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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67227 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67227)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The King's Own Borderers, Volume II
-(of 3), by James Grant
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The King's Own Borderers, Volume II (of 3)
- A Military Romance
-
-Author: James Grant
-
-Release Date: January 22, 2022 [eBook #67227]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KING'S OWN BORDERERS,
-VOLUME II (OF 3) ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE KING'S OWN BORDERERS.
-
- A Military Romance.
-
-
- BY
-
- JAMES GRANT,
-
-
- AUTHOR OF
- "SECOND TO NONE," "THE ROMANCE OF WAR," "THE YELLOW FRIGATE,"
- ETC. ETC.
-
-
-
- "Memories fast are thronging o'er me,
- Of the grand old fields of Spain;
- How he faced the charge of Junot,
- And the fight where Moore was slain.
- Oh the years of weary waiting
- For the glorious chance he sought,
- For the slowly ripened harvest
- That life's latest autumn brought."
-
-
-
- IN THREE VOLUMES.
-
- VOL. II.
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- GEORGE ROUTLEDGE AND SONS,
- BROADWAY, LUDGATE HILL.
-
- 1865.
-
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- SAVILL AND EDWARDS, PRINTERS, CHANDOS STREET,
- COVENT GARDEN.
-
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
- OF
- THE SECOND VOLUME.
-
-
- CHAP.
-
- I. A LAST REJECTION
- II. THE MESS
- III. THE PUNISHMENT PARADE
- IV. THE OLD REGIMENT OF EDINBURGH
- V. THE ADVANCED PICQUET
- VI. COSMO JOINS
- VII. THE DEPARTURE
- VIII. ON THE SEA
- IX. PORTALEGRE
- X. COSMO'S CRAFT
- XI. QUENTIN DEPARTS
- XII. ANXIOUS FRIENDS
- XIII. THE PARAGRAPH
- XIV. THE WAYSIDE CROSS AND WELL
- XV. THE MULETEERS
- XVI. GIL LLANO
- XVII. DANGER IN THE PATH
- XVIII. THE CHASSEUR À CHEVAL
- XIX. EUGÈNE DE RIBEAUPIERRE
- XX. THE GALIOTE OF ST. CLOUD
- XXI. THE GUERILLA HEAD-QUARTERS
- XXII. A REPRISAL
- XXIII. DON BALTASAR DE SALDOS
- XXIV. DONNA ISIDORA
- XXV. THE JOURNEY
- XXVI. A SURPRISE
- XXVII. THE VILLA DE MACIERA
- XXVIII. OUR LADY DEL PILAR
-
-
-
-
-THE KING'S OWN BORDERERS.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-A LAST REJECTION.
-
- "Ae fond kiss and then we sever!
- Ae farewell, alas for ever!
- Deep in heart-wrung tears I'll pledge thee,
- Warring sighs and groans I'll wage thee;
- Who shall say that Fortune grieves him
- While the star of hope she leaves him?"
- BURNS.
-
-
-Ignoring the source or cause of the excitement among the household,
-Cosmo lounged into the breakfast-parlour, where the silver urns were
-hissing amid a very chaste equipage, and where the September sun was
-shining in through clusters of sweet briar and monthly roses, and as
-he seated himself he handed to his father a long official-like
-document, at the sight of which his mother changed colour, and even
-Flora, who looked charming in her smiling radiance, lace frills, and
-morning dress of spotted white muslin, lifted her dark eyelashes with
-interest.
-
-"What's the matter, Cosmo?--your leave cancelled?" asked Rohallion.
-
-"Oh no, my lord--nothing so bad as that."
-
-"A summons from headquarters, I see."
-
-"Something very like it," drawled Cosmo; "read it to the ladies.
-Spillsby, some coffee--no cream."
-
-The letter ran briefly thus:--
-
-
-"Horse Guards, &c., &c.
-
-"SIR,--I have the honour to acquaint you, by direction of His Royal
-Highness the Field-Marshal Commanding-in-Chief, that it is now in his
-power to appoint you to one of the second battalions lately raised
-for the line and for immediate foreign service, provided that within
-a fortnight you are prepared to assume the command, in which case
-your name shall appear in the next Gazette.
-
- "I have the honour to be, &c., &c.
-
- "Major the Hon. C. Crawford,
- &c., &c."
-
-
-"A fortnight!--are we to have you only for a fortnight, my dear, dear
-Cosmo?" exclaimed Lady Rohallion, all her maternal tenderness welling
-up at once.
-
-"You will not, I fear, have me so long, my dear mother," said he;
-"and you, Flora," he added in a low voice, as he purposely held his
-plate across her for a wing of grouse; "and you----"
-
-"Give you full leave to go, with my dearest wishes, and your heart
-unbroken. Come, Cosmo," she added in the same low voice, and with a
-soft smile; "let us part friends, at least."
-
-Cosmo's eyes seemed to shrink and dilate, while a cold and haughty
-smile spread over his otherwise handsome features, as he turned
-quietly to discuss his grouse, and said to the butler,--
-
-"Spillsby, tell the groom to have a horse saddled for my man--take
-Minden, the bay mare--as I must despatch a letter to Maybole within
-an hour."
-
-Breakfast was hurried over in silence and constraint, then Cosmo,
-kissing the brow of his mother, who was already in tears,--for the
-only real emotion that lingered in the Master's heart was a regard
-for his mother--played with the silk tassels of his luxurious
-dressing-gown, and lounged into the library to write his answer to
-the military secretary, and profess himself to be completely, as in
-duty bound, at the disposal of His Royal Highness, and proud to
-accept the command offered him.
-
-He soon penned the letter, and sealed it with the coronet, the shield
-_gules_ and fess _ermine_ of Rohallion, muttering as he did so,--
-
-"The line--the line after all; a horrid bore indeed, to come down to
-that!"
-
-He threw open his dressing-gown, as if it stifled him, almost tearing
-the tasselled girdle as he did so, and planting his foot on the buhl
-writing-table, lounged back in an easy-chair, where he strove to read
-up Sir David Dundas's "Eighteen Manoeuvres," and fancied how he would
-handle his battalion without clubbing the companies or bringing the
-rear rank in front; by taking them into action with snappers instead
-of flints, as old Whitelock did at Buenos Ayres, or committing other
-little blunders, which might prove very awkward if a brigade of
-French twelve-pounders were throwing in grape and canister at
-half-musket range.
-
-Soothed by pipe, and by the silence of the place, and by the subdued
-sunlight that stole through the deep windows of that old library, so
-quaint with its oak shelves of calf-bound and red-labelled folios and
-quartos, its buhl cabinets, and square-backed chairs of the
-Covenanting days, its half-curtained oriel window, through which were
-seen the ripe corn or stubble fields that stretched in distance far
-away to the brown hills of Carrick. Soothed, we say, by all this,
-Cosmo dawdled over the pages and the diagrams of the famous review at
-Potsdam for some time before he became conscious that Flora was
-seated near him, busy with a book of engravings.
-
-Then begging pardon for his pipe and his free-and-easy position, a
-bachelor habit, as he said, he arose and joined her. Leaning over
-the back of his chair, as if to overlook the prints, while in reality
-his admiring eyes wandered alternately and admiringly over her fine
-glossy hair, the contour of her head, and little white ears (at each
-of which a rose diamond dangled), and her delicate neck, which rose
-so nobly from her back and beautifully curved shoulders, he said in a
-low voice, and with considerable softness of manner, for him at
-least,--
-
-"'Pon my honour, friend Flora, I believe you really begin to love me,
-after all."
-
-"How do you think so, or why?" she asked, looking half round, with
-her bewitching eyes full of wonder and amusement.
-
-"Because we always quarrel when we meet, and that is called a Scots
-mode of wooing, isn't it?"
-
-"So our nurses used to say, long ago."
-
-"And were they right?"
-
-"Now, dear Cosmo, let us talk of something else, if you please," she
-urged pleadingly.
-
-"Why so?"
-
-"A dangerous topic has a strange fascination for you."
-
-"Dangerous?"
-
-"Unpleasant, at least," said Flora, pettishly.
-
-Cosmo flung the "Eighteen Manœuvres" of Lieutenant-General Dundas
-very angrily and ignominiously to the extreme end of the library, and
-folding his arms stood haughtily erect before Flora, whose bright
-eyes were fixed on his, with a smiling expression of fear and
-perplexity combined.
-
-"Can it be possible," he began, "I ask you, can it be possible, Miss
-Warrender----"
-
-"Oh, you are about to address me officially--well, sir?"
-
-"Can it be possible, Flora, that you still love this unknown protégé
-of my foolish mother--this nameless rascal, who has run away, heaven
-knows where? By-the-bye, I wonder if Spillsby has overhauled the
-plate chest since he went!"
-
-Flora was silent, but his _brusquerie_ and categorical manner
-offended her, and filled her eyes with tears.
-
-"This weeping is enough," continued the exasperated Cosmo, who,
-though he had no great regard for Flora, felt his self-esteem--which
-was not small--most fearfully wounded; "you do love him."
-
-"And what if I do?" she asked, very quietly, but withal rather
-defiantly.
-
-"Very fine, Miss Warrender--very fine, 'pon my soul! That old jade,
-Anne Radcliffe, with her 'Romance of the Forest,' her 'Castles of
-Athlin and Dunbayne,' and this new Edinburgh fellow, Scott, with his
-'Marmion,' and so forth, have perfected your education. Your
-teaching has been most creditable!"
-
-"This taunting manner is not so to you,' replied Flora, resuming her
-inspection of the book of prints.
-
-"Oho! we are in a passion again it seems?"
