a team o'
+horses at dung cart or gravel cart, and thee wants em to come to ee; thee
+jest holds whip up over to the ed o' th' leadin orse like this ere, and
+says 'mither woiy,' and round er comes as natteral as possible."
+
+"O, that's it!" said Horatio; "I see."
+
+"Ah!" said Bumpkin, "I can teach ee summat, can't I, though thee comes
+from town, and I be only a country clown farmer?"
+
+"I should just like to come down a month on trial, that's all, when I
+have my holiday," said the youth; "I think it would do me good: 'mither
+woiy,'" he said, mimicking his instructor.
+
+"Thee shall come if thee likes," replied the good-natured Bumpkin;
+"Nancy'll be proud to see thee--thee's got 'mither woiy' to rights."
+
+"What a very nice public-house!" exclaimed Horatio, as they approached a
+village green where an old Inn that had flourished in the coaching days
+still stood, the decaying monument of a past age, and an almost forgotten
+style of locomotion.
+
+"Be a good house. I often pulls up there on way from market."
+
+"Did you ever try rum and milk for your cough?" inquired the pale youth.
+
+"Never had no cough," said Bumpkin.
+
+"What a good thing! But it's capital, they say, in case you should have
+one; they say there's nothing beats rum and milk."
+
+"Hem!" muttered Bumpkin, giving his horse a tremendous jerk with the
+reins. "I spoase thee'd like a glass, Mr. Jigger."
+
+"I don't care about it for myself," answered the youth; "but if you like
+to have one I'll join you with pleasure."
+
+"So us wool then;" and up they pulled at the sign of the "Merry-go-round"
+on Addlehead Green.
+
+"Bain't bad tackle!" said Mr. Bumpkin, tossing off his glass.
+
+"No," responded Horatio, "I've tasted worse medicine. I quite enjoy my
+ride, Mr. Bumpkin; I wish we had a dozen more affidavits to swear."
+
+"I doan't," said the client; "I sworn a goodish many on em as it be. I
+doan't think that air Snooks can bate un."
+
+"I don't think he can," said Horatio, as they once more climbed into the
+old-fashioned gig; "but talk about paper, you should see your brief:
+that's a caution and no mistake!"
+
+"Is ur now? In what way, sir?"
+
+"Lor, how I should like a cigar, Mr. Bumpkin, if I'd only got my case
+with me, but unfortunately--"
+
+"Would ur--then thee shall 'ave one; here, Mr. Ostler, jest goo and fetch
+one o' them there what d'ye call ems."
+
+"O, do they sell them down here? Cigars--cigars," said Horatio, "I
+wasn't aware of that."
+
+"Now then, sir; what about this ere what d'ye call un--beef?"
+
+Mr. Bumpkin, being a very artful man, was inwardly chuckling at the
+successful manoeuvring by which he was drawing out this pale
+unsophisticated London youth, and hoped by dint of a little strategy to
+learn a good deal before they parted company.
+
+"Brief! brief!" said Horatio, laughing.
+
+"Ah! so it wur; thee said he wur a hell of a big un."
+
+"Yes, and I wrote him myself."
+
+"Did ur now; then thee knows all about un?"
+
+"From beginning to end--he is a clipper, I can tell you; a regular
+whacker."
+
+"I hope he'll whack thic Snooks then."
+
+"He's a beauty!" rejoined Horatio, much to his companion's surprise; for
+here was this young man speaking of a brief in the same terms that he
+(Bumpkin) would use with reference to a prize wurzel or swede. A brief
+being a _beauty_ sounded somewhat strange in the ears of a farmer who
+could associate the term with nothing that didn't grow on the farm.
+
+"I dare say you've heard of Macaulay's England?" asked the lad.
+
+"Whose England?"
+
+"Macaulay's."
+
+"I've eerd o' England, if you mean this ere country, sartainly."
+
+"You've heard of Macaulay's History, I mean?"
+
+"Can't say as ever I eerd tell on un."
+
+"Well, there's as much in your brief as there is in that book, and that's
+saying something, ain't it?"
+
+"Zo't be; but what th' devil be 't all about?"
+
+"Well, I'll tell you," said Horatio, holding out his hands and putting
+the point of his right forefinger on to the point of the forefinger of
+his left hand. "First: biography of the plaintiff."
+
+"There now," said Bumpkin, shaking the reins; "thee med jist as well talk
+Greek--it's the same wally (value) to me, for I doan't understan' a
+word--bography, indade!"
+
+"Well then, Mr. Bumpkin, there is first a history of your life."
+
+"Good lord, what be that for?"
+
+"I'll tell you presently--then there's the history of Mrs. Bumpkin from
+the cradle." (Mr. Bumpkin uttered an exclamation which nothing shall
+induce me to put on paper.) "Then"--and here the young man had reached
+the third finger of the left hand--"then comes a history of the defendant
+Snooks."
+
+"Ah!" said Bumpkin, as though they were getting nearer the mark; "that be
+summut like--that'll do un--have you put in about the gal?"
+
+"What's that?" asked the youth.
+
+"Oh! didn't thee 'ear? Why, thee 'st left out the best part o' Snooks'
+life; he were keepin company wi' a gal and left her in t' lurch: but I
+'ope thee 'st shown up ur carater well in other ways--he be the worst man
+as ever lived in this 'ere country."
+
+"Well," said Horatio, travelling towards his little finger; "then there's
+the history of the pig."
+
+"Zounds!" laughed the farmer, "if ever I eerd tell o' such a thing in my
+bornd days. What the devil be the good o' thic?"
+
+"O, a good deal; the longer you make the brief the more money you
+get--you are paid by the yard. They don't pay lawyers accordin' to the
+value of their services, but the length of 'em."
+
+"Well, look ee 'ere, if I sells a pig it ain't wallied by its length, but
+by its weight."
+
+"It ain't so with lawyers then," rejoined Horatio; "the taxing master
+takes the length of the pig, and his tail counts, and the longer the tail
+the better the taxing master likes it; then comes,"--(as the young lad
+had only four fingers he was obliged to have recourse to his thumb,
+placing his forefinger thereon)--"then comes about ten pages on the
+immortality of the soul."
+
+"That be the tail, I spoase."
+
+"You got it," said Horatio, laughing. "O, he's a stunner on the
+immortality of the soul."
+
+"Who be?--Snooks?"
+
+"No--Prigg--he goes into it like winkin'."
+
+"But what be it to do with thic case?"
+
+"Well, if you only put in a brief what had got to do with the case it
+would be a poor thing."
+
+And I saw in my dream that the young man was speaking truthfully: it was
+a beautifully drawn essay on the immortality of the soul, especially
+Bumpkin's.
+
+"By George!" continued the youth, "it'll cost something--that brief."
+
+Mr. Bumpkin twitched as if he had touched with ice a nerve of his hollow
+tooth.
+
+"If I had the money that case'll cost I wouldn't do any more work," said
+the youth.
+
+"What would'st thee be then?"
+
+"Well, I should try and get an Associate's place in one of the Courts."
+
+"Hem! but this ere Snooks ull have to pay, won't he?"
+
+"Ah!" said Horatio, breathing deeply and indignantly, "I hope so; he's a
+mean cuss--what d'ye think? never give Locust's boy so much as a
+half-sovereign! Now don't such a feller deserve to lose? And do you
+think Locust's boy will interest himself in his behalf?"
+
+Bumpkin looked slily out of the corners of his eyes at the young man, but
+the young man was impassive as stone, and pale as if made of the best
+Carrara marble.
+
+"But tell I, sir--for here we be at the plaace of Mr. Commissioner to
+take oaths--what need be there o' this ere thing I be gwine to swear, for
+I'll be danged if I understand a word of un, so I tell ee."
+
+"Costs, my dear sir, costs!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And I heard Bumpkin mutter to himself that "he'd he danged if this 'ere
+feller wur so young as he made out--his 'ead wur a mighty dale older nor
+his body."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+The last night before the first London expedition, which gives occasion
+to recall pleasant reminiscences.
+
+"I, Bumpkin, make oath and say," having been duly presented, and the
+Commissioner having duly placed the Testament in Mr. Bumpkin's hands, and
+said to him that to the best of his knowledge and belief the contents of
+the "I Bumpkin" paper were true, the matter was over, and Mr. Snigger,
+with the valuable document in his possession, might have returned to
+London by the next train. But as Horatio afterwards observed to a
+friend, he "was not quite so green." It was market day; Mr. Bumpkin was
+a genial companion, and had asked him to partake of the Market Ordinary.
+So thither at one o'clock they repaired, and a very fine dinner the pale
+youth disposed of. It seemed in proportion to the wonderful brief whose
+merits they had previously discussed. More and more did Horatio think
+that a farmer's life was the life for him. He had never seen such
+"feeding;" more and more would he like that month on trial in the
+country; more and more inclined was he to throw up the whole blessed law
+at once and for ever. This partly-formed resolution he communicated to
+Mr. Bumpkin, and assured him that, but for the case of _Bumpkin_ v.
+_Snooks_, he would do so on that very afternoon, and wash his hands of
+it.
+
+"I don't want," said he, "to leave you in the lurch, Mr. Bumpkin, or else
+I'd cut it at once, and throw this affidavit into the fire."
+
+"Come, come," said the farmer, "thee beest a young man, don't do nowt
+that be wrong--stick to thy employer like a man, and when thee leaves,
+leave like a man."
+
+"As soon as your case is over, I shall hook it, Mr. Bumpkin. And now let
+me see--you'll have to come to London in a week or two, for I am pretty
+nigh sure we shall be in the paper by that time. I shall see you when
+you come up--where shall you stay?"
+
+"Danged if I know; I be a straanger in Lunnun."
+
+"Well, now, look 'ere, Mr. Bumpkin, I can tell you of a very nice quiet
+public-house in Westminster where you'll be at home; the woman, I
+believe, comes from your part of the country, and so does the landlord."
+
+"What be the naame o' the public 'ouse?" asked Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"It's the sign of the 'Goose,' and stands just a little way off from the
+water-side."
+
+"The Goose" sounded countryfied and homelike, and being near the water
+would be pleasant, and the landlord and landlady being Somersetshire
+people would also be pleasant.
+
+"Be it a dear plaace?" he inquired.
+
+"Oh, no; dirt cheap."
+
+"Ah, that air _dirt_ cheap I doan't like--I likes it a bit clean like."
+
+"Oh, yes, clean as a smelt--clean as ever it can be; and I'll bespeak
+your lodgings for you if you like, and all."
+
+"Well, thankee, sir, thankee," said the farmer, shaking hands with the
+youth, and giving him a half-sovereign. "I be proud to know thee." And
+thus they parted: Horatio returning to his office, and Mr. Bumpkin
+driving home at what is called a "shig-shog" pace, reflecting upon all
+the events that had transpired during that memorable day.
+
+Pretty much the same as ever went on the things at the farm, and the
+weeks passed by, and the autumn was over, and Christmas Day came and
+went, and the Assizes came and went, and _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_ alone in
+all the world seemed to stand still. One day in the autumn a friend of
+Mr. Prigg's came and asked the favour of a day's fishing, which was
+granted with Mr. Bumpkin's usual cordiality. He was not only to fish on
+that day, but to come whenever he liked, and make the house his "hoame,
+like." So he came and fished, and partook of the hospitality of the
+homely but plentiful table, and enjoyed himself as often as he pleased.
+He was a most agreeable man, and knew how to talk. Understood a good
+deal about agriculture and sheep breeding, and quite enjoyed a walk with
+Mr. Bumpkin round the farm. This happened five or six times during the
+autumn. He was reticent when Mr. Bumpkin mentioned the lawsuit, because
+he knew so little about legal proceedings. Nor could Mr. Bumpkin "draw
+him out" on any point. Nothing could be ascertained concerning him
+except that he had a place in Yorkshire, and was in London on a visit;
+that he had known Mr. Prigg for a good many years, and always "found him
+the same." At last, the month of February came, and the long expected
+letter from Mr. Prigg. Bumpkin and Joe were to be in London on the
+following day, for it was expected they would be in the paper. What a
+flutter of preparation there was at the farm! Bumpkin was eager, Mrs.
+Bumpkin anxious. She had never liked the lawsuit, but had never once
+murmured; now she seemed to have a presentiment which she was too wise to
+express. And she went about her preparations for her husband's leaving
+with all the courage she could command. It was, however, impossible
+entirely to repress her feelings, and now and again as she was packing
+the flannels and worsted stockings, a tear would force its way in spite
+of all she could do.
+
+Night came, and the fireside was as cosy as ever. But there was a sense
+of sadness nevertheless. Tim seemed to understand that something was not
+quite as it should be, for he was restless, and looked up plaintively in
+his master's face, and went to Joe and put his head in his lap; then
+turned away and stretched himself out on the hearth, winking his eyes at
+the fire.
+
+It is always a melancholy effort to "keep up the spirits" when the moment
+of separation is at hand. One longs for the last shake of the hand and
+the final good-bye. This was the case at Southwood Farm on this
+memorable evening. Nothing in the room looked as usual. The pewter
+plates on the shelf shone indeed, but it was like the smile of a winter
+sun; it lacked the usual cheery warmth. Even the old clock seemed to
+feel sad as he ticked out with melancholy monotony the parting moments;
+and the wind, as it came in heavy gusts and howled round the old chimney,
+seemed more melancholy than need be under the circumstances.
+
+"Thee must be careful, Tom," said Mrs. Bumpkin; "that Lunnun, as I hear,
+be a terrible plaace."
+
+"How be un a terrible plaace?" said Bumpkin, sarcastically. "I bean't a
+child, Nancy."
+
+"No, thee bean't a child, Tom; but thee bean't up to Lunnun ways: there
+be thieves and murderers, and what not."
+
+"Thieves and murderers!"
+
+"And Joe, doan't ee git out o' nights; if anything 'appened to thee, thy
+old mother 'ud brak her 'art."
+
+"Look ee 'ere," said Joe, "I bean't got nuthin' to lose, so I bean't
+afeared o' thieves."
+
+"No, but thee might git into trouble, thee might be led away."
+
+"So might thic bull," said Joe; "but I'd like to zee what 'ud become o'
+the chap as led un."
+
+"Chap as led un!" said Mrs. Bumpkin, laughing.
+
+"I'd gie un a crack o' the canister," said Joe.
+
+"Don't thee git knockin' down, Joe, unless thee be 'bliged," said Mrs.
+Bumpkin; "keep out o' bad company, and don't stay out o' nights."
+
+"And lookee 'ere, Joe," said Bumpkin, "when thee comes afore th'
+Counsellor wi' wig on, hold up thee head; look un straight in t' face and
+spak oop. Thee needn't be afeared t' spak t' truth."
+
+"I bean't afeard," said Joe; "I mind me when old Morris wur at plough,
+and I was leadin' th' 'orses, Morris says, says he, 'Now then, cock,
+let's see if we can't git a eend this time;' so on we goes, and jist
+afore I gits the 'orses to eend o' t' field, Dobbin turns, and then, dash
+my bootons, the tother turns after un, and me tryin' to keep em oop,
+Dobbin gits his legs over the trace. Well, Morris wur that wild, he
+says, says he, 'Damme, if yer doan't look sharp, I'll gie thee a crack o'
+t' canister wi' this 'ere whippense presny'" (presently).
+
+"Crack o' the canister!" laughed Mrs. Bumpkin, "and that's what Morris
+called thy head, eh?"
+
+This was a capital hit on Joe's part, for it set them thinking of the
+events of old times, and Joe, seeing the effect of it, ventured upon
+another anecdote relating to the old carter.
+
+"Thee recollect, master, when that there Mr. Gearns come down to shoot;
+lor, lor, what a queer un he wur, surely!"
+
+"Couldn't shoot a hit," said Bumpkin.
+
+"Not he. Wall, we was carrying wheat, and Morris wur loadin, and jest as
+we gits the last pitch on t' load, right through th' 'orses legs runds a
+rat. Gearns wi'out more ado oops wi' his loaded gun and bangs her off
+right under t' 'orses legs; up jumps th' 'orse, and Morris wur wery nigh
+tossed head fust into th' yard. Wall, he makes no moore ado, for he
+didn't keer, gemman or no gemman--didn't Morris--"
+
+"No more ur didn't, Joe," said Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+"He makes no moore ado, but he up and said, 'damme,' he says, 'sir, you
+might as well a said you was gwine to shoot; you might a had me off and
+broked my neck.'"
+
+"Haw! haw! haw!" laughed Mr. Bumpkin, and "Well done, Morris," said Mrs.
+Bumpkin.
+
+"Wall," said Joe, "this ere gemman says, 'It wouldn't er bin much loss,'
+he says, 'if he had!' 'Damme,' roars Morris, 'it had a bin as much wally
+to me as yourn, anyhow.'"
+
+They all remembered the story, and even Tim seemed to remember it too,
+for when they laughed he wagged his tail and laughed with them.
+
+And thus the evening dragged along and bed time came.
+
+In the morning all was in readiness, and the plaintiff with his witness
+drove away in the gig to the station, where Morris waited to bring the
+old horse back.
+
+And as the train came into the little country station I awoke.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I hope," cried my wife, "that Mr. Prigg is a respectable man."
+
+"Respectable," I answered, "I know he is; but whether he is honest is
+another matter."
+
+"But don't you know?"
+
+"I only know what I dream."
+
+"I have no opinion of him," said she; "nor of that Locust; I believe they
+are a couple of rogues."
+
+"I should be very sorry to suggest such a thing as that," I answered,
+"without some proof. Everybody should give credit for the best of
+motives."
+
+"But what are all these summonses you speak of?"
+
+"O, they are summonses in the action. You may have as many of them as
+you can invent occasion for. You may go up to the Court of Appeal about
+twenty times before you try the action, which means about eighty
+different hearings before Master and Judges."
+
+"But how can a poor man endure that? It's a great shame."
+
+"He can't--he may have a perfectly good cause of action against a rich
+man or a rich company, and they can utterly ruin him before ever his case
+can come into Court."
+
+"But will no solicitor take it up for the poor man?"
+
+"Yes, some will, and the only reward they usually get for their pains is
+to be stigmatized as having brought a speculative action--accused of
+doing it for the sake of costs; although I have known the most honourable
+men do it out of pure sympathy for the poor man."
+
+"And so they ought," cried she.
+
+"And I trust," said I, "that hereafter it will be considered honourable
+to do so. It is quite as honourable, in my judgment, to bring an action
+when you may never be paid as to bring it when you know you will be."
+
+"Who was the person referred to as 'the man?'"
+
+"I don't know," said I, "but I strongly suspect he is, in reality, a
+nominee of Prigg's."
+
+"That is exactly my opinion," said my wife. "And if so, between them,
+they will ruin that poor man."
+
+"I can't tell," said I, lighting my pipe. "I know no more about the
+future of my dream than you do; maybe when I sleep again something else
+will transpire."
+
+"But can no one do anything to alter this state of things? I plainly
+perceive that they are all against this poor Bumpkin."
+
+"Well, you see, in a tinkering sort of way, a good many try their hands
+at reforming the law; but it's to no one's interest, that I can see, to
+reform it."
+
+"I hope you'll write this dream and publish it, so that someone's eyes
+may be opened."
+
+"It may make me enemies."
+
+"Not among honest people; they will all be on your side, and the
+dishonest ones, who seem to me to be the only persons benefited by such a
+dilatory and shocking mode of procedure, are the very persons whose
+enmity you need not fear. But can the Judges do nothing?"
+
+"No; their duty is merely to administer the law, not to change it. But
+if the people would only give them full power and fair play, Old Fogeyism
+would be buried to-morrow. They struggle might and main to break through
+the fetters, but to no purpose while they are hampered by musty old
+precedents, ridiculous forms and bad statutes. They are not masters of
+the situation. I wish they were for the sake of suitors. I would only
+make one condition with regard to them. If they were to set about the
+task of reform, I would not let the Equity Judges reform the Common Law
+nor the Common Law Judges the Equity."
+
+"I thought they were fused."
+
+"No, only transposed."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+Commencement of London life and adventures.
+
+And I dreamt again, and methought there were three things with reference
+to London that Joe had learnt at school. First, that there was a Bridge,
+chiefly remarkable for the fact that Captain Cook, the Navigator, shot
+his servant because he said he was under London Bridge when he was in the
+South Pacific Ocean; secondly, that there was a famous Tower, where the
+Queen's Crown was kept; thirdly, that there was a Monument built to show
+where the Great Fire began, and intimately connected in its cause with
+Guy Faux, whom Joe had helped to carry on the Fifth of November. Now
+when the young man woke in the morning at "The Goose," in Millbank
+Street, Westminster, his attention was immediately attracted by these
+three historic objects; and it was not till after he had made inquiries
+that he found that it was not London Bridge that crossed the water in a
+line with the Horseferry Road, but a very inferior structure called
+Lambeth Suspension Bridge. Nor was the Tower on the left the Tower of
+London, but the Lollards' tower of Lambeth Palace; while the supposed
+Monument was only the handsome column of Messrs. Doulton's Pottery.
+
+But they were all interesting objects nevertheless; and so were the huge
+cranes that were at work opposite the house lifting the most tremendous
+loads of goods from the lighters to the wharves. The "Shipping," too,
+with its black and copper-coloured sails, gave some idea of the extent of
+England's mercantile marine. At all events, it excited the country lad's
+wonder and astonishment. But there was another matter that gave quite an
+agricultural and countrified look to the busy scene, and that was the
+prodigious quantity of straw that was being unloaded from the barges
+alongside. While Mr. Bumpkin went to see his solicitor at Westminster
+Hall, Joe wandered about the wharves looking at the boats and barges, the
+cranes and busy workmen who drove their barrows from barge to wharf, and
+ran along with loads on their backs over narrow planks, in the most
+lively manner. But looking on, even at sights like these, day by day,
+becomes a wearisome task, and Joe, being by no means an idle lad,
+occasionally "lent a hand" where he saw an opportunity. London, no
+doubt, was a very interesting place, but when he had seen Page Street,
+and Wood Street, and Church Street, and Abingdon Street, and Millbank
+Prison, and the other interesting objects referred to, his curiosity was
+gratified, and he began to grow tired of the sameness of the place.
+Occasionally he saw a soldier or two and the military sight fired his
+rustic imagination. Not that Joe had the remotest intention of entering
+the army; it was the last thing he would ever dream of; but, in common
+with all mankind he liked to look at the smart bearing and brilliant
+uniform of the sergeant, who seemed to have little else to do than walk
+about with his cane under his arm, or tap the stone parapet with it as he
+looked carelessly at some interesting object on the river.
+
+The evenings in the taproom at "The Goose" were among the most enjoyable
+periods of the lad's London existence. A select party usually gathered
+there, consisting chiefly of a young man who never apparently had had
+anything to do in his life. His name was Harry Highlow, a clever sort of
+wild young scapegrace who played well at "shove-ha'penny," and sang a
+good comic song. Another of the party was a youth who earned a
+precarious livelihood by carrying two boards on his shoulders advertising
+a great pickle, or a great singer, as the case might be. Another of the
+company was a young man who was either a discharged or a retired groom; I
+should presume the former, as he complained bitterly that the authorities
+at Scotland Yard would not grant him a licence to drive a cab. He
+appeared to be a striking instance of how every kind of patronage in this
+country is distributed by favouritism. There were several others, all
+equally candidates for remunerative situations, but equally unfortunate
+in obtaining them: proving conclusively that life is indeed a lottery in
+which there may be a few prizes, usually going, by the caprice of
+Fortune, to the undeserving, while the blanks went indiscriminately to
+all the rest.
+
+Bound together by the sympathy which a common misfortune engenders, these
+young men were happy in the pursuit of their innocent amusements at "The
+Goose." And while, at first, they were a little inclined to chaff the
+rustic youth on account of his apparent simplicity, they soon learned to
+respect him on account of his exceedingly good temper and his willingness
+to fall in with the general views of the company on all occasions. They
+learnt all about Joe's business in London, and it was a common greeting
+when they met in the evening to ask "how the pig was?" And they would
+enquire what the Lord Chancellor thought about the case, and whether it
+wouldn't be as well to grease the pig's tail and have a pig-hunt. To all
+which jocular observations Joe would reply with excellent temper and
+sometimes with no inappropriate wit. And then they said they would like
+to see Joe tackle Mr. Orkins, and believed he would shut him up. But
+chaff never roused his temper, and he laughed at the case as much as any
+man there. Fine tales he would have to tell when he got back to
+Yokelton; and pleasant, no doubt, would be in after-life, his
+recollections of the evenings at "The Goose."
+
+As a great general surveys the field where the intended action is to be
+fought, so Mr. Bumpkin was conducted by Horatio to Westminster Hall, and
+shown the various Courts of Justice, and some of the judges.
+
+"Be this Chancery?" he enquired.
+
+"O my eye, no!" said Horatio; "the cause has been transferred from
+Chancery to these 'ere Common Law Courts. It was only brought in
+Chancery because the costs there are upon a higher scale; we didn't mean
+to try her there."
+
+"Where will she be tried then?"
+
+"In one of these Courts."
+
+"Who be the judge?" whispered Bumpkin.
+
+At this moment there was a loud shout of "Silence!" and although Mr.
+Bumpkin was making no noise whatever, a gentleman approached him, looking
+very angry, and enquired if Mr. Bumpkin desired to be committed for
+contempt of Court.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin thought the most prudent answer was silence; so he remained
+speechless, looking the gentleman full in the face; while the gentleman
+looked him full in the face for at least a minute and a half, as if he
+were wondering whether he should take him off to prison there and then,
+or give him another chance, as the judge sometimes does a prisoner when
+he sentences him to two years imprisonment with hard labour.
+
+Now the gentleman was a very amiable man of about forty, with large brown
+mutton-chop whiskers, and a very well trained moustache; good-looking
+and, I should think, with some humour, that is for a person connected
+with the Courts. He was something about the Court, but in what capacity
+he held up his official head, I am unable to say. He was evidently
+regarded with great respect by the crowd of visitors. It was some time
+before he took his gaze off Mr. Bumpkin; even when he had taken his eyes
+off, he seemed looking at him as if he feared that the moment he went
+away Bumpkin would do it again.
+
+And then methought I heard someone whisper near me: "His lordship is
+going to give judgment in the case of _Starling_ v. _Nightingale_," and
+all at once there was a great peace. I lost sight of Bumpkin, I lost
+sight of the gentleman, I lost sight of the crowd; an indefinable
+sensation of delight overpowered my senses. Where was I? I had but a
+moment before been in a Court of Justice, with crowds of gaping idlers;
+with prosaic-looking gentlemen in horsehair wigs; with gentlemen in a pew
+with papers before them ready to take down the proceedings. Now it
+seemed as if I must be far away in the distant country, where all was
+calm and heavenly peace.
+
+Surely I must be among the water-lilies! What a lullaby sound as of
+rippling waters and of distant music in the evening air; of the eddying
+and swirl of the mingling currents; of the chime of bells on the evening
+breeze; of the zephyrs through fir-tops; of woodland whispers; of the
+cadence of the cathedral organ; of the soft sweet melody of the maiden's
+laugh; of her gentlest accents in her sweetest mood; of--but similitudes
+fail me. In this delicious retreat, which may be compared to the Garden
+of Eden before the tempter entered, are the choicest flowers of rhetoric.
+I hear a voice as from the far-off past, and I wonder will that be the
+voice which will utter the "last syllable of recorded time?"
+
+Then methought the scene changed, and I heard the question--
+
+"Do you move, Mr. Jones?"
+
+O the prosaic Jones!--"don't you move?"
+
+Yes, he does; he partly rises, ducks his head, and elevates the hinder
+portion of his person, and his movement ceases. And the question is
+repeated to Mr. Quick. "Do you move, Mr. Quick?"
+
+Then I saw Mr. Bumpkin again, just as Mr. Quick ducked his head and
+elevated his back.
+
+And then some gentleman actually moved in real earnest upon these
+interesting facts:--A farmer's bull--just the very case for Mr.
+Bumpkin--had strayed from the road and gone into another man's yard, and
+upset a tub of meal; was then driven into a shed and locked up. The
+owner of the bull came up and demanded that the animal should be
+released. "Not without paying two pounds," said the meal-owner. The
+bull owner paid it under protest, and summoned the meal-owner to the
+County Court for one pound seventeen shillings and sixpence, the
+difference between the damage done (which was really about twopence) and
+the money paid to redeem the bull. Judgment for the plaintiff. Motion
+for new trial, or to enter verdict for the defendant, on the ground that
+the meal man could charge what he liked.
+
+One of the learned Judges asked:
+
+"Do you mean to tell me, Mr. Smiles, that if a man has a bull, and that
+bull goes into a yard and eats some meal out of a meal-tub, and the
+damage amounts to twopence, and the owner of the bull says 'here's your
+twopence,' that the owner of the meal can say, "No, I want a hundred
+pounds, and shall take your bull damage feasant," and then takes him and
+locks him up, and the owner of the bull pays the hundred pounds, he
+cannot afterwards get the money back?"
+
+"That is so," says the learned counsel, "such is the law." And then he
+cited cases innumerable to prove that it was the law.
+
+"Well," said the Judge, "unless you show me a case of a bull and a
+meal-tub, I shall not pay attention to any case--must be a meal-tub."
+
+Second Judge: "It is extortion, and done for the purpose of extortion;
+and I should say he could be indicted for obtaining money by false
+pretences."
+
+"I am not sure he could not, my lord," said the counsel; "but he can't
+recover the money back."
+
+"Then," said the Judge, "if he obtains money by an indictable fraud
+cannot he get it back?"
+
+"Well," said Bumpkin, "that be rum law; if it had bin my bull, he'd a gin
+'em summat afore they runned him in."
+
+It was interesting to see how the judges struggled against this
+ridiculous law; and it was manifest even to the unlettered Bumpkin, that
+a good deal of old law is very much like old clothes, the worse for wear,
+and totally inapplicable to the present day. A struggle against old
+authorities is often a struggle of Judges to free themselves from the
+fetters of antiquated dicta and decisions no longer appropriate to or
+necessary for the modern requirements of civilisation.
+
+In this case precedents running over _one hundred and eight years_ were
+quoted, and so far from impressing the Court with respect, they simply
+evoked a smile of contempt.
+
+The learned Judges, after patiently listening to the arguments, decided
+that extortion and fraud give no title, and thus were the mists and
+vapours that arose from the accumulated mudbanks of centuries dispelled
+by the clear shining of common sense. In spite of arguments by the hour,
+and the pettifogging of one hundred and eight years, justice prevailed,
+and the amazed appellant was far more damaged by his legal proceedings
+than he was by the bull. The moral surely is, that however wise ancient
+judges were in their day, their wisdom ought not to be allowed to work
+injustice. He may be a wise Judge who makes a precedent, but he is often
+a much wiser who sweeps it away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+How the great Don O'Rapley became an usher of the Court of Queen's Bench
+and explained the ingenious invention of the round square--how Mr.
+Bumpkin took the water and studied character from a penny steamboat.
+
+Some years ago there lived in a little village near Bridgewater a young
+man who was the bowler of his village eleven--one of the first roundhand
+bowlers in point of time, and by no means the last in point of merit.
+Indeed, so great was the local fame of this young man that it produced a
+sensation for miles around when it was announced that Don O'Rapley (such
+was his name) was going to bowl. All the boys of the village where the
+match was to take place were in a state of the utmost excitement to see
+the Don. At times it was even suggested that he was unfairly "smugged
+in" to play for a village to which he had no pretensions to belong. In
+process of time the youth became a man, and by virtue of his cricket
+reputation he obtained a post in the Court of Queen's Bench. The
+gentleman whom I have referred to as looking with such austerity at Mr.
+Bumpkin is that very Don O'Rapley; the requirements of a large family
+necessitated his abandonment of a profession which, although more to his
+taste, was not sufficiently remunerative to admit of his indulging it
+after the birth of his sixth child. But it was certain that he never
+lost his love for the relinquished pursuit, as was manifest from his
+habit when alone of frequently going through a kind of dumb motion with
+his arm as if he were delivering one of his celebrated "twisters." He
+had even been seen in a quiet corner of the Court to go through the same
+performance in a somewhat modified form. He was once caught by the Judge
+in the very act of delivering a ball, but found a ready apology in the
+explanation that he had a touch of "rheumatiz" in his right shoulder.
+
+Now I saw in my dream that Don O'Rapley was in earnest conversation with
+Horatio, and it was clear Mr. Bumpkin was the subject of it, from the
+very marked manner in which the Don and the youth turned occasionally to
+look at him. It may be stated that Horatio was the nephew of Don
+O'Rapley, and, perhaps, it was partly in consequence of this
+relationship, and partly in consequence of what Horatio told him, that
+the latter gentleman rose from his seat under the witness-box and came
+towards Mr. Bumpkin, shouting as he did so in a very solemn and prolonged
+tone, "Si-lence!"
+
+Mr. Bumpkin saw him, and, conscious that he was innocent this time of any
+offence for which he could be committed, stood his ground with a bold
+front, and firmly held his white beaver with both hands. O'Rapley
+contemplated him for a few minutes with an almost affectionate interest.
+Bumpkin felt much as a pigeon would under the gaze of an admiring owl.
+
+At last O'Rapley spoke:--
+
+"Why, it's never Mr. Bumpkin, is it?"
+
+"It be a good imitation, sir," said Bumpkin, "and I bean't asheamed of
+un."
+
+"Silence!" cried the Don. "You don't remember me, I s'pose?"
+
+"Wall, not rightly, I doan't."
+
+"I dissay you recollect Don O'Rapley, the demon bowler of Bridgewater?"
+
+"I've 'eered tell on 'im," said Bumpkin.
+
+"I'm that man!" said the Don, "and this is my nephew, Mr. Snigger. He
+tells me you've got a case comin' on?"
+
+"I be."
+
+"Just step outside," said the Don, "we mustn't talk 'ere." So they went
+into Westminster Hall, and the good-natured O'Rapley asked if Mr. Bumpkin
+would like to look round, and if so he said he would be happy to show
+him, for he was very pleased to see anyone from the scene of his youthful
+exploits.
+
+"Thankee, sir--thankee, sir," answered Bumpkin, delighted to find another
+"native" among "furriners." "And this 'ere genleman be thy nevvy, sir?"
+
+"He is, and very proud of him I am; he's my sister's son."
+
+"Seems a nice quiet boy," said Mr. Bumpkin. "Now how old might he be?"
+
+"Old," said Mr. O'Rapley, looking deedily at the floor and pressing his
+hand to his forehead, "why he'll be seventeen come March."
+
+"Hem! his 'ed be a good deal older nor thic: his 'ed be forty--it's my
+way o' thinkin'."
+
+The Don laughed.
+
+"Yes, he has his head screwed on the right way, I think."
+
+"Why that air lad," said Bumpkin, "might make a judge."
+
+O'Rapley laughed and shook his head.
+
+"In old times," said he, "he might ha' made a Lord Chancellor; a man as
+was clever had a chance then, but lor' blesh you, Mr. Bumpkin, now-a-days
+it's so very different; the raw material is that plentiful in the law
+that you can find fifty men as would make rattlin good Lord Chancellors
+for one as you could pick out to make a rattlin' good bowler. But come,
+we'll have a look round."
+
+So round they looked again, and Mr. Bumpkin was duly impressed with the
+array of wigs and the number of books and the solemnity of the judges and
+the arguments of counsel, not one word of which was intelligible to him.
+Mr. O'Rapley explained everything and pointed out where a judge and jury
+tried a case, and then took him into another court where two judges tried
+the judge and jury, and very often set them both aside and gave new
+trials and altered verdicts and judgments or refused to do so
+notwithstanding the elaborate arguments of the most eloquent and
+long-winded of learned counsel.
+
+Then the Don asked if Mr. Bumpkin would like to see the Chancery
+Judges--to which Mr. Bumpkin answered that "he hadn't much opinion o'
+Chancery from all he'd 'eeard, and that when a man got into them there
+Cooarts maybe he'd never coome out agin, but he shouldn't mind seein' a
+Chancery Judge."
+
+"Well, then," said the distinguished bowler, "now-a-days we needn't go to
+Chancery, for they've invented the 'Round Square.'"
+
+Mr. Bumpkin stared. Could so great a man as the O'Rapley be joking? No;
+the Don seldom laughed. He was a great admirer of everything relating to
+the law, but had a marked prejudice against the new system; and when he
+spoke of the "Round Square" he meant, as he afterwards explained, that
+confusion of Law and Equity which consists in putting Chancery Judges to
+try common law cases and Common Law Judges to unravel the nice twistings
+of the elaborate system of Equity; "as though," said he, "you should fuse
+the butcher and the baker by getting the former to make bread and the
+latter to dress a calf."
+
+Mr. Bumpkin could only stare by way of reply.
+
+"If you want to see Chancery Judges," added the Don, "come to the Old
+Bailey!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+An interesting gentleman--showing how true it is that one half the world
+does not know how the other half lives.
+
+"The Old Bailey," said Mr. Bumpkin, as they crossed Palace Yard on their
+way to the steamboat pier, "bean't that where all these 'ere chaps be
+tried for ship stealin'?" (sheep stealing).
+
+"I don't know about ship stealing," said O'Rapley, "but it's a place
+where they can cure all sorts of diseases."
+
+"Zounds!" exclaimed Bumpkin, "I've 'eeard tell of un. A horsepital you
+means--dooan't want to goo there."
+
+"Horse or donkey, it don't matter what," said Don O'Rapley. "They've got
+a stuff that's so strong a single drop will cure any disease you've got."
+
+"I wonder if it 'ud cure my old 'ooman's roomatiz. It 'ud be wuth
+tryin', maybe."
+
+"I'll warrant it," replied the Don. "She'd never feel 'em after takin'
+one drop," and he drew his hand across his mouth and coughed.
+
+"I'd like to try un," said the farmer, "for she be a terrible suffrer in
+these 'ere east winds. 'As 'em like all up the grine."
+
+"Ah," said the Don, "it don't matter where she 'as 'em, it will cure
+her."
+
+"How do 'em sell it--in bottles?"
+
+"No, it isn't in bottles--you take it by the foot; about nine feet's
+considered a goodish dose."
+
+Mr. Bumpkin looked straight before him, somewhat puzzled at this
+extraordinary description of a medicine. At length he got a glimmering
+of the Don's meaning, and, looking towards, but not quite at him, said:--
+
+"I be up to 'ee, sir!" and the Don laughed, and asked whether his
+description wasn't right?
+
+"That be right enough. Zounds! it be right enough. Haw! haw! haw!"
+
+"You never want a second dose," said the Don, "do you?"
+
+"No, sir--never wants moore 'an one dose; but 'ow comes it, if you
+please, sir, that these 'ere Chancery chaps have changed their tack; be
+it they've tried 'onest men so long that they be gwine to 'ave a slap at
+the thieves for a change?"
+
+"Look 'ere," said the worthy O'Rapley, "you will certainly see the inside
+of a jail before you set eyes on the outside of a haystack, if you go on
+like that. It's contempt of court to speak of Her Majesty's Judges as
+'chaps'."
+
+"Beg pardon, sir," said Bumpkin, "but we must all 'ave a larnin'. I
+didn't mane no disruspect to the Lord Judge; but I wur only a axin' jist
+the same as you might ax me about anythink on my farm."
+
+And I saw that they proceeded thus in edifying conversation until they
+came to the Thames embankment. It was somewhat difficult to preserve his
+presence of mind as Mr. Bumpkin descended the gangway and stepped on
+board the boat, which was belching forth its volumes of black smoke and
+rocking under the influence of the wash of a steamer that had just left
+the pier.
+
+"I doant much like these 'ere booats," said he. "Doant mind my old punt,
+but dang these 'ere ships."
+
+"There's no danger," said the O'Rapley, springing on board as though he
+had been a pilot: and then making a motion with his arm as if he was
+delivering a regular "length ball," his fist unfortunately came down on
+Mr. Bumpkin's white hat, in consequence of a sudden jerk of the vessel; a
+rocking boat not being the best of places for the delivery of length
+balls.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin looked round quite in the wrong direction for ascertaining
+what was the cause of the sudden shock to his nervous system and his hat.
+
+"Zounds!" said he, "what were thic?"
+
+"What was what?" asked O'Rapley.
+
+"Summut gie me a crack o' the top o' my 'ead like a thunderbolt."
+
+"I didn't see anything fall," said the Don.
+
+"Noa; but I felt un, which I allows wur more'n seein'--lookee 'ere."
+
+And taking off his huge beaver he showed the dent of Mr. O'Rapley's fist.
+
+"Bless me," said the roundhand bowler, "it's like a crack with a cricket
+ball."
+
+But there was no time for further examination of the extraordinary
+circumstance, for the crowd of passengers poured along and pushed this
+way and that, so that the two friends were fairly driven to the fore part
+of the boat, where they took their seats. It was quite a new world to
+Mr. Bumpkin, and more like a dream than a reality. As he stared at the
+different buildings he was too much amazed even to enquire what was this
+or what was that. But when they passed under the Suspension Bridge, and
+the chimney ducked her head and the smoke came out of the "stump," as Mr.
+Bumpkin termed it, he thought she had struck and broken short off. Mr.
+O'Rapley explained this phenomenon, as he did many others on their route;
+and when they came to Cleopatra's Needle he gave such information as he
+possessed concerning that ancient work. Mr. Bumpkin looked as though he
+were not to be taken in.
+
+"I be up to 'ee, sir," said he. "I s'pose that air thing the t'other
+side were the needle-case?"
+
+The O'Rapley informed him that it was a shot tower where they made shot.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin laughed heartily at this; he was not to be taken in by any
+manner of means; was far too sharp for that.
+
+"And I spoase," said he, "they makes the guns--"
+
+"In Gunnersbury," said Mr. O'Rapley; it was no use to be serious.
+
+"I thought thee were gwine to say in a gun pit, but I don't mind thy
+chaff, Master Rapley, and shall be mighty proud to see thee down at
+Southood for a day's shoot-in': and mind thee bring some o' these ere
+shot with thee that be made at yon tower, haw! haw! haw! Thee'll kill a
+white-tailed crow then, I shouldn't wonder; thee knows a white-tailed
+crow, doan't thee, Master Rapley, when thee sees un--and danged if I
+doan't gie thee a quart bottle o' pigeon's milk to tak' wi' thee; haw!
+haw! haw!"
+
+The O'Rapley laughed heartily at these witty sallies, for Bumpkin was so
+jolly, and took everything in such good part, that he could not but enjoy
+his somewhat misplaced sarcasms.
+
+"Now you've heard of Waterloo, I dare say," said Mr. O'Rapley.
+
+"Yes, I've 'eeard tell on un, and furder, my grand-feather wur out
+theer."
+
+"Well, this that we are coming to is Waterloo Bridge."
+
+"Yes," said Bumpkin, "it be a bridge, but it bean't Worterloo more 'an I
+be my grandfearther--what de think o' that--haw! haw! haw!"
+
+"Good," said O'Rapley; "that's quite right, but this is the bridge named
+after the battle."
+
+"Zo't be neamed artur un because it worn't named afore un, haw! haw! haw!
+Good agin, Maister Rapley, thee got it."
+
+Mr. O'Rapley found that any attempt to convey instruction was useless, so
+he said:--
+
+"Joking apart, Mr. Bumpkin, you see that man sitting over there with the
+wideawake hat?"
+
+"D'ye mane near the noase o' the ship?"
+
+"Well, the nose if you like."
+
+"I zee un--chap wi' red faace, blue 'ankercher, and white spots?"
+
+"That's the man. Well, now, you'd never guess who he is?"
+
+Mr. Bumpkin certainly would have been a sharp man if he could.
+
+"Well," continued the Don, "that man gets his living by bringing actions.
+No matter who it is or what, out comes the writ and down he comes for
+damages."
+
+"Hem! that be rum, too, bean't it?"
+
+"Yes, he's always looking out for accidents; if he hears o' one, down he
+comes with his pocket-book, gets 'old o' some chap that's injured, or
+thinks he is, and out comes the writ."
+
+"What be he then?"
+
+"A scamp--works in the name of some broken-down attorney, and pays him
+for the use of it."
+
+"So he can work the lor like wirout being a loryer?"
+
+"That's it--and, lor' bless you, he's got such a way with him that if he
+was to come and talk to you for five minutes, he'd have a writ out
+against you in the morning."
+
+"Ain't it rayther cold at this eend o' the booat," asked Mr. Bumpkin, "I
+feel a little chilly loike."
+
+"No," said the Don, "we just caught the wind at that corner, that was
+all."
+
+But Mr. Bumpkin kept his eye on the artful man, with a full determination
+to "have no truck wi' un."
+
+"As I was saying, this Ananias never misses a chance: he's on the
+look-out at this moment; if they was to push that gangway against his
+toe, down he'd go and be laid up with an injured spine and concussion of
+the brain, till he got damages from the company."
+
+"Must be a reg'ler rogue, I allows; I should like to push un overboard."
+
+"Just what he would like; he isn't born to be drowned, that man; he'd
+soon have a writ out against you. There was a railway accident once
+miles away in the country; ever so many people were injured and some of
+'em killed. Well, down he goes to see if he could get hold of
+anybody--no, nobody would have him--so what does he do but bring an
+action himself."
+
+"What for?"
+
+"Why, just the same as if he'd been in the accident."
+
+"Ought to be hanged."
+
+"Well, the doctors were very pleased to find that no bones were broken,
+and, although there were no bruises, they discovered that there were
+internal injuries: the spine was wrong, and there was concussion of the
+brain, and so on."
+
+"If ever I 'eerd tell o' sich a thing in my borned days."
+
+"No, but it's true. Well, he was laid up a long time under medical
+treatment, and it was months before he could get about, and then he
+brings his action: but before it came on he prosecutes his servant for
+stealing some trumpery thing or other--a very pretty girl she was
+too--and the trial came on at Quarter Sessions."
+
+"Where Squoire Stooky sits."
+
+"I never laughed so in all my life; there was the railway company with
+the red light, and there was Fireaway, the counsel for the girl, and then
+in hobbled the prosecutor, with a great white bandage round his head. He
+was so feeble through the injuries he had received that he could hardly
+walk. 'Now then,' says the counsel, 'is he sworn?' 'Yes,' says the
+crier.
+
+"'He must be sworn on the Koran,' says Fireaway; 'he's a Mommadon.'
+
+"'Where's the Jorum?' says the crier. 'Must be swore on the Jorum.'
+
+"O dear, dear, you should ha' heard 'em laugh--it was more like a
+theayter than a court. It was not only roars, but continnerus roars for
+several minutes. And all the time the larfter was going on there was
+this man throwin' out his arms over the witness-box at the counsel like a
+madman; and the more he raved the more they laughed. He was changed from
+a hobblin' invalid, as the counsel said, into a hathletic pugilist."
+
+"I 'ope she got off."
+
+"Got off with flying colours--we're magnanimous said the jury, 'not
+guilty.'"
+
+"Well, I likes upright and down-straight," said Bumpkin, "it'll goo
+furdest in th' long run."
+
+"Yes," said O'Rapley, "and the longer the run the furder it'll go."
+
+"So 't wool; but if you doan't mind, sir, I'd like to get nearer that
+'ere fireplace."
+
+"The funnel--very well." And as they moved Mr. O'Rapley, in the
+exuberance of his spirits, delivered another ball at the chimney, which
+apparently took the middle stump, for the chimney again broke in half.
+
+"Got him!" said he. "I quite agree, and I'll tell you for why. You can
+play a straight ball if you mind what you are about--just take your bat
+so, and bring your left elbow well round so, and keep your bat, as you
+say, upright and down-straight, so--and there you are. And there,
+indeed, Mr. Bumpkin was, on his back, for the boat at that moment bumped
+so violently against the side of the pier that many persons were
+staggering about as if they were in a storm.
+
+"Zounds!" said the farmer, as he was being picked up--"these 'ere booats,
+I doan't like 'em--gie me the ole-fashioned uns."
+
+Now came the usual hullabaloo, "Stand back!--pass on!--out of the way!
+now, then, look sharp there!" and the pushing of the gangway against
+people's shins as though they were so many skittles to be knocked over,
+and then came the slow process of "passing out."
+
+"There's one thing," whispered O'Rapley, "if you do break your leg the
+company's liable--that's one comfort."
+
+"Thankee, sir," answered Bumpkin, "but I bean't a gwine to break my leg
+for the sake o' a haction--and mebbee ha' to pay the costs."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+THE OLD BAILEY--ADVANTAGES OF THE NEW SYSTEM ILLUSTRATED.
+
+And I saw in my dream that Don O'Rapley and worthy Master Bumpkin
+proceeded together until they came to the Old Bailey; that delightful
+place which will ever impress me with the belief that the Satanic
+Personage is not a homeless wanderer. As they journeyed together
+O'Rapley asked whether there was any particular kind of case which he
+would prefer--much the same as he would enquire what he would like for
+lunch.
+
+"Well, thankee, sir," said Bumpkin, "what he there?"--just the same as a
+hungry guest would ask the waiter for the bill of fare.
+
+"Well," said Mr. O'Rapley, "there's no murder to-day, but there's sure to
+be highway robberies, burglaries, rapes, and so on."
+
+"Wall, I thinks one o' them air as good as anything," said Bumpkin. "I
+wur on the jury once when a chap were tried."
+
+"Did he get off?"
+
+"Got off as clane as a whusle. Not guilty, we all said: sarved her
+right."
+
+"It's rather early in the morning, p'r'aps," said O'Rapley; "but there's
+sure to be something interesting before lunch--crimes are very pop'lar,
+and for my own part, I think they're as nice as anything: divorces,
+p'r'aps, are as good, and the female intellect prefers 'em as a more
+digestable food for their minds."