-
-"Far from it, sir--I never was more cool in my life," said she,
-looking up with a wicked but glorious smile.
-
-"And where has this runaway gone? His friends in the servants' hall
-heard something of him last night or this morning, if I may judge
-from the pot-house row they made."
-
-"He has gone into the army," replied Flora, with a perceptible
-modulation of voice.
-
-"The army!" replied Cosmo, really surprised; "enlisted--for what?--a
-fifer or triangle boy?"
-
-"No," replied Flora, curling her pretty nostril, while her eyes
-gleamed dangerously under their long thick lashes.
-
-"For what, on earth, has he gone then?"
-
-"A gentleman volunteer."
-
-"A valuable acquisition to His Majesty's service!" said Cosmo,
-laughing, and, greatly to Flora's annoyance, seeming to be really
-amused; "do you know, friend Flora, what a volunteer is?"
-
-"Not exactly, sir," said Flora, again looking down on her book of
-prints with a sigh of anger.
-
-"Shall I tell you?"
-
-"If you please."
-
-"We never had any in the Household Brigade--such fellows are usually
-to be found only with the line corps."
-
-"Ah--with corps that go abroad and really see service--I understand."
-
-"Miss Warrender, the Guards----"
-
-"Well, _what_ is a volunteer?" asked Flora, beating the carpet with a
-very pretty foot.
-
-"A volunteer is a poor devil who is too proud to enlist, and is too
-friendless to procure a commission; who has all a private's duty to
-do, and has to carry a musket, pack, and havresack, wherein are his
-ration-beef, biscuits, and often his blackball and shoebrushes; who
-mounts guard and salutes me when I pass him, and whom I may handcuff
-and send to the cells or guard-house when I please; who is not a
-regular member of the mess and may never be; who gets a shilling per
-diem with the chance of Chelsea, a wooden leg, or an arm with an iron
-hook if his limbs are smashed by a round shot; who is neither
-officer, non-commissioned officer, nor private--neither fish, flesh,
-nor good red-herring (to use a camp phrase). Oh, Flora, Flora
-Warrender, can you be such a romantic little goose as to feel an
-interest in such a fellow as I have described?"
-
-Mingling emotions, indignation at the Master's insulting bitterness,
-pity for Quentin, and pure anger at the annoyance to which she was
-subjected, made Flora's white bosom heave as she quietly turned her
-eyes, with a flashing expression however, upon the cat-like regards
-of the sneering questioner, and said,--
-
-"Who are you, sir, that would thus question or dictate to me?"
-
-"Who am I?" he asked, while surveying her through his glass with
-amusement, perplexity, and something of sorrow in his tone.
-
-"Yes, sir--who are you?"
-
-"I am, I believe, Cosmo, Master of Rohallion, and Colonel to be, of a
-very fine regiment; so I can afford to smile at the pride and
-petulance of a moon-struck girl."
-
-"Oh, how unseemly this is! Whatever happens, let us part friends,"
-said she politely, perhaps a little imploringly.
-
-"So be it," said he, kissing her hand as she retired.
-
-"Now, the sooner I am off from this dreary paternal den the better.
-Away to London at once. Andrews!--Jack Andrews," he shouted, in a
-tone almost of ferocity: "show me the last newspapers." They were
-soon brought, and Cosmo's sharp eyes ran rapidly over the
-advertisements. "Let me see," he pondered, "travelling by mail is
-intolerable; one never knows who the devil one may be boxed up with
-for a week, a fever patient or a lunatic, perhaps! The smacks are
-crowded with all manner of rubbish, travelling bagmen, linesmen going
-home on leave, sick mothers and squalling babies. What is this? The
-good ship _Edinburgh_, pinck-built, near the new quay at Leith, sails
-for England without convoy--carries six 12-pounders--master to be
-spoke with daily at the Cross--to be _spoke_ with. Faugh! what says
-the next advertisement? 'A widow lady, who is to set out for London
-next week in a post-chaise, would be glad to hear of a companion.
-Enquire at the _Courant_ office, opposite the Old Fishmarket-close,
-Edinburgh.' Egad! the very thing--widow lady--hope she's young and
-good-looking. I'll answer _this_!"
-
-Such advertisements in the London and Edinburgh papers were quite
-common in those days, when travelling expenses were enormous.
-
-He replied to it, and departed from Rohallion in a great hurry soon
-after. Whether with a fair companion or not, we are unable to say.
-
-We hope so, and that on the journey of about four hundred miles to
-London, the amenity of the fair widow consoled him for the final
-rebuff he met with from Flora Warrender.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE MESS.
-
- "He is more fortunate! Yea, he hath finished;
- For him there is no longer any future.
- His life is bright; bright without spot it was,
- And cannot cease to be.
-
- O 'tis well with him,
- But who knows what the coming hour,
- Veiled in thick darkness, brings for us!
- _Wallenstein._
-
-
-The mess-room of the 2nd battalion of the 25th Foot, in old
-Colchester Barracks, was a long room, and for its size rather low in
-the ceiling, which was crossed by a massive dormant beam of oak.
-Good mahogany tables occupied the entire length of the room, with a
-row of hair-cloth chairs on each side thereof. It was destitute of
-all ornament save a few framed prints of the popular generals of the
-time, such as the Duke of York, so justly known as "the soldier's
-friend;" Sir Ralph Abercrombie, who fell in Egypt; Sir David Dundas,
-the hero of Tournay; Sir David Baird, flushed with triumph and
-revenge, leading on his stormers at Seringapatam; the sad and gentle
-Sir John Moore, and others.
-
-The room was uncarpeted, but the number of tall wax candles, in
-silver branches, on the long table, and in girandoles, on the
-mantelpiece and sideboard, together with the quantity of rich plate
-that was displayed, and the brilliance of the assembled company,
-about thirty officers in full uniform, their scarlet coats all faced
-and lapelled to the waist with blue barred with gold, and all their
-bullion epaulettes glittering, had a very gay appearance; thus the
-general meagreness of the furniture passed unobserved.
-
-At mess the coats were then worn open, with the crimson silk sash
-inside and over a white waistcoat. Nearly all the seniors still
-indulged in powdered heads, while the juniors wore their hair in that
-curly profusion introduced by George IV., then Prince of Wales. A
-few who were on duty were distinguished by the pipe-clayed
-shoulder-belt and gilt gorget, which was slung round the neck by a
-ribbon which varied in every corps according to the colour of its
-facings.
-
-Amid much good-humour and a little banter, they seated themselves,
-and the president and vice-president--posts taken by every officer in
-rotation--proceeded to their tasks of dispensing the viands.
-
-Quentin was seated next his host, Major Middleton, about the centre
-of the table, and he surveyed the gay scene with surprise and
-pleasure, though looking somewhat anxiously for the face of his kind
-friend Warriston, who was to be a guest that evening, but was still
-detained on duty.
-
-To him much of the conversation was a perfect mystery, being half
-jocular and half technical, or that which is stigmatized as "shop."
-It chiefly ran on drills, duties, and mistakes--how badly those 94th
-fellows marched past yesterday, and so forth; while the standing
-jokes about Buckle's nag-tailed charger, Monkton's old epaulettes,
-Pimple's last love-affair, and the old commandant's state of mind on
-discovering that Colville had a fair visitor in his guard-room,
-seemed to excite as much laughter as if they had all been quite new,
-and had not been heard there every day for the last six months.
-
-Some rapid changes would seem to have taken place at the headquarters
-of the 2nd battalion. The old colonel of whom Quentin heard on the
-march from Ayr, had sold out, and a Major Sir John Glendinning come
-in by purchase. One gazette contained a notice of this, and a second
-announced the death of Sir John in a duel with an officer of the
-Guards. The lieutenant-colonelcy was thus again vacant, and all
-present, even Monkton, hoped the step would be given in the regiment,
-that old Major Middleton would get the command; thus all would have a
-move upward, and who could say but Quentin Kennedy might obtain the
-ensigncy which would thus be rendered vacant? But poor Middleton had
-served so long, and had seen so many promoted over his head, that he
-ceased to be hopeful of anything.
-
-Some of the youngsters drank wine again and again with our young
-volunteer, a spirit of mischief being combined with their
-hospitality. To "screw a Johnny Raw" was one of the chief practical
-jokes at a mess-table then, as it is at some few still; but
-Middleton's influence soon repressed them.
-
-The cloth removed, the regimental mull, a gigantic ram's head, the
-horns of which were tipped with cairngorms and massive silver
-settings, was placed before the president, and was passed down the
-table from left to right, according to the custom of all Scottish
-messes. The mull was the farewell gift of Lord Rohallion, and the
-gallant ram was the flower of all that he could procure in Carrick.
-
-The proposed expeditions to Spain and Holland soon formed the staple
-topics for discourse and surmise; but none present had the slightest
-idea on which of these the regiment might be despatched.
-
-When Quentin looked round that long and glittering mess-table, and
-saw so many handsome, pleasant, and jovial fellows, all heedless and
-full of high spirits, who welcomed him among them, spoke cheeringly
-of his prospects and drank to his success, he felt a pang on
-reflecting that he must owe it to the death in battle of one at least
-among them!
-
-There was plenty of laughter, fun, and joking. Many of those present
-were more or less dandies; but the military Dundreary, the--to use a
-vulgar phrase--"heavy swell," who affects the style of Charles
-Mathews in "Used Up," was unknown in the days of the long, long war
-with France, for men joined the army to become soldiers indeed.
-Their predecessors were usually killed in action, and they had the
-immediate prospect of finding themselves before the bravest enemy in
-the world.
-
-The solemn regimental snob, or yawning yahoo, whose private affairs
-became so "urgent" in the Crimea; the parvenu Lancer or lisping
-Hussar, cold, sarcastic, and unimpressionable, are entirely the
-growth of the piping times of peace, and to them the stern advice of
-the old officer of other times, "Be ever ready with your pistol," is
-meaningless now.
-
-"I joined the service as a volunteer," said Rowland Askerne, the
-burly captain of the Grenadiers--as his massive gold rings announced
-him--turning to Quentin.
-
-"Were you long one?"
-
-"Longer than I quite relished," replied Askerne, laughing.
-
-"Indeed!" said Quentin, anxiously.
-
-"Yes--four years; and long years they seemed to me."
-
-"On foreign service?"
-
-"Of course; and pretty sharp service, too, sometimes. I carried a
-musket with Middleton's company at the capture of Corsica, in '95,
-and again with the Gordon Highlanders on the recent expedition
-against Porto Ferrajo, in Elba, where I had the ill-luck to be the
-only man hit. A French tirailleur put a ball through my left leg,
-but he was shot the next moment by my covering file, Norman Calder,
-now a sergeant. Some of the Irish in '98 proved better marksmen than
-the French; they knocked a number of ours on the head, so I won my
-epaulettes fighting against the poor fellows under General Lake, at
-Vinegar Hill. I had many a heart-burning before they promoted me;
-(by _they_ I mean the Horse Guards) and I swore that when the day
-came that they did so, I would tread on my sash and turn cobbler; but
-I had not the heart to quit, so I wear my harness still--a captain
-only--when I should be lieutenant-colonel by brevet, at least; but
-Middleton's case is a harder one than mine, for he has been longer in
-the service."
-
-"We are most likely bound for North Holland," said the adjutant; "and
-there many an evil will be ended."
-
-"The French are in great strength there, and hard knocks will be
-going," added Monkton. "Many among us are fated perhaps to find a
-last abode among the swamps of Beveland; so, if you escape, Kennedy,
-you must certainly gain your pair of colours, with five shillings and
-threepence per diem--less the income-tax--to spend on the luxuries of
-life--damme!"
-
-"Glad to hear we are to be off so soon, Monkton," said a smart, but
-somewhat blasé-looking young lieutenant, "for we have a most weary
-time of it here in Colchester. The course of drill--drill, always
-drill--with club, sword, or musket, and the whole routine of barrack
-duty, with inspections and guards, are decidedly a bore!"
-
-"What the deuce would you have, Colville?" asked the adjutant,
-bluntly. "What did you come here for?"
-
-"I came to be a soldier," replied the "used up" sub, with a suave
-smile.
-
-"To be a soldier?"
-
-"Yes--not to doze life away by marching to and fro at the goose-step,
-in that gravelled yard, or by lolling over the window in
-shirt-sleeves, to save my shell-jacket. Where are all the castles I
-built----"
-
-"To storm, eh?" asked Buckle, glancing uneasily at the commanding
-officer, who was forming his walnut-shells in grand-division squares,
-for the edification of the second major.
-
-"Yes--I had hoped to have achieved something decidedly brilliant ere
-this."
-
-"Console yourself, Colville, and pass the port. Ah, you consider
-yourself sharp--up to every sort of thing--a common delusion with
-young fellows of your age; but ten years' more soldiering, and the
-rubs of life between your twenties and thirties, to say nothing of
-those afterwards, will cure you of thinking so. Believe me,
-Colville, wherever we go, we shall find plenty of desperate work cut
-out for us all. Well, Monkton, in recruiting, you could not pick up
-an heiress--eh?"
-
-"No. Heiresses are not to be found under every hedge."
-
-"In Scotland, especially."
-
-"I have considered the matter maturely, my dear friend," said
-Monkton, in his bantering tone, "and have come to the sage conclusion
-that, if a man marries, with his pay only, he had better hang; if
-otherwise, and his wife have a long purse, and expectations, to
-enhance the charms of her blushes and orange-buds, let him send in
-his papers, and quit; so the service loses your Benedict any way."
-
-"Purse, or no purse," said Colville, "as Paragon says in the comedy
-we acted at York, 'when you see my wife, you shall see perfection,
-though I never met the woman I could conscientiously throw myself
-away upon.'"
-
-"Pimple, we hear, has been romantically tender on a flax-spinner's
-daughter; and that the route came only in time to save him from the
-arms of Venus for those of Bellona, and he is burning now to forget
-his loved and lost one amid the smoke of battle," said Colville, with
-a tragic air. "Ah, there were great men even before old Agamemnon."
-
-"But Pimple shall show us by his glorious example, that we have at
-least one greater since."
-
-"Let me alone, Colville, and you also, Monkton," said Boyle, becoming
-seriously angry; "I hope to do my duty with the best among you."
-
-Attention was speedily drawn from the irritation of the little ensign
-by the entrance of Warriston, who apologized briefly for being late,
-having been detained on duty at the quarters of his own regiment;
-then drawing a chair near his friend Middleton, he handed to him the
-last number of the _London Gazette_, pointing to a paragraph therein,
-and leisurely filling his glass with claret, passed the decanters.
-When Middleton read the passage referred to, a crimson flush passed
-over his features, and he crushed up the paper as if an emotion, of
-rage and pain thrilled through him.
-
-"What is the matter, major?" asked half-a-dozen voices; "nothing
-unpleasant, I hope?"
-
-"The lieutenant-colonelcy has been given _out_ of the regiment,"
-replied Middleton, with his brows knit, while his hand still crushed
-up the paper; then, as if remembering himself, he smiled, but very
-disdainfully.
-
-"He must have seen much service to be appointed over _your_ head,"
-said Monkton.
-
-"Service--yes, the Guards fight many bloody battles about Hounslow,
-Hyde Park, and the Fifteen Acres," replied the justly exasperated
-field-officer. "Here is my advancement stopped by the promotion of a
-fellow who has some petticoat interest about Carlton House, whose
-cousin is groom of the backstairs, and who has been compelled to
-'eschew sack and loose company,' so he comes from the Household
-Brigade to the Line, and may go from the 25th to the devil, perhaps."
-
-"Be wary, my good friend--be wary," said Warriston, glancing round
-the table hastily.
-
-"And _who_ is he?" asked several, full of curiosity.
-
-"The son of a general officer--the Master of Rohallion."
-
-On hearing this name, Quentin felt as if petrified! Here, even here,
-his evil spirit seemed to be following him!
-
-"It is an old name in the regiment," said Monkton.
-
-"Yes," replied the major; "his father was a gallant officer; I was
-his subaltern in America; but here it is;" and he read, "'25th Foot;
-to be Lieutenant-Colonel, Major the Honourable Cosmo Crawford, from
-the 1st Guards, vice Sir John Glendinning, deceased,' so he comes
-over us, in virtue of that court rank which is one of the worst
-abuses of our service."
-
-"Promotion is always slow among the Household troops, so they
-indemnify themselves at the expense of the line," said Warriston, in
-answer to a question of Quentin's; "every rank among them having a
-grade above us; but take courage, my good old friend, this kind of
-thing is not likely to happen again."
-
-With a smile that grew scornful in spite of himself, the worthy old
-major strove to conceal the bitterness of his heart, though all
-present condoled with him on his disappointment and hard usage by the
-powers that be; and for reasons known to himself alone, none shared
-his chagrin more than Quentin Kennedy.
-
-He had been formally enrolled as a member of the regiment, and had
-ordered his equipments for it; his name, as a volunteer, had been
-sent by Middleton to Sir Harry Calvert, the Adjutant General, at the
-Horse Guards, that he might obtain the first vacant ensigncy
-(_subject to the approval of the commanding officer_), and that he
-might have his passage abroad provided, either by the commissariat
-department, or by the commandant at Hillsea, near Portsmouth. His
-own honour, and all the circumstances under which he stood prevented
-him from quitting; but now, what hope had he of comfort or prosperity
-in remaining? His very chances of advancement depended on the veto,
-whim, and caprice of this Master of Rohallion, his bitterest enemy!
-Of what avail would now be the endurance of campaigning, the hardship
-of serving as a volunteer, and risking all the perils of war?
-
-Perhaps Flora Warrender may come with him as his bride was the next
-idea; and it added greatly to the bitterness of the others.
-
-That night Quentin slept but little, and he seemed barely to have
-closed his eyes when he heard the drum beating the assembly.
-
-Then he sprang from bed just as the grey dawn was breaking, and
-proceeded hastily to dress, remembering to have heard last evening
-that, at daybreak, the regiment was to have a "punishment parade,"
-which, to his uninitiated ears, had a very unpleasant sound.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE PUNISHMENT PARADE.
-
- "Most worthy sergeant, I have seen thee lead,
- Where men among us would be slow to follow;
- Udsdaggers, yes! By trench and culverine,
- Where men and horses too, lay foully heap'd
- On other; and hath it come to this, good sergeant,
- Beshrew my heart--a prisoner and afeared."
- _Old Play._
-
-
-Plain though it was, being destitute of lace or epaulettes, poor
-Quentin was very proud of his volunteer uniform, and being eminently
-a handsome young man, he looked very well in it. The coarse buff
-crossbelts, the pouch, and bayonet, and, more especially, the Brown
-Bess he had to carry, did not suit his taste quite so well. He had
-imagined that he would have to shoulder a kind of Joe Manton, or
-something like a smart Enfield rifle of the present day, with a
-"draw" of ten pounds or less on the trigger, instead of a long
-blunderbuss like the regulation musket of those days, weighing
-fourteen pounds, with its enormous butt-plate of brass and so forth.