+
+"As a what, sir!"
+
+"Well, since they did away with _crim. cons_, there's nothing left for
+females but murders and divorces, worth speaking of."
+
+"Why, how's that, then?"
+
+"O, they're not considered sufficiently moral, that's all. You see,
+Master Bumpkin, we're getting to be a very moral and good people.
+They're doin' away with all that's naughty, such as music and dancing,
+peep-shows and country fairs. This is a religious age. No pictur
+galleries on a Sunday, but as many public-houses as you like; it's wicked
+to look at picturs on a Sunday. And now I'll tell you another thing,
+Master Bumpkin, although p'r'aps I ought to keep my mouth closed; but
+'ere you'll see a Chancery Judge as knows everything about land and
+titles to property, and all that, and never had any training in Criminal
+Courts, and may be never been inside of one before, you'll see 'im down
+'ere tryin' burglaries and robberies, and down at the Assizes you'll see
+'im tryin' men and women for stealing mutton pies and a couple of ounces
+of bacon; that's the way the Round Square's worked, Master Bumpkin; and
+very well it acts. There's a moral atmosphere, too, about the Courts
+which is very curious. It seems to make every crime look bigger than it
+really is. But as I say, where's the human natur of a Chancery
+barrister? How can you get it in Chancery? They only sees human natur
+in a haffidavit, and although I don't say you can't put a lot of it into
+a haffidavit, such as perjury and such like, yet it's so done up by the
+skill of the profession that you can hardly see it. Learning from
+haffidavits isn't like learning from the witness-box, mark my words, Mr.
+Bumpkin; and so you'll find when you come to hear a case or two."
+
+Having thus eloquently delivered himself, Mr. O'Rapley paused to see its
+effect: but there was no answer. There was no doubt the Don could talk
+a-bit, and took especial pride in expressing his views on law reform,
+which, to his idea, would best be effected by returning to the "old
+style."
+
+And I saw that they pushed their way through a crowd of people of all
+sorts and degrees of unwashedness and crime, and proceeded up a winding
+stair, through other crowds of the most evil-looking indictable persons
+you could meet with out of the Bottomless Pit.
+
+And amongst them were pushing, with eager, hungry, dirty faces, men who
+called themselves clerks, evil-disposed persons who traded under such
+names as their owners could use no longer on their own account. These
+prowlers amongst thieves, under the protection of the Law, were permitted
+to extort what they could from the friends of miserable prisoners under
+pretence of engaging counsel to defend them. Counsel they would engage
+after a fashion--sometimes: but not unfrequently they cheated counsel,
+client and the law at the same time, which is rather better than killing
+two birds with one stone.
+
+And the two friends, after threading their way through the obnoxious
+crowd, came to the principal Court of the Old Bailey, called the "Old
+Court," and a very evil-looking place it was. All the ghosts of past
+criminals seemed floating in the dingy atmosphere. Crowds of men, women
+and children were heaped together in all directions, except on the bench
+and in a kind of pew which was reserved for such ladies as desired to
+witness the last degradation of human nature.
+
+Presently came in, announced with a loud cry of "Silence!" and "Be
+uncovered in Court!" a gorgeous array of stout and berobed gentlemen,
+with massive chains and purple faces. These, I learned, were the noble
+Aldermen of the Corporation. What a contrast to the meagre wretches who
+composed the crowd! Here was a picture of what well-fed honesty and
+virtue could accomplish for human nature on the one part, as opposed to
+what hungry crime could effect, on the other. Blessings, say I, on good
+victuals! It is a great promoter of innocence. And I thought how many
+of the poor, half-starved, cadaverous wretches who crowded into the dock
+in all their emaciated wretchedness and rags would, under other
+conditions, have become as portly and rubicund and as moral as the row of
+worthy aldermen who sat looking at them with contempt from their exalted
+position.
+
+The rich man doesn't steal a loaf of bread; he has no temptation to do
+so: the uneducated thief doesn't get up sham companies, because _he_ has
+no temptation to do so. Temptation and Opportunity have much to answer
+for in the destinies of men. Honesty is the best policy, but it is not
+always the most expedient or practicable.
+
+Now there was much arraignment of prisoners, and much swearing of
+jurymen, and proclamations about "informing my Lords Justices and the
+Queen's Attorney-General of any crimes, misdemeanours, felonies, &c.,
+committed by any of the prisoners," and "if anybody could so inform my
+Lords Justices," &c, he was to come forward and do so, and he would be
+heard. And then the crowd of prisoners, except the one about to be
+tried, were told to stand down. And down they all swarmed, some laughing
+and some crying, to the depths below. And the stout warders took their
+stand beside the remaining prisoner.
+
+"Now," said Mr. O'Rapley, "this Judge is quite fresh to the work, and
+I'll warrant he'll take a moral view of the law, which is about the worst
+view a Judge _can_ take."
+
+The man left in the dock was a singular specimen of humanity: he was a
+thin, wizen-looking man of about seventy, with a wooden leg: and as he
+stood up to plead, leant on two crutches, while his head shook a good
+deal, as if he had got the palsy. A smile went round the bar, and in
+some places broke out into a laugh: the situation was, indeed,
+ridiculous; and before any but a Chancery Judge, methought, there must be
+an acquittal on the view. However, I saw that the man pleaded not
+guilty, and then Mr. Makebelieve opened the case for the Crown. He put
+it very clearly, and, as he said, fairly before the jury; and then called
+a tall, large-boned woman of about forty into the witness-box. This was
+the "afflicted widow," as Makebelieve had called her; and the way she
+gave her evidence made a visible impression on the mind of the learned
+Judge. His Lordship looked up occasionally from his note-book and fixed
+his eyes on the prisoner, whose appearance was that of one trembling with
+a consciousness of guilt--that is, to one not versed in human nature
+outside an affidavit.
+
+Mr. Nimble, the prisoner's counsel, asked if the prisoner might sit down
+as he was very "infirm."
+
+"Have you an affidavit of that fact, Mr. Nimble?" asked the Judge.
+
+"No, my lord; it is not usual on such an application to have an
+affidavit."
+
+"It is not usual," said his lordship, "to take notice of any fact not
+upon affidavit; but in this case the prisoner may sit down."
+
+The prosecutrix gave her evidence very flippantly, and did not seem in
+the least concerned that her virtue had had so narrow an escape.
+
+"Now," asked Mr. Nimble, "what are you?"
+
+The learned Judge said he could not see what that had to do with the
+question. Could Mr. Nimble resist the facts?
+
+"Yes, my lord," answered the learned counsel; "and I intend, in the first
+place, to resist them by showing that this woman is entirely unworthy of
+credit."
+
+"Are you really going to suggest perjury, Mr. Nimble?"
+
+"Assuredly, my lord! I am going to show that there is not a word of
+truth in this woman's statement. I have a right to cross-examine as to
+her credit. If your lordship will allow me, I will--"
+
+"Cross-examination, Mr. Nimble, cannot be allowed, in order to make a
+witness contradict all that she has said in her examination-in-chief; it
+would be a strange state of the law, if it could."
+
+Mr. Nimble looked about the desk, and then under it, and felt in his bag,
+and at last exclaimed in a somewhat petulant tone:
+
+"Where's my Taylor?"
+
+"What do you want your tailor for?" asked the Judge.
+
+"I wish to point out to your lordship that my proposition is correct, and
+that I can cross-examine to the credit of a witness."
+
+Here the clerk of arraigns, who sat just under the learned Judge, and was
+always consulted on matters of practice when there was any difficulty,
+was seen whispering to his lordship: after which his lordship looked very
+blank and red.
+
+"We always consult him, my lord," said Mr. Nimble, with a smile, "in
+suits at Common Law."
+
+Everybody tried not to laugh, and everybody failed. Even the Judge,
+being a very good-tempered man, laughed too, and said:
+
+"O yes, Taylor on Evidence, Mr. Nimble."
+
+At last the book, about the size of a London Directory, was handed up by
+a tall man who was Mr. Nimble's clerk.
+
+"Now, my lord, at page nineteen hundred and seventy-two your lordship
+will find that when the credibility of a witness is attacked--"
+
+Judge: "That will be near the end of the book."
+
+Mr. Nimble: "No, my lord, near the beginning."
+
+"I shall not stop you," said the learned Judge; "your question may be put
+for what it is worth: but now, suppose in answer to your question she
+says she is an ironer, what then?"
+
+"That's what I am, my lordship," said the woman, with an obsequious
+curtsey.
+
+"There, now you have it," said the Judge, "she is an ironer; stop, let me
+take that down, 'I am an ironer.'"
+
+The cross-examination continued, somewhat in an angry tone no doubt, and
+amid frequent interruptions; but Mr. Nimble always thumped down the
+ponderous Taylor upon any objection of the learned Judge, and crushed it
+as though it were a butterfly.
+
+Next the policeman gave his evidence, and was duly cross-examined. Mr.
+Nimble called no witnesses; there were none to call: but addressed the
+jury in a forcible and eloquent speech, stigmatizing the charge as an
+utterly preposterous one, and dealing with every fact in a
+straightforward and manly manner. After he had finished, the jury would
+undoubtedly have acquitted; but the learned Judge had to sum up, which in
+this, as in many cases at Quarter Sessions, was no more a summing up than
+counting ten on your fingers is a summing up. It was a desultory speech,
+and if made by the counsel for the prosecution, would have been a most
+unfair one for the Crown: totally ignoring the fact that human nature was
+subject to frailties, and testimony liable to be tainted with perjury.
+It made so great an impression upon me in my dream that I transcribed it
+when I awoke; and this is the manner in which it dealt with the main
+points:--
+
+"GENTLEMEN OF THE JURY,
+
+"This is a case of a very serious character (the nature of the offence
+was then read from Roscoe), and I am bound to tell you that the evidence
+is all one way: namely, on the side of the prosecution. There is not a
+single affidavit to the contrary. Now what are the facts?"
+
+Mr. Nimble: "Would your lordship pardon me--whether they are facts or not
+is for the jury."
+
+"I am coming to that, Mr. Nimble; unless contradicted they are facts, or,
+at least, if you believe them, gentlemen. If the evidence is
+uncontradicted, what is the inference? The inference is for you, not for
+me; I have simply to state the law: it is for you to find the facts. You
+must exercise your common sense: if the prisoner could have contradicted
+this evidence, is it reasonable to suppose he would not have done so with
+so serious a charge hanging over his head?"
+
+"My lord, may I ask how could the prisoner have called evidence? there
+was no one present."
+
+"Mr. Nimble," said his Lordship solemnly, "he might have shown he was
+elsewhere."
+
+"Yes, my lord; but the prisoner admits being present: he doesn't set up
+an _alibi_."
+
+"Gentlemen, you hear what the learned counsel says: he admits that the
+prisoner was present; that is corroborative of the story told by the
+prosecutrix. Now, if you find a witness speaking truthfully about one
+part of a transaction, what are you to infer with regard to the rest?
+Gentlemen, the case is for you, and not for me: happily I have not to
+find the facts: they are for you--and what are they? This woman, who is
+an ironer, was going along a lonely lane, proceeding to her home, as she
+states--and again I say there is no contradiction--and she meets this
+man; he accosts her, and then, according to her account, assaults her,
+and in a manner which I think leaves no doubt of his intention--but that
+is for you. I say he assaults her, if you believe her story: of course,
+if you do not believe her story, then in the absence of corroboration
+there would be an end of the case. But is there an absence of
+corroboration? What do we find, gentlemen? Now let me read to you the
+evidence of Police Constable Swearhard. What does he say? 'I was coming
+along the Lover's Lane at nine twenty-five, and I saw two persons, whom I
+afterwards found to be the prosecutrix and the prisoner.' 'You will
+mark that, gentlemen, the prisoner himself does not suggest an _alibi_,
+that is to say, that he was elsewhere, when this event occurred. Then he
+was upon the spot: and the policeman tells you--it is for you to say
+whether you believe the policeman or not; there is no suggestion that he
+is not a witness of truth--and he says that he heard a scream, and caught
+the defendant in the act. Now, from whom did that scream proceed? Not
+from the prisoner, for it was the scream of a woman. From whom then
+could it proceed but from the prosecutrix? Now, in all cases of this
+kind, one very material point has always been relied on by the Judges,
+and that point is this: What was the conduct of the woman? Did she go
+about her ordinary business as usual, or did she make a complaint? If
+she made no complaint, or made it a long time after, it is some
+evidence--not conclusive by any means--but it is some evidence against
+the truth of her story. Let us test this case by that theory. What is
+the evidence of the policeman? I will read his words: 'The moment I got
+up,' he says, now mark that, gentlemen, 'the woman complained of the
+conduct of the prisoner: she screamed and threw herself in my arms and
+then nearly fainted.' Gentlemen, what does all that mean? You will say
+by your verdict."
+
+"Consider your verdict," said the Clerk of Arraigns, and almost
+immediately the Jury said: "Guilty of attempt."
+
+"Call upon him," said the Judge: and he was called upon accordingly, but
+only said "the prosecutrix was a well-known bad woman."
+
+Then the Judge said very solemnly:--
+
+"Prisoner at the bar, you have been convicted upon the clearest possible
+evidence of this crime: what you say about the character of the
+prosecutrix the more convinces me that you are a very bad man. You not
+only assail the virtue of this woman, but, happily prevented in your
+design, you endeavour to destroy it afterwards in this Court. No one who
+has heard this case can doubt that you have been guilty of this very
+grave offence; and in my judgment that offence is aggravated by the fact
+that you committed it against her will and without her consent. The
+sentence is that you be sent to prison for eighteen calendar months."
+
+"Rather warm," said Mr. O'Rapley.
+
+"Never heeard such a thing in my life," said Master Bumpkin, "she wur a
+consentin' party if ever there wur one."
+
+"But that makes no difference now-a-days," said Mr. O'Rapley. "Chancery
+Judges studies the equity of the thing more. But perhaps, Mr. Bumpkin,
+you don't know what that means?"
+
+"No," said Bumpkin, "I doan't."
+
+"You must be quiet," said Mr. O'Rapley; "recollect you are in a Court of
+Justice."
+
+"Be I! It 'ud take moore un thic case to make I believe it; but lookee
+here: I be hanged if there ain't that Snooks feller down along there."
+
+"Who?" enquired O'Rapley.
+
+"That there feller," said Bumpkin, "be sure to find his way where there's
+anything gooin on o' this ere natur."
+
+Next an undefended prisoner was placed on trial, and as he was supposed
+to know all the law of England, he was treated as if he did.
+
+"You can't put that question, you know," said the learned Judge; "and now
+you are making a statement; it is not time to make your statement yet;
+you will have ample opportunity by-and-by in your speech to the jury."
+And afterwards, when the Judge was summing up, the unhappy prisoner
+called his lordship's attention to a mistake; but he was told that he had
+had his turn and had made his speech to the jury, and must not now
+interrupt the Court. So he had to be quite silent until he was
+convicted. Then the two companions went into another court, where a very
+stern-looking Common Law Judge was trying a ferocious-looking prisoner.
+And Mr. O'Rapley was delighted to explain that now his friend would see
+the difference. They had entered the court just as the learned Judge had
+begun to address the jury; and very careful his lordship was to explain
+(not in technical language), but in homely, common-place and common-sense
+English, the nature of the crime with which the prisoner was charged. He
+was very careful in explaining this, for fear the jury should improperly
+come to the conclusion that, because they might believe the prisoner had
+in fact committed the act, he must necessarily be guilty. And they were
+told that the act was in that case only one element of the crime, and
+that they must ascertain whether there was the guilty intent or no. Now
+this old Mr. Justice Common Sense, I thought, was very well worth
+listening to, and I heartily wished Mr. Justice Technical from the Old
+Court had been there to take a lesson; and I take the liberty of setting
+down what I heard in my dream for the benefit of future Justices
+Technical.
+
+His lordship directed the jury's attention to the evidence, which he
+carefully avoided calling facts: not to the verbatim report of it on his
+note-book as some Recorders do, and think when they are reading it over
+they are summing it up; but pointing out statements which, if believed,
+become facts and if facts, lead to certain _inferences_ of guilt or
+innocence.
+
+It was while the learned Mr. Justice Common Sense was thus engaged, that
+the warder in the dock suddenly checked the prisoner with these words:
+
+"You mustn't interrupt."
+
+"Why may he not interrupt?" asks Mr. Justice Common Sense. "What do you
+want to say, prisoner?"
+
+"My lord," answered the prisoner, "I wanted to say as how that there
+witness as your lordship speaks on didn't say as he seen me there."
+
+"O, didn't he?" said the Judge. "I thought he did--now let us see,"
+turning over his notes. "No, you are quite right, prisoner, he did not
+see you at the spot but immediately after."
+
+Then his lordship proceeded until there was another interruption of the
+same character, and the foolish warder again told the prisoner to be
+quiet. This brought down Mr. Justice Common Sense with a vengeance:
+
+"Warder! how dare you stop the prisoner? he is on his trial and is
+undefended. Who is to check me if I am misstating the evidence if he
+does not? If you dare to speak like that to him again I will commit you.
+Prisoner, interrupt me as often as you think I am not correctly stating
+the evidence."
+
+"Thankee, my lord."
+
+"That be the sort o' Judge for me," said Bumpkin; "but I've 'ad enough on
+it, Maister O'Rapley, so if you please, I'll get back t' the 'Goose.'
+Why didn't that air Judge try t'other case, I wonder?"
+
+"Because," replied the Don, "the new system is to work the 'Round
+Square'."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+Mr. Bumpkin's experience of London life, enlarged.
+
+On leaving the Old Bailey the two friends proceeded to a neighbouring
+public-house and partook of some light refreshment at the counter. Now
+Mr. Bumpkin had never yet examined the viands displayed on a counter.
+His idea of refreshment, when from home, had always been a huge round of
+beef smoking at one end of the table and a large leg of mutton smoking at
+the other, with sundry dishes of similar pretensions between, and an
+immense quantity of vegetables. When, therefore he saw some
+stale-looking sandwiches under the ordinary glass cover, he exclaimed:
+"Wittals must be mighty scarce to clap 'em under a glass case."
+
+"It's to keep the flies off;" said his companion.
+
+"They need well keep un off, for there bean't enough for a couple if they
+was ony wise ongry like."
+
+However, our friends made the best of what there was, and Mr. O'Rapley,
+wishing success to his companion, enquired who was to be his counsel.
+
+"I doan't rightly know, but I'll warrant Mr. Prigg'll have a good un--he
+knows what he be about; and all I hopes is, he'll rattle it into that
+there Snooks, for if ever there wur a bad un it be him."
+
+"He looks a bad un," replied O'Rapley. "When do you think the case is
+likely to come on?"
+
+"Well, it is supposed as it ull be on to-morrer; but I bleeve there's no
+sartinty about thic. Now then, just give us a little moore, will 'ee
+sir?" (this to the waiter).
+
+"I'll pay for the next," said O'Rapley, feeling in his pocket.
+
+"Noa, noa, I'll pay; and thankee, sir, for comin'."
+
+And then O'Rapley drank his friend's health again, and wished further
+success to the case, and hoped Mr. Bumpkin would be sure to come to him
+when he was at Westminster; and expressed himself desirous to assist his
+friend in every way that lay in his power--declaring that he really must
+be going for he didn't know what would happen if the Judge should find he
+was away; and was not at all certain it would not lead to some officious
+member of the House of Commons asking a question of the Prime Minister
+about it.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin drank his good health, again and again, declaring he was
+"mighty proud to have met with un;" and that when the case was over and
+he had returned to his farm, he should be pleased if Mr. O'Rapley would
+come down and spend a few days with him. "Nancy," he said, "'ll be rare
+and pleased to see thee. I got as nice a little farm as any in the
+county, and as pooty pigs as thee ever clapped eyes on."
+
+Mr. O'Rapley, without being too condescending, expressed himself highly
+gratified with making Mr. Bumpkin's acquaintance, and observed that the
+finest pigs ever he saw were those of the Lord Chief Justice.
+
+"Dade, sir, now what sort be they?" Mr. O'Rapley was not learned in
+pigs, and not knowing the name of any breed whatever, was at a loss how
+to describe them. Mr. Bumpkin came to his assistance.
+
+"Be they smooth like and slim?"
+
+"Yes," said the Don.
+
+"Hardly any hair?"
+
+"Scarce a bit."
+
+"They be Chichesters then--the werry best breed as a man ever had in his
+stye."
+
+"I never see anything so pretty," replied Mr. O'Rapley.
+
+"Ah! and they be the smallest-boned pigs as ever could be--they bean't
+got a bone bigger nor your little finger."
+
+"Ha!" said the Don, finishing his glass, "the smaller the bone the more
+the meat, that's what I always say; and the Lord Chief Justice don't care
+for bone, he likes meat."
+
+"An' so do I--the Lud Judge be right, and if he tries my case he'll know
+the difference betwixt thic pig as Snooks tooked away and one o' them
+there--"
+
+"Jackass-looking pigs," said O'Rapley, seeing that his friend paused. "I
+hate them jackass pigs."
+
+"So do I--they never puts on fat."
+
+"I must go, really," said O'Rapley. "What do you make the right time?"
+
+Master Bumpkin pulled out his watch with great effort, and said it was
+just a quarter past four by Yokelton time.
+
+"Here's your good health again, Mr. Bumpkin."
+
+"And yours, sir; and now I think on it, if it's a fair question Mr.
+O'Rapley, and I med ax un wirout contempt, when do you think this 'ere
+case o' mine be likely to come on, for you ought to know summut about
+un?"
+
+"Ha!" said the Don, partially closing one eye, and looking profoundly
+into the glass as though he were divining the future, "law, sir, is a
+mystery and judges is a mystery; masters is a mystery and 'sociates is a
+mystery; ushers is a mystery and counsel is a mystery;--the whole of life
+(here he tipped the contents of the glass down his throat) is a mystery."
+
+"So it be," said Mr. Bumpkin, drawing the back of his hand across his
+mouth. "So it be sir, but do 'ee think--"
+
+"Well, really," answered the Don, "I should say in about a couple of
+years if you ask me."
+
+"How the h--"
+
+"Excuse me, Master Bumpkin, but contempt follers us like a shadder: if
+you had said that to a Judge it would have been a year at least: it's
+three months as it is if I liked to go on with the case; but I'm not a
+wicious man, I hope."
+
+"I didn't mean no offence," said the farmer.
+
+"No, no, I dare say not; but still there is a way of doing things. Now
+if you had said to me, 'Mr. O'Rapley, you are a gentleman moving in
+judicial circles, and are probably acquainted with the windings of the,'
+&c. &c. &c. 'Can you inform me why my case is being so unduly
+prolonged?' Now if you had put your question in that form I should in
+all probability have answered: 'I do not see that it is unduly prolonged,
+Master Bumpkin--you must have patience. Judges are but human and it's a
+wonder to me they are as much as that, seein' what they have to go
+through.'"
+
+"But if there be a Court why can't us get in and try un, Mr. Rapley?"
+
+"Ah, now that is putting it pointedly;" and O'Rapley closed one eye and
+looked into his tumbler with the other before he answered:
+
+"You see this is how it goes under the continerous sittings--off and on
+we sits continerously at Nisy Prisy in London three months in the year.
+Now that ain't bad for London: but it's nothing near so much time as they
+gives to places like Aylesbury, Bedford, and many others."
+
+Mr. Bumpkin looked like a terrier dog watching a hole out of which he
+expected a rat: at present he saw no sign of one.
+
+"Take Aylesbury; well now, if a Judge went there once in seven years he'd
+find about every other assize enough work to last him till lunch. But in
+course two Judges must go to Aylesbury four times a year, to do nothing
+but admire the building where the Courts are held; otherwise you'd soon
+have Aylesbury marching on to London to know the reason why. P'r'aps the
+Judges have left five hundred cases untried in London to go to this
+Aylesbury."
+
+"Be it a big plaace, sir?"
+
+"Not so big as a good-sized hotel," said the Don. "Then," he continued,
+"there's Bedford ditto again--septennel would do for that; then comes
+Northampton--they don't want no law there at all." (I leave the obvious
+pun to anyone who likes to make it). "Then Okeham again--did you ever
+hear of anyone who came from Okeham? I never did."
+
+The Don paused, as though on the answer to this question depended his
+future course.
+
+"Noa," said Bumpkin, "can't rightly say as ever I did."
+
+"And nobody ever did come from there except the Judges. Well, to Okeham
+they go four times a year, whereas if they was to go about once in every
+hundred years it wouldn't pay. Why raly, Mr. Bumpkin, the Judges goes
+round like travellers arfter orders, and can't get none. I'm not
+talkin', as you are aware, about great centres like Liverpool, where if
+they had about fifty-two assizes in the year it wouldn't be one too many;
+but I'm talking about circumfrences on the confines of civilization."
+
+"Oh dear!" sighed Bumpkin. The hole seemed to him too choked up with
+"larnin'" for the rat ever to come out--he could glean nothing from this
+highly wrought and highly polished enthusiasm.
+
+"And, notwithstanding and accordingly," continued the Don, "they do say,
+goodness knows how true it is, that they're going to have two more
+assizes in the year. All that I can say is, Mr. Bumpkin--and, mark my
+words, there'll be no stopping in London at all, but it will be just a
+reg'ler Judge's merry-go-round." {138}
+
+Mr. Bumpkin dropped a look into his glass, and the two companions came
+out of the door and proceeded along under the archway until they came to
+the corner of Bridge Street, Blackfriars. Exactly at that point a young
+woman with a baby in her arms came in contact with Mr. Bumpkin, and in a
+very angry tone said,--
+
+"I tell you what it is, don't you take them liberties with me or I'll
+give you in charge."
+
+And the young woman passed on with her baby. Just at that moment, and
+while Master Bumpkin was meditating on this strange conduct of the young
+female, he felt a smart tug at his watch, and, looking down, saw the
+broken chain hanging from his pocket.
+
+"Zounds!" he exclaimed, "I never zeed anything claner than thic; did thee
+zee thic feller?"
+
+"There he goes," said O'Rapley.
+
+"There ur gooes," said Mr. Bumpkin, and, as fast as he could, pursued the
+thief.
+
+"Stop un!" he cried. "Stop thic there thief; he got my watch."
+
+But it was a long time before Master Bumpkin's mandate was obeyed; the
+value of a policeman, like that of every other commodity, depends upon
+his rarity. There was no policeman to be found. There was a fire escape
+in the middle of the street, but that was of no use to Master Bumpkin.
+Away went thief, and away went Bumpkin, who could "foot it," as he said,
+"pooty well, old as he wur." Nor did either the thief or himself stop
+until they got nearly to the bridge, when, to Bumpkin's great
+astonishment, up came the thief, walking coolly towards him. This was
+another mystery, in addition to those mentioned by Mr. O'Rapley. But the
+fact was, that the hue and cry was now raised, and although Master
+Bumpkin did not perceive it, about a hundred people, men, women, and
+boys, were in full chase; and when that gentleman was, as Bumpkin
+thought, coolly coming towards him, he was simply at bay, run down,
+without hope of escape; and fully determined to face the matter out with
+all the coolness he could command.
+
+"Take un," said Bumpkin; "take un oop; thee dam scoundrel!"
+
+"Take care what you're saying," said the thief. "I'm a respectable man,
+and there's law in the land."
+
+"Yes, and thee shall have un, too, thee willin; thee stole my watch, thee
+knows that."
+
+"You're a liar," said the captive.
+
+"Why thee's got un on, dang if thee bean't, and a wearin' on un. Well,
+this bates all; take un oop, pleeceman."
+
+At this moment, which is always the nick of time chosen by the force,
+that is to say, when everything is done except the handcuffs, a policeman
+with a great deal of authority in his appearance came up, and plunged his
+hands under his heavy coat-tails, as though he were about to deliver them
+of the bower anchor of a ship.
+
+"Do you give him in charge?"
+
+"Sure enough do ur," said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+So the handcuffs were put on, and the stalwart policeman, like a hero
+with the captive of his bow and spear, marched him along at a great rate,
+Bumpkin striding out manfully at the side, amid a great crowd of small
+boys, with all their heads turned towards the prisoner as they ran, in
+the highest state of delight and excitement. Even Bumpkin looked as if
+he had made a good thing of it, and seemed as pleased as the boys.
+
+As they came again to the corner of Ludgate Hill, there stood Mr.
+O'Rapley, looking very pompous and dignified, as became so great a man.
+
+"You've got him then," said he.
+
+"Ay; come on, Master Rapley, come on."
+
+"One moment," said the official; "I must here leave you for the present,
+Mr. Bumpkin; we are not allowed to give evidence in Criminal Courts any
+more than Her Majesty's Judges themselves; we are a part of the Court.
+But, besides all that, I did not see what happened; what was it?"
+
+"Well," said Mr. Bumpkin, "that be rum too, sir; thee see thic feller
+steal my watch, surely."
+
+"Indeed, Mr. Bumpkin, it was so quickly done that I really did _not_ see
+it, if you ask me."
+
+"Why, he dragged un out o' thic pocket."
+
+"No doubt, Master Bumpkin; but it does not follow that I see it."
+
+"Thee can come and say I wur with thee, anyhow."
+
+"I can't give evidence, Mr. Bumpkin, as I told you before; and, besides,
+I must not appear in this matter at all. You know I was absent to oblige
+you, and it's possible I may be of some further service to you yet; but
+please don't mention me in this matter. I assure you it will do harm,
+and perhaps I should lose my place."
+
+"Well, Master Rapley," said Bumpkin, taking his hand, "I won't do thee no
+harm if I knows it, and there be plenty of evidence."
+
+"Evidence! You say you found the watch upon him?"
+
+"Sartinly."
+
+"The case then is clear. You don't want any evidence besides that."
+
+"Well, sir, you're a man o' larnin'. I bean't much of a scollard, I'll
+tak' thy advice; but I must get along; they be waitin' for I."
+
+"I will see you at Westminster to-morrow, Mr. Bumpkin."
+
+"All right, zir, all right."
+
+And with that Mr. O'Rapley proceeded on his way down Fleet Street, and
+Mr. Bumpkin proceeded on his up Ludgate Hill in the midst of an excited
+crowd.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+The coarse mode of procedure in Ahab _v._ Naboth ruthlessly exposed and
+carefully contrasted with the humane and enlightened form of the present
+day.
+
+Here I awoke, and my wife said unto me, "Dear, you have been dreaming and
+talking in your sleep."
+
+Now fearing for what I may have said, although of a tolerably clear
+conscience, I enquired if she could tell me what words I had uttered.
+She replied that I had mentioned the names of many eminent men: such as
+Mr. Justice Common Sense.
+
+"Indeed," quoth I; and then I told my dream. Upon which she observed,
+that it seemed there must be much exaggeration. To this I made answer
+that dreams do generally magnify events, and impress them more vividly
+upon the senses, inasmuch as the imagination was like a microscope: it
+enabled you to see many things which would escape the naked eye.
+
+"But," said my partner, "if they are distorted?"
+
+"If they are distorted, they are not reliable; but a clear imagination,
+like a good lens, faithfully presents its objects, although in a larger
+form, in order that those who have no time for scientific observation,
+may see what the scientist desires to direct their attention to. There
+are creatures almost invisible to the naked eye, which, nevertheless,
+cause great irritation to the nerves. So, also, there are matters
+affecting the body corporate of these kingdoms which the public are blind
+to and suffer from, but which, if thoroughly exposed, they may be
+inclined to take a hand in removing."
+
+"I don't believe that Mr. O'Rapley," said she: "he seems a cantankerous,
+conceited fellow."
+
+"Why so he is; but cantankerous and conceited fellows sometimes speak the
+truth. They're like those cobwebbed, unwholesome-looking bottles which
+have lain a long time in cellars. You would hardly like to come in
+contact with them, and yet they often contain a clear and beautiful wine.
+This Mr. O'Rapley is a worthy man who knows a great deal, and although a
+bit of a toady to his superiors, expresses his opinions pretty freely
+behind their backs."
+
+"And what of this Master Bumpkin--this worthy Master Bumpkin I hear you
+speak of so often?"
+
+"A very shrewd man in some respects and a silly one in others."
+
+"Not an unusual combination."
+
+"By no means."
+
+And then I told her what I have already related; to which she observed it
+was a pity some friend had not interposed and stopped the business. I
+answered, that friends were no doubt useful, but friends or no friends we
+must have law, and whether for sixpence or a shilling it ought to be
+readily attainable: that no one would be satisfied with having no other
+authority than that of friendship to settle our disputes; and besides
+that, friends themselves sometimes fell out and were generally the most
+hard to reconcile without an appeal to our tribunals.
+
+"Well, it does seem a pity," said she, "that judges cannot sit as they
+did in Moses' time at all seasons so as to decide expeditiously and
+promptly between the claims of parties."
+
+"Why so they do sit 'continuously,'" quoth I, "but the whole difficulty
+consists in getting at them. What is called procedure is so circuitous
+and perplexing, that long before you get to your journey's end you may
+faint by the way."
+
+"Is there no one with good sense who will take this matter up and help
+this poor man to come by his rights. It must be very expensive for him
+to be kept away from his business so long, and his poor wife left all
+alone to manage the farm."
+
+"Why, so it is, but then going to law, which means seeking to maintain
+your rights, is a very expensive thing: a luxury fit only for rich men."
+
+"Why then do people in moderate circumstances indulge in it?"
+
+"Because they are obliged to defend themselves against oppressive and
+unjust demands; although I think, under the present system, if a man had
+a small estate, say a few acres, and a rich man laid claim to it, it
+would be far better for the small man to give up the land without any
+bother."
+
+"But no man of spirit would do that?"
+
+"No, that is exactly where it is, it's the spirit of resistance that
+comes in."
+
+"Resistance! a man would be a coward to yield without a fight."
+
+"Why so he would, and that is what makes law such a beautiful science,
+and its administration so costly. Men will fight to the last rather than
+give in. If Naboth had lived in these times there would have been no
+need of his death in order to oust him from his vineyard. Ahab could
+have done a much more sensible thing and walked in by process of law."
+
+"In what way?"
+
+"In the first place he could have laid claim to a right of way, or
+easement as it is called, of some sort: or could have alleged that Naboth
+had encroached on his land by means of a fence or drain or ditch."
+
+"Well, but if he hadn't?"
+
+"If he hadn't, so much the better for the Plaintiff, and so much the
+worse for Naboth."
+
+"I don't understand; if Naboth had done no wrong, surely it would be far
+better for him than if he had."
+
+"Not in the long run, my dear: and for this reason, if he had encroached
+it would have taken very little trouble to ascertain the fact, and Naboth
+being a just and honest man, would only require to have it pointed out to
+him to remedy the evil. Maps and plans of the estate would doubtless
+have shown him his mistake, and, like a wise man, he would have avoided
+going to law."
+
+"I see clearly that the good man would have said, 'Neighbour Ahab, we
+have been on neighbourly terms for a long lime, and I do not wish in any
+way to alter that excellent feeling which has always subsisted between
+us. I see clearly by these maps and plans which worthy Master Metefield
+hath shown me that my hedge hath encroached some six inches upon thy
+domain, wherefore, Neighbour Ahab, take, I pray thee, as much of the land
+as belongeth unto thee, according to just admeasurement."
+
+"Why certainly, so would the honest Naboth have communed with Ahab, and
+there would have been an end of the business."
+
+"But show me, darling, how being in the wrong was better for good Naboth
+than being in the right in this business?"
+
+"Most willingly," said I; "you see, my dear, there was quickly an end of
+the matter by Naboth yielding to the just demands of neighbour Ahab. But
+now let us suppose honest Naboth in the right concerning his vineyard,
+and neighbour Ahab to be making an unjust demand. You have already most
+justly observed that in that case it would be cowardly on the part of
+Naboth to yield without a struggle?"
+
+"Assuredly."
+
+"Well then, that means a lawsuit."
+
+"But surely," said my wife, "it ought to be soon seen who is in the
+wrong. Where is Master Metefield who you said just now was so accurate a
+surveyor, and where are those plans you spoke of which showed the
+situation of the estates?"
+
+"Ah, my dear, I see you know very little of the intricacies of the law;
+that good Master Metefield, instead of being a kind of judge to determine
+quickly as he did for Master Naboth what were the boundaries of the
+vineyard, hath not now so easy a task of it, because Ahab being in the
+wrong he is not accepted by him as his judge."
+
+"But if the plans are correct, how can he alter them?"
+
+"He cannot alter them, but the question of correctness of boundary as
+shown, is matter of disputation, and will have to be discussed by
+surveyors on both sides, and supported and disputed by witnesses
+innumerable on both sides: old men coming up with ancient memories,
+hedgers and ditchers, farmers and bailiffs and people of all sorts and
+conditions, to prove and disprove where the boundary line really divides
+Neighbour Naboth's vineyard from Neighbour Ahab's park."
+
+"But surely Naboth will win?"
+
+"All that depends upon a variety of things, such as, first, the
+witnesses; secondly, the counsel; thirdly, the judge; fourthly, the
+jury,"
+
+"O," said my wife, "pray don't go on to a fifthly--it seems to me poor
+Naboth is like to have a sorry time of it before he establish his
+boundary line."
+
+"Ay, if he ever do so: but he first is got into the hands of his Lawyers,
+next into the hands of his Counsel, thirdly, into Chancery, fourthly,
+into debt--"
+
+"Pray, do not let us have a fifthly here either; I like not these
+thirdlys and fourthlys, for they seem to bring poor Naboth into bad case;
+but what said you about debt?"
+
+"I say that Naboth, not being a wealthy man, but, as I take it, somewhat
+in the position of neighbour Bumpkin, will soon be forced to part with a
+good deal of his little property in order to carry on the action."
+
+"But will not the action be tried in a reasonable time, say a week or
+two?"
+
+"I perceive," cried I, "that you are yet in the very springtide and
+babyhood of innocence in these matters. There must be summonses for time
+and for further time; there must be particulars and interrogatories and
+discoveries and inspections and strikings out and puttings in and appeals
+and demurrers and references and--"
+
+"O, please don't. I perceive that poor Naboth is already ruined a long
+way back. I think when you came to the interrogatories he was in want of
+funds to carry on the action."
+
+"A Chancery action sometimes takes years," said I.
+
+"Years! then shame to our Parliament."
+
+"I pray you do not take on so," said I. "Naboth, according to the decree
+of Fate, is to be ruined. Jezebel did it in a wicked, clumsy and brutal
+manner. Anyone could see she was wrong, and her name has been handed
+down to us with infamy and execration. I now desire to show how Ahab
+could have accomplished his purpose in a gentle, manly and scientific
+manner and saved his wife's reputation. Naboth's action, carried as it
+would be from Court to Court upon every possible point upon which an
+appeal can go, under our present system, would effectually ruin him ages
+before the boundary line could be settled. It would be all swallowed up
+in costs."
+
+"Poor Naboth!" said my wife.
+
+"And," continued I, "the law reports would hand down the _cause celebre_
+of _Ahab_ v. _Naboth_ as a most interesting leading case upon the subject
+of goodness knows what: perhaps as to whether a man, under certain
+circumstances, may not alter his neighbour's landmark in spite of the
+statute law of Moses."
+
+"And so you think poor Naboth would be sold up?"
+
+"That were about the only certain event in his case, except that Ahab
+would take possession and so put an end for ever to the question as to
+where the boundary line should run."
+
+Here again I dozed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+
+Shewing that lay tribunals are not exactly Punch and Judy shows where the
+puppet is moved by the man underneath.
+
+It was particularly fortunate for Mr. Bumpkin that his case was not in
+the list of causes to be tried on the following day. It may seem a
+curious circumstance to the general reader that a great case like
+_Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_, involving so much expense of time, trouble, and
+money should be in the list one day and out the next; should be sometimes
+in the list of one Court and sometimes in the list of another; flying
+about like a butterfly from flower to flower and caught by no one on the
+look-out for it. But this is not a phenomenon in our method of
+procedure, which startles you from time to time with its miraculous
+effects. You can calculate upon nothing in the system but its
+uncertainty. Most gentle and innocent reader, I saw that there was no
+Nisi Prius Court to sit on the following day, so _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_
+could not be taken, list or no list. The lucky Plaintiff therefore found
+himself at liberty to appear before that August Tribunal which sits at
+the Mansion House in the City of London. A palatial and imposing
+building it was on the outside, but within, so far as was apparent to me,
+it was a narrow ill ventilated den, full of all unclean people and
+unpleasant smells. I say full of unclean people, but I allude merely to
+that portion of it which was appropriated to the British Public; for,
+exalted on a high bench and in a huge and ponderous chair or throne sat
+the Prince of Citizens and the King of the Corporation, proud in his
+dignity, grand in his commercial position, and highly esteemed in the
+opinion of the world. There he sat, the representative of the Criminal
+Law, and impartial, as all will allow, in its administration. Wonderful
+being is my Lord Mayor, thought I, he must have the Law at his fingers'
+ends. Yes, there it is sitting under him in the shape and person of his
+truly respectable clerk. The Common Law resides in the breasts of the
+Judges, but it is here at my Lord Mayor's fingers' ends. He has to deal
+with gigantic commercial frauds; with petty swindlers, common thieves;
+mighty combinations of conspirators; with extradition laws; with
+elaborate bankruptcy delinquencies; with the niceties of the criminal law
+in every form and shape. Surely, thought I, he should be one of those
+tremendous geniuses who can learn the criminal law before breakfast, or
+at least before dinner! So he was. His lordship seemed to have learned
+it one morning before he was awake. But it is not for me to criticise
+tribunals or men: I have the simple duty to perform of relating the story
+of the renowned Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+After the night charges are disposed of up comes the man through the
+floor, not Mr. Bumpkin, but Mr. Bumpkin's prisoner. He comes up through
+the floor like the imp in the pantomime: and then the two tall warders
+prevent his going any farther.
+
+He was a pale, intelligent looking creature, fairly dressed in frock
+coat, dark waistcoat and grey trousers, with a glove on his left hand and
+another in his right; looked meekly and modestly round, and then politely
+bowed to the Lord Mayor. The charge was then read to him and with a
+smile he indignantly repudiated the idea of theft.
+
+And I saw in my dream that he was represented by a learned Counsel, who
+at this moment entered the Court, shook hands with the Lord Mayor, and
+saying, "I appear, my lord, for the prisoner," took his seat upon the
+bench, and entered for a minute or so into some private and apparently
+jocular conversation with his Lordship.
+
+The name of the learned Counsel was Mr. Nimble, whom we have before seen.
+He was a very goodly-shaped man, with a thin face and brown hair. His
+eyes were bright, and always seemed to look into a witness rather than at
+him. His manner was jaunty, good-natured, easy, and gay; not remarkable
+for courtesy, but at the same time, not unpleasantly rude. I thought the
+learned Counsel could be disagreeable if he liked, but might be a very
+pleasant, sociable fellow to spend an hour with--not in the witness-box.
+
+He was certainly a skilful and far-seeing Counsel, if I may make so bold
+as to judge from this case. And methought that nothing he did or said
+was said or done without a purpose. Nor could I help thinking that a
+good many Counsel, young and old, if their minds were free from
+prejudice, might learn many lessons from this case. It is with this
+object that, in my waking moments, I record the impressions of this
+dream. I do not say Mr. Nimble was an example to follow on all points,
+for he had that common failing of humanity, a want of absolute
+perfection. But he was as near to perfection in defending a prisoner as
+any man I ever saw, and the proceedings in this very case, if carefully
+analysed, will go a long way towards proving that assertion.
+
+After the interchange of courtesies between his Lordship and Mr. Nimble,
+the learned Counsel looked down from the Bench on to the top of Mr.
+Keepimstraight's bald head and nodded as if he were patting it. Mr.
+Keepimstraight was the Lord Mayor's Clerk. He was very stout and seemed
+puffed up with law: had an immense regard for himself and consequently
+very little for anybody else: but that, so far as I have been able to
+ascertain, is a somewhat common failing among official personages. He
+ordered everybody about except the Lord Mayor, and him he seemed to push
+about as though he were wheeling him in a legal Bath-chair. His Lordship
+was indeed a great invalid in respect to matters of law; I think he had
+overdone it, if I may use the expression; his study must have been
+tremendous to have acquired a knowledge of the laws of England in so
+short a time. But being somewhat feeble, and in his modesty much
+misdoubting his own judgment, he did nothing and said nothing, except it
+was prescribed by his physician, Dr. Keepimstraight. Even the solicitors
+stood in awe of Dr. Keepimstraight.
+
+And now we are all going to begin--Walk up!
+
+The intelligent and decent-looking prisoner having been told what the
+charge against him was, namely, Highway Robbery with violence, declares
+that he is as "innercent as the unborn babe, your lordship:" and then Mr.
+Keepimstraight asks, where the Prosecutor is--"Prosecutor!" shout a dozen
+voices at once--all round, everywhere is the cry of "Prosecutor!" There
+was no answer, but in the midst of the unsavoury crowd there was seen to
+be a severe scuffle--whether it was a fight or a man in a fit could not
+be ascertained for some time; at length Mr. Bumpkin was observed
+struggling and tearing to escape from the throng.
+
+"Why don't you come when you are called?" asks the Junior Clerk, handing
+him the Testament, as Mr. Bumpkin stood revealed in the witness-box.
+
+And I saw that he was dressed in a light frock, not unlike a pinafore,
+which was tastefully wrought with divers patterns of needlework on the
+front and back thereof; at the openings thus embroidered could be seen a
+waistcoat of many stripes, that crossed and recrossed one another at
+various angles and were formed of several colours. He wore a high calico
+shirt collar, which on either side came close under the ear; and round
+his neck a red handkerchief with yellow ends. His linen certainly did
+credit to Mrs. Bumpkin's love of "tidiness," and altogether the
+prosecutor wore a clean and respectable appearance. His face was broad,
+round and red, indicating a jovial disposition and a temperament not
+easily disturbed, except when "whate" was down too low to sell and he
+wanted to buy stock or pay the rent: a state of circumstances which I
+believe has sometimes happened of late years. A white short-clipped
+beard covered his chin, while his cheeks were closely shaven. He had
+twinkling oval eyes, which I should say, he invariably half-closed when
+he was making a bargain. If you offered less than his price the first
+refusal would come from them. His nose was inexpressive and appeared to
+have been a dormant feature for many a year. It said nothing for or
+against any thing or any body, and from its tip sprouted a few white
+hairs. His mouth, without utterance, said plainly enough that he owed
+"nobody nothink" and was a thousand pound man every morning he rose. It
+was a mouth of good bore, and not by any means intended for a silver
+spoon.
+
+Such was the Prosecutor as he stood in the witness-box at the Mansion
+House on this memorable occasion; and no one could doubt that truth and
+justice would prevail.
+
+"Name?" said Mr. Keepimstraight.
+
+"Bumpkin."
+
+Down it goes.
+
+"Where?"
+
+After a pause, which Mr. Nimble makes a note of.
+
+"Where?" repeats Keepimstraight.
+
+"Westminister."
+
+"Where there?"
+
+"'Goose' publichouse."
+
+Down it goes.
+
+"Yes?" says Keepimstraight.
+
+Bumpkin stares.
+
+"Yes, go on," says the clerk.
+
+"Go on," says the crier; "go on," say half-a-dozen voices all round.
+
+"Can't you go on?" says the clerk.
+
+"Tell your story," says his Lordship, putting his arms on the elbows of
+the huge chair. "Tell it in your own way, my man."
+
+"I wur gwine down thic place when--" "my man" began.
+
+"What time was this?" asks the clerk.
+
+"Arf arter four, as near as I can tell."
+
+"How do you know?" asks the clerk.
+
+"I heard--"
+
+"I object," says the Counsel--"can't tell us what he heard."
+
+Then I perceived that the Lord Mayor leant forward towards Mr.
+Keepimstraight, and the latter gentleman turned his head and leaned
+towards the Lord Mayor, so that his Lordship could obtain a full view of
+Mr. Keepimstraight's eyes.
+
+Then I perceived that Mr. Keepimstraight winked his left eye and
+immediately turned to his work again, and his Lordship said:
+
+"I don't think what you heard, witness, is evidence."
+
+"Can't have that," said Mr. Keepimstraight, as though he took his
+instructions and the Law from his Lordship.
+
+"You said it was half-past four."
+
+"Heard the clock strike th' arf hour."
+
+Here his Lordship leant again forward and Mr. Keepimstraight turned round
+so as to bring his eyes into the same position as heretofore. And I
+perceived that Mr. Keepimstraight winked his right eye, upon which his
+Lordship said:
+
+"I think that's evidence."
+
+Clerk whispered, behind his hand, "Can hardly exclude that."
+
+"Can hardly exclude that," repeats his Lordship; then--turning to the
+Learned Counsel--"Can't shut that out, Mr. Nimble."
+
+"You seldom can shut a church clock out, my Lord," replies the Counsel.
+
+At this answer his Lordship smiled and the Court was convulsed with
+laughter for several minutes.
+
+"Now, then," said Mr. Keepimstraight, "we must have order in Court."
+
+"We must have order in Court," says his Lordship.
+
+"Order in Court," says the Junior Clerk, and "Order!" shouts the
+Policeman on duty.
+
+Then Mr. Bumpkin stated in clear and intelligible language how the man
+came up and took his watch and ran away. Foolishly enough he said
+nothing about the woman with the baby, and wisely enough Mr. Nimble asked
+nothing about it. But what an opportunity this would have been for an
+unskilful Counsel to lay the foundation for a conviction. Knowing, as he
+probably would from the prisoner but from no other possible source about
+the circumstance, he might have shown by a question or two that it was a
+conspiracy between the prisoner and the young woman. Not so Mr. Nimble,
+he knew how to make an investment of this circumstance for future profit:
+indeed Mr. Bumpkin had invested it for him by not mentioning it.