-
-Thanks to the teaching of the old quartermaster, he proved himself so
-apt a pupil under the sergeant-major and old Norman Calder, that
-within a week he was reported as "fit for duty," as Monkton said,
-"doing as much credit to his preceptors as to the cabbage-stalk," for
-so he designated the army tailor.
-
-But we are anticipating.
-
-His first parade was an inauspicious one, in so far as it was for
-punishment.
-
-A sergeant of the regiment had been recently tried by a regimental
-court-martial for permitting spirits to be brought by a woman to the
-main guard-house at night, while he was in command, and by these
-means certain prisoners became intoxicated and riotous. He alleged
-that he was asleep on that luxurious couch, the guard bed, after
-posting his sentinels, and that the fault lay with his corporal and
-others; but the plea was urged in vain--the corps was under orders
-for foreign service--an example was necessary; so he was now to
-receive the award of his dereliction of duty, and as the drum-major
-had received some special instructions over night, all knew that it
-involved the application of the now (happily) almost obsolete
-instrument--the cat!
-
-The degradation of a non-commissioned officer is always a painful
-duty; but when flogging is added thereto, it is doubly painful to the
-witnesses, and maddening to the culprit.
-
-"I told you old Middleton was a Tartar," said Monkton, as he and
-Quentin hurried downstairs from their quarters; "he'd certainly flog
-ensigns if he could; and the _Gazette_ of last night won't have
-improved his variable temper. But here he comes, mounted, with
-holsters and blue saddle-cloth, but looking for all the world like an
-old woman trotting to market with her butter and eggs. Such a
-seat--such a queer length, or rather want of length, in the
-stirrup-leathers! Good morning, Buckle--so we are to have a
-flogging--ugh? that isn't lively."
-
-Quentin being a young hand, felt somewhat awed, as he knew not what
-was about to ensue. The sun had not yet risen, and the September
-morning was chilly and misty; the men of the regiment were falling in
-by companies under arms in light marching order--the tall grenadiers
-on the right with their black bearskin caps; the smart light company
-on the left with green plumes in their shakos, and Saxon horns on all
-their appointments; the sergeants were calling the various rolls; the
-officers were gathered in a somewhat silent group, and the face of
-every man wore a sullen, or rather dejected expression, for a
-punishment parade is the kind of parade least liked by soldiers of
-all ranks. It acts as a damper on the spirits of all; on this
-morning the atmosphere was dense; the sombre sun seemed to linger
-behind the uplands of Suffolk, and the shadows to lie deeper in the
-silent barrack square.
-
-Impressed by the taciturnity and gloomy expression of the men, whose
-faces wore the pallor incident to all who come from bed in haste at
-an unusual hour, Quentin remained silent and full of expectation and
-anxiety as he fell into the rear rank of Captain Askerne's company,
-to which he was to be permanently attached. He was sensible,
-however, that the soldiers viewed him with interest, as a volunteer
-is always popular. It was to rescue Thomas Grahame, when lying
-severely wounded, and then serving as a simple volunteer in the red
-coat of the Caledonian Hunt, that our troops in Holland made one of
-their most desperate rallies, and gained to the service the future
-Lord Lynedoch, the hero of Barossa.
-
-The inspection of the companies and the drum for coverers rapidly
-followed the calling of the muster-rolls; a bugle sounded; the
-officers fell in; the bayonets were fixed, and the regiment, without
-music, was marched silently by sections to a secluded part of the
-barracks, where, surrounded by high stores and magazines, no
-stranger's eye could oversee the proceedings, and then it was formed
-in a hollow square, in the centre of which Quentin perceived three
-sergeants' pikes (weapons not disused till 1830) strapped together by
-the heads, an equilateral triangle being formed by the shafts, which
-were stuck in the earth. Near these were the drummers and
-drum-major, who carried in his hand a canvas bag, which, as Quentin
-was informed in a whisper by the next file on his right, contained
-"the cats."
-
-"The officer with the cocked hat, and without a sash, close by, is
-the doctor," he added.
-
-"The doctor--for what is he required?"
-
-"You'll too soon see that, sir," was the ominous response.
-
-"Steady, rear rank--silence," growled old Sergeant Calder.
-
-At that moment one of the drummers drew forth a cat, and Quentin
-could perceive that it consisted of nine tails of whipcord, each
-having nine knots thereon, and these were firmly lashed to a handle
-about the length of a drum-stick. A slight shudder with an emotion
-of sickness came over him; and he looked anxiously at the face of
-Major Middleton, but it seemed immovable as he said to the
-sergeant-major with studied sternness of tone,
-
-"March in the prisoner."
-
-A section in the face of the square wheeled backward and permitted
-the unfortunate, with his escort, consisting of a corporal and two
-men of the barrack-guard, to march in and halt before the major, on
-which the culprit took off his forage-cap and stood bareheaded, the
-centre of all observation.
-
-He cast a haggard glance at the triangles; another half furtively and
-restlessly at the stolid faces round him, and then he seemed to
-become immovable. There was little need for Mr. Buckle, the
-adjutant, to read over the proceedings of the Court, for the hopeless
-sergeant knew at once his double degradation and his doom!
-
-He was to be reduced to the rank and pay of a private, and to receive
-_three hundred and fifty lashes_, the utmost number a regimental
-court could then award; with the option, if he would avoid this
-extreme punishment, of volunteering to serve for life (_i.e._ till
-disabled by wounds or age) in the York Chasseurs, or any other
-condemned corps, in Africa or the West Indies.
-
-His name was Allan Grange, the colour-sergeant of the Grenadiers, who
-always considered themselves the _corps d'élite_ of a regiment.
-Altogether he was a model of a man, erect and strong in figure, his
-hair was a little grizzled about the temples, and his face was
-somewhat careworn, as if he had known or suffered much anxiety and
-trouble in his time. His eye was clear and keen, and save a little
-nervous twitching about the muscles of the mouth, he seemed unmoved
-and unflinching--unflinching as when on the glorious field of
-Egmont-op-Zee, he commanded the Grenadiers of the 25th, after all
-their officers had fallen, and with his pike broken in his hand by a
-musket shot, led them to that bloody hand-to-hand conflict on the
-road that leads to Haarlem.
-
-Perhaps the poor fellow was thinking of that signal and bloody
-day--perhaps of his boyhood and his home; it might be of the future,
-that was all a blank; for he seemed as in a dream while the adjutant
-read over the formula of the trial, the list of charges and the
-sentence, till he was roused by the drum-major proceeding to rip off
-with a penknife the three hard-won chevrons from his right arm. It
-was done gently, but "the iron seemed to enter his soul" at the
-moment, and a heavy sigh escaped him as his chin sank on his breast.
-
-"Allan Grange," said Major Middleton, raising his voice clearly and
-distinctly, that the whole of the hollow square and even its
-supernumerary ranks might hear, "you are the last man in the whole
-Borderers whom I could have expected to see standing before us as you
-do to-day. In cutting off your stripes I feel extreme reluctance and
-sorrow, and I think you have known me long enough to be aware of
-that."
-
-"I am, major--I am aware of it," said the reduced man in a hollow
-voice.
-
-"Allan Grange, you have come of a respectable old Scottish stock in
-Lothian: you were born in my native place, and are one of the many
-fine lads who came with me to the line from the Buccleugh Fencibles.
-I know well how, in your native village, the Stenhouse, your name and
-progress have been watched by early friends and old schoolfellows; by
-none more than your father, who now lies in Liberton kirkyard, by the
-good old mother who nursed you; by the old dominie who taught you; by
-the grey-haired minister who will ere long see your name affixed, as
-that of a degraded man, on the kirk-door. I know how, at the village
-inn on the braehead, in the smithy at the loan-end, at the mill
-beside the burn, it would be known that Allan Grange had been made a
-corporal--that he had gained his third stripe--that he had been made
-a colour-sergeant; and I can imagine how the listeners would drink to
-your health and to mine, in the hope that we should one day see you
-an officer; and now--_now_--by one act of folly you are again at the
-foot of the ladder!"
-
-A heavy sigh escaped the sergeant; the drum-major's knife gave a
-final rip, and he stood once more a private on parade!
-
-"The worst part of your sentence yet remains--unless--unless you
-volunteer into the York Chasseurs."
-
-"Major Middleton," said Grange, firmly, and standing erect, like a
-fine man as he was, "I'll not leave the regiment!"
-
-The man was fearfully pale, and it was evident to all that Middleton,
-though a strict and sometimes severe officer, was greatly moved.
-
-"You will rather take three hundred and fifty lashes than volunteer?"
-he asked.
-
-"I'd volunteer for a forlorn hope; I've done so before now, sir, as
-you know well, but I'll not quit the old 25th for a condemned corps.
-I'll take my punishment--I've earned it like a fool, and with God's
-help, I hope to bear it like a man."
-
-"Then strip, sir," said Middleton, playing nervously with the blue
-ribbons of his gorget.
-
-All emotion seemed to pass away as the culprit proceeded deliberately
-to unclasp his leather stock and unbutton his coat; but before it was
-off the major exclaimed in a loud voice, as he drew a letter from his
-pocket--
-
-"_Stop!_"
-
-Grange paused, and looked up with a haggard and bloodshot eye.
-
-"I remit the rest of the sentence, for the sake of one who intercedes
-for you."
-
-"Sir?"
-
-"I have had a petition from your wife, and willingly grant it. Take
-away the triangles. Conduct yourself as you did till this misfortune
-came upon you, and ere long, Grange, you may regain the stripes you
-have to-day been deprived of. Rejoin your company."