+Beautiful is Advocacy if you do not mar it by unskilful handling.
+
+When, after describing the robbery, the prosecutor continued:
+
+"I ses to my companion, ses I--"
+
+"I object," says Mr. Nimble.
+
+And I perceived that his Lordship leant forward once more towards Mr.
+Keepimstraight, and Mr. Keepimstraight turned as aforetime towards the
+Lord Mayor, but not quite, I thought, so fully round as heretofore; the
+motion seemed to be performed with less exactness than usual, and that
+probably was why the operation miscarried. Mr. Keepimstraight having
+given the correct signal, as he thought, and the Enginedriver on the
+Bench having misunderstood it, an accident naturally would have taken
+place but for the extreme caution and care of his Lordship, who, if he
+had been a young Enginedriver, would in all probability have dashed on
+neck or nothing through every obstacle. Not so his Lordship. Not being
+sure whether he was on the up or down line, he pulled up.
+
+Mr. Keepimstraight sat pen in hand looking at his paper, and waiting for
+the judicial voice which should convey to his ear the announcement that
+"I ses, ses I," is evidence or no evidence. Judge then of Mr.
+Keepimstraight's disappointment when, after waiting in breathless silence
+for some five minutes, he at last looks up and sees his Lordship in deep
+anxiety to catch his eye without the public observing it. His Lordship
+leant forward, blushing with innocence, and whispered something behind
+his hand to Mr. Keepimstraight. And in my dream I heard his Lordship
+ask:
+
+"_Which eye_?"
+
+To which Mr. Keepimstraight as coolly as if nothing had happened,
+whispered behind his hand:
+
+"_Left_!" and then coughed.
+
+"O then," exclaimed his Lordship, "it is clearly not evidence."
+
+"It's not evidence," repeated the clerk; and then to the discomfiture of
+Mr. Nimble, he went on, "You say you had a companion."
+
+This was more than the learned Counsel wanted, seeing as he did that
+there was another investment to be made if he could only manage it.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin blushed now, but said nothing.
+
+"Would you excuse me," said Mr. Nimble; "I shall not cross-examine this
+witness."
+
+"O, very good," says Keepimstraight, thinking probably it was to be a
+plea of guilty hereafter; "very good. Then I think that is all--is that
+the watch?"
+
+"It be," said the witness; "I ken swear to un."
+
+It certainly would be from no want of metal if Mr. Bumpkin could not
+identify the timepiece, for it was a ponderous-looking watch, nearly as
+large as a tea-saucer.
+
+Then said Mr. Nimble:
+
+"You say that is your watch, do you?"
+
+"It spakes for itself."
+
+"I don't think that's evidence," says Mr. Keepimstraight, with a smile.
+
+"That's clearly not evidence," says the Lord Mayor, gravely. Whereupon
+there was another burst of laughter, in which the clerk seemed to take
+the lead. The remarkable fact, however, was, that his Lordship was
+perfectly at a loss to comprehend the joke. He was "as grave as a
+Judge."
+
+After the laughter had subsided, the learned Keepimstraight leaned
+backward, and the learned Lord Mayor leaned forward, and it seemed to me
+they were conversing together about the cause of the laughter; for
+suddenly a smile illuminated the rubicund face of the cheery Lord Mayor,
+and at last he had a laugh to himself--a solo, after the band had ceased.
+And then his Lordship spoke:
+
+"What your watch may say is not evidence, because it has not been sworn."
+
+Then the band struck up again to a lively tune, his Lordship playing the
+first Fiddle; and the whole scene terminated in the most humorous and
+satisfactory manner for all parties--_except_, perhaps, the prisoner--who
+was duly committed for trial to the next sittings of the Central Criminal
+Court, which were to take place in a fortnight.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin naturally asked for his watch, but that request was smilingly
+refused.
+
+"Bin in our famly forty years," exclaimed the prisoner.
+
+"Will you be quiet?" said Mr. Nimble petulantly, for it was a foolish
+observation for the prisoner to make, inasmuch as, if Mr. Bumpkin had
+been represented by professional skill, the remark would surely be met at
+the trial with abundant evidence to disprove it. Mr. Bumpkin at present,
+however, has no professional skill.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Here something disturbed me, and I awoke. While preparing to enjoy my
+pipe as was my custom in these intervals, my wife remarked:
+
+"I do not approve of that Master O'Rapley by any means, with his
+cynicisms and sarcasms and round squares. Did ever anyone hear of such a
+contradiction?"
+
+"Have patience," quoth I, "and we shall see how worthy Master O'Rapley
+makes it out. I conjecture that he means the same thing that we hear of
+under the term, 'putting the round peg into the square hole.'"
+
+"But why should such a thing be done when it is easy surely to find a
+square peg that would fit?"
+
+"Granted; but the master-hand may be under obligations to the round peg;
+or the round peg may be a disagreeable peg, or a hundred things: one
+doesn't know. I am but a humble observer of human nature, and like not
+these ungracious cavillings at Master O'Rapley. Let us calmly follow
+this dream, and endeavour to profit by its lessons without finding fault
+with its actors."
+
+"But I would like to have a better explanation of that Round Square,
+nevertheless," muttered my wife as she went on with her knitting. So to
+appease her I discoursed as follows:--
+
+"The round square," said I, "means the inappropriate combination of
+opposites."
+
+"Now, not too long words," said she, "and not too much philosophy."
+
+"Very well, my dear," I continued; "Don O'Rapley is right, not in his
+particular instance, but in the general application of his meaning. Look
+around upon the world, or so much of it as is comprised within our own
+limited vision, and what do you find?"
+
+"I find everything," said my wife, "beautifully ordered and arranged,
+from the Archbishop of Canterbury to the Parish Beadle."
+
+"What do you find?" I repeated. "Mark the O'Rapley's knowledge of human
+nature, you not only find Waterloos won in the Cricket-field of Eton, but
+Bishopricks and Secretaryships and many other glorious victories; so that
+you might--"
+
+"Don't be foolish; Trafalgar was not won in the Cricket-field."
+
+"No, but it was fought on the Isis or the Cam, I forget which. But carry
+the O'Rapley's theory into daily life, and test it by common observation,
+what do you find? Why, that this round square is by no means a modern
+invention. It has been worked in all periods of our history. Here is a
+Vicar with a rich benefice, intended by nature for a Jockey or a
+Whipper-in--"
+
+"What, the benefice?"
+
+"No, the Vicar! Here is a barrister who ought to have been a curate, and
+become enthusiastic over worked slippers: there is another thrust into a
+Government appointment, not out of respect to him, the Minister doesn't
+know him, but to serve a political friend, or to place an investment in
+the hands of a political rival, who will return it with interest on a
+future day. The gentleman thus provided for at the country's expense
+would, if left to himself, have probably become an excellent
+billiard-marker or pigeon-shooter. Here is another, who, although a
+member of Parliament, was elected by no constituency under Heaven or
+above it; and it is clear he was intended by Nature for a position where
+obsequiousness and servility meet with their appropriate reward. Another
+fills the post of some awful Commissioner of something, drawing an
+immense salary, and doing an immense amount of mischief for it, intended
+naturally for a secretary to an Autocratic Nobleman, who would trample
+the rights of the people under foot. Here is another--"
+
+"O pray, my dear, do not let us have another--"
+
+"Only one more," said I; "here is another, thrust into the Cabinet for
+being so disagreeable a fellow, who ought to have been engaged in making
+fireworks for Crystal Palace fetes."
+
+"But this is only an opinion of yours; how do you know these gentlemen
+are not fitted for the posts they occupy? surely if they do the work--"
+
+"The public would have no right to grumble."
+
+"And as for obsequiousness and servility, I am afraid those are epithets
+too often unjustly applied to those gentlemen whose courteous demeanour
+wins them the respect of their superiors."
+
+"Quite so," said I; "and I don't see that it matters what is the
+distinguishing epithet you apply to them: this courteous demeanour or
+obsequiousness is no doubt the very best gift Nature can bestow upon an
+individual as an outfit for the voyage of life."
+
+"Dear me, you were complaining but just now of its placing men in
+positions for which they were not qualified."
+
+"Not complaining, my love; only remarking. I go in for obsequiousness,
+and trust I shall never be found wanting in that courteous demeanour
+towards my superiors which shall lead to my future profit."
+
+"But would you have men only courteous?"
+
+"By no means, I would have them talented also."
+
+"But in what proportion would you have the one to the other?"
+
+"I would have the same proportion maintained that exists between the
+rudder and the ship: you want just enough tact to steer your
+obsequiousness."
+
+Here again I dozed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+
+A comfortable evening at the Goose
+
+When Mr. Bumpkin left the Mansion House, he was in a state of great
+triumph not to say ecstasy: for it seemed to him that he had had
+everything his own way. He was not cross-examined; no witnesses were
+called, and it had only been stated by the prisoner himself, not proved,
+although he said he should prove it at the trial, that the watch had been
+in the family for upwards of forty years.
+
+"The biggest lie," muttered Master Bumpkin, "that ever wur told." And
+then he reasoned in this wise: "how could it a bin in his family forty
+year when he, Bumpkin, only lost it the day afore in the most barefaced
+manner? He was a pooty feller as couldn't tell a better story than
+thic."
+
+And then methought in my dream, "Ah, Bumpkin, thou may'st triumph now,
+but little dreamest thou what is in store for thee at the trial. Wait
+till all those little insignificant points, hardly visible at present,
+shall rise, like spear-heads against thee at the Old Bailey and thrust
+thee through and through and make thee curse the advocate's skill and the
+thief's impudence and the inertness of the so-called Public Prosecutor:
+and mayhap, I know not yet, show thee how wrong and robbery may triumph
+over right and innocence. Thou hast raised thyself, good Bumpkin, from
+the humblest poverty to comparative wealth and a lawsuit: but boast not
+overmuch lest thou find Law a taskmaster instead of a Protector!
+
+Thus, moralizing in my dream I perceived that Mr. Bumpkin after talking
+to some men betook himself to a Bus and proceeded on his way to the
+"Goose" at Westminster, whither he arrived in due time and in high
+spirits.
+
+The Goose was a nice cosy public-house, situated, as I before observed,
+near the river side and commanded a beautiful view of the neighbouring
+wharves and the passing craft. It was a favourite resort of waterside
+men, carters, carriers, labourers on the wharf and men out of work. The
+Military also patronized it:--And many were the jovial tales told around
+the taproom hearth by members of Her Majesty's troops to admiring and
+astonished Ignorance.
+
+It was a particularly cold and bleak day, this ninth of March one
+thousand eight hundred and something. The wind was due East and
+accompanied ever and anon with mighty thick clouds of sleet and snow.
+The fireside therefore was particularly comfortable, and the cheery faces
+around the hearth were pleasant to behold.
+
+Now Mr. Bumpkin, as the reader knows, was not alone in his expedition.
+He had his witness, named Joseph Wurzel: called in the village "Cocky,"
+inasmuch as it was generally considered that he set much by his wisdom:
+and was possessed of considerable attainments. For instance, he could
+snare a hare as well as any man in the county: or whistle down pheasants
+to partake of a Buckwheat refection which he was in the habit of
+spreading for their repast.
+
+A good many fellows who were envious of Joe's abilities avowed that "he
+was a regler cunnin' feller, as ud some day find out his mistake;"
+meaning thereby that Joe would inevitably be sent to prison. Others
+affirmed that he was a good deal too cunning for that; that he was a
+regular artful dodger, and knew how to get round the vicar and all in
+authority under him. The reader knows that he was a regular attendant at
+Church, and by that means was in high favour. Nor was his mother behind
+hand in this respect, especially in the weeks before Christmas; and truly
+her religion brought its reward even in this world in the shape of Parish
+Gifts.
+
+No doubt Joe was fond of the chase, but in this respect he but imitated
+his superiors, except that I believe he occasionally went beyond them in
+the means he employed.
+
+Assembled in this common room at the Goose on the night in question, were
+a number of persons of various callings and some of no calling in
+particular. Most of them were acquainted, and apparently regular
+customers. One man in particular became a great favourite with Joe, and
+that was Jacob Wideawake the Birdcatcher; and it was interesting to
+listen to his conversation on the means of catching and transforming the
+London Sparrow into an article of Commerce.
+
+Joe's dress no doubt attracted the attention of his companions when he
+first made his appearance, for it was something out of the ordinary
+style: and certainly one might say that great care had been bestowed upon
+him to render his personal appearance attractive in the witness-box. He
+wore a wideawake hat thrown back on his head, thus displaying his brown
+country-looking face to full advantage. His coat was a kind of dark
+velveteen which had probably seen better days in the Squire's family; so
+had the long drab waistcoat. His corduroy trousers, of a light green
+colour, were hitched up at the knees with a couple of straps as though he
+wore his garters outside. His neckerchief was a bright red, tied round
+his neck in a careless but not unpicturesque manner. Take him for all in
+all he was as fine a specimen of a country lad as one could wish to
+meet,--tall, well built, healthy looking, and even handsome.
+
+Now Mr. Bumpkin, being what is called "a close man," and prone to keep
+his own counsel on all occasions when it was not absolutely necessary to
+reveal it, had said nothing about his case before the Lord Mayor; not
+even Mrs. Oldtimes had he taken into his confidence. It is difficult to
+understand his motive for such secrecy, as it is impossible to trace in
+nine instances out of ten any particular line of human conduct to its
+source.
+
+Acting probably on some vague information that he had received, Mr.
+Bumpkin looked into the room, and told Joe that he thought they should be
+"on" to-morrow. He had learned the use of that legal term from frequent
+intercourse with Mr. Prigg. He thought they should be on but "wur not
+sartin."
+
+"Well," said Joe, "the sooner the better. I hates this ere hangin'
+about." At this Jack Outofwork, Tom Lazyman, and Bill Saunter laughed;
+while Dick Devilmecare said, "He hated hanging about too; it was wus than
+work."
+
+"And that's bad enough, Heaven knows," said Lazyman.
+
+Then I saw that at this moment entered a fine tall handsome soldier, who
+I afterwards learned was Sergeant Goodtale of the One Hundred and
+twenty-fourth Hussars. A smarter or more compact looking fellow it would
+be impossible to find: and he came in with such a genial, good-natured
+smile, that to look at him would almost make you believe there was no
+happiness or glory on this side the grave except in Her Majesty's
+service--especially the Hussars!
+
+I also perceived that fluttering from the side of Sergeant Goodtale's
+cap, placed carelessly and jauntily on the side of his head, was a bunch
+of streamers of the most fascinating red white and blue you ever could
+behold. Altogether, Sergeant Goodtale was a splendid sight. Down went
+his cane on the table with a crack, as much as to say "The Queen!" and he
+marched up to the fire and rubbed his hands: apparently taking no heed of
+any human being in the room.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin's heart leaped when he saw the military sight: his eyes
+opened as if he were waking from a dream out of which he had been
+disturbed by a cry of "fire:" and giving Joe a wink and an obviously
+made-up look, beckoned him out of the room. As they went out they met a
+young man, shabbily clad and apparently poorly fed. He had an
+intelligent face, though somewhat emaciated. He might be, and probably
+was, a clerk out of employment, and he threw himself on the seat in a
+listless manner that plainly said he was tired of everything.
+
+This was Harry Highlow. He had been brought up with ideas beyond his
+means. It was through no fault of his that he had not been taught a
+decent trade: those responsible for his training having been possessed of
+the notion that manual labour lowers one's respectability: an error and a
+wickedness which has been responsible for the ruin of many a promising
+youth before to-day.
+
+Harry was an intelligent, fairly educated youth, and nothing more. What
+is to be done with raw material so plentiful as that? The cheapest
+marketable commodity is an average education, especially in a country
+where even our Universities can supply you with candidates for employment
+at a cheaper rate than you can obtain the services of a first-class cook.
+This young man had tried everything that was genteel: he had even aspired
+to literature: sought employment on the Press, on the Stage, everywhere
+in fact where gentility seemed to reign. Nor do I think he lacked
+ability for any of these walks; it was not ability but opportunity that
+failed him.
+
+"Lookee ere, Joe," said Mr. Bumpkin; "harken to me. Don't thee 'ave nowt
+to say to that there soger."
+
+"All right, maister," said Joe, laughing; "thee thinks I be gwine for a
+soger. Now lookee ere, maister, I beant a fool."
+
+"No, thee beant, Joe. I knowed thee a good while, and thee beant no
+fool."
+
+Joe laughed. It was a big laugh was Joe's, for his mouth was somewhat
+large, and a grin always seemed to twist it. On this occasion, so great
+was his surprise that his master should think he would be fool enough to
+enlist for a "soger," that his mouth assumed the most irregular shape I
+ever saw, and bore a striking resemblance to a hole such as might be made
+in the head of a drum by the heel of a boot.
+
+"I be up to un, maister."
+
+"Have no truck wi' un, I tell ee; don't speak to un. Thee be my head
+witness, and doant dare goo away; no, no more un if--"
+
+"No fear," said Joe. "'Taint likely I be gwine to listen to ee. I knows
+what he wants; he's arter listin chaps."
+
+"Look ee ere, Joe, if ur speaks to thee, jist say I beant sich a fool as
+I looks; that'll ave un."
+
+"Right," says Joe; "I beant sich a fool as I looks; that'll ave un
+straight."
+
+"Now, take heed; I'm gwine into the parlour wi' Landlord."
+
+Accordingly, into the little quiet snuggery of Mr. Oldtimes, Mr. Bumpkin
+betook himself. And many and many an agreeable evening was passed with
+Mr. and Mrs. Oldtimes during the period when Mr. Bumpkin was waiting for
+his trial. For Mr. and Mrs. Oldtimes being Somersetshire people knew
+many inhabitants of the old days in the village of Yokelton, where Mr.
+Bumpkin "were bred and born'd."
+
+Meanwhile the "head witness" had returned to the cheerful scene in the
+taproom, and sat leering out of the corners of his eyes upon the
+Sergeant, as though he expected every moment that officer would make a
+spring at him and have him upon the floor. But the Sergeant was not a
+bullying, blustering sort of man at all; his demeanour was quiet in the
+extreme. He scarcely looked at anyone. Simply engaged in warming his
+hands at the cheerful fire, no one had cause to apprehend anything from
+him.
+
+But a man, Sergeant or no Sergeant, must, out of common civility,
+exchange a word now and then, if only about the weather; and so he said,
+carelessly,--
+
+"Sharp weather, lads!"
+
+Now, not even Joe could disagree with this; it was true, and was assented
+to by all; Joe silently acquiescing. After the Sergeant had warmed his
+hands and rubbed them sufficiently, he took off his cap and placed it on
+a little shelf or rack; and then took out a meerschaum pipe, which he
+exhibited without appearing to do so to the whole company. Then he
+filled it from his pouch, and rang the bell; and when the buxom young
+waitress appeared, he said,--
+
+"My dear, I think I'll have a nice rump steak and some onions, if you
+please."
+
+"Yes, sir," said the maid.
+
+Now I observed that two or three matters were noteworthy at this point.
+First, Joe's mouth so watered that he actually went to the fireplace and
+expectorated. Secondly, he was utterly amazed at the familiar manner in
+which the Sergeant was permitted to address this beautiful young person,
+who seemed to be quite a lady of quality. Thirdly, he was duly impressed
+and astounded with the luxurious appetite of this Sergeant of Hussars!
+
+Then the young woman came back and said,--"Would you like to have it in
+the parlour, sir?"
+
+"O no, my dear," said the Sergeant; "I would rather have it here. I hate
+being alone."
+
+As he said this, he slightly glanced at Dick Devilmecare. Dick,
+flattering himself that the observation was addressed particularly to
+him, observed that he also hated being alone.
+
+Then the Sergeant lighted his pipe; and I suppose there was not one in
+the company who did not think that tobacco particularly nice.
+
+Next, the Sergeant rang again, and once more the pretty maid appeared.
+
+"Lucy," said he, "while my steak is getting ready, I think I'll have
+three of whiskey hot, with a little lemon in it."
+
+At this there was an involuntary smacking of lips all round, although no
+one was conscious he had exhibited any emotion. The Sergeant was
+perfectly easy and indifferent to everything. He smoked, looked at the
+fire, sipped his grog, spread out his legs, folded his arms; then rose
+and turned his back to the fire, everyone thinking how thoroughly he
+enjoyed himself.
+
+"That smells very nice, Sergeant," said Harry.
+
+"Yes, it's very good," said the Sergeant; "it's some I got down at
+Yokelton, Somersetshire."
+
+Here Joe looked up; he hadn't been home for a week, and began to feel
+some interest in the old place, and everything belonging to it.
+
+"I comes from that ere place, Mr. Sergeant," said he.
+
+"Indeed, sir," said the Sergeant, in an off-hand manner.
+
+"Did thee buy un at a shop by the Pond, sir?"
+
+"That's it," replied the Sergeant, pointing with his pipe, "to the
+right."
+
+"The seame plaace," exclaimed Joe. "Why my sister lives there sarvant wi
+that ooman as keeps the shop."
+
+"Indeed!" said Sergeant Goodtale; "how very curious!"
+
+And Jack said, "What a rum thing!"
+
+And Bill said, "That is a rum thing!"
+
+And Harry said it was a strange coincidence. In short, they all agreed
+that it was the most remarkable circumstance that ever was.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+
+The subject continued.
+
+As soon as the conversation on the remarkable circumstance recorded in
+the last chapter had drifted into another subject no less remarkable, and
+the Sergeant had finished his pipe, the beautiful being appeared with the
+rump steak and onions, a snowy white cloth having been previously spread
+at the end of one of the tables. When all was ready, it looked as nice
+and appetizing as could well be conceived. The most indifferent man
+there seemed the Sergeant himself, who, instead of rushing to the chair
+provided for him, walked as coolly up to the table as though he were
+going into action. Then he took the knife, and seeing it had not quite
+so sharp an edge as he liked, gave it a touch or two on the stone hearth.
+
+The smell of that tobacco from Yokelton had been sweet; so had the
+perfume from the whiskey toddy and the lemon; but of all the delicious
+and soul-refreshing odours that ever titilated human nostrils, nothing
+surely could equal that which proceeded from the rump steak and onions.
+The fragrance of new mown hay, which Cowper has so beautifully mentioned,
+had palled on Joe's senses; but when would the fragrance of that dish
+pall on the hungry soul?
+
+The Sergeant took no notice of the hungry looks of the company; he was a
+soldier, and concentrated his mind upon the duties of the moment.
+Sentimentality was no part of his nature. He was a man, and must eat; he
+was a soldier, and must perform the work as a duty irrespective of
+consequences.
+
+"Do you mind my smoke?" asked Harry.
+
+"Oh dear, no," said the Sergeant; "I like it."
+
+Joe stared and watched every bit as the Sergeant cut it. He looked
+admiringly on the soldier and so lovingly at the steak, that it almost
+seemed as if he wished he could be cut into such delicious morsels and
+eaten by so happy a man. What thoughts passed through his mind no one
+but a dreamer could tell; and this is what I saw passing through the mind
+of Wurzel.
+
+"O, what a life! what grub! what jollyness! no turmut oeing; no
+dung-cart; no edgin and ditchin; no five o'clock in the mornin; no
+master; no bein sweared at; no up afore the magistrates; no ungriness;
+rump steaks and inguns; whiskey and water and bacca; if I didn't like
+that air Polly Sweetlove, danged if I wouldn't go for a soger to-morrer!"
+
+Then said Joe, very deferentially and as if he were afraid of being up
+afore the magistrate, "If you please, sir, med I have a bit o' that there
+bacca?"
+
+"Of course," said the Sergeant, tossing his pouch; "certainly; help
+yourself."
+
+Joe's heart was softened more and more towards the military, which he had
+hitherto regarded, from all he could hear, as a devil's own trap to catch
+Sabbath breakers and disobedient to parents.
+
+And methought, in my dream, I never saw men who were not partakers of a
+feast enjoy it more than the onlookers of that military repast.
+
+Then said Harry,--
+
+"Well, Sergeant, I'm well-nigh tired of my life, and I've come here to
+enlist."
+
+"Just wait a bit," said the Sergeant; "I'm not a man to do things in a
+hurry. I never allow a man to enlist, if I know it, in Her Majesty's
+service, honourable and jolly as it is, without asking him to think about
+it."
+
+"Hear, hear!" said Lazyman; "that's good, I likes that; don't be in a
+hurry, lad."
+
+"Hear, hear!" says Outofwork, "don't jump into a job too soon, yer medn't
+like it."
+
+"Hear, hear!" says the Boardman, "walk round a-bit."
+
+"But," said Harry, "I have considered it. I've just had education enough
+to prevent my getting a living, and not enough to make a man of me: I've
+tried everything and nobody wants me."
+
+"Then," said Sergeant Goodtale, "do you think the Queen only wants them
+that nobody else'll have. I can tell you that ain't the Queen of
+England's way. It might do for Rooshia or Germany, or them countries,
+but not for Old England. It's a free country. I think, lads, I'm
+right--"
+
+Here there was tremendous hammering on the table by way of assent and
+applause; amidst which Joe could be observed thumping his hard fist with
+as much vehemence as if he had got a County Magistrate's head under it.
+
+"This is a free country, sir," said the Sergeant, "no man here is
+kidnapped into the Army, which is a profession for men, not slaves."
+
+"I'm going to join," said Harry, "say what you like."
+
+"Wait till the morning;" said the Sergeant, "and meanwhile we'll have a
+song."
+
+At this moment Mr. Bumpkin put in an appearance; for although he had been
+enjoying himself with Mr. and Mrs. Oldtimes, he thought it prudent to
+have a peep and see how "thic Joe wur gettin on."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+
+Mr. Bumpkin sings a good old song--the Sergeant becomes quite a convivial
+companion and plays dominoes.
+
+The Sergeant, having finished his repast, again had recourse to his pipe,
+and was proceeding to light it when Mr. Bumpkin appeared in the room.
+
+"We be gwine to have a song, maister," said Joe.
+
+"Give us a song, governor," said half-a-dozen voices.
+
+"Ay, do, maister," says Joe; "thee sings a good un, I knows, for I ha
+eerd thee often enough at arvest oames: gie us a song, maister."
+
+Now if there was one thing Mr. Bumpkin thought he was really great at
+besides ploughing the straightest and levellest furrow, it was singing
+the longest and levellest song. He had been known to sing one, which,
+with its choruses, had lasted a full half hour, and then had broken down
+for lack of memory.
+
+On the present occasion he would have exhibited no reluctance, having had
+a glass or two in the Bar Parlour had he not possessed those misgivings
+about the Sergeant. He looked furtively at that officer as though it
+were better to give him no chance. Seeing, however, that he was smoking
+quietly, and almost in a forlorn manner by himself, his apprehensions
+became less oppressive.
+
+Invitations were repeated again and again, and with such friendly
+vehemence that resistance at last was out of the question.
+
+"I aint sung for a good while," said he, "but I wunt be disagreeable
+like, so here goes."
+
+But before he could start there was such a thundering on the tables that
+several minutes elapsed. At length there was sufficient silence to
+enable him to be heard.
+
+"This is Church and Crown, lads."
+
+ "Gie me the man as loves the Squire,
+ The Parson, and the Beak;
+ And labours twelve good hours a day
+ For thirteen bob a week!"
+
+"Hooroar! hooroar! hooroar!" shouted Lazyman. "What d'ye think 'o that?"
+
+"O, my eye," said Outofwork, "aint it jolly?"
+
+"Well done! bravo!" shrieked the Boardman. "I'll carry that ere man
+through the streets on my shoulders instead o' the boards, that I will.
+Bravo! he ought to be advertized--this style thirteen bob a week!"
+
+"Thirteen bob a week!" laughed Harry; "who'd go for a soldier with such a
+prospect. Can you give us a job, governor?"
+
+"Wait a bit, lads," said Mr. Bumpkin, "there be another werse and then a
+chorus."
+
+"Hooray!" they shouted, "a chorus! let's have the chorus--there ought to
+be a chorus--thirteen bob a week!"
+
+"Now, gentlemen, the chorus if you please," said Harry; "give it mouth,
+sir!"
+
+Then sang Bumpkin--
+
+ "O 'edgin, ditchin, that's the geaam,
+ All in the open air;
+ The poor man's health is all his wealth,
+ But wealth without a care!
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+ Then shout hurrah for Church and State
+ Though 'eretics may scoff,
+ The devil is our head Constable,
+ To take the willins off.
+
+ Give me the man that's poor and strong,
+ Hard working and content;
+ Who looks on onger as his lot,
+ In Heaven's wise purpose sent.
+ Who looks on riches as a snare
+ To ketch the worldly wise;
+ And good roast mutton as a dodge,
+ To blind rich people's eyes.
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+ Give me the man that labours hard
+ From mornin' until night,
+ And looks at errins as a treat
+ And bacon a delight.
+ O 'edgin, ditchin, diggin drains,
+ And emptyin pool and dyke,
+ It beats your galloppin to 'ounds,
+ Your ball-rooms and the like.
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+ Gi' me the man that loves the Squire
+ With all his might and main;
+ And with the taxes and the rates
+ As never racks his brain.
+ Who loves the Parson and the Beak
+ As Heaven born'd and sent,
+ And revels in that blessed balm
+ A hongry sweet content.
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+ Gie me the good Shaksperan man
+ As wants no other books,
+ But them as he no need to spell,
+ The ever runnin brooks:
+ As feeds the pigs and minds the flocks,
+ And rubs the orses down;
+ And like a regler lyal man,
+ Sticks up for Church and Crown."
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+At the termination of this pastoral song there was such a hullabaloo of
+laughter, such a yelling, thumping, and, I grieve to say, swearing, that
+Mr. Bumpkin wondered what on earth was the occasion of it. At the Rent
+dinner at the Squire's he had always sung it with great success; and the
+Squire himself had done him the honour to say it was the best song he had
+ever heard, while the Clergyman had assured him that the sentiments were
+so good that it ought to be played upon the organ when the people were
+coming out of church. And Farmer Grinddown, who was the largest
+gentleman farmer for miles around, had declared that if men would only
+act up to that it would be a happy country, and we should soon be able to
+defy America itself.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin, hearing such shouts of laughter, thought perhaps he might
+have a patch of black on his face, and put his hand up to feel. Then he
+looked about him to see if his dress was disarranged; but finding nothing
+amiss, he candidly told them he "couldn't zee what there wur to laugh at
+thic fashion."
+
+They all said it was a capital song, and wondered if he had any more of
+the same sort, and hoped he'd leave them a lock of his hair--and
+otherwise manifested tokens of enthusiastic approbation.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin, however, could not quite see their mirth in the same light,
+so he turned on his heel and, beckoning to Joe, left the room in high
+dudgeon, not to say disdain.
+
+"Mind Joe--no truck wi un."
+
+"Why, maister, he knows my sister."
+
+"Damn thee sister, Joe; it be a lie."
+
+"Be it? here's some o' the bacca he brought up from Okleton, I tell ee."
+
+"I tell thee, have nowt to do wi un; we shall be on t'morrer, we be tenth
+in the list."
+
+"Ay," said Joe, "we bin igher in list un thic, we bin as near as eight; I
+shall be mighty glad when it be over."
+
+"An get back to pigs, aye, Joe?"
+
+"Aye, maister."
+
+"Nothin like oame, Joe, be there?" and Mr. Bumpkin turned away.
+
+"No," said Joe; "no, maister, if so be" (and this was spoken to himself)
+"if so be you got a oame."
+
+Then I saw that Joe rejoined his companions, amongst whom a conversation
+was going on as to the merits of the song. Some said one thing and some
+another, but all condemned it as a regular toading to the Parson and the
+Squire: and as for the Beak, how any man could praise him whose only duty
+was to punish the common people, no one could see. The company were
+getting very comfortable. The Sergeant had called for another glass of
+that delectable grog whose very perfume seemed to inspire everyone with
+goodfellowship, and they all appeared to enjoy the Sergeant's liquor
+without tasting it.
+
+"What do you say to a game of dominoes?" said Harry.
+
+"They won't allow em ere," said Lazyman.
+
+"Won't they," answered Outofwork. "I'll warrant if the Sergeant likes to
+play there's no landlord'll stop him, ay, Sergeant?"
+
+"Well, I believe," said the Sergeant, "as one of the Queen's servants, I
+have the privilege of playing when I like."
+
+"Good," said Harry, "and I'll be a Queen's man too, so out with the
+shilling, Sergeant."
+
+"Wait till the morning," said the Sergeant.
+
+"No," said Harry. "I've had enough waiting. I'm on, give me the
+shilling."
+
+The Sergeant said, "Well, let me see, what height are you?" and he stood
+up beside him.
+
+"Ah!" he said, "I think I can get you in," saying which he gave him a
+shilling; such a bright coin, that it seemed to have come fresh from the
+Queen's hand.
+
+Then the Sergeant took out some beautiful bright ribbons which he was
+understood to say (but did _not_ say) the Queen had given him that
+morning. Then he rang the bell, and the buxom waitress appearing he
+asked for the favour of a needle and thread, which, the radiant damsel
+producing, with her own fair fingers she sewed the ribbons on to Harry's
+cap, smiling with admiration all the while. Even this little incident
+was not without its effect on the observant "head witness," and he felt
+an unaccountable fascination to have the same office performed by the
+same fair hands on his own hat.
+
+Then, without saying more, a box of dominoes was produced, and Joe soon
+found himself, he did not know how, the Sergeant's partner, while Lazyman
+and Outofwork were opposed to them.
+
+"Is it pooty good livin in your trade, Mr. Sergeant?" asked Joe.
+
+"Not bad," said the Sergeant; "that is five-one, I think"--referring to
+the play.
+
+"Rump steaks and ingons aint bad living," said Outofwork.
+
+"No," said the Sergeant, "and there's nothing I like better than a good
+thick mutton chop for breakfast--let me see, what's the game?"
+
+"Ah!" said Joe, smacking his lips, "mutton chops is the best thing out; I
+aint had one in my mouth, though, for a doocid long time; I likes em with
+plenty o' fat an gravy loike."
+
+"You see," said the Sergeant, "when you've been out for a two or three
+mile ride before breakfast in the fresh country air, a chap wants
+something good for breakfast, and a mutton chop's none too much for him."
+
+"No," answered Joe, "I could tackle three."
+
+"Yes," said Sergeant Goodtale, "but some are much larger than others."
+
+"So em be," agreed Joe.
+
+"What's the game," enquired the Sergeant.
+
+"Two-one," said Joe.
+
+"One's all," said the soldier.
+
+"I tell ee what," remarked Joe, "if I was going to list, there's no man
+as I'd liefer list wi than you, Mr. Sergeant."
+
+"Domino!" said the Sergeant, "that's one to us, partner!"
+
+Then they shuffled the dominoes and commenced again. But at this moment
+the full figure of Mr. Bumpkin again stood in the doorway.
+
+"Joe!" he exclaimed angrily, "I want thee, come ere thirecly, I tell ee!"
+
+"Yes, maister; I be comin."
+
+"You stoopid fool!" said Mr. Bumpkin in a whisper, as Joe went up to him,
+"thee be playin with thic feller."
+
+"Well, maister, if I be; what then?" Joe said this somewhat angrily, and
+Mr. Bumpkin replied:--
+
+"He'll ha thee, Joe--he'll ha thee!"
+
+"Nay, nay, maister; I be too old in the tooth for he; but it beant thy
+business, maister."
+
+"No," said Bumpkin, as he turned away, "it beant."
+
+Then Joe resumed his play. Now it happened that as the Sergeant smacked
+his lips when he took his occasional sip of the fragrant grog, expressive
+of the highest relish, it awakened a great curiosity in Wurzel's mind as
+to its particular flavour. The glass was never far from his nose and he
+had long enjoyed the extremely tempting odour. At last, as he was not
+invited to drink by Sergeant Goodtale, he could contain himself no
+longer, but made so bold as to say:--
+
+"Pardner, med I jist taste this ere? I never did taste sich a thing."
+
+"Certainly, partner," said the Sergeant, pushing the tumbler, which was
+about three-parts full. "What's the game now?"
+
+"Ten-one," said Outofwork.
+
+"One's all, then," said the Sergeant.
+
+Joe took the tumbler, and after looking into it for a second or two as
+though he were mentally apostrophizing it, placed the glass to his lips.
+
+"Don't be afraid," said the Sergeant.
+
+No one seemed more courageous than Wurzel, in respect of the act with
+which he was engaged, and before he took the glass from his lips its
+contents had disappeared.
+
+"I'm mighty glad thee spoke, Maister Sergeant, for if thee hadn't I
+should a drunk un all wirout thy leave. I never tasted sich tackle in my
+life; it's enough to make a man gie up everything for sogering."
+
+"Domino!" said the Sergeant. "I think that's the game!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"My dear," said my wife, "you have been talking again in your sleep."
+
+"Really," said I, "I hope I have not compromised myself."
+
+"I do not understand you," cried she.
+
+"No more do I, for I am hardly awake."
+
+"You have been talking of Joe Wurzel again."
+
+"O, to be sure. What about him?"
+
+"Then you mentioned Mr. Outofwork and Mr. Lazyman and Mr. Devilmecare,
+and another whose name I did not catch."
+
+"Ah," I asked, "did they go for soldiers?"
+
+"At present, no, except Harry, for whom I was heartily sorry, he seemed
+such a nice disappointed lad. But pray who is this Sergeant Goodtale?"
+
+"He is on recruiting service, a very fine, persuasive fellow."
+
+"But he didn't seem to press these people or use any arts to entice them:
+I like him for that. He rather seemed to me to discourage them from
+enlisting. He might have been sure poor Harry meant it, because, as I
+take it, he was half-starved, and yet he desired him to wait till the
+morning."
+
+"I think," said I, "his conduct was artful if you examine it with
+reference to its effect on the others; but he is an extraordinary man,
+this Sergeant Goodtale--was never known to persuade any one to enlist, I
+believe."
+
+"But he seemed to get along very well."
+
+"Very; I thought he got along very comfortably."
+
+"Then there was one Lucy Prettyface!"
+
+"Ah, I don't remember her," cried I, alarmed lest I might have said
+anything in my dream for which I was not responsible.
+
+"Why she was the girl who sewed the colours on and somebody called 'my
+dear.'"
+
+"I assure you," I said, "it was not I: it must have been the Sergeant;
+but I have no recollection--O yes, to be sure, she was the waitress."
+
+"You remember her now?"
+
+"Well," said I, determined not to yield if I could possibly help it, "I
+can't say that I do. I know there was a person who sewed colours on and
+whom the Sergeant called 'my dear,' but further than that I should not
+like to pledge myself. Yes--yes--to be sure," and here I went on
+talking, as it were, to myself, for I find it is much better to talk to
+yourself if you find it difficult to carry on a conversation with other
+persons.
+
+"She was pretty, wasn't she?" said my wife with an arch look.
+
+I gave her a look just as arch, as I replied,
+
+"Really I hardly looked at her; but I should say _not_." I make a point
+of never saying any one is pretty.
+
+"Joe thought her so."
+
+"Did he? Well she may have been, but I never went in for Beauty myself."
+
+"You shocking man," said my wife, "do you perceive what you are saying?"
+
+"Why, of course; but you take me up so sharply: if you had not cut me off
+in the flower of my speech you would have been gratified at the finish of
+my sentence. I was going to say, I never went in for Beauty, but once.
+That, I think, gives the sentence a pretty turn."
+
+"Well, now, I think these dreams and this talking in your sleep indicate
+that you require a change; what do you say to Bournemouth?"
+
+"You think I shall sleep better there?"
+
+"I think it will do you good."
+
+"Then we'll go to Bournemouth," cried I, "for I understand it's a very
+dreamy place."
+
+"But I should like to know what becomes of this action of Mr. Bumpkin,
+and how all his people get on? You may depend upon it that Sergeant will
+enlist those other men."
+
+"I do not know," I remarked, "what is in the future."
+
+"But surely you know what you intend. You can make your characters do
+anything."
+
+"Indeed not," I said. "They will have their own way whether I write
+their history or any one else."
+
+"That Sergeant Goodtale will have every one of them, my dear; you mark my
+words. He's the most artful man I ever heard of."
+
+Of course I could offer no contradiction to this statement as I was not
+in the secrets of the future. How the matter will work out depends upon
+a variety of circumstances over which I have not the least control. For
+instance, if Bill were to take the shilling, I believe Dick would follow:
+and if the Sergeant were to sing a good song he might catch the rest.
+But who can tell?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+
+Joe electrifies the company and surprises the reader.
+
+"Suppose we have another song," said Sergeant Goodtale.
+
+"And spoase we has some moore o' that there stuff," answered Joe.
+
+"Aye," said Harry, "we will too. I'll spend my shilling like a man."
+
+Saying which he rang the bell and ordered a glass for himself and one for
+Joe.
+
+"Now, then," said the latter, "I can't sing, but I'll gie thee summut as
+I larned."
+
+"Hooray!" said Harry, "summut as he larned!"
+
+"Bravo!" said the Boardman, "summut as he larned?"
+
+"Here's at un," said Joe.
+
+And then with a mighty provincialism he repeated without a break:--
+
+
+
+DR. BRIMSTONE'S SERMON,
+AS PUT INTO VERSE BY GAFFER DITCHER.
+
+
+ I bin to Church, I ha', my boy,
+ And now conwarted be;
+ The last time I wur ever there
+ War eighteen farty-three!
+
+ And 'ow I knows it is as this,
+ I didn't goo to pray,
+ Nor 'ear the Word, but went becorse
+ It wur my weddin day!
+
+ Zounds! wot a blessed sarmon twur
+ I 'eeard the Sabbath morn;
+ 'Ow I a woful sinner wur
+ Or ever I wur born.
+
+ You sees them wilful igorant pigs
+ In mud a wollorin;
+ Well, like them pigs, but ten times wus,
+ We wollers in our sin.
+
+ We're coated o'er wi' sinful mud,--
+ A dreadful sight we be;
+ And yet we doant despise ourselves--
+ For why?--We doant zee!
+
+ I thinks I had yer there, my boy,
+ For all your sniggerin' jeers;
+ Thee're in t' mud, I tell 'ee, lad,
+ Rightoover 'ed an' ears.
+
+ Zounds! what a orful thing it be
+ That love should blind us so!
+ Why, them there bloomin rosy cheeks
+ Be ony masks o' woe!
+
+ The reddest on 'em thee could kiss
+ Aint 'ardly wuth the pains;
+ At best it's but the husk o' bliss,
+ It's nuther wuts nor banes.
+
+ There aint a pleasure you can name,
+ From coourtin down to skittles,
+ But wot there's mischief in the same,
+ Like pisen in your wittles.
+
+ The Reverend Brimstone says, "Beloved,
+ Be allays meek an umble;
+ A saint should never ax for moor,
+ An never larn to grumble."
+
+ We ain't to tork o' polleticks
+ An' things as don't consarn us,
+ And wot we wornts to know o' lor
+ The madgistret will larn us.
+
+ We ain't to drink wi' Methodists,
+ No, not a friendly soop;
+ We ain't to tork o' genteel folks
+ Onless to praise un oop.
+
+ We ain't to 'ear a blessed word
+ Agin our betters said;
+ We're got to lay the butter thick
+ Becorse they're sich 'igh bred!
+
+ We got to say "Ha! look at he!
+ A gemman tooth and nail!"
+ You morn't say, "What a harse he'd be
+ If he'd a got a tail!"
+
+ For why? becorse these monied gents
+ Ha' got sich birth an' breedin';
+ An' down we got to 'old our 'eads,
+ Like cattle, when they're feedin'.
+
+ The parson put it kindly like--
+ He sed, says he, as 'ow
+ We're bean't so good as them there grubs
+ We turns up wi' the plow.
+
+ There's nowt more wretcheder an we,
+ Or worthier an the rich,
+ I praises 'em for bein' born,
+ An' 'eaven for makin' sich.
+
+ So wile we be, I daily stares
+ That earthquakes doan't fall,
+ An' swaller up this unconwinced
+ Owdashus earthly ball!
+
+ An' wen I thinks of all our sins--
+ Lay down, says I, my boys,
+ We're fittin' only for manoor,
+ So don't let's make a noise.
+
+ Let's spred us out upon the ground
+ An' make the turmuts grow,
+ It's all we're good for in this world
+ O' wickedness an' woe!
+
+ And yet we're 'llow'd to brethe the air
+ The same as gents from town;
+ And 'llow'd to black their 'appy boots,
+ And rub their 'orses down!
+
+ To think o' blessins sich as these,
+ Is like ongrateful lust;
+ It stuffs us oop wi' worldly pride,
+ As if our 'arts would bust!
+
+ But no, we're 'umble got to be,
+ Though privileged so 'igh:
+ Why doan't we feed on grass or grains,
+ Or leastways 'umbly die!
+
+ We got to keep our wicked tongue
+ From disrespeckful speakin',
+ We han't a got to eat too much,
+ Nor yet goo pleasure seekin'.
+
+ Nor kitch a rabbit or a aire,
+ Nor call the Bobby names,
+ Nor stand about, but goo to church,
+ And play no idle games:
+
+ To love paroshial orficers,
+ The squire, and all that's his,
+ And never goo wi' idle chaps
+ As wants their wages riz.
+
+ So now conwarted I ha' bin
+ From igorance and wice;
+ It's only 'appiness that's sin,
+ And norty things that's nice!
+
+ Whereas I called them upstart gents
+ The wust o' low bred snobs,
+ Wi' contrite 'art I hollers out
+ "My heye, wot bloomin' nobs!"
+
+ I sees the error o' my ways,
+ So, lads, this warnin' take,
+ The Poor Man's path, the parson says,
+ Winds round the Burnin' Lake.
+
+ They've changed it since the days o' yore,
+ Them Gospel preachers, drat un;
+ They used to preach it to the poor,
+ An' now they preach it _at_ un.
+
+Every one was amazed at the astonishing memory of this country lad: and
+the applause that greeted the reciter might well be calculated to awaken
+his latent vanity. It was like being called before the curtain after the
+first act by a young actor on his first appearance. And I believe every
+one understood the meaning of the verses, which seemed to imply that the
+hungry prodigal, famishing for food, was fed with husks instead of grain.
+Contentment with wretchedness is not good preaching, and this was one
+lesson of Dr. Brimstone's sermon. As soon as Harry could make himself
+heard amidst the general hubbub, which usually follows a great
+performance, he said:--
+
+"Now, look here, lads, it's all very well to be converted with such
+preaching as that; but it's my belie it's more calculated to make
+hypocrites than Christians."
+
+"Hear! hear!" said Lazyman. "That _is_ right." Anything but conversion
+for Lazyman.
+
+"Now," continued Harry, "I've heard that kind of preaching a hundred
+times: it's a regular old-fashioned country sermon; and, as for the poor
+being so near hell, I put it in these four lines."
+
+"Hear, hear!" cried the company; "order!"
+
+And they prepared themselves for what was to come with as great eagerness
+as, I venture to say, would always be shown to catch the text, if it came
+at the end, instead of the beginning, of a sermon.
+
+"Shut up," says Lazyman; "let's 'ear this 'ere. I knows it's summut good
+by the look an him."
+
+"Don't make a row," retorts the Boardman; "who can hear anything while
+you keeps on like that?"
+
+And there they stood, actually suspending the operation of smoking as
+they waited the summing up of this remarkably orthodox "preaching of the
+word." The sergeant only was a spectator of the scene, and much amused
+did he seem at the faces that prepared for a grin or a sneer as the
+forthcoming utterance should demand. Then said Harry solemnly and
+dramatically:--
+
+ "In WANT full many a vice is born,
+ And Virtue in a DINNER;
+ A well-spread board makes many a SAINT,
+ And HUNGER many a sinner."
+
+From the explosion which followed this antidote to Mr. Brimstone's
+sermon, I should judge that the more part of the company believed that
+Poverty was almost as ample a virtue as Charity itself. They shook their
+heads in token of assent; they thumped the table in recognition of the
+soundness of the teaching; and several uttered an exclamation not to be
+committed to paper, as an earnest of their admiration for the ability of
+Mr. Highlow, who, instead of being a private soldier, ought, in their
+judgment, to be Lord Mayor of London. After this recital every one said
+he thought Mr. Highlow might oblige them.
+
+"Well, I'm no singer," said Harry.
+
+"Try, Harry!" exclaimed Lazyman: he was a rare one to advise other people
+to try.
+
+"Trying to sing when you can't," answered Harry, "I should think is a rum
+sort of business; but I'll tell you what I'll do if you like. When I was
+down at Hearne Bay I heard an old fisherman tell a story which--"
+
+"That's it!" thumped out Joe, "a story. I likes a good story, specially
+if there be a goast in it."
+
+"I don't know what there is in it," said Harry, "I'll leave you to make
+that out; but I tell you what I did when I heard it, I made a ballad of
+it, and so if you like I'll try and recollect it."
+
+"Bravo!" they said, and Harry gave them the following
+
+
+
+SONG OF THE WAVES.
+
+
+ Far away on the pebbly beach
+ That echoes the sound of the surge;
+ As if they were gifted with speech,
+ The breakers will sing you a dirge.
+
+ The fishermen list to it oft,
+ And love the sweet charm of its spell,
+ For sometimes it wispers so soft,
+ It seems but the voice of the shell.
+
+ It tells of a beautiful child
+ That used to come down there and play,
+ And shout to the surges so wild
+ That burst on the brink of the bay.
+
+ She was but a child of the poor,
+ Whose father had perished at sea;
+ 'Twas strange, that sweet psalm of the shore,
+ Whatever the story might be!
+
+ Yes, strange, but so true in its tone
+ That no one could listen and doubt;
+ The heart must be calm and alone
+ To search its deep mystery out.