-
-"I thank you, sir, for the sake of my poor wife and her bairnie. I
-have proved that I would rather take my punishment than leave the
-regiment and you; and--sir--sir----"
-
-Here Grange fairly broke down and sobbed aloud; and no man among the
-nine hundred there thought the less of him, because his stout heart,
-which even the terror of the lash could not appal, now became full of
-penitence and gratitude. At that moment many an eye glistened in the
-ranks, and many a heart was swelling.
-
-"There, there--don't make a fuss," said Middleton, testily; "I hate
-scenes! Prepare to form quarter-distance column right in
-front--stand fast the Light Company."
-
-And so ended an episode, that, like the warm rising sun now shining
-cheerfully into the barrack-square, shed a brightness over every
-face, and lent a lightness--a sense of pleasure and relief to every
-heart, as the regiment marched back to quarters, and to what was of
-some importance after being two hours under arms in the morning
-air--breakfast.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE OLD REGIMENT OF EDINBURGH.
-
- "Such is our love of liberty, our country and our laws,
- That like our ancestors of old, we'll stand in freedom's cause;
- We'll bravely fight like heroes for honour and applause,
- And defy the French, with all their art, to alter our laws."
- _The Garb of Old Gaul._
-
-
-From Major Middleton, who took somewhat of a fatherly interest in
-him, Quentin learned much of the past history and achievements of the
-regiment he had joined.
-
-It was one with which the stories of his old military friends at
-Rohallion had made him familiar from boyhood; thus, he was in
-possession of so many old regimental names, so many stock stories and
-anecdotes, which Middleton deemed unknown beyond the circle of their
-mess-table and barrack-rooms, that he considered the lad an enigma,
-and was puzzled how, or where, he had gained all this information
-about the corps; for Quentin, though looking forward to the arrival
-of Cosmo with a disgust that almost amounted to terror, kept his own
-counsel with wonderful prudence, and never permitted the name of
-Rohallion to escape him.
-
-As there is no official record of the Borderers' achievements prior
-to 1808, the account given by the major is perhaps the only one
-extant.
-
-Under David Leslie, Earl of Leven, the 25th Foot were formed on the
-10th of March, 1689, from a body of six thousand Covenanters, who, on
-the news of William of Orange landing at Torbay, marched from the
-West Country and laid siege to the castle of Edinburgh. On their
-banners were an open Bible, with the motto, "For Reformation
-according to the Word of God."
-
-Marching north against the loyal Highlanders, they left their
-compatriots, all of whom served without pay or remuneration till the
-conclusion of the siege, when the fortress was surrendered by the
-Duke of Gordon after a noble defence, and after being warned by a
-spectre--pale as he "who drew Priam's curtain at the dead of
-night"--in fact, by the wraith of the terrible Claverhouse in his
-buff coat, cuirass, and cavalier wig, all stained with gouts of
-blood, that he had been shot by a silver bullet on the field of
-Killycrankie. In one of the rooms of the old fortress this vision is
-alleged to have appeared to Colin, Earl of Balcarris, then the duke's
-prisoner, and the truth of the episode is admitted by a delirious
-biographer of the viscount, who affirms that he is frequently in
-communion with the ghost in question, and with others.
-
-The Earl of Leven, though colonel of infantry under Frederick
-Wilhelm, Elector of Brandenburg, and of a regiment which came over
-with the Prince of Orange, who made him Governor of Edinburgh Castle
-and Master of the Scottish ordnance, was a Whig noble, chiefly famous
-for the rapidity of his flight from Killycrankie, and the vigour with
-which he horsewhipped the Lady Morton Hall. It is said that he rode
-six miles from the Pass without drawing his bridle, though his
-regiment, the future 25th, and Hastings, the future 13th, were the
-only troops that made any stand against the victorious Highlanders.
-
-Leven's regiment having been raised in the capital while Sir John
-Hall, Knight, was Lord Provost, was designated of Edinburgh, and bore
-the insignia yet borne on its colours, the triple castle of the city,
-with its crest and motto, _Nisi Dominus Frustra_.
-
-As Leven's regiment--the same in which "my uncle Toby" fought at
-Landen, and with which he went to "mount guard in the trenches before
-the gate of St. Nicholas in his roquelaure"--it served in all King
-William's useless wars for the well-being of his darling Dutch, and
-all the great barrier towns of Europe have heard the drums of the
-25th. It was the first British regiment which used the socket in
-lieu of the screw bayonet, which its lieutenant-colonel, Maxwell,
-adopted in imitation of the bayonets of the French Fusiliers. Prior
-to this, our bayonets were screwed into the muzzles of the muskets,
-and to fire with them fixed, was, of course, an impossibility. After
-fighting at Sheriffmuir, as Viscount Shannon's Foot, it served with
-distinction in the wars of the Spanish and Austrian succession, and
-shared in the disasters of Fontenoy, ere its soldiers had again to
-imbrue their hands in the blood of their own countrymen at Falkirk,
-at Culloden, and in defending the Comyn's Tower in the old Castle of
-Blair against Lord George Murray, till we find them again among the
-troops defeated at Val through the cowardice and incapacity of the
-Duke of Cumberland.
-
-During the seven years' war it suffered severely at the siege of a
-small German castle, by the heroism of a sergeant of the enemy.
-Under Lord Rohallion a party of the Edinburgh Regiment had made
-themselves masters of an outwork, in which they established
-themselves at the point of the bayonet. _Under_ this work was a
-secret mine, which (as the "Ecole Historique et Morale du Soldat"
-relates) was entrusted to a sergeant and a few soldiers of the Royal
-Piedmontese Guards. The mine was ready, the _saucisson_ led through
-the gallery, the train was laid, and a single spark would blow all
-below and above to atoms!
-
-With admirable coolness the sergeant desired his comrades to retire,
-and request the king to take charge of his wife and children. He
-then, inspired by a spirit of self-devotion, set fire to the train
-and perished, as the mine exploded. The outwork rose into the air
-and fell thundering into the fosse, Lord Rohallion, a corporal, and
-two men alone escaping, covered with bruises and cuts. The name of
-the sergeant was said to be Amadeus di Savillano, son of the
-Castellan of the fortress of that name in Piedmont.
-
-The Edinburgh regiment served at the battle of Minden. The Earl of
-Home was then its colonel, and it was in the second line, and on the
-left of Kingsley's famous brigade. Landing in England, on the
-homeward march, near the Borders, the old colours borne in the seven
-years' war were buried by its soldiers, with all honour, and three
-volleys were fired over them.
-
-In those days, when any regiment approached London, the colours were
-furled and cased, and no drum was beaten or fife blown during the
-march through its limits. The 3rd, or Old East Kentish Buffs, were
-alone excepted, and had the exclusive privilege of marching through
-the City of London with all the honours of war, in memory of having,
-at some period, been recruited from the City Trained Bands.
-
-Likewise no regiment could beat a drum within the walls, or through
-the portes of the Scottish capital, with the exception of the 25th,
-or old Edinburgh Regiment. But not long after the battle of Minden,
-it chanced that a certain thick-pated lord-provost objected to their
-drums beating up for recruits, on the plea that none should beat
-there but those of the City Guard. On this, the colonel, Lord George
-Henry Lennox (M.P. for the county of Sussex, who died in 1805), was
-so incensed, that on his special application the title of the corps
-was changed, and its facings were altered from the royal yellow of
-Scotland to the royal blue of Britain, and after a time it was styled
-the "King's Own Borderers."
-
-Egmont-op-zee, Martinique, and Egypt added fresh honours to those of
-other times; but still on drum and standard are borne unchanged the
-castle, triple-towered, with the anchor and motto, _Nisi Dominus
-Frustra_, usually the first little bit of latinity learned by the
-Edinburgh schoolboy.
-
-Such is a rapid outline of the past history of this famous old corps,
-in the ranks of which Quentin Kennedy hoped to achieve for himself a
-position and a name--perhaps, rank and glory too! What boy does not
-look forward to some such vague but brilliant future,--
-
- "In life's morning march when the bosom is young."
-
-
-The evening subsequent to the punishment parade was the _last_ on
-which the battalion mess would assemble, and Quentin was Monkton's
-guest. He was again seated near the worthy major, and from him he
-learned much of what we have just narrated, many a quaint regimental
-story being woven up with what was actual military history.
-
-"You should tell him of that startling adventure, or rather, I should
-say, of those series of adventures, which happened to you when
-commanding an out-picquet in America," said Colville, with a
-significant but hasty glance at Monkton, for the frequent repetition
-of this story formed a kind of covert joke against the worthy major.
-
-"What--which out-picquet--at the siege of Fort St. John?"
-
-"Exactly, Major," said Monkton.
-
-"St. John, on the Richelieu River?" asked Quentin.
-
-"Yes," said Middleton, with an air of gratification; "you are a very
-intelligent young man, and have no doubt read of the defence of that
-place."
-
-Quentin hastened to say that he _had_ heard of it; in fact, the
-defence with all its details--the bravery of Majors Preston and André
-of the Cameronians, and so forth--formed one of the stock stories of
-his old friends, the quartermaster and Jack Andrews; and so
-frequently had he heard it, that he was somewhat uncertain at times
-that he had not served there too.
-
-"But the episode of yours, with that devilish Indian fellow, may
-scare Kennedy when on sentry," said the adjutant, "a duty he must do
-as a volunteer."
-
-"Scare--not at all!" said Middleton, testily; "it is the very thing
-to sharpen his wits and to keep him wide awake. There are others
-here who never heard the story, and it is worth listening to; but
-before I begin we must send away the marines and replenish the
-decanters."
-
-"Right!" cried Askerne, who was president; "this is the last night of
-one of the jolliest messes in His Majesty's service. To-morrow the
-plate, which has glittered before us so long--the crystal from which
-we have imbibed the full bodied port, the creamy claret, and the
-choice Madeira, the sparkling champagne, the old hock, in fact, 'the
-entire plant,' to use a commercial phrase, will be packed up and
-stored away among dust and cobwebs, while the Borderers march in
-quest of 'fresh fields and pastures new.' A long farewell to our
-glorious mess!" exclaimed the handsome grenadier, as he poured a
-glass of port down his capacious throat. "Mr. Vice-President, order
-the last cooper of port before the major begins his story."
-
-"Ah, the mess!" sighed Buckle, the adjutant; "when we come to be
-frying our ration beef in a camp-kettle lid, under a shower of rain,
-perhaps, there will be an exchange with a devil of a difference!"
-
-With the aforesaid "cooper" there came in hot whisky-toddy for the
-major and a few select seniors, for it was _then_ the custom at the
-messes of Scots and Irish national corps to introduce the Farintosh
-and potheen; though I fear our dandies of the Victorian age
-(especially such as are horrified at the sight of a black bottle)
-might consider such a proceeding a deplorable solecism in good taste.
-
-"And now, major, for your story," said Askerne, while Colville,
-perhaps the only affected man in the regiment, gave his shoulders a
-shrug, perceptible only by the glittering of his epaulettes, and
-Monkton responded by a sly wink behind his glass of wine, while he
-pretended to be looking for the beeswing.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE ADVANCED PICQUET.
-
- "All quiet along the Potomac, they say,
- Except now and then a stray picquet,
- Is shot as he walks on his beat to and fro,
- By a rifleman hid in the thicket.
- 'Tis nothing. A private or two now and then,
- Will not count in the tale of the battle;
- Not an officer lost--only one of the men,
- Breathing out all alone the death-rattle."
-
-
-"In the spring of the year '75, a party of ours, under Lord
-Rohallion, then a captain, was sent to the Fort of St. John, on the
-Richelieu River, to strengthen the garrison, which was composed of
-some companies of the 7th Fusiliers and the 26th, or Cameronians,
-under Major Preston, of Valleyfield, in Fifeshire, as gallant a
-fellow as ever bore the King's commission.
-
-"We were in daily expectation of the advance of the rebel General
-Montgomery, with a great force, so the duties of guards and sentinels
-were performed with great vigilance, as the whole country for miles
-around, if not actually in possession of the armed colonists, was
-full of people who were favourable to their cause, and were
-consequently inimical to the king and to us.
-
-"Montgomery was expected to approach through Vermont county (now one
-of the states) by the eastern shore of Lake Champlain, a long and
-narrow sheet of deep water, which forms the boundary between it and
-the State of New York; thus, on an eminence which commanded a
-considerable view of the country southward, and at the distance of
-two miles from Fort St. John, Major Preston, of the 26th, had an
-outpost or picquet, consisting of one officer and twenty men,
-stationed in a log-hut, from whence they were relieved every week.
-The officer in command of this advanced party had to throw forward a
-line of sentinels, extending across the road by which the Americans
-were expected to approach. At the hut was also a small piece of
-cannon, taken from a gunboat recently destroyed on the Lake, a
-6-pounder, which was to be fired as a signal for the troops in Fort
-St. John to get under arms, and the picquet was well supplied with
-rockets to give the alarm by night.
-
-"Our sentinels there had frequently been found dead and scalped,
-without a shot being fired. Sometimes they disappeared altogether,
-without leaving a trace, save a few spots of blood on the prairie
-grass. Their desertion was never suspected by those in authority;
-but that savages and assassins lurked in woods along the eastern and
-western shores of Lake Champlain we had not a doubt; thus the
-solitary outpost before the Fort of St. John was a duty disliked by
-all, and always undertaken with sensations of doubt and anxiety.
-
-"It was on a beautiful afternoon in the month of September, that with
-a sergeant and twenty men of the Borderers, I took possession of this
-log hut, relieving a Lieutenant Despard, of the Fusiliers, from whom
-I received over my orders, and posted my line of six sentinels at
-intervals across the highway and a kind of open prairie which it
-traversed. These orders were written and delivered with the parole
-and countersign, by Major André, of the Cameronians (afterwards named
-'the unfortunate'), and they were simply, that during the night the
-sentinels were to face all persons approaching their posts, to stand
-firm in a state of preparation at half-cock with ported arms, and to
-fire instantly on all who could not give the countersign.
-
-"Despard informed me that excessive vigilance was necessary, as he
-had lost five sentinels in one week, information which made my
-fellows look somewhat blankly in each other's faces; 'and these
-assassinations have occurred,' he added, 'though we have an Indian
-scout, Le Vipre Noir, an invaluable fellow, however unpleasant his
-name may sound, attached to the picquet-house. I would advise you to
-keep off that bit of prairie in front, Middleton. Zounds! one is
-always over the ankles in mud there, and mid-leg deep occasionally;
-so it's more like snipe-shooting in an Irish bog, than knocking over
-Yankees and Iroquois.'
-
-"I now found that there was another scout, a Cornishman, named old
-Abe Treherne, attached to the post, as well as the native mentioned
-by Despard.
-
-"Abe Treherne was a white-haired squatter and pioneer, who, for more
-than forty years, had been in the district, living by the use of his
-rifle and hatchet. He wore an Indian hunting-shirt and deer-skin
-mocassins, and had so completely forgotten the civilization of his
-native England, that he had almost become an Indian by habit, if not
-by speech. He was brave, however, and a most faithful fellow to us.
-Active and hardy, brown and weatherbeaten by constant exposure;
-privation could not impair, nor toil weary his strength, which was
-wonderful, for, by the wild life of nature he had led, every muscle
-had been developed, till it became like a band of iron.
-
-"The savage scout, Le Vipre Noir, as he was named, was one of the
-Lenni-Lenappe--or unmixed race as they boast themselves--who once
-occupied all the vast tract of country which lies between Penobscot
-and the shores of the Potomac; but we styled the most of them
-Delawares, and by that name they became known.
-
-"Well, this devil of a Delaware--I think I can see the fellow
-now!--was a model of muscular strength and manly beauty, so far as
-form and sinew go. He was like a colossal statue of polished copper.
-His usual expression was fierce and sullen; his eyes were keen,
-black, and glittering, and his red and yellow streaks of war-paint
-lent a fiendish aspect to his dusky visage, the features of which
-were otherwise clean cut and regular. He was somewhat of a dandy in
-his own way, as his fur mocassins and hunting-shirt were gaily
-ornamented with scarlet cloth, wampum, and beads, by the Delaware
-girls.
-
-"His head had been denuded of hair entirely, save the scalp-lock, in
-which two feathers were stuck. At his girdle hung his pipe and
-hunting-pouch, a large musk-rat skin, in the tail of which his
-keen-edged scalping-knife was sheathed; he had also a pouch for
-ammunition, a long rifle, and a tomahawk, which were never from his
-side by night or day.
-
-"This Delaware was from one of the native villages about the upper
-end of the Penobscot river, where the chiefs had signed a treaty of
-alliance, offensive and defensive, with our government, and had sworn
-to have no communication with the Americans or others, the king's
-enemies, without the knowledge of the officer commanding the British
-forces in North America.
-
-"One of our men, named Jack Andrews, had quarrelled with the
-Delaware, about a wild goose they had shot. Blows were exchanged;
-the savage drew his scalping-knife; but the Borderer clubbed his
-musket, and laid the red-skin sprawling among the reeds. Peace was
-enforced between them; but the savage was more than ever sullen and
-reserved, doubtless brooding on the vengeance he meant to take.
-
-"Such was Le Vipre Noir, who will bear rather a conspicuous part in
-my little story.
-
-"It was a lovely evening, I have said, when we took possession of the
-sequestered picquet-house. The rays of the setting sun, as he sank
-beyond those grand and lofty mountain ranges, which rise between the
-source of the Hudson and Lake Champlain, shed a red glow across the
-water, and bathed in warm light the foliage of the mighty primeval
-forest, which for ages had clothed the shores of that magnificent
-lake. In the immediate foreground the bayonets of my sentinels
-seemed tipped with fire, as they trod slowly to and fro upon their
-posts in that voiceless solitude. Before the log-hut the arms were
-piled, and my soldiers, with the Cornishman, were cooking their
-supper, while the swarthy Indian scout was squatted on his hams at a
-little distance, smoking listlessly or half asleep, as the duty of
-searching in the woods usually devolved upon him after nightfall.
-
-"I, too, lit my pipe, and the pouch from which I took my tobacco
-called back to mind some half-forgotten thoughts and fancies.
-
-"They were lovely hands that embroidered that pouch for me, and it
-was associated with many a promenade in Paul Street, when we were
-quartered in Montreal, with balls at _her_ father's house, in the Rue
-de Notre Dame, flirtation and ices in the Place d'Armes, where the
-French troops used to parade of old--for, in short, that
-tobacco-pouch had been made for me by Ella Carleton, the belle of
-that old colonial city.
-
-"She had a dash of the old French blood in her, and hence her dark
-hair and eyes, which contrasted so wonderfully with her pure English
-skin, and hence her continental form of eyelid and drooping lash. So
-I sighed as I thought of a year ago--cursed the emergencies of the
-service that banished me to Fort St. John, and passed my fair Ella's
-present to the sergeant of the picquet, that he might supply himself,
-for active service is a true leveller, and without impairing
-discipline leads to a spirit of _camaraderie_ not to be found in such
-tented fields as Hyde Park or the Phœnix at Dublin.