+
+ She came with a smaller than she
+ That toddled along at her side;
+ Now ran to and fled from the sea,
+ Now paddled its feet in the tide.
+
+ Afar o'er the waters so wild,
+ Grazed Effie with wondering eye;
+ What mystery grew on the child
+ In all that bright circle of sky?
+
+ Her father--how sweet was the thought!
+ Was linked with this childish delight;
+ 'Twas strange what a vision it brought--
+ As though he still lingered in sight.
+
+ Was it Heaven so near, so remote,
+ Across the blue line of the wave?
+ 'Twas thither he sailed in his boat,
+ 'Twas there he went down in his grave!
+
+ So the days and the hours flew along,
+ Like swallows that skim o'er the flood;
+ Like the sound of a beautiful song,
+ That echoes and dies in the wood!
+
+ One day as they strayed on the strand,
+ And played with the shingle and shell,
+ A boat that just touched on the land
+ Was playfully rocked by the swell.
+
+ O childhood, what joy in a ride!
+ What eagerness beams in their eyes!
+ What bliss as they climb o'er the side
+ And shout as they tumble and rise!
+
+ O sea, with thy pitiful dirge,
+ Thou need'st to be mournful and moan!
+ The wrath of thy terrible surge
+ Omnipotence curbs it alone!
+
+ The boat bore away from the shore,
+ The laughter of childhood so glad!
+ And the breakers bring back ever more
+ The dirge with its echo so sad!
+
+ A widow sits mute on the beach,
+ And ever the tides as they flow,
+ As if they were gifted with speech,
+ Repeat the sad tale of her woe!
+
+"That's werry good," said the Boardman. "I'm afraid them there children
+was washed away--it's a terrible dangerous coast that ere Ern Bay. I've
+'eeard my father speak on it."
+
+"Them there werses is rippin'!" said Joe.
+
+"Stunnin'!" exclaimed Bob.
+
+And so they all agreed that it was a pretty song and "well put together."
+
+"Capital," said the sergeant, "I never heard anything better, and as for
+Mr. Wurzel, a man with his memory ought to do something better than feed
+pigs."
+
+"Ay, aye," said the company to a man.
+
+"Why don't you follow my example?" said Harry; "it's the finest life in
+the world for a young fellow."
+
+"Well," said the sergeant, "that all depends; its very good for some, for
+others not so good--although there are very few who are not pleased when
+they once join, especially in such a regiment as ours!"
+
+"And would you mind telling me, sir," asked Outofwork, "what sort of
+chaps it don't suit?"
+
+"Well, you see, chaps that have been brought up in the country and tied
+to their mothers' apron strings all their life: they have such soft
+hearts, they are almost sure to cry--and a crying soldier is a poor
+affair. I wouldn't enlist a chap of that sort, no, not if he gave me ten
+pounds. Now, for instance, if Mr. Wurzel was to ask my advice about
+being a soldier I should say 'don't!'"
+
+"Why not, sir?" asked Joe; "how's that there, then? D'ye think I be
+afeard?"
+
+"I should say, go home first, my boy, and ask your mother!"
+
+"I be d---d if I be sich a molly-coddle as that, nuther; and I'll prove
+un, Mr. Sergeant; gie me thic bright shillin' and I be your man."
+
+"No," said the sergeant, "think it over, and come to me in a month's
+time, if your mother will let you. I don't want men that will let their
+masters buy them off the next day."
+
+"No; an lookee here, Maister Sergeant; I bean't to be bought off like
+thic, nuther. If I goes, I goes for good an' all."
+
+"Well, then," said the sergeant, shaking him by the hand, and pressing
+into it the bright shilling, "if you insist on joining, you shall not say
+I prevented you: my business is not to prevent men from entering Her
+Majesty's service."
+
+Then the ribbons were brought out, and Joe asked if the young woman might
+sew them on as she had done Harry's; and when she came in, Joe looked at
+her, and tried to put on a military bearing, in imitation of his great
+prototype; and actually went so far as to address her as "My dear," for
+which liberty he almost expected a slap in the face. But Lucy only
+smiled graciously, and said: "Bravo, Mr. Wurzel! Bravo, sir; I've seen
+many a man inlisted, and sewed the Queen's colours on for him, but never
+for a smarter or a finer fellow, there!" and she skipped from the room.
+
+"Well done!" said several voices. And the sergeant said:
+
+"What do you think of that, Mr. Wurzel? I'll back she's never said that
+to a soldier before."
+
+Joe turned his hat about and drew the ribbons through his fingers, as
+pleased as a child with a new toy, and as proud as if he had helped to
+win a great battle.
+
+Here I awoke.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+
+The Sergeant makes a loyal speech and sings a song, both of which are
+well received by the company.
+
+And when I got to Bournemouth I dreamed again; and a singular thing
+during this history was, that always in my dream I began where I had left
+off on the previous night. So I saw that there, in the room at "The
+Goose," were Sergeant Goodtale, and Harry, and Joe, and the rest, just as
+I had left them when I last awoke. But methought there was an air of
+swagger on the part of the head witness which I had not observed
+previously. His hat was placed on one side, in imitation of the
+sergeant's natty cap, and he seemed already to hold up his head in a
+highly military manner; and when he stooped down to get a light he tried
+to stoop in the same graceful and military style as the sergeant himself;
+and after blowing it out, threw down the spill in the most off-hand
+manner possible, as though he said, "That's how we chaps do it in the
+Hussars!" Everyone noticed the difference in the manner and bearing of
+the young recruit. There was a certain swagger and boldness of demeanour
+that only comes after you have enlisted. Nor was this change confined to
+outward appearance alone. What now were pigs in the mind of Joe? Merely
+the producers of pork chops for breakfast. What was Dobbin that slowly
+dragged the plough compared to the charger that Joe was destined to
+bestride? And what about Polly Sweetlove and her saucy looks? Perhaps
+she'd be rather sorry now that she did not receive with more favour his
+many attentions. Such were the thoughts that passed through the lad's
+mind as he gradually awakened to a sense of his new position. One
+thought, however, strange to say, did not occur to him, and that was as
+to what his poor old mother would think. Dutiful son as Joe had always
+been, (though wild in some respects), he had not given her a single
+thought. But his reflections, no doubt, were transient and confused amid
+the companions by whom he was surrounded.
+
+"You'll make a fine soldier," said the Boardman, as he saw him swagger
+across to his seat.
+
+"Yes," said the sergeant, "any man that has got it in him, and is steady,
+and doesn't eat too much and drink too much, may get on in the army. It
+isn't like it used to be."
+
+"I believe that," said Bob Lazyman.
+
+"The only thing," continued the sergeant, "is, there is really so little
+to do--there's not work enough."
+
+"That ud suit me," said Bob.
+
+"Ah! but stop," added the sergeant, "the temptations are great--what with
+the girls--."
+
+"Hooray!" exclaimed Dick; "that beats all--I likes them better than
+mutton chops."
+
+"Yes," replied the sergeant; "they are all very well in their way; but
+you know, if a man wants to rise in the army, he must be steady."
+
+"Steady, boys! stea--dy!" shouted Dick
+
+I don't know how far the sergeant was justified, morally, in thus holding
+out the prospect of riotous living to these hungry men, but I think, all
+things considered, it was an improvement on the old system of the
+pressgang, which forced men into the navy. These lads were not bound to
+believe the recruiting sergeant, and were not obliged to enter into a
+contract with Her Majesty. At the same time, the alluring prospects were
+such that if they had been represented as facts in the commercial
+transactions of life, such is the purity of the law that they would have
+given rise to much pleading, multifarious points reserved, innumerable
+summonses at Chambers, and, at least, one new trial.
+
+"Now," said Jack Outofwork, "I tell yer what it is--I don't take no
+Queen's shilling, for why? it ain't the Queen's--it belongs to the
+people--I'm for a republic."
+
+'"Well," said the sergeant, "I always like to meet a chap that calls
+himself a republican, and I'll tell you why. This country is a republic,
+say what you like, and is presided over by our gracious Queen. And I
+should like to ask any man in this country--now, just listen, lads, for
+this is the real question, whether--"
+
+"Now, order," said Lazyman, "I never 'eerd nothing put better."
+
+"Let's have order, gentlemen," said Harry; "chair! chair!"
+
+"All 'tention, sergeant," said Dick.
+
+"I say," continued the sergeant; "let us suppose we got a republic
+to-morrow; well, we should want a head, or as they say, a president."
+
+"That's good," said half-a-dozen voices.
+
+"Well, what then?" said the sergeant; "Who would you choose? Why, the
+Queen, to be sure."
+
+Everybody said "The Queen!" And there was such a thumping on the table
+that all further discourse was prevented for several minutes. At last
+everyone said it was good, and the sergeant had put it straight.
+
+"Well, look'ee 'ere, lads--I was born among the poor and I don't owe
+nothing to the upper classes, not even a grudge!"
+
+"Hear! hear! Bravo, Mr. Sergeant!" cried all.
+
+"Well, then; I've got on so far as well as I can, and I'm satisfied; but
+I'll tell you what I believe our Queen to be--a thorough woman, and loves
+her people, especially the poor, so much that d---d if I wouldn't die for
+her any day--now what d'ye think o' that?"
+
+Everybody thought he was a capital fellow.
+
+"Look, here," he continued, "it isn't because she wears a gold crown, or
+anything of that sort, nor because a word of her's could make me a field
+marshal, or a duke, or anything o' that sort, nor because she's rich, but
+I'll tell you why it is--and it's this--when we're fighting we don't
+fight for her except as the Queen, and the Queen means the country."
+
+"Hear! hear! hear! hear!"
+
+"Well, we fight for the country--but she loves the soldiers as though
+they were not the country's but her own flesh and blood, and comes to see
+'em in the hospital like a mother, and talks to 'em the same as I do to
+you, and comforts 'em, and prays for 'em, and acts like the real mother
+of her people--that's why I'd die for her, and not because she's the
+Queen of England only."
+
+"Bravo!" said Joe. "Hope I shall soon see her in th' 'orsepittal. It be
+out 'ere: beant it St. Thomas's."
+
+"I hope you won't, my brave lad," said the sergeant; "but don't tell me
+about republicanism when we've got such a good Queen; it's a shame and a
+disgrace to mention it."
+
+"So it be," said Joe; "I'm darned if I wouldn't knock a feller into the
+middle o' next week as talked like thic. Hooroar for the Queen!"
+
+"And now I'm going to say another thing," continued the sergeant, who
+really waxed warm with his subject, and struck admiration into his
+audience by his manner of delivery: may I say that to my mind he was even
+eloquent, and ought to have been a sergeant-at-law, only that the country
+would have been the loser by it: and the country, to my mind, has the
+first right to the services of every citizen. "Just look," said the
+sergeant, "at the kindness of that--what shall I call her? blessed!--yes,
+blessed Princess of Wales! Was there ever such a woman? Talk about Jael
+in the Bible being blessed above women--why I don't set no value upon
+her; she put a spike through a feller it's true, but it was precious
+cowardly; but the Princess, she goes here and goes there visiting the
+sick and poor and homeless, not like a princess, but like a real woman,
+and that's why the people love her. No man despises a toady more than I
+do--I'd give him up to the tender mercies of that wife of Heber the
+Keenite any day; but if the Princess was to say to me, 'Look 'ere,
+Sergeant, I feel a little low, and should like some nice little
+excitement just to keep up my spirits and cheer me up a bit'" (several of
+them thought this style of conversation was a familiar habit with the
+Princess and Sergeant Goodtale, and that he must be immensely popular
+with the Royal Family), "well, if she was to say, 'Look here, Sergeant
+Goodtale, here's a precipice, it ud do me good to see you leap off that,'
+I should just take off my coat and tuck up my shirt sleeves, and away I
+should go."
+
+At such unheard of heroism and loyalty there was a general exclamation of
+enthusiasm, and no one in that company could tell whom he at that moment
+most admired, the Princess or the Sergeant.
+
+"That's a stunner!" said Joe.
+
+"Princess by name and Princess by nature," replied the sergeant; "and now
+look'ee here, in proof of what I say, I'm going to give you a toast."
+
+"Hear, hear," said everybody.
+
+"But stop a minute," said the sergeant, "I'm not a man of words without
+deeds. Have we got anything to drink to the toast?"
+
+All looked in their respective cups and every one said, "No, not a drop!"
+
+Then said the sergeant "We'll have one all rounded for the last. You'll
+find me as good as my word. What's it to be before we part?"
+
+"Can't beat this 'ere," said Joe, looking into the sergeant's empty
+glass.
+
+"So say all of us," exclaimed Harry.
+
+"That's it," said all.
+
+"And a song from the sergeant," added Devilmecare.
+
+"Ay, lads, I'll give you a song."
+
+Then came in the pretty maid whom Joe leered at, and the sergeant winked
+at; and then came in tumblers of the military beverage, and then the
+sergeant said:
+
+"In all companies this is drunk upstanding, and with hats off, except
+soldiers, whose privilege it is to keep them on. You need not take yours
+off, Mr. Wurzel; you are one of Her Majesty's Hussars. Now then all say
+after me: 'Our gracious Queen; long may she live and blessed be her
+reign--the mother and friend of her people!'"
+
+The enthusiasm was loud and general, and the toast was drunk with as
+hearty a relish as ever it was at Lord Mayor's Banquet.
+
+"And now," said the sergeant, "once more before we part--"
+
+"Ah! but the song?" said the Boardman.
+
+"Oh yes, I keep my word. A man, unless he's a man of his word, ought
+never to wear Her Majesty's uniform!" And then he said:
+
+"The Prince and Princess of Wales and the rest of the Royal Family."
+
+This also was responded to in the same unequivocal manner; and then amid
+calls of "the sergeant," that officer, after getting his voice in tune,
+sang the following song:
+
+
+
+GOD BLESS OUR DEAR PRINCESS.
+
+
+ There's not a grief the heart can bear
+ But love can soothe its pain;
+ There's not a sorrow or a care
+ It smiles upon in vain.
+ And _She_ sends forth its brightest rays
+ Where darkest woes depress,
+ Where long wept Suffering silent prays--
+ God save our dear Princess!
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+ She soothes the breaking heart,
+ She comforts in distress;
+ She acts true woman's noblest part.
+ God save our dear Princess
+ She bringeth hope to weary lives
+ So worn by hopeless toil;
+ E'en Sorrow's drooping form revives
+ Beneath her loving smile.
+ Where helpless Age reluctant seeks
+ Its refuge from distress,
+ E'en there _Her_ name the prayer bespeaks
+ God save our dear Princess!
+
+ It's not in rank or princely show
+ True _Manhood's_ heart to win;
+ 'Tis Love's sweet sympathetic glow
+ That makes all hearts akin.
+ Though frequent storms the State must stir
+ While Freedom we possess,
+ Our hearts may all beat true to Her,
+ Our own beloved Princess.
+
+ The violet gives its sweet perfume
+ Unconscious of its worth;
+ So Love unfolds her sacred bloom
+ And hallows sinful earth;
+ May God her gentle life prolong
+ And all her pathway bless;
+ Be this the nation's fervent song--
+ God save our dear Princess!
+
+Although the language of a song may not always be intelligible to the
+unlettered hearer, the spirit and sentiment are; especially when it
+appeals to the emotions through the charms of music. The sergeant had a
+musical voice capable of deep pathos; and as the note of a bird or the
+cry of an animal in distress is always distinguishable from every other
+sound, so the pathos of poetry finds its way where its words are not
+always accurately understood. It was very observable, and much I thought
+to the sergeant's great power as a singer, that the first chorus was sung
+with a tone which seemed to imply that the audience was feeling its way:
+the second was given with more enthusiasm and vehemence: the third was
+thumped upon the table as though a drum were required to give full effect
+to the feelings of the company; while the fourth was shouted with such
+heartiness that mere singing seemed useless, and it developed into loud
+hurrahs, repeated again and again; and emphasized by the twirling of
+hats, the clapping of hands, and stamping of feet.
+
+"What d'ye think o' that?" says the Boardman.
+
+"I'm on," said Lazyman; "give me the shilling, sergeant, if you please?"
+
+"So'm I," said Saunter.
+
+"Hooroar!" shouted the stentorian voice that had erstwhile charmed the
+audience with Brimstone's sermon.
+
+"Bravo!" said Harry.
+
+"Look'ee here," said Jack Outofwork, "we've had a werry pleasant evenin'
+together, and I ain't goin' to part like this 'ere; no more walkin' about
+looking arter jobs for me, I'm your man, sergeant."
+
+"Well," said the sergeant, eyeing his company, "I didn't expect this; a
+pluckier lot o' chaps I never see; and I'm sure when the Queen sees you
+it'll be the proudest moment of her life. Why, how tall do you stand,
+Mr. Lazyman?"
+
+"Six foot one," said he.
+
+"Ha," said the Sergeant, "I thought so. And you, Mr. Outofwork?"
+
+"I don't rightly know," said Jack.
+
+"Well," said the sergeant, "just stand up by the side of me--ha, that
+will do," he added, pretending to take an accurate survey, "I think I can
+squeeze you in--it will be a tight fit though."
+
+"I hope you can, Mr. Sergeant," said he.
+
+"Look 'ere," laughed Joe; "We'll kitch 'old of his legs and give him a
+stretch, won't us, Sergeant?"
+
+And so the bright shillings were given, and the pretty maid's services
+were again called in; and she said "she never see sich a lot o' plucky
+fellows in her born days;" and all were about to depart when, as the
+sergeant was shaking hands with Dick Devilmecare in the most pathetic and
+friendly manner, as though he were parting from a brother whom he had not
+met for years, Devilmecare's eyes filled with tears, and he exclaimed,
+
+"Danged if I'll be left out of it, sergeant; give me the shillin'?"
+
+At this moment the portly figure of Mr. Bumpkin again appeared in the
+doorway!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+
+The famous Don O'Rapley and Mr. Bumpkin spend a social evening at the
+"Goose."
+
+When Mr. Bumpkin, on this memorable evening, went into Mrs. Oldtimes'
+parlour to console himself after the fatigues and troubles of the day
+there were a cheerful fire and a comfortable meal prepared for him. Mr.
+O'Rapley had promised to spend the evening with him, so that they might
+talk over the business of the day and the prospects of the coming trial.
+It was a very singular coincidence, and one that tended to cement the
+friendship of these two gentlemen, that their tastes both inclined to
+gin-and-water. And this very house, as appeared from a notice on the
+outside, was the "noted house for Foolman's celebrated gin."
+
+But as yet Mr. O'Rapley had not arrived; so after his meal Mr. Bumpkin
+looked into the other room to see how Joe was getting on, for he was
+extremely anxious to keep his "head witness" straight. "Joe was his
+mainstay."
+
+I have already related what took place, and the song that Bumpkin sang.
+The statement of the head witness that he was all right, and that he was
+up to Mr. Sergeant, to a great extent reassured Mr. Bumpkin: although he
+felt, keen man that he was, that that soldier was there for the purpose
+of "ketchin what young men he could to make sogers on 'em; he had 'eerd
+o' sich things afore:" such were his thoughts as Mr. O'Rapley entered the
+apartment.
+
+"Dear me, Mr. Bumpkin," said that official, "how very cold it is! how are
+you, Mrs. Oldtimes? I haven't seen you for an age."
+
+The Don always made that observation when strangers were present.
+
+"Hope you're quite well, sir," said the landlady, with much humility.
+
+"What'll thee please to take, sir?" asked Bumpkin.
+
+"Well, now, I daresay you'll think me remarkable strange, Mr. Bumpkin,
+but I'm going to say something which I very very seldom indulge in, but
+it's good, I believe, for indigestion. I will take a little--just a very
+small quantity--of gin, with some hot water, and a large lump of sugar,
+to destroy the alcohol."
+
+"Ha!" said the knowing Bumpkin; "that's wot we call gin-and-water in our
+part of the country. So'll I, Mrs. Oldtimes, but not too much hot water
+for I. What'll thee smoke, sir?"
+
+"Thank you, one of those cheroots that my lord praised so much the last
+time we was 'ere."
+
+"If you please, sir," said the landlady, with a very good-natured smile.
+
+"Well," said the O'Rapley, in his patronizing manner; "and how have we
+got on to-day? let us hear all about it. Come, your good health, Mr.
+Bumkin, and success to our lawsuit. I call it _ours_ now, for I really
+feel as interested in it as you do yourself; by-the-bye, what's it all
+about, Mr. Bumpkin?"
+
+"Well, sir, you see," replied the astute man, "I hardly knows; it beginnd
+about a pig, but what it's about now, be more un I can tell thee. I
+think it be salt and trespass."
+
+"You have not enquired?"
+
+"No, I beant; I left un all in the hands o' my lawyer, and I believe he's
+a goodun, bean't he?"
+
+"Let me see; O dear, yes, a capital man--a very good man indeed, a close
+shaver."
+
+"Is ur? and that's what I want. I wants thic feller shaved as close to
+his chin as may be."
+
+"Ah!" said O'Rapley, "and Prigg will shave him, and no mistake. Well,
+and how did we get on at the Mansion House? First of all, who was
+against you?--Mrs. Oldtimes, I _think_ I'll just take a very small
+quantity more, it has quite removed my indigestion--who was against you,
+sir?"
+
+"Mr. Nimble; but, lor, he worn't nowhere; I had un to rights,--jest gi'e
+me a leetle more, missus,--he couldn't axe I a question I couldn't
+answer; and I believe he said as good, for I zeed un talking to the Lord
+Mayor; it worn't no use to question I."
+
+"You didn't say anything about me?"
+
+"No," answered Bumpkin, in a loud whisper; "I din't; but I did say afore
+I could stop the word from comin' out o' my mouth as I had a _companion_,
+but they didn't ketch it, except that the gentleman under the lord mayor
+were gwine to ax about thee, and blowed if the counsellor didn't stop un;
+so that be all right."
+
+"Capital!" exclaimed the great bowler, waving his arm as if in the act of
+delivery; then, in a whisper, "Did they ask about the woman?"
+
+"Noa--they doan't know nowt about thic--not a word; I was mighty plased
+at un, for although, as thee be aware, it be the biggest lie as ever wur
+heard, I wouldn't have my wife hear o' sich to save my life. She be a
+good wife to I an' allays have a bin; but there I thee could clear me in
+a minute, if need be, sir."
+
+"Yes, but you see," said the artful Don, "if I was to appear, it would
+make a sensational case of it in a minute and fill all the papers."
+
+"Would ur now? Morn't do that nuther; but, wot d'ye think, sir? As I
+wur leavin' the Cooart, a gemman comes up and he says, says he, 'I
+spoase, sir, you don't want this thing put in the papers?' How the dooce
+he knowed that, I can't make out, onless that I wouldn't say where I
+lived, for the sake o' Nancy; no, nor thee couldn't ha' dragged un out o'
+me wi' horses."
+
+"Yes?" said the Don, interrogatively.
+
+"'Well,' says I, 'no, I don't partickler want it in.' I thought I'd say
+that, don't thee zee (with a wink), 'cos he shouldn't think I were eager
+like."
+
+"Exactly,"
+
+"Well, this 'ere gemman says, says he, 'It don't matter to me, sir,
+whether it's in or not, but if thee don't want it in, I'll keep it out,
+that's all. It will pay I better p'raps to put un in.'
+
+"'And who med thee be, sir?' I axed.
+
+"'Only the _Times_', said the gemman, 'that's all.' Then, turning to his
+friend, he said, 'Come on, Jack, the gemman wants it in, so we'll have it
+in, every word, and where he comes from too, and all about the gal; we
+know all about it, don't us, Jack?'"
+
+"Ha!" said the O'Rapley, blowing out a large cloud, and fixing his eye on
+the middle stump.
+
+"Well," continued Bumpkin, "thee could ha' knocked I down wi' a feather.
+How the doose they knowed where I comed from I can't make out; but here
+wur I as cloase to the man as writes the _Times_ as I be to thee."
+
+The O'Rapley nodded his head knowingly several times.
+
+"'Well, and how much do thee charge to keep un out?' seys I. 'Don't be
+too hard upon me, I be only a poor man.'
+
+"'We have only one charge,' says the _Times_, 'and that is half a
+guinea.'
+
+"'Spoase we say seven and six,' sess I.
+
+"'That,' seys the _Times_, 'wouldn't keep your name out, and I suppose
+you don't want that in?' 'Very well,' I sess, takin' out my leather bag
+and handin' him the money; 'this'll keep un out, wool ur?'
+
+"'Sartainly,' says he; and then his friend Jack says, 'My fee be five
+shillings, sir.' 'And who be thee?' says I. 'I'm the _Telegrarf_,' seys
+he. 'The devil thee be?' I sess, 'I've eerd tell on ee.' 'Largest
+calculation in the world,' he says; 'and, if thee like,' he says, 'I can
+take the _Daily Noos_ and _Stanard_ money, for I don't see 'em here jist
+now; it'll be five shillings apiece.'
+
+"'Well,' I sess, 'this be rum business, this; if I takes a quantity like
+this, can't it be done a little cheaper?'
+
+"'No,' he says; 'we stands too high for anything o' that sort. Thee can
+'ave it or leave it.'
+
+"'Very well,' I sess; 'then, if there's no option, there's the money.'
+And with that I handed un the fifteen shillings.
+
+"'Then,' says the _Times_, 'we'd better look sharp, Jack, or else we
+shan't be in time to keep it out.' And wi' that they hurried off as fast
+as they could. I will say't they didn't let the grass grow under their
+feet."
+
+"And why," enquired the Don, with an amused smile, "were you so anxious
+to keep it out of the _Times_? Mrs. Bumpkin doesn't read the _Times_,
+does she?"
+
+"Why, no; but then the Squoire tak it in, and when eve done wi un he
+lends un to the Doctor, Mr. Gossip; and when he gets hold o' anything,
+away it goes to the Parish Clerk, Mr. Jeerum, and then thee med as well
+hire the town crier at once."
+
+"I see; but if you'll excuse me, Mr. Bumpkin, I will give you a bit of
+information that may be of service."
+
+"Thankee, sir; will thee jist tak a little more to wet the tother eye
+like."
+
+"Well, really," replied O'Rapley, "it is long past my hour of nocturnal
+repose."
+
+"What, sir? I doant ondustand."
+
+"I mean to say that I generally hook it off to bed before this."
+
+"Zackly; but we'll 'ave another. Your leave, sir, thee was going to tell
+I zummat."
+
+"O yes," said Mr. O'Rapley, with a wave of the hand in imitation of the
+Lord Chief Justice. "I was going to say that those two men were a couple
+of rogues."
+
+Mr. Bumpkin paused in the act of passing the tumbler to his lips, like
+one who feels he has been artfully taken in.
+
+"You've been done, sir!" said Mr. O'Rapley emphatically, "that man who
+said he was the _Times_ was no more the _Times_ than you're _Punch_."
+
+"Nor thic _Telegrarf_ feller!"
+
+"No. And you could prosecute them. And I'll tell you what you could
+prosecute them for." Mr. Bumpkin looked almost stupified.
+
+"I'll tell you what these villains have been guilty of; they've been
+guilty of obtaining money by false pretences, and conspiring to obtain
+money by false pretences."
+
+"Have um?" said Bumpkin.
+
+"And you can prosecute them. You've only got to go and put the matter in
+the hands of the police, and then go to some first-rate solicitor who
+attends police courts; now I can recommend you one that will do you
+justice. I should like to see these rascals well punished."
+
+"And will this fust-rate attorney do un for nothin'?"
+
+"Why, hardly; any more than you would sell him a pig for nothing."
+
+"Then I shan't prosekit," said Mr. Bumpkin; "the devil's in't, I be no
+sooner out o' one thing than I be into another--why I beant out o' thic
+watch job yet, for I got to 'pear at the Old Bailey on the
+twenty-fourth."
+
+"O, committed for trial, was he?" exclaimed the Don.
+
+"Sure wur ur," said Mr. Bumpkin triumphantly--"guilty!"
+
+Now I perceived that the wily Mr. O'Rapley did not recommend Bumpkin to
+obtain the services of a solicitor to conduct his prosecution in this
+case; and I apprehend for this reason, that the said solicitor being
+conscientious, would unquestionably recommend and insist that Mr.
+Bumpkin's evidence at the Old Bailey should be supported by that of the
+Don himself. So Mr. Bumpkin was left to the tender mercies of the Public
+Prosecutor or a criminal tout, or the most inexperienced of "soup"
+instructed counsel, as the case might be, but of which matters at present
+I have no knowledge as I have no dreams of the future.
+
+Then Mr. Bumpkin said, "By thy leave, worthy Mr. O'Rapley, I will just
+see what my head witness be about: he be a sharp lad enow, but wants a
+dale o' lookin arter."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+
+Don O'Rapley expresses his views of the policy of the legislature in not
+permitting dominoes to be played in public houses.
+
+When Mr. Bumpkin returned to the cosy parlour, his face was red and his
+teeth were set. He was so much agitated indeed, that instead of
+addressing Mr. O'Rapley, he spoke to Mrs. Oldtimes, as though in her
+female tenderness he might find a more sincere and sympathetic adviser.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin was never what you would call an eloquent or fluent speaker:
+his Somersetshire brogue was at times difficult of comprehension. He
+certainly was not fluent when he said to Mrs. Oldtimes: "Why
+thic--there--damn un Mrs. Oldtimes if he beant gwine and never zeed zich
+a thing in my bornd days--"
+
+"Why what ever in the name of goodness gracious is the matter?" asked the
+landlady.
+
+"Why thic there head witness o' mine: a silly-brained--Gor forgive me
+that iver I should spake so o' un, for he wor allays a good chap; and I
+do b'leeve he've got moore sense than do any thing o' that kind."
+
+"What's the matter? what's the matter?" again enquired Mrs. Oldtimes.
+
+"Why he be playin' dominoes wi thic Sergeant."
+
+"O," said the landlady, "I was afraid something had happened. We're not
+allowed to know anything about dominoes or card-playing in our house--the
+Law forbids our knowing it, Mr. Bumpkin; so, if you please, we will not
+talk about it--I wish to conduct my house as it always has been for the
+last five-and-twenty years, in peace and quietness and respectability,
+Mr. Bumpkin, which nobody can never say to the contrairy. It was only
+the last licensing day Mr. Twiddletwaddle, the chairman of the Bench,
+said as it were the best conducted house in Westminster."
+
+Now whether it was that the report of this domino playing was made in the
+presence of so high a dignitary of the law as Mr. O'Rapley, or from any
+other cause, I cannot say, but Mrs. Oldtimes was really indignant, and
+positively refused to accept any statement which involved the character
+of her establishment.
+
+"I think," she continued, addressing Mr. O'Rapley, "you have known this
+house for some time, sir."
+
+"I have," said O'Rapley. "I have passed it every evening for the last
+ten years."
+
+"Ah now, to be sure--you hear that, Mr. Bumpkin. What do you think of
+that?"
+
+"Never saw anything wrong, I will say that."
+
+"Never a game in my house, if I knows it; and what's more, I won't
+believe it until I sees it."
+
+"Ockelar demonstration, that's the law," said the Don.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin's excitement was absolutely merged in that of the landlady,
+whom he had so innocently provoked. He stared as the parties continued
+their wordy justification of this well-ruled household like one dreaming
+with his eyes open. No woman could have made more ado about her own
+character than Mrs. Oldtimes did respecting that of her house. But then,
+the one could be estimated in money, while the other possessed but an
+abstract value.
+
+"I believe," she repeated, "that cards or dominoes has never been played
+in my house since here I've been, or since the law has been what it is."
+
+"I be wery sorry," said the penitent Bumpkin; "I warn't aweare I wur
+doing anythin' wrong."
+
+"It's unlawful, you see, to play," said the Don; "and consequently they
+dursn't play. Now, why is it unlawful? Because Public Houses is for
+drinking, not for amusement. Now, sir, Drink is the largest tax-payer
+we've got--therefore Drink's an important Industry. Set people to work
+drinking and you get a good Rewenue, which keeps up the Army and
+Navy--the Navy swims in liquor, sir--but let these here Perducers of the
+Rewenue pause for the sake o' playing dominoes, or what not, and what's
+the consequence? You check this important industry--therefore don't by
+any manner of means interrupt drinking. It's an agreeable ockepation and
+a paying one."
+
+"Well done, sir," said Oldtimes, from the corner of the fireplace, where
+he was doing his best with only one mouth and one constitution to keep up
+the Army and Navy. A patriotic man was Oldtimes.
+
+"Drink," continued O'Rapley, "is the most powerful horgsilery the
+Government has."
+
+"Ah!" said Mr. Bumpkin, not knowing what a horgsilery was; "now thee've
+gone a-head o' me, sir. Thee're a larned man, Mr. O'Rapley, and I beant
+much of a schollard; will thee please to tell I what a horgs--what wur
+it?"
+
+"Horgsilery," said Mr. O'Rapley.
+
+"Horsgilly--ah! so twur. Well, by thy leave, worthy sir, will thee be so
+kind as to tell I be it anything like a hogshead?"
+
+"Well," said Mr. O'Rapley, "its more like a corkscrew: the taxes of the
+country would be bottled up as tight as champagne and you couldn't get
+'em out without this corkscrew."
+
+"But I worn't spakin' about taxes when I spak of dominoes; what I wur
+alludin' to wur thic Joe been drawed in to goo for a soger."
+
+"Lor, bless you," said Mrs. Oldtimes, "many a man as good as Joe have
+listed before now and will again."
+
+"Mayhap," said Bumpkin; "but he wurn't my 'ead witness and didn't work
+for I. Joe be my right hand man, although I keeps un down and tells un
+he beant fit for nothin'."
+
+"Ha," said the Don, "he's not likely to go for a soldier, I think, if
+it's that good-looking young chap I saw with the kicking-straps on."
+
+"Kickin'-straps," said Bumpkin; "haw! haw! haw! That be a good un. Well
+he told I he wur up to un and I think ur be: he'll be a clever feller if
+ur gets our Joe. Why Nancy ud goo amost out o' her mind. And now, sir,
+will thee 'ave any moore?"
+
+Mr. O'Rapley, in the most decisive but polite manner, refused. He had
+quite gone out of his way as it was in the hope of serving Mr. Bumpkin.
+He was sure that the thief would be convicted, and as he rose to depart
+seized his friend's hand in the most affectionate manner. Anything he
+could do for him he was sure he would do cheerfully, at any amount of
+self-sacrifice--he would get up in the night to serve him.
+
+"Thankee," said Bumpkin; but he had hardly spoken when he was startled by
+the most uproarious cheers from the taproom. And then he began again
+about the folly of young men getting into the company of recruiting
+sergeants.
+
+"Look here," said the Don, confidentially, "take my advice--say
+nothing--a still tongue makes a wise head; to persuade a man not to enter
+the army is tantamount to advising him to desert. If you don't mind, you
+may lay yourself open to a prosecution."
+
+"Zounds!" exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin, "it seem to me a man in Lunnon be every
+minit liable to a prosecution for zummat. I hope sayin' that beant
+contempt o' Coourt, sir."
+
+Mr. O'Rapley was silent--his head drooped towards Mr. Bumpkin in a
+semi-conscious manner, and he nodded three consecutive times: called for
+another "seroot," lit it after many efforts, and again assuring Mr.
+Bumpkin that he would do all he could towards facilitating his triumph
+over Snooks, was about to depart, when his friend asked him,
+confidentially, whether he had not better be at the Old Bailey when the
+trial came on, in case of its being necessary to call him.
+
+"Shurel not!" hiccupped the Don. Then he pointed his finger, and leering
+at Bumpkin, repeated, "Shurel not;--jus swell cll Ch. Jussiself"--which
+being interpreted meant, "Certainly not, you might just as well call the
+Chief Justice himself."
+
+"Pr'aps he'll try un?" said Bumpkin.
+
+"Noer won't--noer won't: Chansy Juge mos likel Massr Rolls."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+
+In spite of all warnings, Joe takes his own part, not to be persuaded on
+one side or the other--affecting scene between Mr. Bumpkin and his old
+servant.
+
+"Whatever can that there shoutin' be for, Mrs. Oldtimes--they be terrible
+noisy."
+
+"O," said the landlady, "somebody else has listed."
+
+"I hope it beant that silly Joe. I warned un two or three times agin
+thic feller."
+
+"There have been several to-night," said the landlady, who had scarcely
+yet recovered from the insinuations against the character of her house.
+
+"How does thee know thic, my dear lady?"
+
+"O, because Miss Prettyface have been in and out sewin' the colours on
+all the evening, that's all. Sergeant Goodtale be the best recrootin'
+sergeant ever come into a town--he'd list his own father!"
+
+"Would ur, now?" said Bumpkin. "Beant thee afeard o' thy husband bein'
+took?"
+
+Mrs. Oldtimes shrieked with laughter, and said she wished he would list
+Tom, for he wasn't any good except to sit in the chimney corner and smoke
+and drink from morning to night.
+
+"And keep up th' Army," growled the husband
+
+"Ha, keep up the Army, indeed," said Mrs. Oldtimes; "you do your share in
+that way, I grant."
+
+Now it was quite manifest that that last cheer from the taproom was the
+herald of the company's departure. There was a great scuffling and
+stamping of feet as of a general clearing out, and many "good nights."
+Then the big manly voice of the Sergeant said: "Nine o'clock, lads; nine
+o'clock; don't oversleep yourselves; we shall have chops at eight. What
+d'ye say to that, Mrs. Oldtimes?"
+
+"As you please, Sergeant; but there's a nice piece of ham, if any would
+like that."
+
+"Ha!" said the Sergeant; "now, how many would like ham?"
+
+"I'se for a chop," said Joe, working his mouth as if he would get it in
+training.
+
+"Right," said the Sergeant, "we'll see about breakfast in the morning.
+But you know, Mrs. Oldtimes, we like to start with a good foundation."
+
+And with three cheers for the Sergeant the recruits left the house: all
+except Joe, who occupied his old room.
+
+After they were gone, and while Mr. Bumpkin was confidentially conversing
+with the landlord in the chimney corner, he was suddenly aroused by the
+indomitable Joe bursting into the room and performing a kind of dance or
+jig, the streamers, meanwhile, in his hat, flowing and flaunting in the
+most audaciously military manner.
+
+"Halloa! halloa! zounds! What be th' meaning o' all this? Why, Joe!
+Joe! thee's never done it, lad! O dear! dear!"
+
+There were the colours as plain as possible in Joe's hat, and there was a
+wild unmeaning look in his eyes. It seemed already as if the old
+intimacy between him and his master were at an end. His memory was more
+a thing of the future than the past: he recollected the mutton chops that
+were to come. And I verily believe it was brightened by the dawn of new
+hopes and aspirations. There was an awakening sense of individuality.
+Hitherto he had been the property of another: he had now exercised the
+right of ownership over himself; and although that act had transferred
+him to another master, it had seemed to give him temporary freedom, and
+to have conferred upon him a new existence.
+
+Man is, I suppose, what his mind is, and Joe's mind was as completely
+changed as if he had been born into a different sphere. The moth comes
+out of the grub, the gay Hussar out of the dull ploughman.
+
+"Why, Joe, Joe," said his old master. "Thee's never gone an' listed, has
+thee, Joe?"
+
+"Lookee 'ere, maister," said the recruit, taking off his hat and
+spreading out the colours--"Thee sees these here, maister?"
+
+"Thee beant such a fool, Joe, I knows thee beant--thee's been well
+brought oop--and I knows thee beant gwine to leave I and goo for a
+soger!"
+
+"I be listed, maister."
+
+"Never!" exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin. "I wunt b'lieve it, Joe."
+
+"Then thee must do tother thing, maister. I tellee I be listed; now,
+what's thee think o' that?"
+
+"That thee be a fool," said Mr. Bumpkin, angrily; "thee be a
+silly-brained--."
+
+"Stop a bit, maister, no moore o' that. I beant thy sarvant now. I be a
+Queen's man--I be in the Queen's sarvice."
+
+"A pooty Queen's man thee be, surely. Why look at thic hair all down
+over thy face, and thee be as red as a poppy."
+
+Now I perceived that although neither master nor man was in such a state
+as could be described as "intoxicated," yet both were in that
+semi-beatific condition which may be called sentimental.
+
+"Lookee 'ere, maister," continued Joe.
+
+"And lookee here," said Mr. Bumpkin, "didn't I come out to thee two or
+three times, and call thee out and tell 'ee to tak' heed to thic soger
+feller, for he wur up to no good? Did I Joe, or did I not?"
+
+"Thee did, maister."
+
+"Well, an' now look where thee be; he've regler took thee in, thee silly
+fool."
+
+"No, he beant; for he wouldn't 'ave I at fust, and told I to goo and ax
+my mither. No ses I, I'll goo to the divil afore I be gwine to ax
+mither. I beant a child, I ses."
+
+"But thee's fond o' thy poor old mither, Joe; I knows thee be, and sends
+her a shillin' a week out o' thy wages; don't thee, Joe?"
+
+This was an awkward thrust, and pricked the lad in his most sensitive
+part. His under-lip drooped, his mouth twitched, and his eyes glistened.
+He was silent.
+
+"Where'll thy poor old mither get a shilling a week from noo, Joe?
+That's what I wants to know."
+
+Joe drew his sleeve over his face, but bore up bravely withal. _He_
+wasn't going to cry, not he.
+
+"Thee beest a silly feller to leave a good ooame and nine shillin' a week
+to goo a sogerin; and when thee was out o' work, there were allays a
+place for thee, Joe, at the fireside: now, warnt there, Joe?"
+
+"Lookee 'ere, maister, I be for betterin' myself."
+
+"Betterin' thyself? who put that into thy silly pate? thic sergeant, I
+bleeve."
+
+"So ur did; not by anything ur said, but to see un wi beef steaks and
+ingons for supper, while I doan't 'ave a mouthful o' mate once a week,
+and work like a oarse."
+
+"Poor silly feller--O dear, dear! whatever wool I tell Nancy and thy poor
+mither. What redgimen be thee in, Joe?"
+
+"Hooroars!"
+
+"Hooroars! hoo-devils!" and I perceived that Mr. Bumpkin's eyes began to
+glisten as he more and more realized the fact that Joe was no more to
+him--"thee manest the oosors, thee silly feller; a pooty oosor thee'll
+make!"
+
+"I tellee what," said Joe, whose pride was now touched, "Maister Sergeant
+said I wur the finest made chap he ever see."
+
+"That's ow ur gulled thee, Joe."
+
+"Noa didn't; I went o' my own free will. No man should persuade I--trust
+Joe for thic: couldn't persuade I to goo, nor yet not to goo."
+
+"That's right," chimed in Miss Prettyface, with her sweet little voice.
+
+"And thee sewed the colours on; didn't thee, Miss?"
+
+"I did," answered the young lady.
+
+"Joe," said Mr. Bumpkin, "I be mortal sorry for thee; what'll I do wirout
+thy evidence? Lawyer Prigg say thee's the most wallible witness for I."
+
+"Lookee 'ere, maister, ere we bin 'anging about for weeks and weeks and
+no forrerder so far as I can see. When thy case'll come on I don't
+bleeve no man can tell; but whensomdever thee wants Joe, all thee've got
+to do is to write to the Queen, and she'll gie I leave."
+
+"O thee silly, igerant ass!" said Mr. Bumpkin; "I can't help saying it,
+Joe--the Queen doan't gie leave, it be the kernel. I know zummut o'
+sogerin, thee see; I were in th' militia farty year agoo: but spoase thee
+be away--abraird? How be I to get at thee then?"
+
+"Ha! if I be away in furren parts, and thy case be in the list, I doant
+zee--"
+
+"Thee silly feller, thee'll ha to goo fightin' may be."
+
+"Well," said Joe, "I loikes fightin'."
+
+"Thee loikes fightin'! what's thee know about fightin'? never fit
+anything in thy life but thic boar-pig, when he got I down in the yard.
+O, Joe, I can't bear the thought o thee goin'."
+
+"Noa, but Maister Sergeant says thee jist snicks off the 'eads of the
+enemy like snickin' off the tops o' beans."
+
+"Yes, but ow if thee gets thine snicked off?"
+
+"Well, if mine be snicked off, it wunt be no use to I, and I doan't care
+who has un when I ha' done wi un: anybody's welcome as thinks he can do
+better with un than I, or 'as moore right to un."
+
+"Joe, Joe, whatever'll them there pigs do wirout thee, and thic there
+bull 'll goo out of his mind--he wur mighty fond o' thee, Joe--thee
+couldst do anything wi un: couldn't ur, Joe?"
+
+"Ha!" said the recruit; "that there bull ud foller I about anywhere, and
+so ur would Missis."
+
+"Then there be Polly!"
+
+"Ha, that there Polly, she cocked her noase at I, maister, becos she
+thought I worn't good enough; but wait till she sees me in my cloase; she
+wunt cock her noase at I then, I'll warrant."
+
+"Well, Joe, as thee maks thy bed so thee must lie on un, lad. I wish
+thee well, Joe."
+
+"Never wronged thee, did I, maister?"
+
+"Never; no, never." And at this point master and man shook hands
+affectionately.
+
+"Gie my love to thic bull," said Joe. "I shall come down as soon as evir
+I can: I wish they'd let me bring my oarse."
+
+"Joe, thee ha' had too much to drink, I know thee has; and didn't I warn
+thee, Joe? Thee can't say I didn't warn thee."
+
+"Thee did, maister, I'll allays say it; thee warned I well--but lor that
+there stuff as the Sergeant had, it jist shoots through thee and livins
+thee oop for all the world as if thee got a young ooman in thee arms in a
+dancin' booth at the fair."
+
+"Ha, Joe, it were drink done it."
+
+"Noa, noa, never!--good-night, maister, and God bless thee--thee been a
+good maister, and I been a good sarvant. I shall allays think o' thee
+and Missis, too."
+
+Here I saw that Mr. Bumpkin, what with his feelings and what with his
+gin-and-water, was well nigh overcome with emotion. Nor was it to be
+wondered at; he was in London a stranger, waiting for a trial with a
+neighbour, with whom for years he had been on friendly terms; his hard
+savings were fast disappearing; his stock and furniture were mortgaged;
+some of it had been sold, and his principal witness and faithful servant
+was now gone for a soldier. In addition to all this, poor Mr. Bumpkin
+could not help recalling the happiness of his past life, his early
+struggles, his rigid self-denial, his pleasure as the modest savings
+accumulated--not so much occasioned by the sordid desire of wealth, as
+the nobler wish to be independent. Then there was Mrs. Bumpkin, who
+naturally crossed his mind at this miserable moment in his existence--at
+home by herself--faithful, hardworking woman, who believed not only in
+her husband's wisdom, but in his luck. She had never liked this going to
+law, and would much rather have given Snooks the pig than it should have
+come about; yet she could not help believing that her husband must be
+right come what may. What would she think of Joe's leaving them in this
+way? All this passed through the shallow mind of the farmer as he
+prepared for bed. And there was no getting away from his thoughts, try
+as he would. As he lay on his bed there passed before his mind the old
+farm-house, with its elm tree; and the barnyard, newly littered down with
+the sweet smelling fodder; the orchard blossoms smiling in the morning
+sunshine; the pigs routing through the straw; the excited ducks and the
+swifter fowls rushing towards Mrs. Bumpkin as she came out to shake the
+tablecloth; the sleek and shining cows; the meadows dotted all over with
+yellow buttercups; the stately bull feeding in the distance by himself;
+the lazy stream that pursued its even course without a quarrel or a
+lawsuit; all these, and a thousand other remembrances of home, passed
+before the excited and somewhat distempered vision of the farmer on this
+unhappy night. Had he been a criminal waiting his trial he could not
+have been more wretched. At length he endeavoured to console himself by
+thinking of Snooks: tried to believe that victory over that ill-disposed
+person would repay the trouble and anxiety it cost him to achieve. But
+no, not even revenge was sweet under his present circumstances. It is
+always an apple of ashes at the best; but, weighed now against the
+comforts and happiness of a peaceful life, it was worse than ashes--it
+was poison.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Here I awoke.
+
+"Now," said my wife, "is it not just as I told you? I knew that artful
+Sergeant would enlist poor stupid Joe?"
+
+"O," quoth I, "have I been talking again?"
+
+"More than ever; and I am very sorry Joe has deserted his kind master. I
+am afraid now he will lose his case."
+
+"I am not concerned about that at present; my work is but to dream, not
+to prophesy events. I hope Mr. Bumpkin will win, but nothing is so
+uncertain as the Law."
+
+"And why should that be? Law should be as certain as the Multiplication
+Table."
+
+"Ah," sighed I, "but--"
+
+"A man who brings an action must be right or wrong," interrupted my wife.
+
+"Yes," said I, "and sometimes he's both; and one judge will take one view
+of his case--his conduct out of Court, and his demeanour in--while
+another judge will take another; why, I have known a man lose his case
+through having a wart upon his nose."
+
+"Gracious!" exclaimed my wife, "is it possible?"
+
+"Yes," quoth I; "and another through having a twitch in his eye. Then
+you may have a foolish jury, who take a prejudice against a man. For
+instance, if a lawyer brings an action, he can seldom get justice before
+a common jury; and so if he be sued. A blue ribbon man on the jury will
+be almost sure to carry his extreme virtue to the border of injustice
+against a publican. Masters decide against workmen, and so on."
+
+"Well, Mr. Bumpkin is not a lawyer, or a publican, or a blue ribbon man,
+so I hope he'll win."
+
+"I don't hope anything about it," I replied. "I shall note down what
+takes place; I don't care who wins."
+
+"When will his case at the Old Bailey come on? I think that's the term
+you use."
+
+"It will be tried next week."
+
+"He is sure to punish that wicked thief who stole his watch."
+
+"One would think so: much will depend upon the way Mr. Bumpkin gives his
+evidence; much on the way in which the thief is defended; a good deal on
+the ability of the Counsel for the Prosecution; and very much on the
+class of man they get in the jury box."
+
+"But the case is so clear."
+
+"Yes, to us who know all about it; but you have to make it clear to the
+jury."
+
+"There's the watch found upon the man. Why, dear me, what can be clearer
+or plainer than that?"
+
+"True; that's Mr. Bumpkin's evidence."
+
+"And Mr. Bumpkin saw him take it."
+
+"That's Bumpkin again."
+
+"Then Mr. O'Rapley was with him."
+
+"Did you not hear that he is not to be called; the Don doesn't want to be
+seen in the affair."
+
+"Well, I feel certain he will win. I shall not believe in trial by jury
+if they let that man off."
+
+"You don't know what a trial at the Old Bailey or Quarter Sessions is. I
+don't mean at the Old Bailey before a real Common Law judge, but a
+Chancery judge. I once heard a counsel, who was prosecuting a man for
+passing bad money, interrupt a recorder in his summing up, and ask him to
+tell the jury there was evidence of seven bad florins having been found
+in the prisoner's boot. As guilty knowledge was the gist of the offence,
+this seemed somewhat important. The learned young judge, turning to the
+jury, said, in a hesitating manner, 'Well, really, gentlemen, I don't
+know whether that will affect your judgment in any way; there is the
+evidence, and you may consider it if you please.'"
+
+"One more thing I should like to ask."
+
+"By all means."
+
+"Why can't they get Mr. Bumpkin's case tried?"
+
+"Because there is no system. In the County Court, where a judge tries
+three times as many cases in a day as any Superior judge, cases are tried
+nearly always on the day they are set down for. At the Criminal Courts,
+where every case is at least as important as any Civil case, everyone
+gets tried without unnecessary delay. In the Common Law Courts it's very
+much like hunt the slipper--you hardly ever know which Court the case is
+in for five minutes together. Then they sit one day and not another, to
+the incalculable expense of the suitors, who may come up from Devonshire
+to-night, and, after waiting a week, go back and return again to town at
+the end of the following month."
+
+"But, now that O'Rapley has taken the matter up, is there not some hope?"
+
+"Well, he seems to have as much power as anyone."
+
+"Then I hope he'll exert it; for it's a shame that this poor man should
+be kept waiting about so long. I quite feel for him: there really ought
+not to be so much delay in the administration of justice."
+
+"A dilatory administration of justice amounts too often to a denial of it
+altogether. It always increases the expense, and often results in
+absolute ruin."
+
+"I wonder men don't appoint someone when they fell out to arbitrate
+between them."
+
+"They often do, and too frequently, after all the expense of getting
+ready for trial has been incurred, the case is at last sent to the still
+more costly tribunal called a reference. Many matters cannot be tried by
+a jury, but many can be that are not; one side clamouring for a reference
+in order to postpone the inevitable result; the other often obliged to
+submit and be defeated by mere lapse of time."
+
+"It seems an endless sort of business."
+
+"Not quite; the measure of it is too frequently the length of the purse
+on the one side or the other. A Railway Company, who has been cast in
+damages for 1,000 pounds, can soon wear out a poor plaintiff. One of the
+greatest evils of modern litigation is the frequency with which new
+trials are granted."
+
+"Lawyers," said my wife, "are not apparently good men of business."
+
+"They are not organizers."
+
+"It wants such a man as General Wolseley."
+
+"Precisely." And here I felt the usual drowsiness which the subject
+invariably produces. So I dreamed again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+
+Morning reflections--Mrs. Oldtimes proves herself to be a great
+philosopher--the departure of the recruits to be sworn in.
+
+And as I dreamed, methought what a strange paradox is human nature. How
+often the night's convivialities are followed by despondent morning
+reflections! In the evening we grow valiant over the inspiriting
+converse and the inspiring glass; in the morning we are tame and
+calculating. The artificial gaslight disappears, and the sober, grey
+morning breaks in upon our reason. If the sunshine only ripened one-half
+the good resolves and high purposes formed at night over the social
+glass, what a harvest of good deeds there would be! Yes, and if the
+evening dissipations did not obliterate the good resolves of the morning,
+which we so often form as a protection against sin and sorrow, what happy
+creatures we should be!
+
+Methought I looked into a piece of three-cornered glass, which was
+resting on a ledge of the old wall in the room where Joe was sleeping,
+and that I read therein the innermost thoughts of this country lad. And
+I saw that he awoke to a very dreadful sense of the realities of his new
+position; that, one after another, visions of other days passed before
+his mind's eye as he lay gazing at the dormer window of his narrow
+chamber. What a profound stillness there was! How different from the
+roystering glee of the previous night! It was a stillness that seemed to
+whisper of home; of his poor old mother; of the green sward lane that led
+to the old farm; of the old oak tree, where the owls lived, and ghosts
+were said to take up their quarters; of the stile where, of a Sunday
+morning, he used to smoke his pipe with Jack, and Ned, and Charley; where
+he had often stood to see Polly go by to church; and he knew that,
+notwithstanding she would not so much as look at him, he loved her down
+to the very sole of her boot; and would stand and contemplate the print
+of her foot after she had passed; he didn't know why, for there was
+nothing in it, after all. No, Joe, nothing in it--it was in you; that
+makes all the difference. And the voice whispered to him of sunny days
+in the bright fields, when he held the plough, and the sly old rook would
+come bobbing and pecking behind him; and the little field-mouse would
+flit away from its turned up nest, frightened to death, as if it were
+smitten with an earthquake; and the skylark would dart up over his head,
+letting fall a song upon him, as though it were Heaven's blessing. Then
+the voice spoke of the noontide meal under the hedge in the warm
+sunshine, or in the shade of the cool spreading tree; of the horses
+feeding close up alongside the hedge; of the going home in the evening,
+and the warm fireside, and the rustic song, and of the thousand and one
+beloved associations that he was leaving and casting behind him for ever.
+But then, again, he thought of "bettering his condition," of getting on
+in the world, of the smart figure he should look in the eyes of Polly,
+who would be sure now to like him better than she liked the baker. He
+never could see what there was in the baker that any girl should care
+for; and he thought of what the Sergeant had said about asking his
+mother's leave. And then he pondered on the beef steaks and onions and
+mutton chops, and other glories of a soldier's life; so he got up with a
+brave, resolute heart to face the world like a man, although it was
+plainly visible that sorrow struggled in his eyes.
+
+There was just one tear for old times, the one tear that showed how very
+human Joe was beneath all the rough incrustations with which ignorance
+and poverty had enveloped him.
+
+As he was sousing his head and neck in a pail of cold water in the little
+backyard of the Inn, the thought occurred to him,--
+
+"I wonder whether or no we 'gins these 'ere mutton chops for brakfast
+to-day or arter we're sweared in. I expects not till arter we're sweared
+in."
+
+Then his head went into the pail with a dash, as if that was part of the
+swearing-in process. As it came out he was conscious of a twofold
+sensation, which it may not be out of place to describe: the sensation
+produced by the water, which was refreshing in the highest degree, and
+the sensation produced by what is called wind, which was also deliciously
+refreshing; and it was in this wise. Borne along upon the current of air
+which passed through the kitchen, there was the most odoriferous savour
+of fried bacon that the most luxurious appetite could enjoy. It was so
+beautifully and voluptuously fragrant that Joe actually stopped while in
+the act of soaping his face that he might enjoy it. No one, I think,
+will deny that it must have been an agreeable odour that kept a man
+waiting with his eyes fall of soap for half a minute.
+
+"That beant amiss," thought Joe; "I wonder whether it be for I."
+
+The problem was soon solved, for as he entered the kitchen with a face as
+bright and ruddy almost as the sun when he comes up through a mist, he
+saw the table was laid out for five, and all the other recruits had
+already assembled. There was not one who did not look well up to his
+resolution, and I must say a better looking lot of recruits were never
+seen: they were tall, well made, healthy, good-looking fellows.
+
+Now Mrs. Oldtimes was busy at the kitchen fire; the frying-pan was doing
+its best to show what could be done for Her Majesty's recruits. He was
+hissing bravely, and seemed every now and then to give a louder and
+heartier welcome to the company. As Joe came in I believe it fairly gave
+a shout of enthusiasm, a kind of hooray. In addition to the rashers that
+were frying, there was a large dish heaped up in front of the fire, so
+that it was quite clear there would be no lack, however hungry the
+company might be.
+
+Then they sat down and every one was helped. Mrs. Oldtimes was a woman
+of the world; let me also state she had a deep insight into human nature.
+She knew the feelings of her guests at this supreme moment, and how
+cheaply they could be bought off at their present state of soldiering.
+She was also aware that courage, fortitude, firmness, and the higher
+qualities of the soul depend so much upon a contented stomach, that she
+gave every one of her guests some nice gravy from the pan.
+
+It was a treat to see them eat. The Boardman was terrific, so was Jack.
+Harry seemed to have a little more on his mind than the others, but this
+did not interfere with his appetite; it simply affected his manner of
+appeasing it. He seemed to be in love, for his manner was somewhat
+reserved. At length the Sergeant came in, looking so cheerful and
+radiant that one could hardly see him and not wish to be a soldier. Then
+his cheery "Well, lads; good morning, lads," was so home-like that you
+almost fancied soldiering consisted in sitting by a blazing kitchen fire
+on a frosty morning and eating fried bacon. What a spirit his presence
+infused into the company! He detected at a glance the down-heartedness
+of Harry, and began a story about his own enlistment years ago, when the
+chances for a young man of education were nothing to what they are now.
+The story seemed exactly to fit the circumstances of the case and cheered
+Harry up wonderfully. Breakfast was nearly finished when the Sergeant,
+after filling his pipe, said:
+
+"Comrades, what do you say; shall I wait till you've quite finished?"
+
+"No, no, Sergeant; no, no," said all.
+
+Oh! the fragrance of that pipe! And the multiplied fragrance of all the
+pipes! Then came smiling Miss Prettyface to see if their ribbons were
+all right; and the longing look of all the recruits was quite an
+affecting sight; and the genial motherly good-natured best wishes of Mrs.
+Oldtimes were very welcome. All these things were pleasant, and proved
+Mrs. Oldtimes' philosophy to be correct--if you want to develop the
+higher virtues in a man, feed him.
+
+Then came the word of command in the tone of an invitation to a pleasure
+party: "Now, lads, what do you say?" And off went Harry, upright as if
+he had been drilled; off went Bill, trying to shake off the deal boards
+in which he had been sandwiched for a year and a half; off went Bob as
+though he had found an agreeable occupation at last; off went Devilmecare
+as though the war was only just the other side of the road; off went Jack
+as though it mattered nothing to him whether it was the Army or the
+Church; and, just as Mr. Bumpkin looked out of the parlour window, off
+went his "head witness," swaggering along in imitation of the Sergeant,
+with the colours streaming from his hat as though any honest employment
+was better than hanging about London for a case to "come on."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+
+A letter from home.
+
+"I wonder," said Mrs. Oldtimes, "who this letter be for; it have been
+'ere now nigh upon a week, and I'm tired o' seein' it."
+
+Miss Prettyface took the letter in her hand and began, as best she could,
+for the twentieth time to endeavour to decipher the address. It was very
+much blotted and besmeared, and presented a very remarkable specimen of
+caligraphy. The most legible word on it seemed "Gouse."
+
+"There's nobody here of that name," said the young lady. "Do you know
+anybody, Mr. Bumpkin, of the name of Gouse?"
+
+"Devil a bit," said he, taking the letter in his hands, and turning it
+over as if it had been a skittle-ball.
+
+"The postman said it belonged here," said Mrs. Oldtimes, "but I can't
+make un out."
+
+"I can't read the postmark," said Miss Prettyface.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin put on a large pair of glasses and examined the envelope with
+great care.
+
+"I think you've got un upside down," said Mrs. Oldtimes.
+
+"Ah! so ur be," replied the farmer, turning it over several times.
+"Why," he continued, "here be a _b_--and a _u_, beant it? See if that
+beant a _u_, Miss, your eyes be better un mine; they be younger."
+
+"O yes, that's a _u_," said Miss Prettyface, "and an _m_."
+
+"And that spell _bum_."
+
+"But stop," said Miss Prettyface, "here's a _p_."
+
+"That's _bump_," said Mrs. Oldtimes; "we shall get at something
+presently."
+
+"Why," exclaimed Bumpkin, "I be danged if I doant think it be my old
+'ooman's writin': but I beant sure. That be the way ur twists the tail
+of ur _y_'s and _g_'s, I'll swear; and lookee 'ere, beant this _k i n_?"
+
+"I think it is," said the maid.
+
+"Ah, then, thee med be sure that be Bumpkin, and the letter be for I."
+
+"Yes," said the young lady, "and that other word which looks more like
+Grouse is meant for Goose, the sign of the house."
+
+"Sure be un," exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin, "and Nancy ha put Bumpkin and Goose
+all in one line, when ur ought to ha made two lines ov un. Now look at
+that, that letter might ha been partickler."
+
+"So it may be as it is," said Mrs. Oldtimes; "it's from Mrs. Bumpkin, no
+doubt. Aren't you going to open it?"
+
+"I think I wool," said Bumpkin, turning the letter round and round, and
+over and over, as though there was some special private entrance which
+could only be discovered by the closest search. At length Mrs. Oldtimes'
+curiosity was gratified, for he found a way in, and drew out the many
+folded letter of the most difficult penmanship that ever was subjected to
+mortal gaze. It was not that the writing was illegible, but that the
+spelling was so extraordinary, and the terms of expression so varied.
+Had I to interpret this letter without the aid of a dream I should have a
+long and difficult task before me. But it is the privilege of dreamers
+to see things clearly and in a moment: to live a lifetime in a few
+seconds, and to traverse oceans in the space of a single respiration.
+So, in the present instance, that which took Mr. Bumpkin, with the help
+of Mrs. Oldtimes and the occasional assistance of Lucy an hour to
+decipher, flashed before me in a single second. I ought perhaps to
+translate it into a more civilized language, but that would be impossible
+without spoiling the effect and disturbing the continuity of character
+which is so essential in a work made up of various actors. Mr. Bumpkin
+himself in his ordinary costume would be no more out of place in my Lord
+Mayor's state carriage than Mrs. Bumpkin wielding the Queen's English in
+its statelier and more fashionable adornment. So I give it as it was
+written. It began in a bold but irregular hand, and clearly indicated a
+certain agitation of mind not altogether in keeping with the even
+temperament of the writer's daily life.
+
+"Deer Tom" (the letter began), "I ope thee be well for it be a long time
+agoo since thee left ere I cant mak un out wot be all this bother about
+a pig but Tom thee'll be glad to ear as I be doin weel the lamin be over
+and we got semteen as pooty lams as ever thee clapped eyes on The weet
+be lookin well and so be the barly an wuts thee'll be glad Tom to ear wot
+good luck I been avin wi sellin Mister Prigg have the kolt for twenty
+pun a pun more an the Squoire ofered Sam broked er in and ur do look
+well in Mrs. Prigg faten I met un the tother day Mr. Prigg wur drivin un
+an he tooked off his at jist th' sam as if I'd been a lady Missis Prigg
+din't see me as her edd wur turned th' tother way I be glad to tell ee
+we sold the wuts ten quorter these was bort by Mister Prigg and so wur
+the stror ten load as clane and brite as ever thee seed Mr. Prigg be a
+rale good custumer an a nice man I wish there was moore like im it ud be
+the makin o' th' Parish we shal ave a nice lot o monie to dror from un at
+Miklemes he be the best customer we ever ad an I toold th' Squoire wen ur
+corled about the wuts as Mister Prigg ad orfered ten shillin a quorter
+for un more un ee Ur dint seem to like un an rod away but we dooant o un
+anythink Tom so I dont mind we must sell ware we ken mak moast monie I
+spose Sampson be stronger an grander than ever it's my belief an I thinks
+we shal do well wi un this Spring tell t' Joe not to stop out o' nites or
+keep bad kumpany and to read evere nite wat the Wicker told un the fust
+sarm an do thee read un Tom for its my bleef ur cant 'urt thee nuther."
+
+"Humph!" said Bumpkin, "fust sarms indade. I got a lot o' time for
+sarms, an' as for thic Joe--lor, lor, Nancy, whatever will thee say, I
+wonder, when thee knows he's gone for a soger--a sarm beant much good to
+un now; he be done for."
+
+And then Mr. Bumpkin went and looked out of the window, and thought over
+all the good news of Mrs. Bumpkin's letter, and mentally calculated that
+even up to this time Mr. Prigg's account would come to enough to pay the
+year's rent.
+
+Going to law seemed truly a most advantageous business. Here he had got
+two shillings a quarter more for the oats than the Squire had offered,
+and a pound more for the colt. Prigg was a famous customer, and no doubt
+would buy the hay. And, strange to say, just as Mr. Bumpkin thought
+this, he happened to turn over the last page of the letter, and there he
+saw what was really a Postscript.
+
+"Halloo!" says he, "my dear, here be moore on't; lookee 'ere."
+
+"So there is," answered Lucy; "let's have a look." And thus she read:--
+
+"The klover cut out well it made six lode the little rik an four pun
+nineteen The Squoire ony offered four pun ten so in corse I let Mister
+Prigg ave un."
+
+"Well done, Nancy, thee be famous. Now, thic big rik'll fetch moore'n
+thic."
+
+Such cheering intelligence put Mr. Bumpkin in good heart in spite of his
+witness's desertion. Joe was a good deal, but he wasn't money, and if he
+liked to go for a soger, he must go; but, in Mr. Bumpkin's judgment, he
+would very soon be tired of it, and wish himself back at his fireside.
+
+"Now, you must write to Mrs. Bumpkin," said Lucy.
+
+"Thee'll write for I, my dear; won't thee?"
+
+"If you like," said Lucy. And so, after dinner, when she had changed her
+dress, she proceeded to write an epistle for Mrs. Bumpkin's edification.
+She had _carte blanche_ to put in what she liked, except that the main
+facts were to be that Joe had gone for a horse soger; that he expected
+"the case would come on every day;" and that he had the highest opinion
+of the unquestioned ability of honest Lawyer Prigg.
+
+And now another surprise awaited the patient Bumpkin. As he sat, later
+in the day, smoking his pipe, in company with Mrs. Oldtimes, two men,
+somewhat shabbily dressed, walked into the parlour and ordered
+refreshment.
+
+"A fine day, sir," said the elder of the two, a man about thirty-five.
+This observation was addressed to Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"It be," said the farmer.
+
+The other individual had seated himself near the fire, and was apparently
+immersed in the study of the _Daily Telegraph_. Suddenly he observed to
+his companion, as though he had never seen it before,--
+
+"Hallo! Ned, have you seen this?"
+
+"What's that?" asked the gentleman called Ned.
+
+"Never read such a thing in my life. Just listen."
+
+ "'A YOUNG MAN FROM THE COUNTRY.'
+ "EXTRAORDINARY STORY.
+
+ "A man, apparently about sixty-eight, who gave the name of Bumpkin,
+ appeared as the prosecutor in a case under the following
+ extraordinary circumstances. He said he was from the country, but
+ declined to give any more particular address, and had been taken by a
+ friend to see the Old Bailey and to hear the trials at that Court.
+ After leaving the Central Criminal Court, he deposed, that, walking
+ with his friend, he was accosted in the Street in the open daylight
+ and robbed of his watch; that he pursued the thief, and when near
+ Blackfriars Bridge met a man coming towards him; that he seized the
+ supposed thief, and found him wearing the watch which he affirmed had
+ been stolen. The manner and appearance of 'the young man from the
+ country' excited great laughter in Court, and the Lord Mayor, in the
+ absence of any evidence to the contrary, thought there was a _prima
+ facie_ case under the circumstances, and committed the accused for
+ trial to the Central Criminal Court. The prisoner, who was
+ respectably dressed, and against whom nothing appeared to be known,
+ was most ably defended by Mr. Nimble, who declined to put any
+ questions in cross-examination, and did not address his Lordship.
+ The case created great sensation, and it is expected that at the
+ trial some remarkable and astounding disclosures will be made. 'The
+ young man from the country' was very remarkably dressed: he twirled
+ in his hand a large old-fashioned white-beaver hat with a black band
+ round it; wore a very peculiar frock, elaborately ornamented with
+ needlework in front and behind, while a yellow kerchief with red ends
+ was twisted round his neck. The countryman declined to give his town
+ address; but a remarkable incident occurred during the hearing, which
+ did not seem to strike either the Lord Mayor or the counsel for the
+ defence, and that was that no appearance of the countryman's
+ companion was put in. Who he is and to what region he belongs will
+ probably transpire at the ensuing trial, which is expected to be
+ taken on the second day of the next Sessions. It is obvious that
+ while the case is _sub judice_ no comments can properly be made
+ thereon, but we are not prevented from saying that the evidence of
+ this extraordinary 'young man from the country' will be subjected to
+ the most searching cross-examination of one of the ablest counsel of
+ the English Bar."
+
+The two men looked at Mr. Bumpkin; while the latter coloured until his
+complexion resembled beetroot. Miss Prettyface giggled; and Mrs.
+Oldtimes winked at Mr. Bumpkin, and shook her head in the most
+significant manner.
+
+"That's a rum case, sir," said Ned.
+
+Silence.
+
+"I don't believe a word of the story," said his companion.
+
+Silence.
+
+"Do you believe," he continued, "that that man could have been wearing
+that watch if he'd stole it?"
+
+"Not I."
+
+"Lor! won't Jemmy Nimble make mincemeat of 'im!"
+
+Mrs. Oldtimes looked frequently towards Mr. Bumpkin as she continued her
+sewing, making the most unmistakeable signals that under no circumstances
+was he to answer. It was apparent to everyone, from Mr. Bumpkin's
+manner, that the paragraph referred to him.
+
+"The best thing that chap can do," said Ned, "is not to appear at the
+trial. He can easily keep away."
+
+"He won't, you're sure," answered the other man; "he knows a trick worth
+two of that. They say the old chap deserted his poor old wife, after
+beating her black and blue, and leaving her for dead."
+
+"It be a lie!" exclaimed Bumpkin, thumping his fist on the table.
+
+"Oh!" said Ned, "do you know anything about it, sir? It's no odds to me,
+only a man can't shut his ears."
+
+"P'r'aps I do and p'r'aps I doant; but it beant no bi'niss o' thine."
+
+"I didn't mean no offence, but anybody can read the paper, surely; it's a
+free country. P'r'aps you're the man himself; I didn't think o' that."
+
+"P'r'aps I be, and p'r'aps I beant."
+
+"And p'r'aps your name is Bumpkin?"
+
+"And p'r'aps it beant, and what then?"
+
+"Why, you've nothing to do with it, that's all; and I don't see why you
+should interfere."
+
+"I can't have no quarrelling in my house," said the landlady. "This
+gentleman's nothing to do with it; he knows nothing at all about it; so,
+if you please, gentlemen, we needn't say any more."
+
+"Oh! I don't want to talk about it," said Ned.
+
+"No more do I," chimed in his companion; "but it's a pity that he should
+take up our conversation when he hasn't anything to do with it, and his
+name isn't Bumpkin, and he hasn't lost his watch. It's no odds to me; I
+don't care, do you, Ned?"
+
+"Not I," said Ned; "let's be off; I don't want no row; anybody mustn't
+open his mouth now. Good day, sir."
+
+And the two young men went away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+
+Mr. Bumpkin determines to maintain a discreet silence about his case at
+the Old Bailey--Mr. Prigg confers with him thereon.
+
+And I saw that Mr. Bumpkin's case did not come on. Day by day passed
+away, and still it was not in the paper. The reason, however, is simple,
+and need not be told to any except those of my readers who are under the
+impression that the expeditious administration of justice is of any
+consequence. It was obvious to the most simple-minded that the case
+could not be taken for a day or two, because there was a block in every
+one of the three Courts devoted to the trial of Nisi Prius actions. And
+you know as well as anyone, Mr. Bumpkin, that when you get a load of
+turnips, or what not, in the market town blocked by innumerable other
+turnip carts, you must wait. Patience, therefore, good Bumpkin. Justice
+may be slow-footed, but she is sure handed; she may be blind and deaf,
+but she is not dumb; as you shall see if you look into one of the
+"blocked Courts" where a trial has been going on for the last sixteen
+days. A case involving a dispute of no consequence to any person in the
+world, and in which there is absolutely nothing except--O rare
+phenomenon!--plenty of money. It was interesting only on account of the
+bickerings between the learned counsel, and the occasionally friendly
+altercations between the Bench and the Bar. But the papers had written
+it into a _cause celebre_, and made it a dramatic entertainment for the
+beauty and the chivalry of England. So Mr. Bumpkin had still to wait;
+but it enabled him to attend comfortably the February sittings of the Old
+Bailey, where his other case was to be tried.
+
+When Mr. Prigg read the account of the proceedings before the Lord Mayor,
+he was very much concerned, not to say annoyed, because he was under the
+impression that he ought to have been consulted. Not knowing what to do
+under the circumstances, he resolved, after due consideration, to get
+into a hansom and drive down to the "Goose." Mr. Prigg, as I have before
+observed, was swift in decision and prompt in action. He had no sooner
+resolved to see Bumpkin than to Bumpkin he went. But his client was out;
+it was uncertain when he would be in. Judge of Mr. Prigg's
+disappointment! He left word that he would call again; he did call
+again, and, after much dodging on the part of the wily Bumpkin, he was
+obliged to surrender himself a captive to honest Prigg.
+
+"My dear Mr. Bumpkin," exclaimed he, taking both the hands of his client
+into his own and yielding him a double measure of friendship; "is it
+possible--have you been robbed? Is it you in the paper this morning in
+this _very_ extraordinary case?"
+
+Bumpkin looked and blushed. He was not a liar, but truth is not always
+the most convenient thing, say what you will.
+
+"I see," said Mr. Prigg; "quite so--quite so! Now _how_ did this
+happen?"
+
+Bumpkin still looked and blushed.
+
+"Ah!" said Mr. Prigg; "just so. But who was this companion?"
+
+Bumpkin muttered "A friend!"
+
+"O! O! O!" said Mr. Prigg, drawing a long face and placing the
+fore-finger of his left hand perpendicularly from the tip of his nose to
+the top of his forehead.
+
+"Noa," said Bumpkin, "'taint none o' that nuther; I beant a man o' that
+sort."
+
+"Well, well," said Mr. Prigg, "I only thought I'd call, you know, in case
+there should be anything which might in any way affect our action."
+
+Mr. Bumpkin, conscious of his moral rectitude, like all good men, was
+fearless: he knew that nothing which he had done would affect the merits
+of his case, and, therefore, instead of replying to the subtle question
+of his adviser, he merely enquired of that gentleman when he thought the
+case would be on. The usual question.
+
+Mr. Prigg rubbed his hands and glanced his eyes as though just under his
+left elbow was a very deep well, at the bottom of which lay that
+inestimable jewel, truth. "Really," Mr. Bumpkin, "I expect every hour to
+see us in the paper. It's very extraordinary; they have no less than
+three Courts sitting, as I daresay you are aware. No less than--let me
+see, my mind's so full of business, I have seven cases ready to come on.
+Where was I? O, I know; I say there are no less than three Courts, under
+the continuous sittings system, and yet we seem to make no progress in
+the diminution of the tremendous and overwhelming mass of business that
+pours in upon us."
+
+Mr. Bumpkin said "Hem!"
+
+"You see," continued Mr. Prigg, "there's one thing, we shall not last
+long when we do come on."
+
+"Shan't ur?"
+
+"You see there's only one witness, besides yourself, on our side."
+
+"And 'eve gone for a soger," said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"A soldier!" exclaimed Prigg. "A soldier, my dear Bumpkin. No--no--you
+don't say so, really!"
+
+"Ay, sure 'ave ur; and wot the devil I be to do agin that there Snooks,
+as 'll lie through a brick wall, I beant able to say. I be pooty nigh
+off my chump wot wi' one thing and another."
+
+"Off what, sir?" enquired Mr. Prigg.
+
+"Chump," shouted Bumpkin.
+
+"O, indeed, yes; dear me, you don't say so. Well, now I'm glad I called.
+I must see about this. What regiment did you say he'd joined?"
+
+"Hoosors!"
+
+"Ha! dear me, has he, indeed?" said Mr. Prigg, noting it down in his
+pocket-book. "What a pity for a young man like that to throw himself
+away--such an intelligent young fellow, too, and might have done so well;
+dear me!"
+
+"Ha," answered Bumpkin, "there worn't a better feller at plough nor thic
+there; and he could mend a barrer or a 'arrer, and turn his 'and to pooty
+nigh anything about t' farm."
+
+"And is there any reason that can be assigned for this extraordinary
+conduct? Wasn't in debt, I suppose?"
+
+Mr. Bumpkin laughed one of his old big fireside laughs such as he had not
+indulged in lately.
+
+"Debt! why they wouldn't trust un a shoe-string. Where the devil wur
+such a chap as thic to get money to get into debt wi'?"
+
+"My dear sir, we don't want money to get into debt with; we get into debt
+when we have none."
+
+"Do ur, sir. Then if I hadn't 'ad any money I'd like to know 'ow fur
+thee'd ha' trusted I."
+
+"Dear me," said Mr. Prigg, "what a very curious way of putting it! But,
+however, soldier or no soldier, we must have his evidence. I must see
+about it: I must go to the depot. Now, with regard to your case at the
+Old Bailey."
+
+"Well," said Mr. Bumpkin, rather testily; "I be bound over to proserkit,
+and that be all I knows about un. I got to give seam evidence as I guv
+afore the Lord Mayor, and the Lord Mayor said as the case wur clear, and
+away it went for trial."
+
+"Indeed! dear me!"
+
+"And I got to tak no trouble at all about un, but to keep my mouth shut
+till the case comes on, that's what the pleeceman told I. I bean't to
+talk about un, or to tak any money not to proserkit."
+
+"O dear, no," said Mr. Prigg. "O dear, dear, no; you would be
+compounding a felony." (Here Mr. Prigg made a note in his diary to this
+effect:--"Attending you at 'The Goose' at Westminster, when you informed
+me that you were the prosecutor in a case at the Old Bailey, and in which
+I advised you not, under any circumstances, to accept a compromise or
+money for the purpose of withdrawing from the prosecution, and strongly
+impressed upon you that such conduct would amount in law to a
+misdemeanor. Long conference with you thereon, when you promised to
+abide by my advice, 1 pound 6_s._ 0_d._").
+
+"Now," said Bumpkin, "it seem to me that turn which way I wool, there be
+too much law, too many pitfalls; I be gettin' sick on't."
+
+"Well," said Mr. Prigg, "we have only to do our duty in that station of
+life in which we are called, and we have no cause to fear. Now you know
+you would _not_ have liked that unprincipled man, Snooks, to have the
+laugh of you, would you now?"
+
+Mr. Bumpkin clenched his fist as he said, "Noa, I'd sooner lose every
+penny I got than thic there feller should ha' the grin o' me."
+
+"Quite so," said the straightforward moralist. "Quite so! dear me!
+Well, well, I must wish you good morning, for really I am so overwhelmed
+with work that I hardly know which way to turn--bye, bye. I will take
+care to keep you posted up in--." Here Mr. Prigg's cab drove off, and I
+could not ascertain whether the posting up was to be in the state of the
+list or in the lawyer's ledger.
+
+"What a nice man!" said the landlady.
+
+Yes, that was Mr. Prigg's character, go where he would: "A nice man!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+
+The trial at the Old Bailey of Mr. Simple Simonman for highway robbery
+with violence--Mr. Alibi introduces himself to Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+I next saw Mr. Bumpkin wandering about the precincts of that Grand
+Institution, the Old Bailey, on a drizzly morning about the middle of
+February, 187--, waiting to go before the Grand Jury. As the famous
+prison in Scotland was called the "Heart of Midlothian" so the Old Bailey
+may be considered the Heart of Civilization. Its commanding situation,
+in the very centre of a commercial population, entitles it to this
+distinction; for nothing is supposed to have so civilizing an influence
+as Commerce. I was always impressed with its beautiful and picturesque
+appearance, especially on a fine summer morning, during its sittings,
+when the sun was pouring its brightest beams on its lively portals. What
+a charming picture was presented to your view, when the gates being open,
+the range of sheds on the left met the eye, especially the centre one
+where the gallows is kept packed up for future use. The gallows on the
+one side might be seen and the stately carriages of my Lord Mayor and
+Sheriffs on the other! Gorgeous coachmen and footmen in resplendent
+liveries; magnificent civic dignitaries in elaborate liveries too, rich
+with gold and bright with colour, stepping forth from their carriages,
+amid loud cries of "Make way!" holding in their white-gloved hands large
+bouquets of the loveliest flowers, emblems of--what?
+
+Crime truly has its magnificent accompaniments, and if it does not dress
+itself, as of old, in the rich costumes of a Turpin or a Duval, it is not
+without its beautiful surroundings. Here, where the channels and gutters
+of crime converge, is built, in the centre of the greatest commercial
+city in the world, the Bailey. Mr. Bumpkin wandered about for hours
+through a reeking unsavoury crowd of thieves and thieves' companions,
+idlers of every type of blackguardism, ruffians of every degree of
+criminality; boys and girls receiving their finishing lessons in crime
+under the dock, as they used to do only a few years ago under the
+gallows. The public street is given over to the enemies of Society; and
+Civilisation looks on without a shudder or regret, as though crime were a
+necessity, and the Old Bailey, in the heart of London, no disgrace.
+
+And a little dirty, greasy hatted, black whiskered man, after pushing
+hither and thither through this pestiferous crowd as though he had
+business with everybody, but did not exactly know what it was, at length
+approached Mr. Bumpkin; and after standing a few minutes by his side
+eyeing him with keen hungry looks, began that interesting conversation
+about the weather which seems always so universally acceptable. Mr.
+Bumpkin was tired. He had been wandering for hours in the street, and
+was wondering when he should be called before the Grand Jury. Mr. Alibi,
+that was the dark gentleman's name, knew all about Mr. Bumpkin's case,
+his condition of mind, and his impatience; and he said deferentially:
+
+"You are waiting to go before the Grand Jury, I suppose, sir?"
+
+"I be," answered Bumpkin.
+
+"Where's your policeman?" enquired Alibi.
+
+"I doant know," said Bumpkin.
+
+"What's his number?"
+
+"Sev'n hunderd and sev'nty."
+
+"O, I know," said Alibi; "why not let me get you before the Grand Jury at
+once, instead of waiting about here all day, and perhaps to-morrow and
+the next day, and the day after that; besides, the sooner you go before
+the Grand Jury, the sooner your case will come on; that stands to common
+sense, I think."
+
+"So ur do," answered the farmer.
+
+"You will be here a month if you don't look out. Have you got any
+counsel or solicitor?"
+
+"Noa, I beant; my case be that plaain, it spaks for itself."
+
+"Ah!" said Mr. Alibi; "they won't always let a case speak for
+itself--they very often stop it--but if you can get a counsel for
+nothing, why not have one; that stands to reason, I think?"
+
+"For nothing? well that be the fust time I ever eeard o' a loryer as
+chape as thic."
+
+How it could pay was the wonder to Mr. Bumpkin. And what a strange
+delusion it must seem to the mind of the general reader! But wait,
+gentle peruser of this history, you shall see this strange sight.
+
+"If you like to have a counsel and a lawyer to conduct your case, sir, it
+shall not cost you a farthing, I give you my word of honour! What do you
+think of that?"
+
+What could Mr. Bumpkin think of that? What a pity that he had not met
+this gentleman before! Probably he would have brought several actions if
+he had; for if you could work the machinery of the law for nothing, you
+would always stand to win.
+
+"O," said Mr. Alibi, "here is seven hundred and seventy! This gentleman
+wants a counsel, and I've been telling him he can have one, and it won't
+cost him anything."
+
+"That's right enough," said the Policeman; "but it ain't nothin' to do
+with me!"
+
+"Just step this way, sir, we'll soon have this case on," said Alibi; and
+he led the way to the back room of a public-house, which seemed to be
+used as a "hedge" lawyer's office.
+
+"Med I mak so bold, sir; be thee a loryer?"
+
+"No," answered Alibi, "I am clerk to Mr. Deadandgone."
+
+"And don't Mr. Deadandam charge nothin'?"
+
+"O dear, no!"
+
+What a very nice man Mr. Deadandam must be!
+
+"You see," said Alibi, "the Crown pays us!"
+
+"The Crown!"
+
+And here Mr. Alibi slipped a crown-piece into the artfully extended palm
+of the policeman, who said:
+
+"It ain't nothin' to do wi' me; but the gentleman's quite right, the
+Crown pays." And he dropped the money into his leather purse, which he
+rolled up carefully and placed in his pocket.
+
+"You see," said Alibi, "I act as the Public Prosecutor, who can't be
+expected to do everything--you can't grind all the wheat in the country
+in one mill, that stands to common sense."
+
+"That be right, that's werry good,"
+
+"And," continued Mr. Alibi, "the Government allows two guineas for
+counsel, a guinea for the solicitor, and so on, and the witnesses, don't
+you see?"
+
+"Zactly!" said Bumpkin.
+
+"And that's quite enough," continued Alibi; "we don't want anything from
+the prosecutor--that's right, policeman!"
+
+"It ain't nothink to do wi' me," said the policeman; "but what this 'ere
+gentleman says is the law."
+
+"There," said Alibi, "I told you so."
+
+"I spose," said the policeman, "you don't want me, gentlemen; it ain't
+nothink to do with me?"
+
+"Oh, no, Leary," replied Alibi; "we don't want you; the case is pretty
+straight, I suppose."
+
+"Oh, yes, sir; I expects it'll be a plea of guilty. There ain't no
+defence, not as I'm aware of."
+
+"Oh," said Alibi, "that's all right--keep your witnesses together,
+Leary--don't be out of the way."
+
+"No, sir," says Leary; "I thinks I knows my dooty."
+
+And with this he slouched out of the room, and went and refreshed himself
+at the bar.
+
+In two or three minutes the policeman returned, and was in the act of
+drawing the back of his hand across his mouth, when Alibi said:
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"Beg pardin, sir; but there's another gentleman wants to see you--I
+thinks he wants you to defend ---; but it ain't nothink to do wi' me,
+sir."
+
+"Very good," answered Alibi, "very good; now let me see--"
+
+"You got the Baker's case?" said Leary.
+
+"Yes," said Alibi; "O, yes--embezzlement."
+
+Everything was thus far satisfactorily settled, and Mr. Bumpkin's
+interests duly represented by Mr. Deadandgone, an eminent practitioner.
+No doubt the services of competent counsel would be procured, and the
+case fully presented to the consideration of an intelligent jury.
+
+Who shall say after this that the Old Bailey is _not_ the Heart of
+Civilization?
+
+I pass over the preliminary canter of Mr. Bumpkin before the Grand Jury;
+the decision of that judicial body, the finding of the true bill, the
+return of the said bill in Court, the bringing up of the prisoner for
+arraignment, and the fixing of the case to be taken first on Thursday in
+deference to the wishes of Mr. Nimble. I pass by all those preliminary
+proceedings which I have before attempted to describe, and which, if I
+might employ a racing simile, might be compared to the saddling of Mr.
+Bumpkin in the paddock, where, unquestionably, he was first favourite for
+the coming race, to be ridden by that excellent jockey, Alibi; and come
+at once to the great and memorable trial of Regina on the prosecution of
+Thomas Bumpkin against Simon Simpleman for highway robbery with violence.
+
+As the prisoner entered the dock there was a look of unaffected innocence
+in his appearance that seemed to make an impression on the learned Judge,
+Mr. Justice Technical, a recently appointed Chancery barrister. I may be
+allowed to mention that his Lordship had never had any experience in
+Criminal Courts whatever: so he brought to the discharge of his important
+duty a thoroughly unprejudiced and impartial mind. He did not suspect
+that a man was guilty because he was charged: and the respectable and
+harmless manner of the accused was not interpreted by his Lordship as a
+piece of consummate acting, as it would be by some Judges who have seen
+much of the world as it is exhibited in Criminal Courts.
+
+Many ladies of rank were ushered in by the Sheriff, all looking as
+smiling and happy as if they were about to witness the performance of
+some celebrated actress for the first time; they had fans and
+opera-glasses, and as they took their places in the boxes allotted to
+rank and fashion, there was quite a pleasant sensation produced in Court,
+and they attracted more notice for the time being than the prisoners
+themselves.
+
+Now these ladies were not there to witness the first piece, the mere
+trial of Simpleman for highway robbery, although the sentence might
+include the necessary brutality of flogging. The afterpiece was what
+they had come to see--namely, a fearful tragedy, in which two men at
+least were sure of being sentenced to death. This is the nearest
+approach to shedding human blood which ladies can now witness in this
+country; for I do not regard pigeon slaughtering, brutal and bloodthirsty
+as it is, as comparable to the sentencing of a fellow-creature to be
+strangled. And no one can blame ladies of rank if they slake their
+thirst for horrors in the only way the law now leaves open to them. The
+Beauty of Spain is better provided for. What a blessed thing is
+humanity!
+
+It is due to Mr. Newboy, the counsel for the prosecution in the great
+case of _Regina_ v. _Simpleman_, to say that he had only lately been
+called to the Bar, and only "_instructed_," as the prisoner was placed in
+the dock. Consequently, he had not had time to read his brief. I do not
+know that that was a disadvantage, inasmuch as the brief consisted in
+what purported to be a copy of the depositions so illegibly scrawled that
+it would have required the most intense study to make out the meaning of
+a single line.
+
+Mr. Newboy was by no means devoid of ability; but no amount of ability
+would give a man a knowledge of the facts of a case which were never
+communicated to him. In its simplicity the prosecution was beautifully
+commonplace, and five minutes' consideration would have been sufficient
+to enable counsel to master the details and be prepared to meet the
+defence. Alas, for the lack of those five minutes! The more Mr. Newboy
+looked at the writing (?) the more confused he got. All he could make
+out was his own name, and _Reg._ v. _Somebody_ on the back.
+
+Now it happened that Mr. Alibi saw the difficulty in which Mr. Newboy
+was, and knowing that his, Alibi's, clerk, was not remarkable for
+penmanship, handed to the learned counsel at the last moment, when the
+last juryman was being bawled at with the "well and truly try," a copy of
+the depositions.
+
+The first name at the top of the first page which caught the eye of the
+learned counsel, was that of the prisoner; for the depositions commence
+in such a way as to show the name of the prisoner in close proximity to,
+if not among the names of witnesses.
+
+So Mr. Newboy, in his confusion, taking the name of the prisoner as his
+first witness, shouted out in a bold voice, to give himself courage,
+"_Simon Simpleman_."
+
+"'Ere!" answered the prisoner.
+
+The learned Judge was a little astonished; and, although, he had got his
+criminal law up with remarkable rapidity, his lordship knew well enough
+that you cannot call the prisoner as a witness either for or against
+himself. Mr. Newboy perceived his mistake and apologised. The laugh, of
+course, went round against him; and when it got to Mr. Nimble, that merry
+gentleman slid it into the jury-box with a turn of his eyes and a twist
+of his mouth. The counsel for the prosecution being by this time pretty
+considerably confused, and not being able to make out the name of a
+single witness on the depositions (there were only two) called out, "The
+Prosecutor."
+
+"Here, I be," said a voice from the crowd in a tone which provoked more
+laughter, all of which was turned into the jury-box by Mr. Nimble. "Here
+I be" struggled manfully with all his might and main to push through the
+miscellaneous crowd of all sorts and conditions that hemmed him in. All
+the arrangements at the Old Bailey, like the arrangements at most Courts,
+are expressly devised for the inconvenience of those who have business
+there.
+
+All eyes were turned towards "_Here I be_," as, after much pushing and
+struggling as though he were in a football match, he was thrust headlong
+forward by three policemen and the crier into the body of the Court.
+There he stood utterly confounded by the treatment he had undergone and
+the sight that presented itself to his astonished gaze. Opera-glasses
+were turned on him from the boxes, the gentlemen on the grand tier
+strained their necks in order to catch a glimpse of him; the pit, filled
+for the most part with young barristers, was in suppressed ecstasies;
+while the gallery, packed to the utmost limit of its capacity, broke out
+into unrestrained laughter. I say, unrestrained; but as the Press truly
+observed in the evening papers, "it was immediately suppressed by the
+Usher."
+
+Mr. Bumpkin climbed into the witness-box (as though he were going up a
+rick), which was situated between the Judge and the jury. His appearance
+again provoked a titter through the Court; but it was not loud enough to
+call for any further measure of suppression than the usual "Si--lence!"
+loudly articulated in two widely separated syllables by the crier, who
+had no sooner pronounced it than he turned his face from the learned
+Judge and pressed his hand tightly against his mouth, straining his eyes
+as if he had swallowed a crown-piece. Mr. Bumpkin wore his long drab
+frock overcoat, with the waist high up and its large flaps; his hell-fire
+waistcoat, his trousers of corduroy, and his shirt-collar, got up
+expressly for the occasion as though he had been a prime minister. The
+ends of his neckerchief bore no inconsiderable likeness to two well-grown
+carrots. In his two hands he carefully nursed his large-brimmed
+well-shaped white beaver hat; a useful article to hold in one's hands
+when there is any danger of nervousness, for nothing is so hard to get
+rid of as one's hands. I am not sure that Mr. Bumpkin was nervous. He
+was a brave self-contained man, who had fought the world and conquered.
+His maxim was, "right is right," and "wrong is no man's right." He was
+of the upright and down-straight character, and didn't care "for all the
+counsellors in the kingdom." And why should he? His cause was good, his
+conscience clear, and the story he had to tell plain and
+"straightforrard" as himself. No wonder then that his face beamed with a
+good old country smile, such as he would wear at an exhibition where he
+could show the largest "turmut as ever wur growed." That was the sort of
+smile he turned upon the audience. And as the audience looked at the
+"turmut," it felt that it was indeed the most extraordinary specimen of
+field culture it had ever beheld, and worthy of the first prize.
+
+"What is your name?" inquired Mr. Newboy; "I mustn't lead."
+
+"Bumpkin, and I bearned asheamed on 'im," answered the bold farmer.
+
+"Never mind whether you are ashamed or not," interposed Mr. Nimble; "just
+answer the question."
+
+"You must answer," remarked the learned Judge, "not make a speech."
+
+"Zackly, sir," said Bumpkin, pulling at his hair.
+
+Another titter. The jury titter and hold down their heads. Evidently
+there's fun in the case.
+
+Then Mr. Newboy questioned him about the occurrence; asked him if he
+recollected such a day, and where he had been, and where he was going,
+and a variety of other questions; the answer to every one of which
+provoked fresh laughter; until, after much floundering on the part of
+both himself and Mr. Newboy, as though they were engaged in a wrestling
+match, he was asked by the learned Judge "to tell them exactly what
+happened. Let him tell his own story," said the Judge.
+
+"Ha!" said everybody; "now we shall hear something!"
+
+"I wur a gwine," began Bumpkin, "hoame--"
+
+"That's not evidence," said Mr. Nimble.
+
+"How so?" asks the Judge.
+
+"It doesn't matter where he was going to, my lord, but where he was!"
+
+"Well, that is so," says the Judge; "you mustn't tell us, Mr. Bumpkin,
+whither you were going, but where you were!"
+
+Bumpkin scratched his head; there were too many where's for him.
+
+"Can't yon tell us," says Mr. Newboy, "where you were?"
+
+"Where I were?" says Bumpkin.
+
+A roar of laughter greeted this statement. Mr. Nimble turning it into
+the jury-box like a flood.
+
+"I wur in Lunnun--"
+
+"Yes--yes," says his counsel; "but what locality?"
+
+You might just as well have put him under a mangle, as to try to get
+evidence out of him like that.
+
+"Look," says the Judge, "attend to me; if you go on like that, you will
+not be allowed your expenses."
+
+"What took place?" asks his counsel; "can't you tell us, man?"
+
+"Why the thief cotch--"
+
+"I object," says Mr. Nimble; "you mustn't call him a thief; it is for the
+jury, my lord, to determine that."
+
+"That is so," says my lord; "you mustn't call him a thief, Mr. Bumpkin."
+
+"Beg pardon, your lord; but ur stole my watch."
+
+"No--no," says Mr. Newboy; "took your watch."
+
+"An if ur took un, ur stole un, I allows," says Bumpkin; "for I never gin
+it to un."
+
+There was so much laughter that for some time nothing further was said;
+but every audience knows better than to check the source of merriment by
+a continued uproar; so it waited for another supply.
+
+"You must confine yourself," says the Judge, "to telling us what took
+place."
+
+"I'll spak truth and sheam t' devil," says Bumpkin.
+
+"Now go on," says Newboy.
+
+"The thief stole my watch, and that be t' plain English on 't."
+
+"I shall have to commit you to prison," says the Judge, "if you go on
+like that; remember you are upon your oath, and it's a very serious
+thing--serious for you and serious for the young man at the bar."
+
+At these touching words, the young man at the bar burst out crying, said
+"he was a respectable man, and it was all got up against him;" whereupon
+Mr. Nimble said "he must be quiet, and that his lordship and the
+gentlemen in the box would take care of him and not allow him to be
+trampled on."
+
+"You are liable," said the Judge, "to be prosecuted for perjury if you do
+not tell the truth."
+
+"Well, then, your lord, if a man maun goo to prison for losin' his watch,
+I'll goo that's all; but that ere man stole un."
+
+Mr. Newboy: "He took it, did he?"
+
+"I object," said Mr. Nimble; "that is a leading question."