-
-"After the sun set and twilight stole on, I walked restlessly to and
-fro before the log-hut, within which my men were now gathered with
-their arms, as the dew was falling. I had seen all carefully loaded
-and had examined the flints and priming. I was resolved that due
-vigilance on my part should not be wanting if the post were attacked
-or my sentinels surprised; and to prevent them from wandering
-unconsciously from their beat in the dark, I had six white stakes
-placed in the ground, and gave orders that they were to remain close
-by them during the night, until relieved, and every hour I went in
-person with the reliefs, a most harassing duty.
-
-"Leaving my sergeant at the picquet-house, a few minutes before
-midnight, I went with six men to relieve my sentinels, who were all
-posted on the skirts of an open spacs, a large tract of waste ground
-which for some miles was covered with long prairie grass, and which
-stretched away towards the forest that was traversed by the main road
-leading to Fort Edward on the Hudson, about sixty miles distant.
-
-"Save the gurgle of a runnel that stole under the prairie grass,
-there was no sound in the air--not even the whistle of the cat-bird;
-there was no moon, but the stars were clear and bright, and guided by
-their light we went straight from post to post, relieving the
-sentinels; but as we approached the place where the sixth should have
-been, on the extreme left of the highway, we advanced _unchallenged_
-to the stake that marked his beat: the place was solitary and the
-man--was gone.
-
-"His musket, undischarged, was lying there, and a pool of blood
-beside it at once refuted any suspicion of desertion. But how came
-it that he had perished without resistance--without giving an alarm,
-and where was his body? All round the place we searched for it, but
-did so in vain.
-
-"Posting another man, I gave him reiterated orders and injunctions to
-be on the alert, and wistfully the poor fellow looked after us as we
-returned to the picquet-house with the tidings of another mystery,
-which added to the consternation that prevailed concerning this
-devilish outpost. Neither le Vipre Noir nor Treherne had yet
-returned; they were as usual scouting in front of our advanced
-sentinels, and when they came back, not together, but separately,
-they each reported the country all quiet for miles towards the
-mountains. Who then was this determined assassin, unless it were
-Satan himself?
-
-"Next night the sentinel on the extreme right was missing, without
-leaving even a trace of blood, and without the grass being bruised or
-trodden near his beat; and on the night following, the sentinel on
-the roadway was found lying dead on his face; his musket was
-undischarged, his head cloven behind, and his scalp gone.
-
-"The consternation of my picquet had now reached its height. Still
-our scouts asserted the country to be quiet around us, though, with a
-strange gleam in his eyes, the Indian said, that when he shouted in
-the woods he heard an echo.
-
-"'From whence?' I asked, suspiciously.
-
-"'From the great barrows by the lake--where the bones of my
-forefathers lie. The white man treads there now; but they were great
-warriors, and many were the scalps that dried before their tents.'
-
-"I was but a young officer then, being fresh from our Scottish
-Fencibles, otherwise I would have doubled my sentinels; but the idea
-never occurred to me, and my sergeant failed to suggest it. The
-affair was becoming intolerable. This mysterious assassination of
-brave men roused my blood to fever heat, and I resolved that on the
-next night I should take the duty of sentinel with a firelock, and
-remain on my post as such, not for one hour merely, but for the
-entire night, in the hope of solving this terrible enigma.
-
-"On the evening I came to this conclusion the post was visited by
-Charley Halket from the fort, the captain of our first company, who
-came cantering up on a fine bay horse. I was glad to see him, for
-Halket was one of the most lively and devil-may-care fellows in the
-corps, and he sang the best song and was the best stroke at billiards
-in our whole brigade. Charley would drink his two bottles at mess
-overnight and wing a fellow in the morning, without keeping his arm
-in a cold bath, and with an accuracy that showed he had a
-constitution of iron; he hunted fearlessly, shot fairly, rode like a
-mad-cap; gambled, but simply for excitement, and spent his money like
-a good-hearted fellow. He was always laughing and jovial, and I was
-about to relate the disasters that had befallen my party, when the
-pale and anxious expression of his usually merry face arrested me,
-and I feared that the fort had been taken by surprise in rear of our
-post.
-
-"'What the devil is the matter, Halket?' said I. 'I have always
-predicted to Preston that we should never have our legs under his
-mahogany at Valleyfield again--never taste his Fifeshire mutton, or
-test his fine old Burgundy. What is up? Has the fort fallen,
-Charley, that you come here with your bay thoroughbred covered with
-foam, even to its bang-up tail?'
-
-"'No, my dear Middleton; but I wish to pass your post.'
-
-"'To the front?' I asked, with astonishment.
-
-"'Yes.'
-
-"'It is impossible!'
-
-"'Even if out of uniform?'
-
-"'In or out of uniform, none can pass or repass save our scouts,
-whose lives are of little value. Preston's orders are strict and
-decisive.'
-
-"'But if in disguise?' he urged, earnestly, and lowering his tone, as
-he stooped from his saddle.
-
-"'Worse and worse!'
-
-"'How? explain, pray,' he demanded, as his earnestness became tinged
-with irritation.
-
-"'You might be deemed a deserter by General Burgoyne if found more
-than two miles from camp or quarters.'
-
-"'A deserter!--I?--pooh, man, absurd!'
-
-"'A general officer has joined the rebels already. Then you might be
-hanged as a spy by Montgomery, whose troops are certainly closing up,
-if we may judge from the murderous outrages committed by his Indian
-allies upon the picquets stationed here.'
-
-"'It is for that very reason, Middleton, that I am most anxious to
-ride southward for about twelve miles into the country along the
-shore of the lake, towards Misiskoui.'
-
-"'You could not return; my sentinels have positive orders to fire
-instantly on all----'
-
-"'Who have not the parole and countersign,' said he, smiling; 'they
-are _Quebec_ and WOLFE. You see that I have both!'
-
-"'From whom?'
-
-"'My friend André, of the Cameronians--the fort-major.'
-
-"'He is very rash! I wish he had this infernal picquet to command;
-the duty might teach him caution.'
-
-"'But, my dear Middleton----'
-
-"'Say no more, Charley--come, don't be rash; duty is duty; and I must
-perform mine. Moreover, I value your life and my own honour too much
-to risk either to further some mad-cap ramble of yours.'
-
-"'Zounds, sir!' he began, furiously.
-
-"'Now don't call me out, Charley; I am on duty and can't go, and when
-I am relieved and you are cool, you won't ask me. But tell me,
-Charley, what affair is this that seems so urgent? The country in
-front is full of perils; already eight or nine sentinels have been
-assassinated, and yonder grave covers one of three fine fellows I
-have lost.'
-
-"'Listen to me, Jack,' said he, dismounting, and throwing the reins
-of his horse over his arm, and leading me a little way apart from the
-soldiers who were smoking and lounging before the log-hut; 'you
-remember Ella Carleton?'
-
-"'I should rather think I do' said I, reddening, and giving him a
-very knowing wink, to which he made not the slightest response;
-'Ella, whom we used to meet so much a year ago at Montreal.'
-
-"'The same,' said he.
-
-"'I remember her perfectly--a charming girl, with features that were
-pale but beautifully regular, and with eyes and hair so dark.'
-
-"'Exactly,' said Halket, whose eyes sparkled with pleasure. 'Her
-father, you are aware, is a rich land-owner, in the American
-interest.'
-
-"'Many a bottle of champagne I have drunk in his house in the Rue de
-Notre Dame.'
-
-"'Yet he is an old curmudgeon who hates us red-coats, and for that
-reason, as well as for a few others that were more cogent, Ella and I
-were privately married about a year ago.'
-
-"'Married?--whew! Here's news for the mess to discuss over their
-wine and walnuts!' I exclaimed, while laughing to conceal an
-irrepressible emotion of pique.
-
-"'I depend on your honour,' said he, earnestly.
-
-"'To the death, Charley; but you have quite taken my breath away.
-Married--you never looked a bit like it!'
-
-"'We were married a year ago at the cathedral in the Place d'Armes
-unknown to all--even to yourself, Rohallion, and others my most
-intimate friends,' said Halket, speaking rapidly and with growing
-emotion; 'in a month she will be a mother--think of that, Jack! She
-is residing at one of her father's country clearings near the
-Missiskoui River, in an old hunting-lodge, built by Simon de
-Champlain, who first discovered the lake. She has written to me by a
-circuitous route, saying that Montgomery's advanced posts are within
-a few miles; that her father and all his men are with the rebels;
-that the Iroquois are ravaging the country, burning, killing, and
-scalping all before them; and thus, for the love I bear her, and for
-the sake of our child that is yet unborn, I must strive to save her,
-and have her conveyed to Fort St. John. This is all my story,
-Middleton. She is about twelve miles distant from this outpost; I
-think I know the way, and am certain I should be back before the
-morning-gun is fired. If not, I must risk all--commission, rank,
-reputation, everything--but Ella must be saved! You understand me
-now, don't you, my dear friend?' said he, earnestly, as he grasped my
-hand, and I could see that the poor fellow's eyes were filled with
-tears.
-
-"'Perfectly, Charley; I would risk my life to save or serve her or
-you; but I think we may find those who will do both more effectually
-than either you or I.'
-
-"'Who do you mean?'
-
-"'The Delaware scout, and old Abe Treherne, the hunter, will get over
-the ground in half the time, and knowing, as they do, every track and
-trail in the forest, with ten degrees more safety than you could ever
-hope for.'