+
+"Yes," said the Judge; "I think that is rather leading," Mr. Newboy; "you
+may vary the form though, and ask him whether the prisoner stole it."
+
+"Really, my lord," said Mr. Nimble, "that, with very great respect, is as
+leading as the other form."
+
+"Not quite, I think, Mr. Nimble. You see in the other form, you make a
+positive assertion that he did steal it; in this, you merely ask the
+question."
+
+And I saw that this was a very keen and subtle distinction, such as could
+only be drawn by a Chancery Judge.
+
+"Would it not be better, my lord, if he told us what took place?"
+
+"That is what he is doing," said the Judge; "go on, witness."
+
+"I say as 'ow thic feller comed out and hugged up aginst I and took 't
+watch and runned away. I arter'd him, and met him coomin' along wi' it
+in 's pocket; what can be plaainer an thic?"
+
+There was great laughter as Mr. Bumpkin shook his head at the learned
+counsel for the defence, and thumped one hand upon the ledge in front of
+him.
+
+"That will do," said Mr. Newboy, sitting down triumphantly.
+
+Then the counsel for the defence arose, and a titter again went round the
+Court, and there was a very audible adjustment of persons in preparation
+for the treat that was to come.
+
+"May the prisoner have a seat, my lord?"
+
+"Oh, certainly," said his lordship; "let an easy-chair be brought
+immediately."
+
+"Now then, Mr. Bumpkin, or whatever your name is, don't lounge on the
+desk like that, but just stand up and attend to me. Stand up, sir, and
+answer my questions," says Mr. Nimble.
+
+"I be standin' oop," said Bumpkin, "and I can answer thee; ax away."
+
+"Just attend," said the Judge. "You must not go on like that. You are
+here to answer questions and not to make speeches. If you wish those
+gentlemen to believe you, you must conduct yourself in a proper manner.
+Remember this is a serious charge, and you are upon your oath."
+
+Poor Bumpkin! Never was there a more friendless position than that of
+Ignorance in the witness-box.
+
+"Just attend!" repeated Mr. Nimble; this was a favourite expression of
+his.
+
+"How may aliases have you?"
+
+"Ow many who?" asked Bumpkin. (Roars of laughter.)
+
+"How many different names?"
+
+"Naames! why I s'pose I got two, like moast people."
+
+"How many more?"
+
+"None as iver I knowed of."
+
+"Wait a bit, we shall see. Now, sir, will you swear you have never gone
+by the name of Pumpkin?"
+
+Loud laughter, in which the learned judge tried not to join.
+
+"Never!"
+
+"Do you swear it?"
+
+"I do."
+
+"My lord, would you kindly let me see the depositions. Now look here,
+sir, is that your signature?"
+
+"I ain't much of a scollard."
+
+"No; but you can make a cross, I suppose."
+
+"Ay, I can make a cross, or zummut in imitation as well as any man."
+
+"Look at that, is that your cross?"
+
+"It look like un."
+
+"Now then, sir; when you were before the Lord Mayor, I ask you, upon your
+oath, did you not give the name of Pumpkin?"
+
+"Noa, I din't!"
+
+"Was this read over to you, and were you asked if it was correct?"
+
+"It med be."
+
+"Med be; but wasn't it? You know it was, or, don't you?"
+
+Bumpkin seemed spiked, so silent; seemed on fire, so red.
+
+"Well, we know it was so. Now, my lord, I call your lordship's attention
+to this remarkable fact; here in the depositions he calls himself
+Pumpkin."
+
+His lordship looks carefully at the depositions and says that certainly
+is so.
+
+Mr. Newboy rises and says he understands that it may be a mistake of the
+clerk's.
+
+Judge: "How can you say that, Mr. Newboy, when it's in his affidavit?"
+
+(Clerk of Arraigns whispers to his lordship.) "I mean in his
+depositions, as I am told they are called in this Court; these are read
+over to him by the clerk, and he is asked if they are correct." Shakes
+his head.
+
+(So they began to try the prisoner, not so much on the merits of the case
+as on the merits of the magistrate's clerk.)
+
+"You certainly said your name was Pumpkin," said the Judge, "and what is
+more you swore to it."
+
+("They've got the round square at work," muttered a voice in the
+gallery.)
+
+Mr. Nimble: "Now just attend; have you ever gone so far as to say that
+this case did not refer to you because your name was not Bumpkin?"
+
+The witness hesitates, then says "he b'leeves not."
+
+"Let those two gentlemen, Mr. Crackcrib and Mr. Centrebit, step forward."
+
+There was a bustle in Court, and then, with grinning faces, up stepped
+the two men who had visited Mr. Bumpkin at the "Goose" some days before.
+
+"Have you ever seen these gentlemen before?" asks the learned counsel.
+
+The gentlemen alluded to looked up as if they had practised it together,
+and both grinned. How can Mr. Bumpkin's confusion be described? His
+under jaw fell, and his head drooped; he was like one caught in a net
+looking at the fowler.
+
+The question was repeated, and Mr. Bumpkin wiped his face and returned
+his handkerchief into the depths of his hat, into which he would have
+liked to plunge also.
+
+Question repeated in a tone that conveyed the impression that witness was
+one of the biggest scoundrels in the Heart of Civilization.
+
+"You must really answer," says the Judge.
+
+"They be put on, your lordship."
+
+"No, no," says the counsel, "you mustn't say that, I'll have an answer.
+Have you seen them before?"
+
+"Yes," muttered the prosecutor.
+
+"Let them go out of Court. Now then," says the counsel, extending his
+right hand and his forefinger and leaning towards the witness,
+"have--you--not--told--them--that--this case was nothing to do with you
+as your name wasn't Bumpkin?"
+
+"My lord," says the witness.
+
+"No, no; you must answer."
+
+The witness stood confounded.
+
+"You decline to answer," says the counsel. "Very well; now then, let me
+see if you will decline to answer this. When you were robbed, as you
+say, was anybody with you?"
+
+"Be I obligated to answer, my lord?"
+
+"I think you must answer," said his lordship.
+
+"There wur."
+
+"Who was it?"
+
+"A companion, I s'poase."
+
+"Yes, but who was he? what was his name?"
+
+No answer.
+
+"You'd rather not answer; very well. Where does he live?"
+
+"I doant know. Westmunster, I believe."
+
+"Is he here?"
+
+"Not as I knows on."
+
+("What a lark this is," chuckled the Don, as he sat in the corner of the
+gallery peeping from behind the front row.)
+
+"Did he see the watch taken?"
+
+"He did, leastways I s'poase so."
+
+"And has never appeared as a witness?"
+
+"How is that?" asks his lordship.
+
+"He axed me, m'lud, not to say as 'ow he wur in it."
+
+Judge shakes his head. Counsel for the prisoner shakes his head at the
+jury, and the jury shake their heads at one another.
+
+Now in the front row of the gallery sat five young men in the undress
+uniform of the hussars: they were Joe and his brother recruits come to
+hear the famous trial. At this moment Mr. Bumpkin in sheer despair
+lifted his eyes in the direction of the gallery and immediately caught
+sight of his old servant. He gave a nod of recognition as if he were the
+only friend left in the wide world of that Court of Justice.
+
+"Never mind your friends in the gallery," said Mr. Nimble; "I dare say
+you have plenty of them about; now attend to this question:"--Yes, and a
+nice question it was, considering the tone and manner with which it was
+asked. "At the moment when you were being robbed, as you say, did a
+young woman with a baby in her arms come up?"
+
+The witness's attention was again distracted, but this time by no such
+pleasing object as on the former occasion. He was dumbfoundered; a
+sparrow facing an owl could hardly be in a greater state of nervousness
+and discomfiture: for down in the well of the Court, a place where he had
+never once cast his eyes till now, with a broad grin on his coarse
+features, and a look of malignant triumph, sat the _fiendlike Snooks_!
+His mouth was wide open, and Bumpkin found himself looking down into it
+as though it had been a saw-pit. By his side sat Locust taking notes of
+the cross-examination.
+
+"What are you looking at, Mr. Bumpkin?" inquired the learned counsel.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin started.
+
+"What are you looking at?"
+
+"I wur lookin' doun thic there hole in thic feller's head," answered
+Bumpkin.
+
+Such a roar of laughter followed this speech as is seldom heard even in a
+breach of promise case, where the most touching pathos often causes the
+greatest amusement to the audience.
+
+"What a lark!" said Harry.
+
+"As good as a play," responded Dick.
+
+"I be sorry for the old chap," said Joe; "they be givin' it to un pooty
+stiff."
+
+"Now attend," said the counsel, "and never mind the hole. Did a young
+woman with a baby come up?"
+
+"To the best o' my b'leef."
+
+"Don't say to the best of your belief; did she or not?"
+
+"He can only speak to the best of his belief," said the Judge.
+
+("There's the round square," whispered O'Rapley.)
+
+"Did she come up then to the best of your belief?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And--did--she--accuse--you--to the best of your belief of assaulting
+her?"
+
+"I be a married man," answered the witness. (Great laughter.)
+
+"Yes, we know all about you; we'll see who you are presently. Did she
+accuse you, and did you run away?"
+
+"I runned arter thic feller."
+
+"No, no; did she accuse you?"
+
+"She might."
+
+The learned counsel then sat down with the quickest motion imaginable,
+and then the policeman gave his evidence as to taking the man into
+custody; and produced the huge watch. Mr. Bumpkin was recalled and asked
+how long he had had it, and where he bought it; the only answers to which
+were that he had had it five years, and bought it of a man in the market;
+did not know who he was or where he came from; all which answers looked
+very black against Mr. Bumpkin. Then the policeman was asked to answer
+this question--yes or no. "Did he know the prisoner?" He said "No."
+
+Mr. Nimble said to the jury, "Here was a man dressing himself up as an
+old man from the country (laughter) prowling about the streets of London
+in company with an associate whose name he dared not mention, and who
+probably was well-known to the police; here was this countryman actually
+accused of committing an assault in the public streets on a young woman
+with a baby in her arms: he runs away as hard as his legs will carry him
+and meets a man who is actually wearing the watch that this Bumpkin or
+Pumpkin charges him with stealing. He, the learned counsel, would call
+witness after witness to speak to the character of his client, who was an
+engraver (I believe he was an engraver of bank notes); he would call
+witness after witness who would tell them how long they had known him,
+and how long he had had the watch; and, curiously enough, such curious
+things did sometimes almost providentially take place in a Court of
+Justice, he would call the very man that poor Mr. Simpleman had purchased
+it of five years ago, when he was almost, as you might say, in the first
+happy blush of boyhood (that 'blush of boyhood' went down with many of
+the jury who were fond of pathos); let the jury only fancy! but really
+would it be safe--really would it be safe, let him ask them upon their
+consciences, which in after life, perhaps years to come, when their heads
+were on their pillows, and their hands upon their hearts, (here several
+of the jury audibly sniffed), would those consciences upbraid, or would
+those consciences approve them for their work to-day? would it be safe to
+convict after the exhibition the prosecutor had made of himself in that
+box, where, he ventured to say, Bumpkin stood self-condemned before that
+intelligent jury."
+
+Here the intelligent jury turned towards one another, and after a moment
+or two announced, through their foreman (who was a general-dealer in old
+metal, in a dark street over the water), that if they heard a witness or
+two to the young man's character that would be enough for them.
+
+Witnesses, therefore, were called to character, and the young man was
+promptly acquitted, the jury appending to their verdict that he left the
+Court without a stain upon his character.
+
+"Bean't I 'lowed to call witnesses to charickter?" asks the Prosecutor.
+
+"Oh, no," replied Mr. Nimble; "we know your character pretty well."
+
+"What's that?" inquired the Judge.
+
+"He wants to know, my lord," says Mr. Nimble, laughing, "if he may call
+witnesses to character!"
+
+"Oh dear, no," says the Judge; "you were not being tried."
+
+Now many persons might have been of a different opinion from his lordship
+on this point. Snooks for one, I think; for he gave a great loud vulgar
+haw! haw! haw! and said, "I could ha' gien him a charakter."
+
+"Si-lence!" said the Usher.
+
+"May the prisoner have his watch, my lord?" asks Mr. Nimble.
+
+"O, yes," said his lordship, "to be sure. Give the prisoner his watch."
+
+"_His_ watch," groaned a voice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+
+Mr. Alibi is stricken with a thunderbolt--interview with Horatio and Mr.
+Prigg.
+
+The "round square," as the facetious Don called the new style of putting
+the round judicial pegs into the square judicial holes, had indeed been
+applied with great effect on this occasion; for I perceived that Mr.
+Alibi, remarkable man, was not only engaged on the part of the Crown to
+prosecute, but also on that of the prisoner to defend. And this fact
+came to my knowledge in the manner following:
+
+When Mr. Bumpkin got into the lower part of that magnificent pile of
+buildings which we have agreed to call the Heart of Civilisation, he soon
+became the centre of a dirty mob of undersized beings who were anxious to
+obtain a sight of him; and many of whom were waiting to congratulate
+their friend, the engraver. Amidst the crowd was Mr. Alibi. That
+gentleman had no intention of meeting Mr. Bumpkin any more, for certain
+expenses were due to him as a witness, and it had long been a custom at
+the Old Bailey, that if the representative of the Crown did not see the
+witnesses the expenses due to them would fall into the Consolidated Fund,
+so that it was a clear gain to the State if its representative officers
+did not meet the witnesses. On this occasion, however, Mr. Alibi ran
+against his client accidentally, and being a courteous gentleman, could
+not forbear condoling with him on the unsuccessful termination of his
+case.
+
+"You, see," began Mr. Alibi, "I was instructed so late--really, the
+wonder is, when gentlemen don't employ a solicitor till the last moment,
+how we ever lay hold of the facts at all. Now look at your case, sir.
+Yes, yes, I'm coming--bother my clerks, how they worry--I'll be there
+directly."
+
+"But thic feller," said Mr. Bumpkin, "who had my case din't know nowt
+about it. I could ha' done un better mysel."
+
+"Ah, sir; so we are all apt to think. He's a most clever man, that--a
+very rising man, sir."
+
+"Be he?" said Bumpkin.
+
+"Why, do you know, sir," continued Mr. Alibi, "he was very great at his
+University."
+
+"That bean't everything, though, by a long way."
+
+"No, sir, granted, granted. But he was Number Four in his boat; and the
+papers all said his feathering was beautiful."
+
+"A good boatman, wur he?"
+
+"Magnificent, sir; magnificent!"
+
+"Then he'd better keep a ferry; bean't no good at law."
+
+"Ah! I am afraid you are a little prejudiced. He's a very learned man."
+
+"I wish he'd larned to open his mouth. Why, I got a duck can quack a
+devilish sight better un thic feller can talk."
+
+"Ha, how d'ye do, Mr. Swindle?" said a shabby-looking gentleman, who came
+up at this moment.
+
+"Excuse me, sir; but you have the advantage of me," said Alibi, winking.
+
+"Dear me, how very strange, I thought you were Mr. Wideawake's
+representative."
+
+"Ah!" said Mr. Alibi, laughing, "we are often taken for brothers--and
+yet, would you believe me, there is no relationship."
+
+"No?" said the gentleman.
+
+"None, whatever. I think you'll find him in the Second Court, if not,
+he'll be there in a short time. I saw him only just now."
+
+That is how I learned that Mr. Alibi represented the Crown and Mr.
+Deadandgone for the prosecutor; also the prisoner, and Mr. Wideawake for
+the defence. Clever man!
+
+"Now," said Mr. Bumpkin, "Can't un get a new trial?"
+
+"I fear not," said Alibi; "but I should not be in the least surprised if
+that Wideawake, who represented the prisoner, brought an action against
+you for false imprisonment and malicious prosecution."
+
+"What, thic thief?"
+
+"Ah, sir--law is a very deep pit--it's depth is not to be measured by any
+moral plummet."
+
+"Doan't 'zacly zee't."
+
+"Well, it's this," said Mr. Alibi. "Whether you're right or whether
+you're wrong, if he brings an action you must defend it--it's not your
+being in the right will save you."
+
+"Then, what wool?" asked Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+Mr. Alibi did not know, unless it was instructing him in due time and not
+leaving it to the last moment. That seemed the only safe course.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin took off his hat, drew out his handkerchief, and wiped the
+perspiration from his forehead. Then he breathed heavily. Now at this
+moment a strange phenomenon occurred, not to be passed over in this
+truthful history. Past Mr. Bumpkin's ear something shot, in appearance
+like a human fist, in velocity like a thunderbolt, and unfortunately it
+alighted full on the nose and eye of the great Mr. Alibi, causing that
+gentleman to reel back into the arms of the faithful thieves around. I
+cannot tell from what quarter it proceeded, it was so sudden, but I saw
+that in the neighbourhood whence it came stood five tall hussars, and I
+heard a voice say:
+
+"Now, look at that. Come on, Maister, don't let us git into no row."
+
+Mr. Bumpkin, with the politeness of his nature, said:
+
+"Good marnin', sir," and retired.
+
+And thus thought the unfortunate prosecutor: "This 'ere country be all
+law, actions grows out o' actions, like that 'ere cooch that runs all
+over everywhere's." And then he saw the five recruits strutting along
+with their caps at the side of their heads, the straps across their
+chins, their riding-whips under their arms, and walking with such a
+swagger that one would have thought they had just put down a rebellion,
+or set up a throne.
+
+It was some time before, in the confusion of his mind, the disappointed
+Bumpkin could realize the fact that there was any connection between him
+and the military. But as he looked, with half-closed eyes, suddenly the
+thought crossed his mind: "Why, that be like our Joe--that middle un."
+
+And so it was: they were walking at a fastish pace, and as they strutted
+along Joe seemed to be marching away with the whole farm and with all the
+pleasures of his past life. Even Mrs. Bumpkin herself, in some
+extraordinary manner, seemed to be eloping with him. Why was it? And
+now, despondent, disappointed and humiliated, with his blood once more
+up, poor old Bumpkin bethought himself seriously of his position. For
+weeks he had been waiting for his case to "come on"; weeks more might
+pass idly away unless he made a stir. So he would call at the office of
+Mr. Prigg. And being an artful man, he had a reason for calling without
+further delay. It was this: his desire to see Prigg before that
+gentleman should hear of his defeat. Prigg would certainly blame him for
+not employing a solicitor, or going to the Public Prosecutor. So to
+Prigg's he went about three o'clock on that Thursday afternoon. I do not
+undertake to describe furniture, so I say nothing of Prigg's dingy
+office, except this, that if Prigg had been a spider, it was just the
+sort of corner in which I should have expected him to spin his web.
+Being a man of enormous practice, and in all probability having some
+fifty to sixty representatives of county families to confer with, two
+hours elapsed before Mr. Bumpkin could be introduced. The place, small
+as it was, was filled with tin boxes bearing, no doubt, eminent names.
+Horatio was busy copying drafts of marriage settlements, conveyances, and
+other matters of great importance. He had little time for gossip because
+his work seemed urgent, and although he was particularly glad to see Mr.
+Bumpkin, yet being a lad of strict adherence to duty, he always replied
+courteously, but in the smallest number of words to that gentleman's
+questions.
+
+"Will ur be long?" asked the client; "I don't think so," said Horatio.
+
+Then in a whisper, asked Mr. Bumpkin, "How does thee think, sir, we shall
+get on: win, shan't us?"
+
+Horatio just raised his face from the paper and winked, as though he were
+conveying a valuable secret.
+
+"Have ur heard anythink, sir?"
+
+Another artful wink.
+
+"Thee know's zummat, I knows thee do."
+
+Another artful wink.
+
+"Thee can tell I, surely? I wunt let un goo no furder."
+
+Horatio winked once more, and made a face at the door where the great
+Prigg was supposed to be.
+
+"Ain't give in, ave ur?"
+
+Horatio put his finger in his mouth and made a popping noise as he pulled
+it out.
+
+"What the devil does thee mean, lad? there be zummat up, I'll swear."
+
+"Hush! hush!"
+
+"Now, look here," said Bumpkin, taking out his purse; "thee beest a good
+chap, and writ out thic brief, didn't thee? I got zummat for thee;" and
+hereupon he handed Horatio half-a-crown.
+
+The youth took the money, spun it into the air, caught it in the palm of
+his hand, spat on it for good luck, and put it in his pocket
+
+"I'll have a spree with that," said he, "if I never do again."
+
+"Be careful, lad," said Bumpkin, "don't fool un away."
+
+"Not I," said Horatio; "I'm on for the Argille tonight, please the pigs."
+
+"Be thic a place o' wusship" said Bumpkin, laughing.
+
+"Not exactly," answered Horatio; "it's a place where you can just do the
+gentleman on the cheap, shoulder it with noblemen's sons, and some of the
+highest. Would you like to go now, just for a lark? I'm sure you'd like
+it."
+
+"Not I," said the client; "this 'ere Lunnun life doan't do for I.'.'
+
+"Yes; but this is a nice quiet sort of place."
+
+"Gals, I spoase."
+
+"Rather; I believe you my boy; stunners too."
+
+"Thee be too young, it's my thinking."
+
+"Well, that's what the Governor says; everybody says I'm too young; but I
+hope to mend that fault, Master Bumpkin, if I don't get the better of any
+other."
+
+"I wish I wur as old in the 'ead; but tell I, lad, hast thee 'eard
+anything? Thee might just as well tell I; it wunt goo no furder."
+
+Horatio put his finger to his nose and made a number of dumb signs,
+expressive of more than mere words could convey.
+
+"Danged if I can mak' thee out," said Bumpkin.
+
+"You recollect that ride we had in the gig."
+
+"Ha, now it's coming," thought he; "I shall have un now," so he answered:
+"Well, it wur nice, wurn't ur?"
+
+"Never enjoyed myself more in my life," rejoined Horatio; "what a nice
+morning it was!"
+
+"Beautiful!"
+
+"And do you recollect the rum and milk?"
+
+Mr. Bumpkin remembered it.
+
+"Well, I believe that rum and milk was the luckiest investment you ever
+made. Hallo! there's the bell--hush, _mither woy_!"
+
+"Dang thee!" said Bumpkin, "thee's got un;" and he followed the youthful
+clerk into Mr. Prigg's room.
+
+There sat that distinguished lawyer with his respectable head, in his
+easy chair, much worn, both himself and the chair, by constant use.
+There sat the good creature ready to offer himself up on the altar of
+Benevolence for the good of the first comer. His collar was still
+unruffled, so was his temper, notwithstanding the severe strain of the
+county families. There was his clear complexion indicating the continued
+health resulting from a well-spent life. His almost angelic features
+were beautiful rather in the amiability of their expression than in their
+loveliness of form. Anyone looking at him for the first time must
+exclaim, "Dear me, what a _nice_ man!"
+
+"Well, Mr. Bumpkin," said he, extending his left hand lazily as though it
+were the last effort of exhausted humanity, "how are we now?"--always
+identifying himself with Bumpkin, as though he should say "We are in the
+same boat, brother; come what may, we sink or swim together--how are we
+now?"
+
+"Bean't wery well," answered Mr. Bumpkin, "I can tell 'ee."
+
+"What's the matter? dear me, why, what's the matter? We must be cool,
+you know. Nothing like coolness, if we are to win our battle."
+
+"Lookee 'ere," said Bumpkin; "lookee 'ere, sir; I bin here dordlin' about
+off an' on six weeks, and this 'ere dam trial--"
+
+"Sh--sh!" remonstrated Mr. Prigg with the softest voice, and just lifting
+his left hand on a level with his forehead. "Let us learn resignation,
+good Mr. Bumpkin. Let us learn it at the feet of disappointment and
+losses and crosses."
+
+"Yes, yes," said Bumpkin; "but thic larnin' be spensive, I be payin' for
+it."
+
+"Mr. Bumpkin," said the good man sternly, "the dispensations of
+Providence are not to be denounced in this way. You are a man, Bumpkin;
+let us act, then, the man's part. You see these boxes, these names: they
+represent men who have gone through the furnace; let us be patient."
+
+"But I be sick on it. I wish I'd never know'd what law wur."
+
+"Ah, sir, most of us would like to exist in that state of wild and
+uncultured freedom which only savages and beasts are permitted to enjoy;
+but life has higher aims, Mr. Bumpkin; grander pursuits; more sublime
+duties."
+
+"Well, sir, I bean't no schollard and so can't argify; but if thee plase
+to tell I, sir, when this case o' mine be likely to come on--"
+
+"I was just that minute going to write to you, Mr. Bumpkin, as your name
+was announced, to say that it would not be taken until next term."
+
+Mr. Bumpkin uttered an exclamation which is not for print, and which
+caused the good Prigg to clap his hands to his ears and press them
+tightly for five minutes. Then he took them away and rubbed them
+together (I mean his hands), as though he were washing them from the
+contaminating influence of Mr. Bumpkin's language.
+
+"Quite so," he said, mechanically; "dear me!"
+
+"What be quite so," asked Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"Yes--yes--you see," said Prigg, "Her Majesty's Judges have to go
+circuit; or, as it is technically called, jail delivery."
+
+"They be allays gwine suckitt."
+
+"Quite so. That is precisely what the profession is always observing.
+No sooner do they return from one circuit than they start off on another.
+Are you aware, Mr. Bumpkin, that we pay a judge five thousand a-year to
+try a pickpocket?"
+
+"Hem!" said Bumpkin, "I bean't aware on it. Never used t' have so many
+o' these 'ere--what d'ye call 'ems?"
+
+"Circuits. No--but you see, here now is an instance. There's a prisoner
+away somewhere, I think down at Bodmin, hundreds of miles off, and I
+believe he has sent to say that they must come down and try him at once,
+for he can't wait."
+
+"I'd mak' un wait. Why should honest men wait for sich as he? I bin
+waitin' long enough."
+
+"Quite so. And the consequence is that the Lord Chief Justice of England
+is going down to try him, a common pickpocket, I believe, and his
+Lordship is the very head of the Judicial Body."
+
+"Hem!" said Mr. Bumpkin; "then I may as well goo hoame?"
+
+"Quite so," answered the amiable Prigg; "in fact, better--much better."
+
+"An' we shan't come on now, sir; bean't there no chance?"
+
+"Not the least, my dear sir; but you see we have not been idle; we have
+been advancing, in fact, during the whole time that has seemed to you so
+long. Now, just look, my dear sir; we have fought no less than ten
+appeals, right up, mind you, to the Court of Appeal itself; we have
+fought two demurrers; we have compelled them three times to give better
+answers to our interrogatories, and we have had fourteen other summonses
+at Chambers on which they have not thought proper to appeal beyond the
+Judge. Now, Mr. Bumpkin, after that, I _think_ you ought to be
+satisfied; but really that is one of the most disparaging things in the
+profession, the most disparaging, I may say; we find it so difficult to
+show our clients that we have done enough for them."
+
+"An' thee think, sir, as we shall win un?" said Bumpkin.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Prigg, "I never like to prophesy; but if ever a case
+looked like winning it's _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_. And I may tell you this,
+Mr. Bumpkin, only pray don't say that I told you."
+
+"What be thic, sir?" asked the eager client, with his eyes open as widely
+as ever client's can be.
+
+"The other side are in a tre-_men_-dous way!"
+
+"What, funkin', be um? I said so. That there Snooks be a rank bad
+un--now, then, we'll at un like steam."
+
+"All in good time, Bumpkin," said the worthy Prigg, affectionately taking
+his client's hand. "All in good time. My kind regards to Mrs. Bumpkin.
+I suppose you return to-night?"
+
+"Ay, sir, I be off by the fust train. Good day t' ye, sir; good day and
+thankee."
+
+Thus comforted and thus grateful did the confiding client take leave of
+his legal adviser, who immediately took down his costs-book and booked a
+long conference, including the two hours that Mr. Bumpkin was kept in the
+"outer office." This followed immediately after another "long conference
+with you when you thought we should be in the paper to-morrow from what a
+certain Mr. O'Rapley had told you, and I thought we should not."
+
+As he passed through the "outer office" he shook. Horatio by the hand.
+"Good-bye, sir. I knows what it wur now--bean't comin' on."
+
+"Don't say I told you," said the pale boy, as though he were afraid of
+communicating some tremendous secret.
+
+"Noa, thee bean't told I. Now, lookee 'ere, Mr. Jigger, come down when
+thee like; I shall be rare and prood to see thee, and so'll Missus."
+
+"Thanks," said Horatio; "I'll be sure and come. _Mither woy_!"
+
+"Ha! mither woy, lad! that's ur; thee got un. Good-bye."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+
+Mr. Bumpkin at home again.
+
+How peaceful the farm seemed after all the turmoil and worry that Farmer
+Bumpkin had been subjected to in London! What a haven of rest is a
+peaceful Home! How the ducks seemed to quack!--louder, as Mr. Bumpkin
+thought, than they ever did before. The little flock of sheep looked up
+as he went, with his old ash stick under his arm, to look round the farm.
+They seemed to say to one another, "Why, here's Master; I told you he'd
+come back." And the cows turned their heads and bellowed a loud welcome.
+They knew nothing of his troubles, and only expressed their extreme
+pleasure at seeing him again. They left off eating the whole time he was
+with them; for they were very well bred Shorthorns and Alderneys. It was
+quite pleasant to see how well behaved they all were. And Mrs. Bumpkin
+pointed out which ones had calved and which were expected to calve in the
+course of a few months. And then the majestic bull looked up with an
+expression of immense delight; came up to Mr. Bumpkin and put his nose in
+his master's hand, and gazed as only a bull would gaze on a farmer who
+had spent several weeks in London. It was astonishing with what
+admiration the bull regarded him; and he seemed quite delighted as Mrs.
+Bumpkin told her husband of the bull's good conduct in his absence; how
+he had never broken bounds once, and had behaved himself as an exemplary
+bull on all occasions.
+
+"But," said Mrs. Bumpkin, "I be 'bliged to say, Tom, that there Mrs.
+Snooks have belied him shamefully. She haven't got a good word to say
+for un; nor, for the matter o' that, for anything on the farm."
+
+"Never mind," said Mr. Bumpkin; "he bean't the only one as 'ave been
+slandered hereabouts."
+
+"No, Tom, sure enough; but we bean't 'bliged to heed un."
+
+"No, nor wun't. And now here come Tim."
+
+To see Tim run and bound and leap and put his paws round Mr. Bumpkin's
+neck and lick him, was a sight which must have made up for a great deal
+of the unkindness which he had experienced of late. Nor could any dog
+say more plainly than Tim did, how he had had a row with that ill-natured
+cur of Snooks', called Towser, and how he had driven him off the farm and
+forbade him ever setting foot on it again. Tim told all about the
+snarling of Towser, and said he would not have minded his taking Snooks'
+part in the action, if he had confined himself to that; but when he went
+on and barked at Mr. Bumpkin's sheep and pigs, against whom he ought to
+have shown no ill-feeling, it was more than Tim could stand; so he flew
+at him and thoroughly well punished him for his malignant disposition.
+
+But in the midst of all this welcoming, there was an unpleasant
+experience, and that was, that all the pigs were gone but two. The rare
+old Chichester sow was no more.
+
+"There be only two affidavys left, Nancy!"
+
+"No, Tom--only two; the man fetched two yesterday."
+
+"I hope they sold well. Have he sent any money yet?"
+
+"Not a farthing," said Mrs. Bumpkin; "nor yet for the sheep. He have had
+six sheep."
+
+"Zo I zee; and where be th' heifers? we had six."
+
+"They be all sold, Tom."
+
+"And how much did 'em fetch?"
+
+"The man ain't brought in the account yet, Tom; but I spect we shall have
+un soon."
+
+"Why," said Mr. Bumpkin, looking at the stackyard, "another rick be
+gone!"
+
+"Yes, Tom, it be gone, and fine good hay it wur; it cut out as well as
+any hay I ever zeed."
+
+"Sure did ur!" answered Tom; "it were the six ak'r o' clover, and were
+got up wirout a drop o' rain on un; it wur prime hay, thic. Why, I wur
+offered six pun' a looad for un."
+
+"I don'ow what ur fetched, Tom; but I be mighty troubled about this 'ere
+lawsuit. I wish we'd never 'a had un."
+
+"Doan't say thic, Nancy; we be bound to bring un. As Laryer Prigg say,
+it bean't so much t' pig--"
+
+"No, Tom, thee said un fust."
+
+"Well, s'poase I did--so ur did, and it worn't so much t' pig, it wur
+thic feller's cheek."
+
+"Well, I don't know nothing about un; I dissay you be right, because
+you've allays been right, Tom; and we've allays got on well togither
+these five and thirty year: but, some'ow, Tom--down, Tim!--down, Tim!"
+
+"Poor old Tim!" said Tom. "Good boy! I wish men wur as good as dogs
+be."
+
+"Some'ow," continued Mrs. Bumpkin, "I doan't like that 'aire Prigg; he
+seem to shake his head too much for I; and 'olds his 'at up to his face
+too long in church when ur goes in; and then ur shakes his head so much
+when ur prays. I don't like un, Tom."
+
+"Now, Nancy, thee knows nothing about un. I can tell 'ee he be a rare
+good man, and sich a clever lawyer, he'll knock that 'aire Snooks out o'
+time. But, come on, let's goo in and 'ave some ta."
+
+So they went in. And a very comfortable tea there was set out on the old
+oak table in front of the large fireplace where the dog-irons were. And
+a bright, blazing log there was on the hearth; for a cold east wind was
+blowing, notwithstanding that the sun had shone out bravely in the day.
+Ah! how glad Tom was to see the bright pewter plates and dishes ranged in
+rows all round the homely kitchen! They seemed to smile a welcome on the
+master; and one very large family sort of dish seemed to go out of his
+way to give him welcome. I believe he tumbled down in his enthusiasm at
+Tom's return, although it was accounted for by saying that Tim had done
+it by the excessive "waggling" of his tail. I believe that dish fell
+down in the name of all the plates and dishes on the shelves, for the
+purpose of congratulating the master; else why should all their faces
+brighten up so suddenly with smiles as he did so? It's ridiculous to
+suppose plates and dishes have no feelings; they've a great deal more
+than some people. And then, how the great, big, bright copper kettle,
+suspended on his hook, which was in the centre of the huge fireplace, how
+he did sing! Why the nightingale couldn't throw more feeling into a song
+than did that old kettle! And then the home-made bread and rashers of
+bacon, such as you never see out of a farmhouse; and tea, such as can't
+be made anywhere else! And then the long pipe was brought out of his
+corner, where he had been just as Tom had left it before going to town.
+And the bowl of that pipe gave off circular clouds of the bluest smoke,
+expressive of its joy at the master's return: it wasn't very expressive,
+perhaps, but it was all that a pipe could do; and when one does his best
+in this world, it is all that mortal man can expect of him.
+
+And then said Mrs. Bumpkin,--still dubious as to the policy of the
+proceedings, but too loving to combat her husband upon them,--"When be
+thee gwine agin, Tom?"
+
+"I doan't rightly know," said Bumpkin. "Mr. Prigg will let I know;
+sometime in May, I reckon."
+
+"Dear, dear!" said Mrs. Bumpkin; "it may be on, then, just as th'
+haymakin's about."
+
+"Lor, lor! no, dearie; it'll be over long enough afore."
+
+"Doan't be too sure, Tom; it be a long time now since it begun."
+
+"Ah!" said Tom, "a long time enough; but it'll be in th' paper afore long
+now; an' we got one o' the cleverest counsel in Lunnun?"
+
+"What be his name?"
+
+"Danged if I know, but it be one o' the stunninest men o' the day; two on
+'em, by Golly; we got two, Nancy."
+
+"Who be th' tother? p'r'aps thee med mind his name?"
+
+"Noa, I doan't mind his name nuther. Now, what d'ye think o' thic?"
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin laughed, and said, "I think it be a rum thing that thee 'as
+counsellors and doan't mind their names."
+
+And then the conversation turned upon Joe, whose place was vacant in the
+old chimney corner.
+
+The tears ran down Mrs. Bumpkin's rosy cheeks as she said for the
+twentieth time since Mr. Bumpkin's return,--
+
+"Poor Joe! why did ur goo for a soger?"
+
+"He wur a fool!" said Bumpkin, "and I told un so. So as I warned un
+about thic Sergeant; the artfullest man as ever lived, Nancy."
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin wiped her eyes. "He wur a good boy, wur Joe, goo where ur
+wool; but, Tom, couldn't thee 'a' kept thine eye on un when thee see thic
+Sergeant hoverin' roun' like a 'awk arter a sparrer?"
+
+"I did keep eye on un, I tell 'ee; but what be the good o' thic; as well
+keep thee eye on th' sparrer when th' hawk be at un. I tell 'ee I
+'suaded un and warned un, and begged on un to look out."
+
+"An' what did ur say?"
+
+"Say, why said ur wur up to un."
+
+"Up to un," repeated Mrs. Bumpkin. "Can't think 'ow ur got 'old on un."
+
+"No, and thee mark I, no more can nobody else--in Lunnon thee're 'ad
+afore thee knows where thee be."
+
+And now Mr. Bumpkin had his "little drop of warm gin and water before
+going to bed": and Mrs. Bumpkin had a mug of elder wine, for the
+Christmas elder wine was not quite gone: and after that Mrs. Bumpkin, who
+as the reader knows, was the better scholar of the two, took down from a
+shelf on which the family documents and books were kept, a large old
+bible covered with green baize. Then she wiped her glasses, and after
+turning over the old brown leaves until she came to the place where she
+had read last before Tom went away, commenced her evening task, while her
+husband smoked on and listened.
+
+Was it the old tone with which she spelt her way through the sacred
+words? Hardly: here it could be perceived that in her secret heart there
+was doubt and mistrust. Do what she would her eyes frequently became so
+dim that it was necessary to pause and wipe her glasses; and when she had
+finished and closed the book, she took Tom's hand and said:
+
+"O, Tom, I hope all 'll turn out well, but sure enough I ha' misgivings."
+
+"What be it, my dear? Mr. Prigg say we shall win--how can ur do better
+'an thic?"
+
+"Shall we get back the pigs and sheep, Tom?"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin looked into her lap, and folding her apron very smooth with
+both hands, answered:
+
+"I doan't think, Tom, that man looks like bringing anything back. He be
+very chuffy and masterful, and looks all round as he goo away, as though
+he wur lookin' to see what ur would take next. I think he'll have un
+all, Tom."
+
+"Stuff!" said Mr. Bumpkin, "he be sellin' for I, take what ur may."
+
+"He be sellin' THEE, Tom, I think, and I'd stop un from takin' more."
+
+They rose to go to bed, and as Mrs. Bumpkin looked at the cosy old
+hearth, and put up the embers of the log to make it safe for the night,
+it seemed as if the prosperity of their old home had burnt down at last
+to dull ashes, and she looked sadly at the vacant place where Joe had
+used to sit.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+
+Joe's return to Southwood--an invitation from the Vicar--what the old oak
+saw.
+
+It was a long time after the circumstances mentioned in the last chapter.
+The jails had been "delivered" of their prisoners, and prodigious events
+had taken place in the world; great battles had been fought and won,
+great laws made for the future interpretation of judges, and for the
+vexation of unfortunate suitors. It seemed an age to Mr. Bumpkin since
+his case commenced; and Joe had been in foreign parts and won his share
+of the glory and renown that falls to the lot of privates who have helped
+to achieve victory for the honour and glory of their General and the
+happiness of their country. It was a very long time, measured by events,
+since Mr. Bumpkin's return from town, when on a bright morning towards
+the end of June, a fine sunburnt soldier of Her Majesty's regiment of the
+--- Hussars knocked with the butt-end of his riding whip at the old oak
+door in the old porch of Southwood farm-house.
+
+"Well, I never! if that there bean't our Joe!" exclaimed Mrs. Bumpkin,
+looking out of the window; and throwing down the rolling-pin which she
+had just been using in rolling-out the dough for a dumpling--(Mr. Bumpkin
+was "uncommon fond o' dumplins")--"well, I never!" repeated Mrs. Bumpkin,
+as she opened the door; "who ever would ha' thought it? Why, how be'est
+thee, Joe? And bless the lad, 'ow thee've growed! My 'art alive, come
+along! The master'll be mighty glad to see thee, and so be I, sure a
+ly."
+
+And here Mrs. Bumpkin paused to look round him, sticking her knuckles in
+her sides and her elbows in the air as though Joe were a piece of
+handiwork--a dumpling, say--which she herself had turned out, clothes and
+all. And then she put the corner of her apron to her eye.
+
+"Why, Joe, I thought," said she, "I should never see thee agin! Dear,
+dear, this 'ere lawsuit be the ruin on us, mark my words! But lor, don't
+say as I said so to the master for the world, for he be that wropped up
+in un that nothing goes down night and morning, morning and night, but
+affidavys, and summonses, and counsellors, and jussices, and what not."
+
+"Well," said the soldier, slapping his whip on his leg as was his custom,
+"you might be sure I should come and see yer if they left me a leg to hop
+with, and I should 'a wrote, but what wi' the smoke and what with the
+cannon balls flying about, you haven't got much time to think about
+anything; but I did think this, that if ever I got back to Old England,
+if it was twenty year to come, I'd go and see the old master and missus
+and 'ear 'ow that lawsuit wur going on."
+
+"And that be right, Joe--I knowed 'ee would; I said as much to master.
+But 'ow do thee think it'll end? shall us win or lose?"
+
+Now this was the first time he had ever been called upon to give a legal
+opinion, or rather, an opinion upon a legal matter, so he was naturally
+somewhat put about; and looking at the rolling-pin and the dough and then
+at Mrs. Bumpkin, said:
+
+"Well, it's like this: a man med win or a man med lose, there's no
+telling about the case; but I be dang'd well sure o' this, missus, he'll
+lose his money: I wish master had chucked her up long agoo."
+
+This opinion was not encouraging; and perceiving that the subject
+troubled Mrs. Bumpkin more than she liked to confess, he asked a question
+which was of more immediate importance to himself, and that was in
+reference to Polly Sweetlove.
+
+"Why, thee'll make her look at thee now, I'll warrant; thy clothes fit
+thee as though they growed on thee."
+
+"Do she walk with the baker?" inquired Joe, with trembling accents.
+
+"I never heeard so, an' it's my belief she never looked at un wi' any
+meaning. I've seen her many a time comin' down the Green Lane by herself
+and peepin' over th' gate."
+
+"Now look at that!" said Joe; "and when I was here I couldn't get Polly
+to come near the farm--allays some excuse--did you ever speak to her
+about me, missus?"
+
+"I ain't going to tell tales out of school, Joe, so there."
+
+"Now look at that," said Joe; "here's a chap comes all this way and you
+won't tell him anything."
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin laughed, and went on rolling the dough, and told him what a
+nice dumpling she was making, and how he would like it, and asked how
+long he was going to stop, and hoped it would be a month, and was telling
+him all about the sheep and the cows and the good behaviour of the bull,
+when suddenly she said:
+
+"Here he be, Joe! lor, lor, how glad he'll be to see thee!"
+
+But it wasn't the Bull that stepped into the room; it was Mr. Bumpkin,
+rosy, stalwart, jolly, and artful as ever. Now Mrs. Bumpkin was very
+anxious to be the bearer of such good intelligence as Joe's arrival, so,
+notwithstanding the fact that Mr. Bumpkin and he were face to face, the
+eager woman exclaimed:
+
+"Here be our Joe, Tom, hearty and well. And bean't he a smart fine
+feller? What'll Polly think of un now?"
+
+"Shut up thic chatter," said Mr. Bumpkin, laughing. "Halloa! why, Joe,
+egad thee looks like a gineral. I'd take thee for a kernel at the wery
+least. Why, when did thee come, lad?"
+
+"Just now, master."
+
+"That be right, an' I be glad to see thee. I'll warrant Nancy ain't axed
+thee t' have nothun."
+
+"Why, thee be welcome to the 'ouse if thee can eat un, thee knows thic,"
+answered Nancy; "but dinner'll be ready at twelve, and thee best not
+spoil un."
+
+"A quart o' ale wun't spile un, will un, Joe?"
+
+"Now look at that," said the soldier. "Thankee, master, but not a
+quart."
+
+"Well, thee hasn't got thee head snicked off yet, Joe?"
+
+"No, master, if my head had been snicked off I couldn't ha' bin here."
+And he laughed a loud ha! ha! ha!
+
+And Mr. Bumpkin laughed a loud haw! haw! haw! at this tremendous
+witticism. It was not much of a witticism, perhaps, after all, when duly
+considered, but it answered the purpose as well as the very best, and
+produced as much pleasure as the most brilliant _repartee_, in the most
+fashionable circles. We must take people as they are.
+
+So Joe stayed chattering away till dinner-time, and then, referring to
+the pudding, said he had never tasted anything like it in his life; and
+went on telling the old people all the wonders of the campaign: how their
+regiment just mowed down the enemy as he used to cut corn in the
+harvest-field, and how nothing could stand aginst a charge of cavalry;
+and how they liked their officers; and how their General, who warn't
+above up to Joe's shoulder, were a genleman, every inch on him, an' as
+brave as any lion you could pick out. And so he went on, until Mr.
+Bumpkin said:
+
+"An' if I had my time over agin I'd goo for a soger too, Joe," which made
+Mrs. Bumpkin laugh and ask what would become of her.
+
+"Ha! ha! ha! look at that!" said Joe; "she's got you there, master."
+
+"No she bean't, she'd a married thic feller that wur so sweet on her
+afore I had ur."
+
+"What, Jem?" said Mrs. Bumpkin, "why I wouldn't ha' had un, Tom, if every
+'air had been hung wi' dimonds."
+
+"Now look at that," laughed Joe.
+
+And so they went on until it was time to take a turn round the farm.
+Everything seemed startled at Joe's fine clothes, especially the bull,
+who snorted and pawed the earth and put out his tail, and placed his head
+to the ground, until Joe called him by name, and then, as he told his
+comrades afterwards in barracks, the bull said:
+
+"Why danged if it bean't our Joe!"
+
+I must confess I did not hear this observation in my dream, but I was
+some distance off, and if Mr. Ricochet, Q.C., in cross-examination had
+said, "Will you swear, sir, upon your oath that the bull did not use
+those words?" I must have been bound to answer, "I will not."
+
+But presently they met old Tim, the Collie, and there was no need for Joe
+to speak to him. Up he came with a bound and caressed his old mate in
+the most loving manner.
+
+The Queen's uniform was no disguise to him.
+
+The next day it was quite a treat to see Joe go through the village.
+Such a swagger he put on that you would have thought he was the whole
+regiment. And when he went by the Vicarage, where Polly was housemaid,
+it was remarkable to see the air of indifference which he assumed. Whack
+went his riding-whip on his leg: you could hear it a hundred yards off.
+He didn't seem to care a bit whether she was staring at him out of the
+study window as hard as she could stare or not. Two or three times he
+struck the same leg, and marched on perfectly indifferent to all around.
+
+At length came Sunday, as Sunday only comes in a country village. No
+such peace, no such Sabbath anywhere. You have only got to look at
+anything you like to know that it is Sunday. Bill's shirt collar; the
+milkman; even his bright milk-can has a Sunday shine about it. The cows
+standing in the shallow brook have a reverent air about them. They never
+look like that on any other day. Why the very sunshine is Sabbath
+sunshine, and seems to bring more peace and more pleasantness than on any
+other day of the week. And all the trees seem to whisper together, "It's
+Sunday morning."
+
+Presently you see the people straggling up to the little church, whose
+donging bell keeps on as much as to say, "I know I'm not much of a peal,
+but in my humble way I do my duty to the best of my ability; it's not the
+sound but the spirit of the thing that is required; and if I'm not very
+musical, and can't give you many changes, I'm sincere in what I say."
+And this was an emblem of the sincerity and the simplicity of the
+clergyman inside. He kept on hammering away at the old truths and
+performing his part in God's great work to the best of his ability; and I
+know with very great success. So in they all came to church; and Joe,
+who had been a very good Sunday-school pupil (notwithstanding his love of
+poaching) and was a favourite with the vicar, as the reader knows, took
+his old place in the free seats, not very far from the pew where the
+vicar's servants sat. Who can tell what his feelings were as he wondered
+whether Polly would be there that morning?
+
+The other servants came in. Ah, dear! Polly can't come, now look at
+that! Just as he was thinking this in she came. Such a flutter in her
+heart as she saw the bright uniform and the brighter face, bronzed with a
+foreign clime and looking as handsome as ever a face could look. O what
+a flutter too in Joe's heart! But he was determined not to care for her.
+So he wouldn't look, and that was a very good way; and he certainly would
+have kept his word if he could.
+
+I think if I had to choose where and how I would be admired, if ever such
+a luxury could come to me, I would be Joe Wurzel under present
+circumstances. A young hero, handsome, tall, in the uniform of the
+Hussars, with a loved one near and all the village girls fixing their
+eyes on me! That for once only, and my utmost ambition would be
+gratified. Life could have no greater pride for me. I don't know
+whether the sermon made much impression that day, but of the two, I
+verily believe Joe made the most; and as they streamed out of the little
+church all the young faces of the congregation were turned to him: and
+everywhere when they got outside it was, "Halloa, Joe!" "Why, Joe, my
+lad, what cheer?" "Dang'd if here bean't Joe!" and other exclamations of
+welcome and surprise. And then, how all the pinafored boys flocked round
+and gazed with wondering eyes at this conquering hero; chattering to one
+another and contradicting one another about what this part of his uniform
+was and what that part was, and so on; but all agreeing that Joe was
+about the finest sight that had come into Yokelton since ever it was a
+place.
+
+And then the old clergyman sent for him and was as kind as ever he could
+be; and Joe was on the enchanted ground where the fairy Polly flitted
+about as noiselessly as a butterfly. Ah, and what's this? Now let not
+the reader be over-anxious; for a few lines I must keep you, gentle one,
+in suspense; a great surprise must be duly prepared. If I told you at
+once what I saw, you would not think so much of it as if I kept you a
+little while in a state of wondering curiosity. What do you think
+happened in the Vicarage?
+
+Now's the moment to tell it in a fresh paragraph. Why in came the fairy
+with a little tray of cake and wine! Now pause on that before I say any
+more. What about their eyes? Did they swim? What about their hearts;
+did they flutter? Did Polly blush? Did Joe's bronzed face shine? Ah,
+it all took place, and much more than I could tell in a whole volume.
+The vicar did not perceive it, for luckily he was looking out of the
+window. It only took a moment to place the tray on the table, and the
+fairy disappeared. But that moment, not then considered as of so much
+importance, exciting as it was, stamped the whole lives of two beings,
+and who can tell whether or no such a moment leaves its impress on
+Eternity?
+
+All good and all kind was the old vicar; and how attentively he listened
+with Mrs. Goodheart to the eye-witness of England's great deeds! And
+then--no, he did not give Joe a claptrap maudlin sermon, but treated him
+as a man subject to human frailties, and, only hoped in all his career he
+would remember some of the things he had been taught at the Sunday
+School.
+
+"Ay," said Joe, "ay, sir, and the best lesson I ever larned, and what
+have done me most good, be the kindness I always had from you."
+
+So they parted, and a day or two after, strangely enough, just as Joe was
+walking along by the old Oak that is haunted, and which the owls and the
+ghosts occupy between them, who should come down the lane in the opposite
+direction but Polly Sweetlove! Where she came from was the greatest
+mystery in the world! And it was so extraordinary that Joe should meet
+her: and he said so, as soon as he could speak.
+
+"Now look at that! Whoever would have thought of meeting anybody here?"
+
+Polly hung down her head and blushed. Neither of them knew what to say
+for a long time; for Joe was not a spokesman to any extent. At last
+Polly Sweetlove broke silence and murmured in the softest voice, and I
+should think the very sweetest ever heard in this world:
+
+"Are you going away soon, Joe?"
+
+"Friday," answered the young Hussar.
+
+Ah me! This was Wednesday already; to-morrow would be Thursday, and the
+next day Friday! I did not hear this, but I give you my word it took
+place.
+
+"Are you coming to see the Vicar again?" asked the sweet voice.
+
+"No," said Joe.
+
+They both looked down at the gnarled roots of the old tree--the roots did
+stick out a long way, and I suppose attracted their attention--and then
+Polly just touched the big root with her tiny toe. And the point of that
+tiny toe touched Joe's heart too, which seemed to have got into that root
+somehow, and sent a thrill as of an electric shock, only much pleasanter,
+right through his whole body, and even into the roots of his hair.
+
+"When are you coming again?" whispered the sweet lips.
+
+"Don't know," said the young soldier; "perhaps never."
+
+"But you'll come and see--your mother?"
+
+"O yes," answered Joe, "I shall come and see mother; but what's it matter
+to thee, lassie?"
+
+The lassie blushed, and Joe thought it a good opportunity to take hold of
+her hand. I don't know why, but he did; and he was greatly surprised
+that the hand did not run away.
+
+"I think the Vicar likes you, Joe?"
+
+"Do he?" and he kept drawing nearer and nearer, little by little, until
+his other hand went clean round Polly Sweetlove's waist, and--well an owl
+flew out of the tree at that moment, and drew off my attention; but
+afterwards I saw that they both kept looking at the root of the tree, and
+then Joe said;
+
+"But you love th' baker, Polly?"
+
+"No," whispered Polly; "no, no, never!"
+
+"Now, look at that!" said Joe, recovering himself a little; "I always
+thought you liked the baker."
+
+"Never, Joe."
+
+"Well then, why didn't you look at me?"
+
+Polly blushed.
+
+"Joe, they said you was so wild."
+
+"Now, look at that," said Joe; "did you ever see me wild, Polly?"
+
+"Never, Joe--I will say that."
+
+"No, and you can ask my mother or Mrs. Bumpkin, or the Vicar, or anybody
+else you like, Polly--."
+
+"I shall go and see your mother," said Polly.
+
+"Will you come to-morrow night?" asked Joe.
+
+"If I can get away I will; but I must go
+now--good-bye--good-bye--good----"
+
+"Are you in a hurry, Polly."
+
+"I must go, Joe--good--; but I will come to-morrow, as soon as dinner is
+over--good--good--good-bye."
+
+"And then----," but the Old Oak kept his counsel. Here I awoke.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Well," cried my wife, "you have broken off abruptly."
+
+"One can't help it," quoth I, rubbing my eyes. "I cannot help waking any
+more than I can help going to sleep."
+
+"Well, this would be a very pretty little courtship if true."
+
+"Ah," I said, "if I have described all that I saw in my dream, you may
+depend upon it it is true. But when I go to Southwood I will ask the Old
+Oak, for we are the greatest friends imaginable, and he tells me
+everything. He has known me ever since I was a child, and never sees me
+but he enters into conversation."
+
+"What about?"
+
+"The past, present, and future--a very fruitful subject of conversation,
+I assure you."
+
+"Wide enough, certainly."
+
+"None too wide for a tree of his standing."
+
+"Ask him, dear, if Joe will marry this Polly Sweetlove."
+
+"He will not tell me that; he makes a special reservation in favour of
+lovers' secrets. They would not confide their loves to his keeping so
+often as they do if he betrayed them. No, he's a staunch old fellow in
+that respect, and the consequence is, that for centuries lovers have
+breathed their vows under his protecting branches."
+
+"I'm sorry for that--I mean I am sorry he will not tell you about this
+young couple, for I should like to know if they will marry. Indeed, you
+must find out somehow, for everyone who reads your book will be curious
+on this subject."
+
+"What, as to whether ploughman Joe will marry Polly the housemaid. Had
+he been the eldest son of the Squire now, and she the Vicar's daughter,
+instead of the maid--"
+
+"It would not have been a whit more interesting, for love is love, and
+human nature the same in high and low degree. But, perhaps, this old
+tree doesn't know anything about future events?"
+
+"He knows from his long experience of the past what will happen if
+certain conditions are given; he knows, for instance, the secret
+whispers, and the silent tokens exchanged beneath his boughs, and from
+them he knows what will assuredly result if things take their ordinary
+course."
+
+"So does anyone, prophet or no prophet."
+
+"But his process of reasoning, based upon the experience of a thousand
+years, is unerring; he saw William the Conqueror, and listened to a
+council of war held under his branches; he knew what would happen if
+William's projects were successful: whether they would be successful was
+not within his knowledge. He was intimately acquainted with Herne's Oak
+at Windsor, and they frequently visited."
+
+"Visited! how was that possible?"
+
+"Quite possible; trees visit one another just the same as human
+beings--they hold intercourse by means of the wind. For instance, when
+the wind blows from the north-east, Southwood Oak visits at Windsor Park,
+and when the wind is in the opposite direction a return visit is paid.
+There isn't a tree of any position in England but the Old Oak of
+Southwood knows. He is in himself the History of England, only he is
+unlike all other histories, for he speaks the truth."
+
+"He must have witnessed many love scenes!"
+
+"Thousands!"
+
+"Tell me some?"
+
+"Not now--besides, I must ask leave."
+
+"Does he ever tell you anything about yourself?"
+
+"A great deal--it is our principal topic of conversation; but he always
+begins it, lest my modesty should prevent any intercourse on the
+subject."
+
+"What has he said?"
+
+"A great deal: he has inspired me with hope, even instilled into me some
+ambition: he has tried to impart to me an admiration of all that is true,
+and to awaken a detestation of all that is mean and pettifogging. I
+never look at him but I see the symbol of all that is noble, grand and
+brave: he is the emblem of stability, friendship and affection; a
+monument of courage, honesty, and fidelity; he is the type of manly
+independence and self-reliance. I am glad, therefore, that under his
+beautiful branches, and within his protecting presence, two young hearts
+have again met and pledged, as I believe they have, their troth, honestly
+resolving to battle together against the storms of life, rooted in
+stedfast love, and rejoicing in the sunshine of the Creator's smiles!"
+
+After these observations, which were received with marked approval, I
+again gave myself up to the soft influence of a dreamy repose.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+
+A consultation as to new lodgings.--Also a consultation with counsel.
+
+It was a subject of grave discussion between the Bumpkins and Joe, as to
+where would be the best place for the plaintiff to lodge on his next
+visit to London. If he had moved in the upper ranks of life, in all
+probability he would have taken Mrs. Bumpkin to his town house: but being
+only a plain man and a farmer, it was necessary to decide upon the most
+convenient, and at the same time, inexpensive locality.
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin, who, of course, knew all about her husband's adventures,
+was strongly opposed to his returning to the Goose. Never had created
+thing lost so much in her estimation by mere association as this domestic
+bird. Joe was a fine soldier, no doubt, but it was the Goose that had
+taken him in.
+
+Curiously enough, as they were discussing this important question, who
+should come in but honest Lawyer Prigg himself.
+
+What a blessing that man seemed to be, go where he would! Why, he spread
+an air of hope and cheerfulness over this simple household the moment he
+entered it! But the greatest virtue he dispensed was resignation; he had
+a large stock of this on hand. He always preached it: "resignation to
+the will of Providence;" resignation to him, Prigg!
+
+So when he came in with his respectable head, professional collar, and
+virtuous necktie, Mr. and Mrs. Bumpkin could not choose but rise. Mr.
+Bumpkin meekly pulled his hair, and humbly bowed obeisance as to his
+benefactor. Mrs. Bumpkin curtseyed as to a superior power, whom she
+could not recognize as a benefactor. Joe stood up, and looked as if he
+couldn't quite make out what Mr. Prigg was. He knew he worked the Law
+somehow, and "summut like as a man works a steam-threshing machine, but
+how or by what means, was a mystery unrevealed to the mind of the simple
+soldier."
+
+"Good morning! good morning!" said Mr. Prigg, after the manner of a
+patriarch conferring a blessing. "Well, Joe, so you are returned, are
+you? Come, now, let me shake hands with one of our brave heroes!"
+
+What condescension! and his tone was the tone of a man reaching down from
+a giddy height to the world beneath him.
+
+"So you were in the thick of the fight, were you--dear me! what a charge
+that was!" Ah, but, dear reader, you should see Prigg's charges!
+
+"I wur someur about, sir," said Joe. "I dunnow where now though."
+
+"Quite so," said Mr. Prigg, "it was a great victory; I'm told the enemy
+ran away directly they heard our troops were coming."
+
+"Now look at that," said Joe; "what a lot of lies do get about sure-ly!"
+
+"Dear me!" said Mr. Prigg; "but you beat them, did you not? we won the
+battle?"
+
+"That's right enough," said Joe; "but if they'd run away we couldn't a
+beat un--'tain't much of a fight when there's no enemy."
+
+"Haw, haw, haw!" laughed Bumpkin. "That be good, Mr. Prigg, that be
+good!"
+
+"Very good, very good, indeed," said Mr. Prigg; "I don't wonder at your
+winning if you could make such sallies as that."
+
+And that was good for Mr. Prigg.
+
+"And now," said he, "to business--business, eh?"
+
+"We be jist gwine to 'ave a nice piece o' pork and greens, Mr. Prigg,
+would ee please to tak some," said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"Dear me!" answered Prigg; "how very strange, my favourite dish--if ever
+Mrs. Prigg is in doubt about--"
+
+"It be wery plain," said Bumpkin.
+
+"The plainer the better, my dear sir; as I always say to my servants, if
+you--"
+
+"I'm sure," said Mrs. Bumpkin; "I be 'ardly fit to wait on a gennleman
+like you. I ain't 'ad time this morning to change my gown and tidy up
+myself."
+
+"Really, my dear madam--don't, now; I adjure you; make no apologies--it
+is not the dress--or the--or the --, anything in fact, that makes us what
+we are;--don't, if you please."
+
+And here his profound sentiments died away again and were lost to the
+world; and the worthy man, not long after, was discussing his favourite
+dish with greedy relish.
+
+"An when'll this 'ere thing be on, Mr. Prigg, does thee think? It be a
+hell of a long time."
+
+"Tom! Tom!" exclaimed Mrs. Bumpkin. But Mr. Prigg was too well bred and
+too much occupied with his pork and greens to hear the very wayward
+epithet of the Farmer Bumpkin.
+
+"Quite so," said the lawyer; "quite so, it is so difficult to tell when a
+case will come on. You're in the list to-day and gone to-morrow; a man
+the other day was just worried as you have been; but mark this; at the
+trial, Mr. Bumpkin, the jury gave that man a verdict for a thousand
+pounds!"
+
+"Look at that, Nancy," exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin; "Will 'ee tak a little more
+pork, sir?"
+
+"Thank you," said Mr. Prigg, "it's uncommonly good; some of your own
+feeding, I suppose?"
+
+"Ay," said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"Were that a pig case, Mr. Prigg, where the man got the thousand pounds?"
+asked Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+"Let me see," answered Prigg, "_was_ it a pig case?" Here he put his
+finger to the side of his nose. "I really, at this moment, quite forget
+whether it was or was not a pig case. I'll trouble you, Mrs. Bumpkin,
+for a little more greens, if you please."
+
+"Now, I wur saying," said Bumpkin, "jist as thee comed in, where be I to
+lodge when I gooes to Lunnon agin?"
+
+"Ah, now, quite so--yes; and you must go in a day or two. I expect we
+shall be on shortly. Now, let me see, you don't like 'The Goose'? A
+nice respectable hostelry, too!"
+
+"I wunt 'ave un goo there, Mr. Prigg," said Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+"Quite so--quite so. Now what I was thinking was, suppose you took
+lodgings at some nice suburban place, say--"
+
+"What pleace, sir?" inquired Bumpkin.
+
+"Let us say Camden Town, for instance--nice healthy neighbourhood and
+remarkably quiet. You could come every morning by 'bus, or if you
+preferred it, by rail; and if by rail, you could take a season ticket,
+which would be much cheaper; a six months' ticket, again, being cheaper
+than a three months' ticket."
+
+"In the name o' Heaven, sir," exclaimed Mrs. Bumpkin, "be this 'ere thing
+gwine on for ever?"
+
+Mr. Prigg smiled benignly, as much as to say, "You ladies are so
+impatient, so innocent of the business of life."
+
+"It seems to me, Mr. Prigg, one need live to be as old as thic there
+Mackthusaler to bring a law-suit now-a-days."
+
+"Now, look at that!" broke in Joe, "it's made master look forty year
+older aready."
+
+"So it have, Joe," rejoined the mistress; "I wish it could be chucked up
+altogether."
+
+Mr. Prigg benignantly shook his head.
+
+"D'ye think I be gwine to give in to thic sniggerin' Snooks feller?"
+asked Mr. Bumpkin. "Not if I knows it. Why thic feller goo sniggerin'
+along th' street as though he'd won; and he 'ave told lots o' people how
+he'll laugh I out o' Coourt--his counsel be gwine to laugh I out o'
+Coourt becors I be a country farmer."
+
+"Right can't be laughed out of Court, sir," said the excellent Prigg,
+solemnly.
+
+"Noa, noa, right bean't asheamed, goo where ur wool. Upright and
+down-straight wur allays my motto. I be a plain man, but I allays tried
+to act straight-forrerd, and bean't asheamed o' no man."
+
+This speech was a complete success: it was unanswerable. It fixed the
+lodgings at Camden Town. It stopped Mrs. Bumpkin's impatience;
+diminished her apprehensions; and apparently, lulled her misgivings. She
+was a gentle, hard-working, loving wife.
+
+And so all was settled. It was the month of April, and it was
+confidently expected that by the end of July all would be comfortably
+finished in time to get in the harvest. The crops looked well; the
+meadows and clover-field promised a fair crop, and the wheat and barley
+never looked better.
+
+The following week found Mr. Bumpkin in his new lodgings at Camden Town;
+and I verily believe, as Mr. Prigg very sagaciously observed, if it had
+not been for the Judges going circuit, _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_ would have
+been in the paper six weeks earlier than it really was. But even
+lawsuits must come on at last, be they never so tardy: and one day, in
+bustling haste, Mr. Prigg's young man informed Mr. Bumpkin that a
+consultation was actually fixed at his leader's chambers, Garden Court,
+Temple, at seven o'clock punctually the next day.
+
+Bumpkin was delighted: he was to be present at the express wish of the
+leading counsel. So to Garden Court he went at seven, with Mr. Prigg;
+and there sure enough was Mr. Dynamite, his junior counsel. Mr.
+Catapult, Q.C., had not yet arrived. So while they waited, Mr. Bumpkin
+had an opportunity of looking about him; never in his life had he seen so
+many books. There they were all over the walls; shelves upon shelves.
+The chambers seemed built with books, and Mr. Bumpkin raised his eyes
+with awe to the ceiling, expecting to see books there.
+
+"What be all these 'ere books, sir?" he whispered to Prigg.
+
+"These are law books," answered the intelligent Prigg; "but these are
+only a few."
+
+"Must be a good dale o' law," said Bumpkin.
+
+"A good deal too much," observed Mr. Dynamite, with a smile; "if we were
+to burn nine-tenths of the law books we should have better law, eh, Mr.
+Prigg?"
+
+Mr. Prigg never contradicted counsel; and if Mr. Dynamite had said it's a
+great pity that our libraries have so few authorities, Prigg would have
+made the same answer, "I quite agree, quite so! quite so!"
+
+"Mr. Cats-'is-name don't seem to come," observed Bumpkin, after an hour
+and a half had passed.
+
+"Mr. _Catapult_, Mr. _Catapult_," said Mr. Prigg; "no, he doesn't seem to
+come." And then he rang for the clerk, and the clerk came.
+
+"Do you think Mr. Catapult will return to-night?" inquired Prigg.
+
+"I don't think he will," said the clerk, looking at his watch; "I am
+afraid not."
+
+"Beant much good to stop then," said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"I fear not," observed the clerk, "he has so many engagements. Shall we
+fix another consultation, Mr. Prigg?"
+
+"If you please," said that gentleman.
+
+"Say half-past seven to-morrow, then. The case, I find, is not in the
+paper to-morrow."
+
+"Quite so, quite so," returned Prigg, "half-past seven to-morrow."
+
+And thus the consultation was at an end and the parties went their
+several ways.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+
+Mr. Bumpkin receives compliments from distinguished persons.
+
+One evening as Mr. Bumpkin was sitting in his little parlour, ruminating,
+or as he termed it, "rummaging" in his mind over many things, and
+especially wondering when the trial would come on, Horatio, in breathless
+impatience, entered the room. His excited and cheerful appearance
+indicated that something of an unusually pleasant nature had occurred. A
+strong intimacy had long been established between this boy and Mr.
+Bumpkin, who regarded Horatio as a kind of legal prodigy; his very hopes
+seemed centered in and inspired by this lad. He seemed to be the guiding
+spirit and the flywheel of the whole proceedings. Was Snooks to be
+pulverized? it must be under Horatio's heel!
+
+This legal stripling brought almost as much comfort as Mr. Prigg himself;
+and it was quite a pleasure to hear the familiar terms in which he spoke
+of the bigwigs of the profession. He would say of McCannister, the
+Queen's Counsel, "I like Mac's style of putting a question, it's so soft
+like--it goes down like a Pick-me-up." Then he would allude to Mr.
+Heavytop, Q.C., as Jack; to Mr. Bigpot as old Kettledrum; to Mr. Swagger,
+Q.C., as Pat; to B. C. Windbag, Q.C., M.P., as B. C.--all which indicated
+to the mind of Mr. Bumpkin the particularly intimate terms upon which
+Horatio was with these celebrities. Nor did his intimacy cease there:
+instead of speaking of the highest legal official of the land in terms of
+respectful deference, as "my Lord High Chancellor," or "my Lord
+Allworthy,"--he would say, in the most indifferent manner "Old Allworthy"
+this, and "Old Allworthy," that; sometimes even, he ventured to call some
+of Her Majesty's Judges by nick-names; an example which, I trust, will
+not be followed by the Horatios of the future. But I believe the pale
+boy, like his great namesake, was fearless. It was a comfort to hear him
+denounce the law's delay, and the terrible "cumbersomeness" of legal
+proceedings: not that he did it in soothing language or in happy
+phraseology: it was rather in a manner that led Mr. Bumpkin to believe
+the young champion was standing up for his particular rights; as if he
+had said to the authorities, whoever they might be, "Look here! I'll
+have no more of this: it's a shame and disgrace to this country that a
+simple dispute between a couple of neighbours can't be tried without
+months of quarrelling in Judges' Chambers and elsewhere; if you don't try
+this case before long I'll see what can be done." Then there was further
+consolation in the fact that Horatio declared that, in his opinion, Tommy
+_Catpup_, Q.C., would knock Snooks into a cocked hat, and that Snooks
+already looked very down in the mouth.
+
+On the evening at which I have arrived in my dream, when the pale boy
+came in, Mr. Bumpkin inquired what was the matter: was the case settled?
+Had Snooks paid the damages? Nothing of the kind. Horatio's visit was
+of a common-place nature. He had simply come to inform Mr. Bumpkin that
+the Archbishop of Canterbury had kindly sent him a couple of tickets for
+the reserved seats at Canterbury Hall.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin was disappointed. He cared nothing for Archbishops. He was
+in hopes it had been something better.
+
+"I wunt goo," said he.
+
+"We ought to go, I think," said Horatio; "it was very kind of old Archy
+to send em, and he wouldn't like it if we didn't go: besides, he and the
+Rolls are great chums."
+
+"Rolls!" said Bumpkin.
+
+"The Master of the Rolls. I shouldn't wonder if he aint got Archy to
+send em--don't you be a fool. And another thing, Paganani's going to
+play the farmyard on the fiddle to-night. Gemminey, ain't that good!
+You hear the pigs squeak, and the bull roar, and the old cock crow, and
+the sow grunt, and the horse kick--"
+
+"How the devil can thee hear a horse kick, unless he kicks zummat?"
+
+"Well, he does," said Horatio; "that's just what he does do. Let's go, I
+am sure you will like it."
+
+"It beant one o' these ere playhouse pleaces, be it?"
+
+"Lor bless you," said Horatio, "there's pews just the same as if you was
+in Church: and the singing's beautiful."
+
+"No sarmon, I s'pooase."
+
+"Not on week nights, but I'll tell you what there is instead: a chap
+climbs up to the top of a high pole and stands on his head for ten
+minutes."
+
+Mr. Bumpkin, although a man who never went out of an evening, could not
+resist the persuasions of his pale young friend. He had never been to
+any place of amusement, except the Old Bailey, since he had been in
+London; although he had promised himself a treat to the Cattle Show,
+provided that came on, which was very likely, as it only wanted five
+months to it, before his case.
+
+So they got on the top of a 'Bus and proceeded on their way to Lambeth
+Palace; for the Canterbury Hall, as everyone knows, is in that ancient
+pile. And truly, when they arrived everything was astonishingly
+beautiful and pleasing. Mr. Bumpkin was taken through the Picture
+Gallery, which he enjoyed, although he would have liked to see one or two
+like the Squire had got in his Hall, such as "Clinker," the prize bull;
+and "Father Tommy," the celebrated ram. But the Archbishop probably had
+never taken a prize: not much of a breeder maybe.
+
+Now they entered the Hall amid strains of sweet, soft, enchanting music.
+Never before had the soul of Bumpkin been so enthralled: it was as if the
+region of fairyland had suddenly burst upon his astonished view. In
+presence of all this beauty, and this delicious cadence of sweet sounds,
+what a common-place thing _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_ seemed!
+
+Theirs was a very nice pew, commanding a full view of the stage and all
+the angelic looking beings. And evidently our friends were considered
+fashionable people, for many of the audience looked round at them as they
+entered. So awed was Mr. Bumpkin when he first sat down, that he
+wondered whether he ought to look into his hat as the Squire did in
+Church; but, resolving to be guided by Horatio, and seeing that the pale
+youth did not even take his billycock off, but spread his elbows out on
+the front ledge and clapped his hands with terrific vehemence, and
+shouted "Anchore" as loudly as he could, Mr. Bumpkin, in imitation,
+clapped his hands and said "Hooroar!"
+
+It was glorious. The waiter came and exchanged winks with the pale boy,
+and brought some soda-and-brandy and a cigar. Mr. Bumpkin wondered more
+and more. It was the strangest place he had ever heard of. It seemed so
+strange to have smoking and drinking. But then he knew there were things
+occurring every day that the cleverest men could not account for: not
+even Mr. Slater, the schoolmaster at Yokelton, could account for them.
+
+Just in front of the two friends was another pew, a very nice one that
+was, and for some little time it was unoccupied. Presently with a great
+rustling of silks and a great smell of Jockey Club, and preceded by one
+of the servants of the establishment, entered two beautiful and
+fashionably dressed ladies of extremely quiet (except the Jockey Club)
+and retiring demeanour. They could not but attract Mr. Bumpkin's
+attention: they so reminded him of the Squire's daughters, only they
+dressed much better. How he would like Nancy to see them: she was very
+fond of beautiful gowns, was Nancy.
+
+"I wonder who they be?" whispered Bumpkin.
+
+"I don't know," answered Horatio; "I'll ask as soon as I get a chance.
+It's the Archbishop's pew; I believe they are his daughters."
+
+"Wouldn't ur ha come wi em?" said Bumpkin.
+
+"He generally does, but I suppose he can't get away to-night."
+
+At this moment a waiter, or as Bumpkin called him a pew opener, was
+passing, and Horatio whispered something in his ear, his companion
+looking at him the while from the corner of his eyes.
+
+"The one on the right," whispered the waiter, untwisting the wire of a
+bottle of sodawater, "is the Countess Squeezem, and the other is Lady
+Flora, her sister."
+
+Bumpkin nodded his head as much as to say, "Just see that: high life,
+that, if you like!"
+
+And really the Countess and Lady Flora were as quiet and unassuming as if
+they had been the commonest bred people in the world.
+
+Now came forward on the stage a sweet young lady dressed in yellow satin,
+with lovely red roses all down the front and one on the left shoulder,
+greeted by a thunder of applause. Her voice was thrilling: now it was at
+the back of the stage; now it was just behind your ear; now in the
+ceiling. You didn't know where to have it. After she had done, Horatio
+said:
+
+"What do you think of Nilsson?"
+
+"Wery good! wery good!"
+
+"Hallo," says Horatio, "here's Sims Reeves. Bravo Sims! bravo Reeves!"
+
+"I've eered tell o' he," says Bumpkin; "he be wery young, bean't he?"
+
+"O," says Horatio, "they paint up so; but ain't he got a tenor--O
+gemminey crikery!"
+
+"A tenner?" says Bumpkin, "what's thee mean, ten pun a week?"
+
+"O my eye!" says the youth, "he gets more than that."
+
+"It be good wages."
+
+"Yes, but it's nothing to what some of em get," says Horatio; "why if a
+man can play the fool well he can get as much as the Prime Minister."
+
+"Ah, and thic Prime Minister can play the fool well at times; it seem to
+me--they tooked the dooty of whate and made un too chape."
+
+"Who's this?" asks Horatio of the waiter.
+
+"Patti," says the waiter, "at the express wish of the Queen."
+
+Bumpkin nods again, as though there was no end to the grandeur of the
+company.
+
+Then comes another no less celebrated, if Horatio was correct.
+
+"Hullo," says he, "here's Trebelli!"
+
+Now this was too much for the absorbing powers of even a Bumpkin.
+Horatio had carried it too far. Not that his friend had ever heard of
+the great vocalist, but if you are inclined for fun pray use names that
+will go down. Mr. Bumpkin looked hard at Horatio's face, on which was
+just the faintest trace of a smile. And then he said:
+
+"What a name, _Bellie_! danged if I doan't think thee be stickin it into
+I," and then he laughed and repeated, "thee be stickin it into I."
+
+"Now for Pagannini!" says Horatio; "now you'll hear something. By Jove,
+he'll show you!"
+
+"Why I've eerd tell o' thic Piganiny when I were a boy," says Bumpkin,
+"used to play on one leg."
+
+"That's the man," says Horatio.
+
+"But this ere man got two legs, how can he be Piganiny?"
+
+"I don't know anything about that," says Horatio; "what's it matter how
+many legs he's got, just listen to that!"
+
+"Why danged if that bean't as much like thic Cochin Chiner cock o' mine
+as ever I eered in my life."
+
+"Told you so," says Horatio; "but keep quiet, you'll hear something
+presently."
+
+And sure enough he did: pig in the straw; sow in the stye; bull in the
+meadow; sheep in the fold; everything was perfect.
+
+Never before had Mr. Bumpkin been so overpowered. He never before knew
+what music was. Truly Piganiny was a deserving man, and a clever one
+too. Mr. Bumpkin's enthusiasm had carried him thus far, when to his
+great satisfaction the Lady Flora looked round. It was very nice of her,
+because it was as if she wished to know if Mr. Bumpkin and his friend
+felt the same rapturous delight as she and her sister. What a nice face
+Lady Flora's was! It wasn't unlike the Squire's eldest daughter's.
+Between that, perhaps, and the Vicar's youngest daughter's.
+
+Then the Countess slightly turned round, her face wearing a smile of
+great complaisance, and Mr. Bumpkin could have seen at once that she was
+a person of great distinction even if he had not been informed of her
+rank. Well, taken for all in all, it was a night he would never forget,
+and his only feeling of regret was that Mrs. Bumpkin was not present to
+share his pleasure--the roar of that bull would have just pleased her; it
+was so like Sampson.
+
+And now the scene shifters were preparing for another performance, and
+were adjusting ropes and fixing poles, and what not, when, as Mr. Bumpkin
+was lost in profound meditation, up rose from her seat the beautiful Lady
+Flora, and turning round with a bewitching face, and assuming an air of
+inexpressible simplicity, she exclaimed to Mr. Bumpkin in the sweetest of
+voices: "O you duck!"
+
+Mr. Bumpkin started as if a cannon had exploded in his face instead of a
+beautiful young lady. He blushed to the deepest crimson, and then the
+lady Flora poured into him a volley of her sweetiest prettiest laughter.
+Attacked thus so suddenly and so effectively, what could he do? He felt
+there must be some mistake, and that he ought to apologize. But the Lady
+Flora gave him no time; leaning forward, she held out her hand--
+
+"Beg pardon, m'lady--thic--I--I."
+
+Then the Countess rose and smiled upon Mr. Bumpkin, and said she hoped he
+wouldn't mind; her sister was of such a playful disposition.
+
+The playful one here just touched Mr. Bumpkin under the chin with her
+forefinger, and again said he was a "_perfect duck_!"
+
+"What be the manin' o' this?" said he. "I be off; come on, sir. This be
+quite enough for I."
+
+"Don't go like that," said Lady Flora. "Oh, dear, dear, what a cruel
+man!"
+
+"Not a glass of wine," said the Countess.
+
+"Not one, Mr. Bumpkin!" urged Lady Flora.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin had risen, and was angry: he was startled at his name being
+known: he looked to Horatio, hoping some explanation might come; but the
+pale youth had his back to him, and was preparing to leave the Hall.
+There were many curious eyes looking at them, and there was much
+laughter. Mr. Bumpkin's appearance would alone have been sufficient to
+cause this: but his mind was to be farther enlightened as to the meaning
+of this extraordinary scene; and it happened in this wise. As he was
+proceeding between the rows of people, followed closely by those
+illustrious members of the aristocracy, the Countess and Lady Flora;
+while the waiters grinned and the people laughed, his eye caught sight of
+an object away over the front seat, which formed a right angle with the
+one he had been occupying; it was an object unattractive in itself but
+which, under the circumstances, fixed and riveted his attention; that
+object was Snooks, in the corner of the third row, with his sawpit mouth
+on the broadest grin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+
+The trial.
+
+Who shall describe the feelings of joy which animated the breast of Mr.
+Bumpkin when at last, with the suddenness of lightning, Mr. Prigg's clerk
+flashed into his little parlour the intelligence, "Case in paper; be at
+Court by ten o'clock; Bail Court." Such was the telegram which Mr.
+Bumpkin got his landlady to read on that pleasant evening towards the end
+of July. The far-seeing Prigg was right. It would come on about the end
+of July. That is what he had predicted. But it would not have been safe
+for Mr. Bumpkin to be away from town for a single day. It might have
+been in the paper at any moment; and here it was, just as he was
+beginning to get tired of "Camden Town and the whole thing."
+
+Mr. Bumpkin put on a clean shirt, with a good stiff high collar, which he
+had reserved from Mrs. Bumpkin's wash; for, in his opinion, there was no
+stiffening in the London starch, and no getting up like Mrs. Bumpkin's.
+He put on his best neckerchief, and a bran new waistcoat which he had
+bought for Sundays six years ago at the market town. He put on his drab
+coat with the long tails, which he had worn on the day of his marriage,
+and had kept for his best ever since; he put on his velvety looking
+corduroy trowsers and his best lace-up watertight boots; and then, after
+a good breakfast, put on his white beaver hat, took his ash-stick, and
+got into a Westminster 'Bus. What a beautiful morning it was! Just the
+morning for a law suit! Down he got at Palace Yard, walked towards the
+spacious door of the old hall, entered its shadowy precincts, and then,
+in my dream, I lost sight of him as he mingled with the crowd. But I saw
+some few moments after in the Bail Court enter, amidst profound silence
+and with impressive dignity, Mr. Justice Stedfast. Let me here inform
+the reader that if by any chance, say by settlement, postponement or
+otherwise, the first case in the list "goes off," as it is called (from
+its bearing a striking resemblance to the unexpected going off of a gun),
+and the parties in the next case, taken by surprise, are not there at the
+moment, that case goes off by being struck out; and very often the next
+and the next, and so on to the end of the list. Parties therefore should
+be ready, so as to prevent a waste of time. The time of the Court is not
+to be wasted by parties not being ready. Now, strangely enough, this is
+what happened in the case of _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_. Being number eight,
+no one thought it would be reached; and the leading counsel, and also the
+junior counsel being engaged elsewhere; and Mr. Prigg and Mr. Prigg's
+clerk not having arrived; and Mr. Bumpkin not knowing his way; at five
+minutes after the sitting of the Court, so expeditious are our legal
+proceedings, the celebrated case was actually reached, and this is what
+took place:
+
+"Are the parties ready?" inquired his Lordship.
+
+Mr. Ricochet, Q.C., who appeared with Mr. Weasel for the defendant, said
+he was ready for the defendant.
+
+"Call the plaintiff!" said a voice.
+
+Loud cries for Bumpkin, who was just pushing his way down the passage
+outside.
+
+"Does anyone answer?" asked his lordship; "do you know if any gentleman
+is instructed, Mr. Ricochet?"
+
+"I am not aware, my lud."
+
+"Stand up and be sworn, gentlemen," says the associate. Up stood the
+jury; and in less than half a minute they found a verdict for the
+defendant, counterclaim being abandoned, just as Mr. Bumpkin had pushed
+into Court. And judgment is given.
+
+The business having been thus got through, the Court rose and went away.
+And then came in both counsel and Mr. Prigg and Horatio; and great
+complaints were made of everybody except the Judge, who couldn't help it.
+
+But our administration of justice is not so inelastic that it cannot
+adapt itself to a set of circumstances such as these. It was only to
+make a few more affidavits, and to appear before his lordship by counsel,
+and state the facts in a calm and respectful manner, to obtain the
+necessary rectification of the matter. All was explained and all
+forgiven. _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_ was to be restored to the paper upon
+payment of the costs of the day--a trifling matter, amounting only to
+about eighteen pounds seventeen shillings. But a severe admonition from
+the Bench accompanied this act of grace: "The Court cannot be kept
+waiting," said his lordship; "and it is necessary that all suitors should
+know that if they are not here when their cases are called on they will
+be struck out, or the party to the cause who is here will be entitled to
+a verdict, if the defendant; or to try his case in the other's absence,
+if he be the plaintiff. It was idle to suppose that parties could not be
+there in time: it was their business to be there."
+
+At this every junior barrister nodded approvingly, and the usher called
+silence.
+
+Of course, the cause could not be in the paper again for some time: they
+must suit Mr. Ricochet's convenience now: and accordingly another period
+of waiting had to be endured. Mr. Bumpkin was almost distracted, but his
+peace of mind was restored by the worthy Prigg, who persuaded him that a
+most laudable piece of good fortune had been brought about by his
+intervention; and that was the preventing the wily Snooks from keeping
+the verdict he had snatched.
+
+What a small thing will sometimes comfort us!
+
+Mr. Bumpkin was, indeed, a lucky man; for if his case had not been in the
+paper when at last it was, it would have "gone over the Long Vacation."
+
+At length I saw Mr. Justice Pangloss, the eminent Chancery Judge, take
+his seat in the Bail Court. He was an immense case lawyer. He knew
+cases that had been tried in the reigns of the Edwards and Henries. A
+pig case could not, therefore, come amiss.
+
+A case lawyer is like Moses and Sons; he can fit anybody, from Chang down
+to a midget. But there is sometimes an inconvenience in trying to fit an
+old precedent on to new circumstances: and I am not unfrequently reminded
+of the boy whose corduroy trousers were of the exact length, and looked
+tolerable in front; but if you went round they stuck out a good deal on
+the other side. He might grow to them, no doubt, but it is a clumsy mode
+of tailoring after all.
+
+Now Mr. Bumpkin, of course, could not be sure that his case was "coming
+on." All he knew was, that he must avoid Snooks' snatching another
+verdict. He had been to great expense, and a commission had actually
+been issued to take Joe's evidence while his regiment was detained at
+Malta. Mr. Prigg had taken the plaintiff into a crowd, and there had
+left him early in the morning.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin's appearance even in the densest crowd was attractive, to say
+the least: and many and various were the observations from time to time
+made by the vulgar roughs around as to his personal appearance. His
+shirtcollar was greatly praised, so was the beauty of his waistcoat:
+while I heard one gentleman make an enquiry which showed he was desirous
+of ascertaining what was the name of the distinguished firm which had the
+honour of supplying him with hats. One said it was Heath, he could tell
+by the brim; another that it was Cole, he went by the polish; and the
+particular curl of the brim, which no other hatter had ever succeeded in
+producing. While another gentleman with one eye and half a nose
+protested that it was one of Lincoln and Bennett's patent dynamite
+resisters on an entirely new principle.
+
+The subject of all these remarks listened as one in doubt as to whether
+they were levelled at him or in any other direction. He glanced at the
+many eyes turned upon him, and heard the laughter that succeeded every
+new witticism. His uncertainty as to whether he was "the party eamed
+at," heightened the amusement of the wits.
+
+Now came a bolder and less mistakable allusion to his personal
+appearance:
+
+"I should like Gladstone to see that, Jem; talk about a collar! the Grand
+Old Man's nowhere--he'd better take to turndowns after this."
+
+"Yes," replied the gentleman addressed; "I think this would settle
+him--is he liberal or tory, I wonder?"
+
+"Tory, you're sure--wotes for the Squoire, I'll warrant. A small loaf
+and a big jail."
+
+Mr. Bumpkin turned his eyes first towards one speaker and then towards
+another without moving his head, as he thought:
+
+"Danged if I doan't bleeve thee means I." But he wisely said nothing.
+
+"I say," said another, "I wonder if pigeon's milk is good for the
+complexion."
+
+"No," said Jem, "it makes your nose red, and makes the hair sprout out of
+the top of it."
+
+Here was a laugh all round, which made the Usher call out silence; and
+the Judge said he would have the Court cleared if order was not
+preserved. Then there was a loud shouting all over the Court for "Thomas
+Bumpkin!"
+
+"Here I be!" said Bumpkin, amid more laughter--and especially of the wits
+around him. Then a great bustling and hustling, and pushing and
+struggling took place.
+
+"Danged if that beant my case," said Mr. Bumpkin; "but it ain't my
+counsellor."
+
+"Make way for the plaintiff," shouted the Usher; "stand on one
+side--don't crowd up this passage. This way, sir, make haste; the
+Court's waiting for you, why do you keep the Court waiting in this way?"
+
+"I was just going to strike your case out," said the Judge, "the public
+time can't be wasted in this way."
+
+Bumpkin scrambled along through the crowd, and was hustled into the
+witness-box. The Judge put up his eye-glass, and looked at the plaintiff
+as though he was hardly fit to bring an action in a Superior Court. Up
+went the book into his hand. "Take the book in your right hand. Kiss
+the book; now attend and speak up--speak up so that those gentlemen may
+hear."
+
+"Why weren't you here before?" asked the Judge.
+
+"I wur, my lord?"
+
+"Didn't you hear your learned counsel opening your case?"
+
+"I didn't know it wur my case," said Bumpkin, amid roars of laughter.
+
+"I don't wonder at that," said Mr. Ricochet, looking at the jury.
+
+"Now then," said the Judge.
+
+"And now, then," said Mr. Silverspoon; for neither of his own counsel was
+able to be present.
+
+"You are a farmer, I believe?"
+
+"I be."
+
+"On the 29th of May, 18--; did the defendant come to your farm?"
+
+"Ur did."
+
+"Did he buy a pig?"
+
+"Ur did not; but ur said he'd be d---d if ur wouldn't 'ave un."
+
+"And did he come and take it away?"
+
+"Ur did; pulled un slick out of the sty; and when I tried to stop un in
+the Lane, took un by main force?"
+
+Mr. Silverspoon sat down.
+
+"What was the age of this pig, Mr. Bumpkin," enquired the Judge.
+
+"He wur ten weeks old, your lord."
+
+"Isn't there a calf case, Mr. Ricochet, very similar to this?"
+
+"Yes, my lord."
+
+"I think," said Mr. Justice Pangloss, "it was tried in the reign of James
+the First."
+
+Mr. Ricochet, who knew nothing of the calf case, except what his Lordship
+had told him, said he believed it was.
+
+"If this was anything," continued Mr. Ricochet, "upon the plaintiff's own
+showing it was a felony, and the plaintiff should have prosecuted the
+defendant criminally before having recourse to his civil remedy; that is
+laid down in the sheep case reported in Walker's Trumpery Cases."
+
+"What volume of the Trumpery Cases is that, Mr. Ricochet?"
+
+"Six hundred and fifty, my lud."
+
+His Lordship writes it down. "Page?" says his lordship.
+
+"Nineteen hundred and ninety-five, my lud; about the middle of the book."
+
+Judge calls to the Usher to bring the six hundred and fiftieth volume of
+Walker's Trumpery Cases.
+
+"But there's a case before that," said his lordship. "There's a case, if
+I recollect rightly, about the time of Julius Caesar--the donkey case."
+
+"It's on all fours with this," said Mr. Ricochet.
+
+"What do you say, Mr. Silverspoon?"
+
+Then Mr. Silverspoon proceeded to show that none of those cases was on
+all fours with the present case; and a long and interesting argument
+followed between the Bench and the Bar. And it was said by those who
+were most competent to judge, that Mr. Silverspoon quite distinguished
+himself for the wonderful erudition he displayed in his knowledge of the
+donkey case, and several other cases of four-footed beasts that were
+called to his attention by Mr. Justice Pangloss. A perfect menagerie was
+"adduced." Mr. Bumpkin meanwhile wondering where he was, and what on
+earth they had all got to do with the plain fact of Snooks taking his pig
+without paying for it.
+
+At length, after four hours had been consumed in these learned
+disquisitions, Mr. Justice Pangloss, reviewing the judgments of the
+various eminent lawyers who had presided over the respective cases in the
+several reigns, and after quoting many observations of those eminent
+jurists, said that in order to save time he would hold, for the purposes
+of to-day, that Mr. Bumpkin was entitled to bring his action: but, of
+course, he would reserve the point; he was by no means clear; he
+considered himself bound by authority; and as the point was extremely
+important, and left undecided after no less than twelve hundred years of
+argument on the one side and the other, he thought it ought to be
+solemnly settled. An unsettled state of the law was a very bad thing in
+his lordship's opinion; especially in these modern times, when it
+appeared to him that the public were clamouring for further reform, and a
+still further simplification of legal procedure.
+
+This suited Mr. Ricochet exactly; he could not be said now to have lost
+his case, even if the jury should find against him. But he had yet to
+cut up Bumpkin in cross-examination. The old trial was brought up
+against the plaintiff; and every thing that could tend to discredit him
+was asked. Mr. Ricochet, indeed, seemed to think that the art of
+cross-examination consisted in bullying a witness, and asking all sorts
+of questions tending to cast reflections upon his character. He was
+especially great in insinuating perjury; knowing that that is always open
+to a counsel who has no other defence.
+
+"Will you swear that?" was asked at almost every answer; sometimes
+prefaced by the warning, "Be careful, sir--be careful." If he could get
+hold of anything against a witness's character, be it ever so small, and
+at ever so remote a distance in the man's life, he brought it out; and
+being a Queen's Counsel he did not always receive the reproofs that would
+have crushed a stuff gownsman into respectable behaviour.
+
+"Were you charged with assaulting a female in the public streets, sir?"
+
+"No, I worn't."
+
+"Be careful, sir--she may be in Court."
+
+"Let her come forward then," said the courageous Silverspoon, who was by
+no means wanting in tact.
+
+"Will you be quiet, sir," retorted Ricochet. "Now Mr. Bumpkin, or
+whatever your name is, will you swear she did not accuse you of
+assaulting her?"
+
+"She coomed oop, and it's my belief she wur in the robbery."
+
+"Bravo Bumpkin!" said one of the men who had chaffed him. And the jury
+looked at one another in a manner that showed approval.
+
+"Will you swear, sir, you have never been in trouble?"
+
+"I donnow what thee means."
+
+"Be careful, sir; you know what I mean perfectly well."
+
+Then Locust whispers to him, and he says:
+
+"O, you frequent Music Halls, don't you?"
+
+"Donnow what thee means," says Bumpkin.
+
+"O, you don't, don't you; will you swear that?"
+
+"I wool."
+
+"Be careful, sir. Were you at the Canterbury Hall with two women, who
+passed as the Countess and Lady Flora?"
+
+"It be a lie!"
+
+And thus every form of torture was ruthlessly employed, till Mr. Bumpkin
+broke down under it, and cried like a child in the witness-box. This
+awakened sympathy for him. There had been much humour and much laughter;
+and Mr. Ricochet having no knowledge of human nature, was not aware how
+closely allied are laughter and tears; that in proportion as the jury had
+laughed at the expense of Mr. Bumpkin they would sympathize with his
+unhappy position.
+
+"I've worked hard," said he, "for sixty year, and let any man come
+forrard and say I've wronged man, ooman, or child!"
+
+That was a point for Bumpkin. Every one said, "Poor old man!" and even
+his Lordship, who was supposed to have no feeling, was quite sympathetic.
+Only Mr. Ricochet was obtuse. He had no heart, and very little skill, or
+he would have managed his case more adroitly. "Badgering" is not much
+use if you have no better mode of winning your case.
+
+"Stand down, Mr. Bumpkin," said his counsel, as Mr. Ricochet resumed his
+seat amid the suppressed hisses of the gallery.
+
+"Joseph Wurzel," said Mr. Silverspoon.
+
+Joe appeared in the uniform of the Hussars. And he wore a medal too.
+Mr. Ricochet had no sympathy with heroes any more than he had with men of
+letters, artists, or any other class of talent. He was a dry,
+uncompromising, blunt, unfeeling lawyer, looking at justice as a
+thimblerig looks at his pea; lift which thimble you may, he will take
+care the pea shall not be found if he can help it. He smiled a grim,
+inhuman smile at Bumpkin's tears, and muttered that he was an "unmanly
+milksop."
+
+Joe gave his evidence briefly and without hesitation. Everyone could see
+he was speaking the truth; everybody but Mr. Ricochet, who commenced his
+cross-examination by telling him to be careful, and that he was upon his
+oath.
+
+"Be careful, sir;" he repeated.
+
+Joe looked.
+
+"You are on your oath, sir." Joe faced him.
+
+"You deserted your master, did you?"
+
+"No," said Joe; "I aint no deserter?"
+
+"But you enlisted."
+
+"I don't know as that's desertion," said Joe; "and I'm here to speak for
+him now; and I give my evidence at Malta, too."
+
+"Do you swear that, sir?" enquired Mr. Ricochet. "Were you not with your
+master when the young woman accused him of assaulting her?"
+
+"I was not."
+
+"Why did you enlist, then?" enquired Mr. Ricochet.
+
+"Cause I choose to," said Joe.
+
+"Now, sir, upon your oath; I ask you, did you not enlist because of this
+charge?"
+
+"No; I never heard on it till arter I was listed."
+
+"When did you hear of it?"
+
+"At the trial at the Old Bailey."
+
+"O," said the learned Q.C.; "wait a minute, you were there, were you?
+Were you there as a witness?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Because I warnt."
+
+"Will you swear that?" asked Ricochet, amid roars of laughter.
+
+"What were you there for?"
+
+"To hear the trial!"
+
+"And you were not called?"
+
+"No."
+
+"And do you mean on your oath, sir, to say that you had enlisted at that
+time."
+
+"Now look at that," said Joe; "the Sergeant there enlisted me, and he
+knows."
+
+"I suppose you had seen your master's watch many times?"
+
+"I'd seen it," said Joe.
+
+"And did not give evidence!"
+
+"No; I warnt called, and know'd nothing about it."
+
+"You've been paid for coming here, I suppose?"
+
+"Not a farden, and wouldn't take un; he bin a good maister to me as ever
+lived."
+
+"And you left him. Now then, sir, be careful; do you swear you heard
+Bumpkin say Snooks should not have the pig?"
+
+"I do."
+
+"Have you been speaking to anyone about this case before to-day?"
+
+Joe thought a bit.
+
+"Be careful, sir, I warn you," says Ricochet.
+
+"Yes," said Joe; "I have."
+
+"I thought so. When? To whom?"
+
+And here an air of triumph lit up the features of Mr. Ricochet.
+
+"Afore I comed here."
+
+"When! let's have it?"
+
+"Outside the Court."
+
+"To Bumpkin?"
+
+"No; to that there Locust; he axed un--"
+
+"Never mind what he axed you;" said Ricochet, whose idea of humour
+consisted in the repetition of an illiterate observation; and he sat
+down--as well he might--after such an exhibition of the art of advocacy.
+
+But on re-examination, it turned out that Mr. Locust had put several
+questions to Joe with a view of securing his evidence himself at a
+reasonable remuneration, and of contradicting Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+This caused the jury to look at one another with grave faces and shake
+their heads.
+
+Mr. Ricochet began and continued his speech in the same common-place
+style as his cross-examination; abusing everyone on the other side,
+especially that respectable solicitor, Mr. Prigg; and endeavouring to
+undo his own bad performance with the witness by a worse speech to the
+jury. What he was going to show, and what he was going to prove, was
+wonderful; everybody who had been called was guilty of perjury; everybody
+he was going to call would be a paragon of all the virtues. He
+expatiated upon the great common sense of the jury (as though they were
+fools), relied on their sound judgment and denounced the conduct of Mr.
+Bumpkin in the witness-box as a piece of artful acting, intended to
+appeal to the weakness of the jury. But all was useless. Snooks made a
+sorry figure in the box. He was too emphatic, too positive, too abusive.
+Mr. Ricochet could not get over his own cross-examination. The
+ridiculous counterclaim with its pettifogging innuendoes vanished before
+that common sense of the jury to which Mr. Ricochet so dryly appealed.
+The edifice erected by the modern pleader's subtle craftiness was
+unsubstantial as the icy patterns on the window-pane, which a single
+breath can dissipate. And yet these ingenious contrivances were
+sufficient to give an unimportant case an appearance of substantiality
+which it otherwise would not have possessed.
+
+The jury, after a most elaborate charge from Mr. Justice Pangloss, who
+went through the cases of the last 900 years in the most careful manner,
+returned a verdict for the plaintiff with twenty-five pounds damages.
+The learned Judge did not give judgment, inasmuch as there were points of
+law to be argued. Mr. Bumpkin, although he had won his case so far as
+the verdict was concerned, did not look by any means triumphant. He had
+undergone so much anxiety and misery, that he felt more like a man who
+had escaped a great danger than one who had accomplished a great
+achievement.
+
+Snooks' mouth, during the badgering of the witnesses, which was intended
+for cross-examination was quite a study for an artist or a physiologist.
+When he thought a witness was going to be caught, the orifice took the
+form of a gothic window in a ruinous condition. When he imagined the
+witness had slipped out of the trap laid for him, it stretched
+horizontally, and resembled a baker's oven. He was of too coarse a
+nature to suspect that his own counsel had damaged his case, and believed
+the result of the trial to have been due to the plaintiff's "snivelling."
+He left the Court with a melancholy downcast look, and his only chance of
+happiness hereafter in this life seemed now to be in proportion to his
+power of making Mr. Bumpkin miserable. Mr. Locust was not behind in his
+advice on their future course; and, after joining his client in the hall,
+at once pointed out the utterly absurd conclusion at which the jury had
+arrived; declared that there must be friends of the plaintiff among them,
+and that Mr. Ricochet would take the earliest opportunity of moving for a
+new trial; a piece of information which quite lit up the coarse features
+of his client, as a breath of air will bring a passing glow to the
+mouldering embers of an ash-heap on a dark night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+
+Motion for rule nisi, in which is displayed much learning, ancient and
+modern.
+
+On the following day there was a great array of judicial talent and
+judicial dignity sitting in what is called "Banco," not to be in any way
+confounded with "Sancho;" the two words are totally distinct both as to
+their meaning and etymology. In the centre of the Bench sat Mr. Justice
+Doughty, one of the clearest heads perhaps that ever enveloped itself in
+horsehair. On his right was Mr. Justice Pangloss, and on his left Mr.
+Justice Technical.
+
+Then arose from the Queen's Counsel row, Mr. Ricochet to apply for a rule
+_nisi_ for a new trial in the cause of _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_ which was
+tried yesterday before Mr. Justice Pangloss.
+
+"Before me?" says Mr. Justice Pangloss.
+
+"Yes, my lud," says Mr. Ricochet.
+
+"Are you sure?" enquired the learned Judge, turning over his notes.
+
+"O, quite, my lud."
+
+"Ah!" says his lordship: "what do you say the name of the case was?"
+
+"_Bumpkin_ against _Snooks_, my lud," says Mr. Ricochet, Q.C.
+
+"Coots; what was it,--a Bill of Exchange?" asks his lordship.
+
+"Snooks, my lud, Snooks;" says Mr. Ricochet, "with the greatest
+deference, my lud, his name is spelt with an S."
+
+Judge, still turning over his book from end to end calls to his clerk,
+and addressing Mr. Ricochet, says: "When do you say it was tried, Mr.
+Ricochet?"
+
+"Yesterday, my lud; with great submission, my lud, I overheard your
+ludship say Coots. Snooks, my lud."
+
+Then all the Judges cried "Snooks!" as if it had been a puzzle or a
+conundrum at a family Christmas party, and they had all guessed it at
+once.
+
+"Bring me the book for this term," said the Judge sharply to his clerk.
+
+"What was the name of the plaintiff?" enquired Mr. Justice Doughty.
+
+"Bumpkin, my lud," said Mr. Ricochet, "with great deference."
+
+"Ah, Pumpkin, so it was," said the presiding Judge.
+
+"With great submission, my lud, Bumpkin!"
+
+"Eh?"
+
+"Bumpkin, my lud;" and then all the Judges' cried "Bumpkin!" as pleased
+as the followers of Columbus when they discovered America.
+
+"Ah, here it is," said Mr. Justice Pangloss, passing his forefinger
+slowly along the page; "the name of the case you refer to, Mr. Ricochet,
+is _Bumpkin_ v. _Snooks_, not _Coots_ v. _Pumpkin_, and it was tried
+before me and a special jury on the twenty-eighth of July of the present
+year."
+
+"Yes, my lud, with all submission."
+
+"Why, that was yesterday," said Mr. Justice Pangloss. "Why did you not
+say so; I was referring to last year's book."
+
+"With all deference, my lud--"
+
+"Never mind, never mind, Mr. Ricochet; let us get on."
+
+"What do you move for?" asked Mr. Justice Doughty.
+
+"A new trial, my lud."
+
+"A new trial--yes--? Which way was the verdict, Mr. Ricochet?"
+
+"Verdict for the plaintiff, my lud."
+
+"And whom do you appear for?"
+
+"I am for the defendant, my lud."
+
+"O! you're for the defendant. Stop--let me have my note correct. I find
+it always of great assistance when the rule comes on to be argued. I
+don't say you're going to have a rule. I must know a little more of the
+case before we grant a rule."
+
+"If your ludship pleases."
+
+I did not gather what his lordship intended to say when he made the
+observations recorded, and can only regret that his lordship should have
+broken off so abruptly.
+
+"What ground do you move upon, Mr. Ricochet."
+
+Mr. Ricochet said, "The usual grounds, my lud; that is to say, that the
+verdict was against the weight of evidence."
+
+"Stop a minute," said Mr. Justice Doughty; "let me have my note correct,
+'against the weight of evidence,' Mr. Ricochet."
+
+"Misdirection, my lud--with all respect to Mr. Justice Pangloss--and
+wrongful admission of evidence."
+
+"What was the action for?"
+
+Now this was a question that no man living had been able to answer yet.
+What was in the pleadings, that is, the pattern of the lawyer's net, was
+visible enough; but as regards merits, I predict with the greatest
+confidence, that no man will ever be able to discover what the action of
+_Bumpkin_ versus _Snooks_ was about. But it speaks wonders for the
+elasticity of our system of jurisprudence and the ingenuity of our
+lawyers that such a case could be _invented_.
+
+"Trespass," said Ricochet, "was one paragraph; then there was assault and
+battery; breach of contract in not accepting a pig at the price agreed;
+trespass in seizing the pig without paying for it; and then, my lud,
+there were the usual money counts, as they used to be called, to which
+the defendant pleaded, among other pleas, a right of way; an easement;
+leave and license; a right to take the pig; that the pig was the property
+of the defendant, and various other matters. Then, my lud, there was a
+counter-claim for slander, for assault and battery; for loss of profit
+which would have been made if the pig had been delivered according to
+contract; breach of contract for the non-delivery of the pig."
+
+Mr. Justice Doughty: "This was pig-iron, I suppose?"
+
+The two other Judges fell back, shaking their sides with laughter; and
+then forcibly thrust their hands against their hips which made their
+tippets stick out very much, and gave them a dignified and imposing
+appearance. Then, seeing the Judges laugh, all the bar laughed, and all
+the ushers laughed, and all the public laughed. The mistake, however,
+was a very easy one to fall into, and when Mr. Justice Doughty, who was
+an exceedingly good-tempered man, saw the mistake he had made, he laughed
+as much as any man, and even caused greater laughter still by
+good-humouredly and wittily observing that he supposed somebody must be a
+pigheaded man. To which Mr. Ricochet laughingly replied, that he
+believed the plaintiff was a very pigheaded man.
+
+"Now," said Mr. Justice Pangloss, "have you considered what Vinnius in
+his 'Commentary on Urban Servitudes' says."
+
+Mr. Ricochet said, "Hem!" and that was the very best answer he could make
+to the learned Pangloss, and if he only continues to answer in that
+manner he'll get any rule he likes to apply for--(no, not the Rule of
+Three, perhaps).
+
+So Mr. Justice Pangloss went on:
+
+"There are, as Gale says, 'two classes of easements distinctly recognised
+by the Civil Law--'"
+
+"Hem!" said Ricochet.
+
+"'Under the head of "Urban Servitudes--'"
+
+Ricochet: "Hem!"
+
+"'That a man,' (continued Mr. Justice Pangloss), 'shall receive upon his
+house or land the _flumen_ or _stillicidium_ of his neighbour--'"
+
+"Hem!" coughed Mr. Ricochet, in a very high key; I verily believe in
+imitation of that wonderful comedian, J. C. Clarke.
+
+Then Mr. Justice Pangloss proceeded, to the admiration of the whole Bar:
+
+"'The difference,' says Vinnius, in his Commentary on this passage,
+between the _flumen_ and the _stillicidium_ is this--the latter is the
+rain falling from the roof by drops (_guttatim et stillatim_).'"
+
+"Hem!" from the whole Bar.
+
+"'The _flumen_'--"
+
+"I think," said Mr. Justice Doughty, "you are entitled to a rule on that
+point, Mr. Ricochet."
+
+Then Mr. Justice Technical whispered, and I heard Mr. Justice Doughty say
+the principle was the same, although there might be some difference of
+opinion about the facts, which could be argued hereafter. "But what is
+the misreception of evidence, Mr. Ricochet? I don't quite see that."
+
+"With all submission, my lud, evidence was admitted of what the solicitor
+for the defendant said to the plaintiff."
+
+"Wait a minute, let me see how that stands," said Mr. Justice Doughty;
+"the solicitor for the defendant said something to the plaintiff, I don't
+quite follow that."
+
+Mr. Justice Technical observed that it was quite clear that what is said
+by the solicitor of one party to the solicitor of another party is not
+evidence.
+
+"O," said the learned Pangloss, "so far back as the time of Justinian it
+was laid down--"
+
+"And that being so," said the eminent Chancery Judge, Mr. Justice
+Technical, "I should go so far as to say, that what the solicitor of one
+party says to the client stands upon the same footing."
+
+"Precisely," said Mr. Ricochet
+
+"I think you are entitled to a rule on that point," remarked Mr. Justice
+Doughty, "although my brother Pangloss seems to entertain some doubt as
+to whether there was any such evidence."
+
+"O, my lud, with all submission, with the greatest possible deference and
+respect to the learned Judge, I assure your ludship that it was so, for I
+have a note of it."
+
+"I was about to say," continued Mr. Justice Doughty, "as my brother
+Pangloss says, it may have been given while he was considering a point in
+Justinian. What is the misdirection?"
+
+"O, my lud, the misdirection was, I venture respectfully and
+deferentially to submit, and with the utmost deference to the learned
+Judge, in his lordship's telling the jury that if they found that the
+right of way which the defendant set up in his answer to the trespass, or
+easement--but perhaps, my lud, I had better read from the short-hand
+writer's notes of his ludship's summing-up. This is it, my lud, his
+ludship said: 'In an action for stopping of his _ancient_ lights --."
+
+"What!" said Mr. Justice Doughty, "_did he black the plaintiff's eyes_,
+then?"
+
+"No, my lud," said Mr. Ricochet, "that was never alleged or suggested."
+
+"I only used it by way of illustration," said Mr. Justice Pangloss.
+
+Then their lordships consulted together, and after about three-quarters
+of an hour's conversation the learned Mr. Justice Doughty said:
+
+"You can take a rule, Mr. Ricochet."
+
+"On all points, my lud, if your ludships please."
+
+"It will be more satisfactory," said his lordship, "and then we shall see
+what there is in it. At present, I must confess, I don't understand
+anything about it."
+
+And I saw that what there was really in it was very much like what there
+is in a kaleidoscope, odds and ends, which form all sorts of combinations
+when you twist and turn them about in the dark tube of a "legal
+argument." And so poor Bumpkin was deprived of the fruit of his victory.
+Truly the law is very expeditious. Before Bumpkin had got home with the
+cheerful intelligence that he had won, the wind had changed and was
+setting in fearfully from the north-east. Juries may find as many facts
+as they like, but the Court applies the law to them; and law is like
+gunpowder in its operation upon them,--twists them out of all
+recognisable shape. It is very difficult in a Court of law to get over
+"_guttatims_" and "_stillatims_," even in an action for the price of a
+pig.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+
+Mr. Bumpkin is congratulated by his neighbours and friends in the market
+place and sells his corn.
+
+What a lovely peace there was again over the farm! It was true Mr.
+Bumpkin had not obtained as large a measure of damages as his solicitor
+had led him to anticipate, but he was triumphant, and that over a man
+like Snooks was something. So the damages were forgotten beneath that
+peaceful August sky. How bright the corn looked! There was not a
+particle of "smut" in the whole field. And it was a good breadth of
+wheat this year for Southwood Farm. The barley too, was evidently fit
+for malting, and would be sure to fetch a decent price: especially as
+they seemed to say there was not much barley this year that was quite up
+to the mark for malting. The swedes, too, were coming on apace, and a
+little rain by and by would make them swell considerably. So everything
+looked exceedingly prosperous, except perhaps the stock. There certainly
+were not so many pigs. Out of a stye of eleven there was only one left.
+The sow was nowhere to be seen. She had been sold, it appeared, so no
+more were to be expected from that quarter. When Mr. Bumpkin asked where
+"old Jack" was (that was the donkey), he was informed that "the man" had
+fetched it. "The man" it appeared was always fetching something.
+Yesterday it was pigs; the day before it was ducks; the day before that
+it was geese; and about a week ago it was a stack of this year's hay: a
+stack of very prime clover indeed. Then "the man" took a fancy to some
+cheeses which Mrs. Bumpkin had in the dairy, some of her very finest
+make. She remonstrated, but "the man" was peremptory. But what most
+surprised Mr. Bumpkin, and drew tears from Mrs. Bumpkin's eyes, was when
+the successful litigant enquired how the bull was.
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin had invented many plans with a view to "breaking this out"
+to her husband: and now that the time had come every plan was a failure.
+The tears betrayed her.
+
+"What, be he dead?" enquired Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"O, no, Tom--no, no--"
+
+"Well, what then?"
+
+"The man!"
+
+"The man! The devil's in thic man, who be he? Where do ur come from?
+I'll bring an action agin him as sure's he's alive or shoot un dead wi my
+gun;" here Mr. Bumpkin, in a great rage, got up and went to the beam
+which ran across the kitchen ceiling, and formed what is called the
+roof-tree of the house, by the side of which the gun was suspended by two
+loops.
+
+"No, no, Tom, don't--don't--we have never wronged any one yet, and
+don't--don't now."
+
+"But I wool," said Bumpkin; "what! be I to be stripped naaked and not
+fight for th' cloathes--who be thic feller as took the bull?"
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin was holding her apron to her eyes, and for a long while
+could say nothing.
+
+"Who be he, Nancy?"
+
+"I don't know, Tom--but he held a paper in his hand writ all over as
+close as the stubble-rows in the field, and he said thee had signed un."
+
+"Lord! lord!" exclaimed Mr. Bumpkin, and then sat down on the settle and
+looked at the fire as though it threw a light over his past actions. He
+couldn't speak for a long time, not till Mrs. Bumpkin went up to him and
+laid her hand upon his shoulder, and said:
+
+"Tom! Tom! thee ha winned the case."
+
+"Aye, aye," said Bumpkin, starting up as from a reverie. "I ha winned,
+Nancy. I ha beat thic there Snooks; ur wont snigger now when ur gooes
+by--lor, lor,--our counsellor put it into un straight, Nancy."
+
+"Did ur, Tom?--well, I be proud."
+
+"Ah!" said Bumpkin, "and what d'ye think?--it wornt our counsellor, that
+is the Queen's Counsellor nuther; he wornt there although I paid un, but
+I spoase he'll gie up the money, Nancy?"
+
+"Were it much, Tom?"
+
+"Farty guineas!"
+
+"Farty guineas, Tom! Why, it wur enough to set up housekeepin wi--and
+thee only winned twenty-five, Tom; why thic winnin were a heavy loss I
+think."
+
+"Now, lookee ere," said Bumpkin; "I oughter had five undered, as Laryer
+Prigg said, our case were that good, but lor it baint sartain: gie I a
+little gin and water, Nancy--thee ain't asked I to have a drap since I
+bin oame."
+
+"Lor, Tom, thee knows I be all for thee, and that all be thine."
+
+"It beant much, it strikes me; lor, lor, whatever shall us do wirout pigs
+and sheep, and wirout thic bull. I be fit to cry, Nancy, although I
+winned the case."
+
+Tom had his gin and water and smoked his pipe, and went to bed and
+dreamed of all that had taken place. He rose with the lark and went into
+the fields and enjoyed once again the fresh morning air, and the sweet
+scent of the new hayrick in the yard; and, without regarding it, the song
+of the lark as it shot heavenward and poured down its stream of glad
+music: but there was amidst all a sadness of spirit and a feeling of
+desolation. It was not like the old times when everything seemed to
+welcome him about the farm wherever he went. The work of "the man" was
+everywhere. But the harvest was got in, and a plentiful harvest it was:
+the corn was threshed, and one day Mr. Bumpkin went to market with his
+little bags of samples of the newly-housed grain. Everybody was glad to
+see him, for he was known everywhere as a regular upright and
+down-straight man. Every farmer and every corn-dealer and cattle-dealer
+congratulated him in his homely way on his success. They looked at his
+samples and acknowledged they were very bright and weighty. "I never
+liked that Snooks feller," was the general cry, and at the farmers'
+ordinary, which was held every market day at the "Plough," every one who
+knew Bumpkin shook hands and wished him well, and after dinner, before
+they broke up, Farmer Gosling proposed his health, and said how proud he
+"were that his old neighbour had in the beautiful words o' the National
+Anthem, 'confounded their politicks': and he hoped that the backbone o'
+old England, which were the farmers, wornt gwine to be broked jist yet
+awhile. Farmin might be bad, but yet wi little cheaper rents and a good
+deal cheaper rates and taxes, there'd be good farmin and good farmers in
+England yit."
+
+Now this speech, I saw in my dream, brought down the house. Everyone
+said it was more to the point than the half-mile speeches which took up
+so much of the newspapers to the exclusion of murders, burglaries and
+divorces. And in truth, now I come to look at it in my waking moments, I
+respectfully commend it to our legislators, or what is better, to their
+constituencies, as embodying on this subject both the principles of true
+conservatism and true liberalism: and I don't see what the most exacting
+of politicians can require more than that.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin made a suitable reply--that is to say, "he wur mighty proud
+o' their neighbourliness--he wur a plaain man, as had made his own way in
+the world, or leastwise tried to do un by ard work and uprightedness and
+downstraightedness; tried to be straight forrerd, and nobody as he knowed
+of could ax un for a shillin'. But," he added: "I be praisin oop myself,
+neighbours, I be afeard, and I doant wish to do thic, only to put I
+straaight afore thee. I beant dead yit, and I hope we shall all be
+friends and neighbours, and meet many moore times at this ornary
+together."
+
+And so, delighted with one another, after a glass or two, and a song or
+two, the party broke up, all going to their several farms. Mr. Bumpkin
+was particularly well pleased, for he had sold twenty quarters of wheat
+at forty-nine shillings a quarter; which, as times went, was a very
+considerable increase, showing the excellent quality of the samples.
+
+Sooner or later, however, it must be told, that when Bumpkin reached his
+quiet farm, a strange and sad scene presented itself. Evidences of "_the
+man_" were in all directions. He had been at work while Mr. Bumpkin in
+his convivial moments was protesting that he did not owe anyone a
+shilling. Alas! how little the best of as know how much we owe!
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin, who had borne up like a true woman through all the troubles
+that had come upon her home,--borne up for his sake, hoping for better
+days, and knowing nothing of the terrible net that had been spread around
+them by the wily fowler, at length gave way, as she saw "the man" loading
+his cart with her husband's wheat; the wheat he had gone that day to
+sell. Bitterly she wrung her hands, and begged him to spare her husband
+that last infliction. Was there anything that she could do or give to
+save him this blow? No, no; the man was obstinate in the performance of
+his duty; "right was right, and wrong was no man's right!"
+
+So when Mr. Bumpkin returned, the greater part of his wheat was gone, and
+the rest was being loaded. The beautiful rick of hay too, which had not
+yet ceased to give out the fresh scent that a new rick yields, were being
+cut and bound into trusses.
+
+Poor Tom was fairly beside himself, but Mrs. Bumpkin had taken the
+precaution to hide the gun and the powder-flask, for she could not tell
+what her husband might do in his distraction. Possibly she was right.
+Tom's rage knew no bounds. Youth itself seemed to be restored in the
+strength of his fury. He saw dimly the men standing around looking on;
+he saw, as in a dream, the man cutting on the rick, and he uttered
+incoherent sentences which those only understood who were accustomed to
+his provincial accent.
+
+"Tom, Tom," said Mrs. Bumpkin, "don't be in a rage."
+
+"Who be thic feller on my rick?"
+
+"I beant any more a feller nor thee, Maister Boompkin; it aint thy rick
+nuther."
+
+"Then in the name of h--, whose be it?"
+
+"It be Maister Skinalive's; thee can't have t' cake an eat un; thee
+sowled it to un."
+
+"It be a lie, a --- lie; come down!"
+
+"Noa, noa, I beant coomin doon till I coot all t' hay; it be good hay an
+all, as sweet as a noot."
+
+"Where is thy master?" enquired Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+"I dooant rightly knoo, missus, where ur be; but I think if thee could
+see un, he'd poot it right if thee wanted time loike, and so on, for he
+be a kind-hearted man enoo."
+
+"Can we find un, do ur think?" asked Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+"If thee do, missus, it wur moor un I bin able to do for the last three
+moonths."
+
+"I'll find some un," said Mr. Bumpkin; "here, goo and fetch a pleeceman."
+
+This was said to a small boy who did the bird-minding, and was now
+looking on with his mouth wide open, and his eyes actually shedding
+tears.
+
+"Ah, fetch a pleeceman an all," said the man, thrusting the big hay-knife
+down into the centre of the rick; "but take a soop o' cyder, maister; I
+dessay thee feels a bit out o' sorts loike."
+
+"Thee darn thief; it be my cyder, too, I've a notion."
+
+"How can it be thine, maister, when thee ha' sowled un?" said the man
+with his unanswerable logic: "haw! haw! haw!"
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin held her husband's hand, and tried her hardest to keep him
+from using violence towards the man. She felt the convulsive twitches of
+his strong muscles, and the inward struggle that was shaking his stalwart
+frame. "Come away, Tom; come away; let un do as they like, we'll have
+them as will see us righted yet. There's law for un, surely."
+
+"It beant no use to kick, maister," said the man, again ramming the knife
+down into the rick as though he were cutting Mr. Bumpkin himself in half,
+and were talking to him the while; "it beant no use to kick, maister.
+Here thee be; thee owes the man the money, and can't pay, so ur does this
+out of kindness to prevent thee being sowled oop loike."
+
+"Here be the pleeceman," said Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+Mr. Bumpkin turned suddenly, and shouted, "Tak thic thief into custody."
+
+The policeman, albeit a country constable, was a very sensible man; and
+seeing how matters stood, he very wisely set himself to the better task
+of taking Mr. Bumpkin into custody without appearing to do so, and
+without Mr. Bumpkin knowing it.
+
+"Now," said he, "if so be as you will come indoors, Mr. Bumpkin, I think
+we can put our heads together and see what can be done in this 'ere case;
+if it's stealing let him steal, and I'll have him nicely; but if it ain't
+stealing, then I woant have him at all." (A pause.)
+
+"For why?" (A pause.)
+
+"Because the law gives you other remedies."
+
+"That be right, pleeceman," said Bumpkin; "I'll goo wi' thee. Now then,
+Nancy, let's goo; and look 'ere, thee thief, I'll ha' thee in th' jail
+yet."
+
+The man grinned with a mouth that seemed to have been cut with his own
+hay-knife, so large was it, and went on with his work, merely saying: "I
+dooant charge thee nothin for cootin' nor yet for bindin, maister; I does
+it all free graatis, loike."
+
+"Thee d--- thief, thee'll be paid."
+
+So they went in, and the policeman was quite a comforter to the poor old
+man. He talked to him about what the law was on this point and that
+point, and how a trespass was one thing, and a breach of the peace
+another; and how he mustn't take a man up for felony just because
+somebody charged him: otherwise, the man on the rick might have charged
+Mr. Bumpkin, and so on; till he got the old man into quite a discussion
+on legal points. But meanwhile he had given him another piece of advice,
+which was also much to his credit, and that was to send to his solicitor,
+Mr. Prigg. Mr. Prigg was accordingly sent for; but, like most good men,
+was very scarce. Nowhere could Mr. Prigg be found. But it was well
+known, for it was advertised everywhere on large bills, that the
+excellent gentleman would take the chair at a meeting, to be held in the
+schoolroom in the evening, for the propagation of Christianity among the
+Jews. The policeman would be on duty at that meeting, and he would be
+sure to see Mr. Prigg, and tell him Mr. Bumpkin was very desirous to see
+him as early as possible on the following day. Mr. Bumpkin was thankful,
+and to some extent pacified. As the policeman wished them goodnight,
+Mrs. Bumpkin accompanied him to the door, and begged, if he wouldn't
+mind, that he would look in to-morrow, for he seemed a kind of protection
+for them.
+
+It was about three in the afternoon of the following day when good Mr.
+Prigg drove up to Mr. Bumpkin's door; he drove up with the mare that had
+been Mr. Bumpkin's cow.
+
+"Here he be," said Mrs. Bumpkin; and if Mr. Prigg had been an angel from
+heaven, his presence could not have been more welcome. Oh, what sunshine
+he seemed to bring! Was it a rainbow round his face, or was it only his
+genial Christian smile? His collar was perfect, so was his tie; his head
+immoveable, so were his principles. "Dear, dear!" said Mrs. Bumpkin, "I
+be so glad thee be come, Mr. Prigg--here be master takin' on so as never
+was; I never see'd anything like it."
+
+"What's the matter, my dear lady?" inquired the good man.
+
+"Be that loryer Prigg?" shouted a voice from the inner room.
+
+"Aye, aye, Tom, it be Mr. Prigg."
+
+"Come in, zur," said the voice, "come in; I be mighty glad to see thee.
+Why dam--"
+
+"Hush!" remonstrated the diffuser of Christianity among the Jews; "hush!"
+and his hands were softly raised in gentle protest--albeit his head never
+turned so much as a hair's breadth. "Let us be calm, my dear sir, let us
+be calm. We win by being calm."
+
+"Ah, we winned the lawsuit; didn't us, sir?"
+
+"Ah, that thee did, Tom!" exclaimed Mrs. Bumpkin, delighted at this
+momentary gleam of gladness in her husband's broken heart.
+
+"Of course we won," said Mr. Prigg. "Did I ever entertain a doubt from
+the first about the merits of that case?"
+
+"Thee did not, sir," said Tom; "but lookee 'ere, sir," he continued, in
+almost a whisper, "I dreamt last night as we lost un; and I see thic
+Snooks a sniggering as plaain as ever I see'd anybody in my life."
+
+"My dear sir, what matters your dream? We won, sir. And as for Snooks'
+sniggering, I am sorry to say he is sold up."
+
+"Sold oop!" exclaimed Bumpkin. "Sorry! why beest thee sorry for
+un--beant thee sorry for I?"
+
+"Sorry you've won, Mr. Bumpkin? No; but, I'm sorry for Snooks, because
+we lose our costs. Oh, that Locust is the greatest dodger I ever met."
+
+"I don't understand thee, sir," said Bumpkin. "What d'ye mean by not
+getting costs--won't ur pay?"
+
+"I fear not," said Mr. Prigg, rubbing his hands. "I am surprised, too,
+that he should not have waited until the rule for a new trial was
+argued."
+
+"What the devil be the meaning o' all this?" exclaimed Bumpkin.
+
+"Really, really," said the pious diffuser of Christianity, "we must
+exercise patience; we may get more damages if there should be another
+trial."
+
+"This be trial enough," said Mr. Bumpkin; "and after all it were a
+trumpery case about a pig."
+
+"Quite so, quite so," said the lawyer, rubbing his hands; "but you see,
+my dear sir, it's not so much the pig."
+
+"No, no," said Mr. Bumpkin, "it beant so much th' pig; it be the hoarses
+moore, and the hayricks, and the whate, and--where be all my fowls and
+dooks?"
+
+"The fowls--quite so! Let me see," said the meditative man, pressing the
+head of his gold pencil-case against his forehead, "the fowls--let me
+see--oh, I know, they did the pleadings--so they did."
+
+"And thic sow o' mine?"
+
+"Yes, yes; I think she made an affidavit, if I remember rightly. Yes,
+yes--and the bacon," said he, elevating his left hand, "six flitches I
+think there were; they used to be in this very room--"
+
+"Ay, sure did ur," said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"Well I remember; they made a very splendid affidavit too: I have a note
+of all of them in my memory."
+
+"What coomed o' the cows?"
+
+"Cows? Yes--I have it--our leading counsel had them; and the calf, if I
+remember rightly, went to the junior."
+
+'"Who had the cheeses?" inquired Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"Cheeses!" said the good man. "Oh, yes, the cheeses; they went in
+refreshers."
+
+"And the poor old donkey?" asked Mrs. Bumpkin.
+
+"Ah, where be Jock?" said Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"Went for the opinion," answered the lawyer.
+
+"Where be thic bull o' mine?" said Tom. "He wur the finest bull in all
+thic county, woren't he, Nancy?"
+
+"Ay," answered Mrs. Bumpkin, "and ur follered I about, Tom, jist like a
+Christian."
+
+"So ur did, Nancy. Dost thee mind, when ur got through thic gap into
+Squire Stucky's meadow, 'mong the cows?"
+
+"Ay, Tom; and thee went and whistled un; but ur wouldn't come for thy
+whistlin; and Joe, poor Joe! went and got a great stick."
+
+"There I mind un," said Bumpkin; "what coomed of un, Master Prigg?"
+
+"Quite so," said Mr. Prigg; "quite so; let me see." And again the gold
+pencil-case was pressed against his respectable forehead in placid
+cogitation. "Yes, that bull argued the appeal."
+
+"Hem!" said Mr. Bumpkin; "argied appeal, did ur? Well, I tell ee what,
+Master Prigg, if that air bull 'ad knowed what I knows now, he'd a gi'en
+them jusseses a bit o' his mind, and thee too."
+
+"Dear me," said Mr. Prigg; "you entirely mis-apprehend--"
+
+"Well, lookee 'ere," said Tom, "it beant no use to mince matters wi' ee.
+What I wants to know is as this; I winned my case--"
+
+"Quite so," said Prigg.
+
+"And 'ow be it then that all my sheep and things be took off the farm?"
+
+"Dear me!" said Mr. Prigg, in the tone of an injured man; "I think, of
+all men, clients are the most ungrateful. I have worked night and day to
+serve you; I have sacrificed my pleasures, which I do not reckon--my home
+comforts--"
+
+"But who be thic feller that steals my corn an' hay, and pigs?"
+
+"Really, Mr. Bumpkin, this is language which I did not expect from you."
+
+"But 'ow comes my farm stripped, Maister Prigg? tell I thic."
+
+"I suppose you have given a bill of sale, Mr. Bumpkin. You are aware
+that a lawsuit cannot be carried on without means, and you should have
+calculated the cost before going to war. I think there is Scripture
+authority for that."
+
+"Then have this Skinalive feller the right to take un?"
+
+"I presume so," said Prigg; "I know he's a most respectable man."
+
+"A friend o' thine, I s'poase?"
+
+"Well," said Prigg, hesitating, "I may even go so far as to say that."
+
+"Then I be gwine so fur as to say thee be a damned rogue!" said Mr.
+Bumpkin, rising, and thumping the table with great vehemence.
+
+You might have knocked Mr. Prigg down with a feather, certainly with a
+bludgeon; such a shock he had never received at the hands of a client in
+the whole course of his professional experience. He rose and drew from
+his pocket an envelope, a very large official-looking envelope, such as
+no man twice in his life would like to see, even if he could be said to
+enjoy the prospect once.
+
+It is not usual for respectable solicitors to carry about their bills of
+costs in their pockets, and why Mr. Prigg should have done so on this
+occasion I am not aware. I merely saw in my dream that he did so. There
+was not a change in his countenance; his piety was intact; there was not
+even a suffusion of colour. Placid, sweet-tempered, and urbane, as a
+Christian should be, he looked pityingly towards the hot and irascible
+Bumpkin, as though he should say, "You have smitten me on this cheek, now
+smite me on that!" and placed the great envelope on the table before the
+ungrateful man.
+
+"What be thic?" inquired Mr. Bumpkin.
+
+"A list of my services, sir," said Prigg, meekly: "You will see there,
+ungrateful man, the sacrifices I have made on your behalf; the
+journeyings oft; the hunger, and, I may say, thirst; the perils of
+robbers, the perils amongst false friends, the--"
+
+"I doant understand, sir," said Bumpkin.
+
+"Because darkness hath blinded your eyes," said the pious lawyer; "but I
+leave you, Mr. Bumpkin, and I will ask you, since you no longer repose
+confidence in my judgment and integrity, to obtain the services of some
+other professional gentleman, who will conduct your case with more zeal
+and fidelity than you think I have shown; I who have carried your cause
+to a triumphant issue; and may be said to have established the grand
+principle that an Englishman's house is his castle."
+
+And with this the good man, evidently affected by deep emotion, shook
+hands silently with Mrs. Bumpkin, and disappeared for ever from my view.
+
+Never in any dream have I beheld that man again. Never, surely, under
+any form of humanity have so many virtues been concealed. I have looked
+for him in daily life, about the Courts of Justice and in the political
+arena, but his equal for simplicity of character, for unaffected piety,
+and purity of motive, have I never discovered, although I have seen many,
+who, without his talents, have vainly endeavoured to emulate his virtues.
+
+Mrs. Bumpkin examined the document he had left, and found a most
+righteous statement of the services rendered by this great and good man;
+which, after giving credit to Mr. Bumpkin for cash received from Mr.
+Skinalive, Mr. Prigg's friend, of seven hundred and twenty-two pounds,
+six shillings and eightpence-half-penny, left a balance due to Honest
+Lawyer Prigg of three hundred and twenty-eight pounds, seven shillings
+and threepence,--subject, of course, to be reduced on taxation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+
+
+Farewell.
+
+The last chapter of a book must always possess a special and melancholy
+interest for the author. He gives his words reluctantly, almost
+grudgingly, like one who is spending his last coins and will soon be left
+penniless upon the world. Or like one who is passing his last moments at
+the house of a friend whom he may see no more for ever. The author is
+taking farewell of his characters and his readers, and therefore his
+regret is twofold; added to which is the doubt as to whether, judged by
+the severe standard of Public Opinion, he has been faithful to both.
+Thought is large, and may fill the world, permeating every class and
+every section of society; it may be circumscribed, and operate only upon
+some infinitesimal proportion of mankind: but whether great or small, for
+good or evil, it is published, and a corresponding responsibility
+devolves upon the writer. I record my dream faithfully, and am therefore
+exonerated, in my conscience, from responsibility in its effect.
+
+How shall I describe the closing scene of this eventful story? I will
+imagine nothing; I will exaggerate nothing; for, during the whole
+progress of the story, it has been my constant care not to give the most
+captious critic the opportunity of saying that I have exaggerated a
+single incident. I will relate faithfully what I saw in my dream, and
+that only; diminishing nothing, and adding nothing.
+
+In my waking moments my wife said it was very wrong of Mr. Bumpkin, after
+all that Mr. Prigg had done for him, to be so rude. I agreed that it
+was: but said, great allowance must be made for Mr. Bumpkin's want of
+education. Then said my wife, "Will not some shallow-minded persons say
+that your story attacks the administration of justice?" To which I
+replied that it did not matter what shallow-minded persons said, but that
+in fact I had in no way attacked the administration of justice; nor had I
+in the least degree reflected on the great body of respectable solicitors
+who had in their hands the interests of the country, and faithfully
+discharged their duties. And then I stood up, and putting forth my hand
+in imitation of Pitt's statue in the corridor of the House of Commons, I
+said, "Justice is Divine, not Human; and you cannot detract from anything
+that is Divine, any more than you can lessen the brilliancy of the sun.
+You may obscure its splendour to mortal eyes, but its effulgence is the
+same. Man may so ostensibly assert his own dignity, or the dignity of a
+perishable system, that it may temporarily veil the beauty of a Divine
+attribute; but Justice must still remain the untarnished glory of Divine
+wisdom. It is not the pomp of position or the majesty of office that
+imparts dignity to Justice."
+
+Here, exhausted with my effort, and with my wife's applause ringing in my
+ears, I fell asleep again, and dreamed that I saw Bumpkin sadly wandering
+about the old farm; his faithful wife following, and never for one moment
+ceasing to cheer him up. It was a fine bright morning in October as they
+wandered forth. There wasn't a living thing about the farm except the
+birds, and even they seemed sad in their twittering. Could it be
+possible that they knew of poor Bumpkin's miserable condition?
+
+There was an old jackdaw that certainly did; for he hopped and hopped
+along after the master with the saddest expression I ever saw bird wear.
+But the master took no notice. On and on he wandered, seemingly
+unconscious of the presence even of his wife.
+
+"Tom!" she said, "Tom, where beest thee gwine?"
+
+Bumpkin started; turned round, and said:
+
+"Nancy! what, be it thee, lassie?"
+
+"Ay, Tom, sure enough it be I. Let's cheer up, Tom. If the worst come
+to the worst--we can but goo to Union."
+
+"The wust have come to th' wust, Nancy; we be ruined! Look at this 'ere
+farm--all be bare--all be lost, Nancy. Hark how silent it all be!"
+
+"Never mind, Tom; never mind. I wish Joe wur here."
+
+"Ah! Joe, yes. I wonder where Joe be; praps he be out here in th' six
+akre."
+
+"No, no, Tom, he be gwine for a sojer; but I've a mind he'll come back.
+And who knows, we may be 'appy yet! We've worked hard, Tom, together
+these five-and-thirty year, and sure we can trudge on t' th' end. Come,
+let's goo in and ave some breakfast."
+
+But Tom kept on walking and looking round the fields after his old
+manner.
+
+"I think we'll ave wuts here," said he.
+
+"So ur will, Tom, but let's have breakfast fust. Come, lad."
+
+They wandered still through the quiet fields, and the old man's mind
+seemed giving way. But I saw that Mrs. Bumpkin kept up with him and
+cheered him whenever she could put in a word of comfort, cold and
+hopeless as it was. And so the day was spent, and the night came, and
+they entered their home for the last time. It was a terribly sad night;
+but the Vicar came and sat up late with the old people, and talked to
+them and read and cried with them, until at last Tom said:
+
+"I zee it, sir, thee hast showed I; thank God for thy words. Yes, yes,
+we maun leave t' morrer, and we'll call on thee, and maybe thou'lt goo to
+th' Squire wi' us and explaain to un how we can't pay our rent, and may
+be th' Squire'll let I work un out. If we could only work un out, I'd be
+'appy."
+
+"Ay, Tom," said Mrs. Bumpkin, "an I'll work too; thee knows that."
+
+"Thee wast allays a good wife, Nancy; and I'll allays say't, come what
+wooll."
+
+"Yes," said the Vicar, "to-morrow we will go--"
+
+"I don't want un to forgive I th' rent," said Tom; "only to gie us time,
+and Nancy and I'll work un out." And so it was arranged that the next
+morning the old home was to be left for ever. It was no longer home, for
+every article of furniture, every tool, every scrap that was of any value
+had been ruthlessly seized by the heartless money-lender whom the Law
+permitted to rob under the name of a bill of sale. The man was in
+possession to take away their bed and the few other articles that were
+left for their accommodation till the morrow.
+
+And on the morrow I saw the last of poor Bumpkin that I shall ever see.
+In the beautiful sunshine of that October morning, just by the old oak,
+he was leaning over the gate looking his last at the dear old fields and
+the old farm-house where so many happy years had been spent. By his side
+was his wife, with her hand shading her eyes; the old dog was between
+them, looking into the face now of Tom and then of his wife. Mr.
+Bumpkin's arms were resting on the gate, and his old ash stick that he
+used to walk with over the fields was in his hand. They stood there for
+a long, long time as though they could never leave it. And I saw the
+tears trickle down the old man's face as Mrs. Bumpkin, letting fall the
+corner of her apron, which she had held to her eyes, and placing her arm
+through his, said in a faltering voice:--
+
+"Come, Tom, we must goo."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE END.
+
+
+
+
+THE LAWSUIT.
+
+
+ Tom Bumpkin was a thriving man,
+ As all the world could see;
+ In forty years he'd raised himself
+ From direst poverty.
+
+ And now he rented from the Squir
+ Some acres, near a score;
+ Some people said 'twas twenty-five,
+ And some that it was more.
+
+ He had a sow of rare brave breed,
+ And nine good pigs had he;
+ A cow and calf, a rick of hay,
+ And horses he had three.
+
+ And Mrs. Bumpkin had a bull,
+ The finest creature out;
+ "And, like a Christian," so she said,
+ "It follered her about."
+
+ So Bumpkin was a thriving man,
+ As all the world could see;
+ A self-made man, but yet not made
+ Of scholarship was he.
+
+ With neighbour Snooks he dealings had
+ About his latest farrow;
+ Snooks said he'd bought a pig, and so,
+ To prove it, brought his barrow.
+
+ Tom said, "It wur to be two crowns;"
+ Snooks said, "Twur nine-and-six;"
+ Then Tom observed, "You doan't 'ave me
+ Wi none o' them there tricks."
+
+ So there was battle; Lawyer Prigg
+ Was told this tale of woe;
+ The Lawyer rubbed his bony hands
+ And said, "I see; quite so!"
+
+ "A case of trespass,"--"Ay zo 't be!"
+ Said Bumpkin, feeling big;
+ "Now mak un pay vor't, mak un pay;
+ It beant so much th' pig."
+
+ "No, no, it's not so much the pig,
+ That were a matter small;
+ Indeed, good Bumpkin, we may say
+ It's not the pig at all!
+
+ "It's more the _principle_ involved,
+ The rights of man, you see"--
+ "Ay, ay," quoth Tom; "the devil's in't
+ 'F I beant as good as he."
+
+ There never was a man more prompt
+ Or swift to strike a blow:
+ Give but the word, and Charger Prigg
+ Was down upon the foe.
+
+ The LETTER, WRIT, and STATEMENT went
+ Like lightning, thunder, rain;
+ INSPECTION and DISCOVERY rode
+ Like Uhlans o'er the plain!
+
+ Then INTERROGATORIES flew
+ Without procrastination:
+ As when the ambushed outposts give
+ A deadly salutation.
+
+ Now Snooks's lawyer was a man
+ To wrong would never pander;
+ And like a high-souled Pleader drew
+ A COUNTERCLAIM for slander;
+
+ And then with cautious skill behind
+ The legal outworks clambers;
+ Until dislodged, he held his own
+ Entrenched in Judges' Chambers.
+
+ At length came battle hot and fierce,
+ And points reserved as though
+ The case must be economized,
+ Not murdered at a blow.
+
+ Then came appeals upon the points,
+ New trials on the facts;
+ More points, more learned arguments,
+ More precedents and Acts.
+
+ But LAW, thou art a tender plant
+ That needs must droop and die;
+ And bear no fruit unless thy root
+ Be watered constantly:
+
+ And Bumpkin with a generous hand
+ Had given thee good supply;
+ He drained the well, and yet withal
+ The noble Prigg was dry.
+
+ With plaintive look would move a stone,
+ Tom gazed on Lawyer Prigg:
+ Who rubbed his hands and said, "You see,
+ It's not so much the pig."
+
+ "Noa, noa, it be th' horses moore,
+ The calf and sheep and kine,
+ Where be th' hay-rick and the straw?
+ And where thic bull o' mine?"
+
+ The Lawyer said, "Quite so, quite so!"
+ Looked wise, and wisely grinned;
+ For Tom was like a ship becalmed,
+ He stopped for want of wind.
+
+ "You see," said Prigg with gravity
+ Would almost make you laugh,
+ "Our leading Counsel had the Cow,
+ The junior had the Calf.
+
+ "The hay and straw _Rules nisi_ got,
+ Made _Absolute_ with corn,
+ The pigs made _Interrogat'ries_,
+ Most beautifully drawn.
+
+ "The Bacon--ah, dear Bumpkin, few
+ In Law suits ever save it;
+ It made together with the sow,
+ A splendid _Affidavit_.
+
+ "The cocks and hens the _Pleadings_ did
+ Most exquisitely utter;
+ And some few pans of cream there were,
+ Which made the _Surre-butter_."
+
+ "Why, Surrey butter! I'd a tub
+ The best in this ere nation"--
+ "Quite so!" said Prigg; "but you forget,
+ 'Twas used in _Consultation_."
+
+ "Well, well, of all the hungry mouths,
+ There's nothing like the Law's;
+ No wonder they can talk if that
+ Be how they iles their jaws.
+
+ "Now just look ere; I'd twenty cheese,
+ The finest of old Cheshires,"--
+ "Quite so, quite so!" said Prigg; "but they
+ Just furnished the _Refreshers_.
+
+ "The Ass for the _Opinion_ went;
+ The Horses, _Costs_ between us;
+ And all the Ducks and Drakes, my boy,
+ Were turned into SUBPOENAS."
+
+ "I zee it all; the road to Ruin,
+ Straight as any furrer:
+ That Bull o' mine"--"Excuse me, Sir,
+ Went up upon DEMURRER."
+
+ "Then beant there nothing left for I,
+ In all this ere undoin?
+ Nay, Nance, our fireside be gone,
+ It's emptiness and ruin.
+
+ "I wish we'd fought un out ourselves
+ Wi' fists instead o' law;
+ Since Samson fit, there never was
+ Good fightin wi the jaw."
+
+ So _now_ Tom's not a thriving man,
+ He owns not cow or pig;
+ And evermore he'll be in debt
+ To Honest Lawyer Prigg.
+
+ BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
+
+
+
+
+Footnotes
+
+
+{0a} Since the First Edition, "a bulky volume" of new rules has
+appeared. No independent existence at present, and therefore anatomy
+uncertain. I have peeped at it, and think if it reaches maturity it will
+help the rich litigant very much; and, if it abolishes trial by jury, as
+it threatens, we shall be, in time to come, a Judge-ridden people, which
+God forbid. I am not afraid of a Judge now, but I should be then. The
+choice in the future _might_ be between servility and a prison; and I
+sincerely believe that if trial by jury should be abolished, this country
+would not be safe to live in. Much _mending_, therefore, and
+consequently the more holes. I wonder what the Liberalism of the future
+will say when it learns that the Liberalism of Mr. Gladstone's Government
+struck the first blow at _Trial by Jury_? Truly "the axe to laid to the
+root of the tree," and, reversing the Divine order, "every tree that
+_bringeth forth good fruit is_" in danger of being "hewn down."
+
+ R. H.
+
+{22} This inscription, with the exception of the names, is a literal
+copy.
+
+{52} Modern pleaders would say the Court would take judicial notice of
+the existence of Egypt: I am aware of this, but at the time I write of
+the Courts were too young to take notice.
+
+{138} The correctness of Mr. O'Rapley's views may be vouched for by a
+newspaper report in the _Evening Standard_ of April 17th, 1883, which was
+as follows:--"Mr. Justice Day in charging the Grand Jury at the
+Manchester Spring Assizes yesterday, expressed his disagreement with the
+opinion of other Judges in favour of the Commission being so altered that
+the Judge would have to 'deliver all the prisoners detained in gaol,' and
+regarded it as a waste of the Judge's time that he should have to try a
+case in which a woman was indicted for stealing a shawl worth
+three-and-ninepence, or a prisoner charged with stealing two mutton pies
+and two ounces of bacon."
+
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HUMOUROUS STORY OF FARMER
+BUMPKIN'S LAWSUIT***
+
+
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