-
-"I at once proposed the affair to them, and Treherne entered into it
-with great readiness. His reward was to be a pair of handsome
-pistols and ten guineas. He knew the old hunting-lodge on Carleton's
-clearing quite well, and with the assistance of the horse, undertook
-to bring the lady to the picquet-house in safety, and long before
-sunrise. The Delaware, however, shook his head.
-
-"'Le Vipre Noir has some darned doubts, I guess,' said the hunter;
-'the woods about the Missiskoui are full of the mocassin prints of
-the Yankees and the Iroquois; the tracks, I reckon, are dangerous
-enough; and there will be an almighty trouble in bringing a fine lady
-a-horse-back through the bush; for all that, Delaware, you'll venture
-to bring the White Chief his squaw safe from the hunting-place beyond
-the river?'
-
-"'From the Missiskoui, where once I had a wigwam, and where my squaw
-and her little papooses perished at the hands of the white men?' said
-the savage, in a husky and guttural voice, while his stealthy eyes
-filled with a malevolent gleam, as he sat sullenly smoking under a
-tree.
-
-"'You're a darned fool, Vipre,' said Treherne, angrily. 'Look ye
-har--what's the use o' thinking o' that now? What's past is past,
-ain't it?'
-
-"'She appealed to them, and they laughed at her. She appealed to
-Manitto, but his face was hidden behind a cloud, and he saw neither
-her nor what the pale-faces did to her. She is with Manitto now--but
-I yet am here.'
-
-"'We may have a scrimmage, Delaware--can you bite yet?' asked
-Treherne, testily.
-
-"The savage pointed to his scalping-knife and grinned.
-
-"'Will you venture with me for twelve bottles of the raal Jamaiky
-fire-water?'
-
-"'Oui, ja, yes!' said the savage, eagerly, in his mixed jargon; 'I
-neither fear the feathered arrows of the rebel Iroquois, or the lead
-bullets of the Yankees. Go! Le Vipre Noir is a warrior!'
-
-"'Delaware,' said I, patting his muscular shoulder, 'what are the
-greatest of human virtues?'
-
-"'Courage and contempt of death,' he replied, loftily, while shaking
-the two heron's plumes in his scalp lock.
-
-"'Good,' said Halkett, who had listened to all this preamble with
-irrepressible anxiety and impatience; 'here are ten guineas as an
-earnest of future reward, Delaware. You will risk this for me?'
-
-"'For _you_?' said the Indian, scornfully, putting the coins,
-however, in the musk-rat pouch, which dangled at his wampum girdle.
-
-"'For her, then?' said Halket, persuasively.
-
-"'For neither,' replied the Delaware, while a lurid gleam shone in
-his sombre eyes.
-
-"'How, fellow?' asked Charley, with alarm.
-
-"'I do so for the reward--for the fire-water and gold that will buy
-me powder and blankets; but neither for the squaw nor the papoose of
-the pale-face.'
-
-"'Risk it for what you will, but only serve me; and you, Treherne----'
-
-"'Make your terms with this darned crittur of a Redskin, and you can
-settle with me after, sir,' said Treherne, who had been regarding his
-compatriot with a somewhat doubtful expression. 'Come, Vipre Noir,
-we must keep the hair on our heads, if we can, certainly; so put
-fresh priming into the pan of your rifle, my dark serpent, for the
-dew is falling heavily; if the rebel Redskins come on us, it must be
-our scalps agin theirs! I'm your brother--let us be off to the bush
-ere the sun sets.'
-
-"Charley Halkett hastily wrote a note to his wife, telling her to
-place implicit confidence in the two scouts as true and tried men,
-who would convey her safely to the British outpost in front of Fort
-St. John, where he, all eagerness and impatience, awaited her; and on
-being furnished with this, Treherne slung his long rifle across his
-body, stuck a short black pipe in his moustachioed mouth, mounted
-Halkett's horse, and, with the swift-footed and agile Indian running
-by his side, crossed the open bit of prairie before the log-hut, and
-rapidly disappeared in the dense and virgin forest that lay beyond.
-
-"That forest soon grew dark; twilight stole along the shores of the
-silent lake; the last red rays of lingering light faded upward from
-the lone mountain tops; one by one the bright stars came twinkling
-out, and the old and clamorous anxiety occurred to us all; and each
-poor fellow, as he was left on his post, felt himself a doomed man,
-who might die without seeing his destroyer, or who might disappear as
-others had so mysteriously done, without leaving a trace behind.
-
-"Slowly and wearily our autumn night wore on, and with our pistols
-cocked, Halkett and I visited the sentinels almost half-hourly. The
-sky was moonless, and the silence around our lonely post was
-oppressive; to the listening ear there came no sounds save those of
-insect life among the long and reedy prairie grass.
-
-"All at once, afar in distance from the deep recesses of the vast
-pine forest, there rose the shrill war-whoop of the red man!
-
-"Like the yell of an unchained fiend, it rung upon the still night
-air; but died away, and all became silent--more silent apparently
-than before, and I felt the hand of Halkett clutch my arm like a
-vice, while hot bead-drops rolled over his temples.
-
-"I had terrible forebodings, but remained silent, and with reiterated
-advice to my sentinels to be 'on the alert,' returned to the
-picquet-house. Poor Charley Halkett's alarm excited all my
-compassion; the boldest, frankest, and jolliest fellow in the corps
-had become a nervous, crushed, and miserable wretch!
-
-"I thought that lingering night would never pass away. It passed,
-however, as others do; the morning came in, bright and sunny, and
-without one of our sentinels being missed or molested; and it seemed,
-certainly, a very singular feature in those mysterious deaths, that
-the only night on which no fatality occurred, should be that on which
-we actually had an _alerte_, and when Treherne and the Delaware were
-away in the direction of Missiskoui, and _not_ scouting in front of
-the post!
-
-"Morning had come, but there was yet no appearance of our messengers
-or Ella Carleton, and old sympathies made me doubly anxious on her
-account.
-
-"Halkett, who was pale with sleeplessness and intense anxiety, walked
-with me a little way beyond our advanced sentinels, who were now
-shouting to each other their happy congratulations that nothing had
-occurred during the night--in short, that they were _all_ there.
-
-"Lake Champlain, in its calm loveliness, shone brightly under the
-morning sun, its surface unruffled by the wind, and not a sail or
-boat was visible in all the blue extent of its far stretching vista.
-The gorgeous azalias were still in their bloom, so were the snowy
-blossoms of the sumach, and the glorious yellow light fell in flakes
-between the towering pines of the ancient forest, while the dewy
-prairie grass glittered as it rippled beneath the pleasant breeze.
-
-"The distant landscape and the dim blue hills that look down on the
-winding Hudson seemed calm and tranquil, the silence around us was
-intense, the hum of a little waterfall alone breaking the stillness
-of the autumn morning.
-
-"Poor Charley was like a madman, and it was in vain that I suggested
-to him that Treherne and the Delaware might have been compelled to
-make a long detour; that Ella might be ill and unable to travel on
-horseback, that her father might have returned, that Montgomery's
-advanced guard might be now far beyond the Missiskoui, that our
-scouts might have lost their way in going or in returning, not that I
-believed either possible for a moment, but I was glad to say anything
-that would serve to account for their delay, or soothe his gnawing
-anxiety; so in exceeding misery he returned to Fort St. John. The
-moment that morning parade was over he hastened to me again, and
-slowly the terrible day passed over, without tidings of Ella Carleton
-or her guides, and as night drew near I had almost to use force to
-prevent Halkett from setting out on foot for the old hunting-lodge on
-the Missiskoui, a place he could never have reached alone.
-
-"Suddenly we were roused, about sunset, by a shout from the picquet,
-and as we looked up, the Delaware stood before us--alone!
-
-"His aspect was fierce but weary; his hunting shirt was torn and bore
-traces of blood. His story was brief. They had been attacked by
-Indians in a deep gulley some miles distant, in the grey dawn of the
-morning; Treherne had been killed and the lady carried off! The
-Indian showed his wounds, and then claimed his reward.
-
-"Poor Halkett, on hearing of this catastrophe, fell, as if struck by
-a ball, and was laid on the hard bed of planks whereon the soldiers
-slept. He was in a delirium, yet passive and weak as a child.
-
-"So the hostile Indians were in our neighbourhood! I thought with
-horror of what the poor girl--on the eve of becoming a mother--might
-suffer at their merciless hands; and all her delicate beauty, her
-merry laugh, the singular combination of elegance and _espièglerie_
-in her manner, came vividly back to memory, as I had seen her last,
-happy, radiant, and smiling, amid the glare and glitter of a garrison
-ball in the city of Montreal.
-
-"I questioned the Delaware closely; but his story was simple and
-unvarying, so he received food, rum, and the reward which Halkett had
-promised.
-
-"An irrepressible anxiety stole over me as night deepened, so taking
-my servant's musket and bayonet, I primed, loaded, and fixed a new
-flint with care; and proceeding to the distance of fifty yards in
-front of my line of sentinels, on the open space where the prairie
-grass grew thick and rank, I resolved to pass some hours there as an
-advanced sentinel.
-
-"The sky was dark and cloudy, the stars were obscured by vapour, the
-silence was intense, and it smote upon my heart with a sense that was
-in some degree appalling, though I knew that my sentinels and the
-rest of the picquet were all within hail. The tall prairie grass
-waved solemnly and noiselessly to and fro; the sombre forest beyond,
-with the myriad cones of its black pines stretched far away to the
-distant mountains, but not a sound came from thence, nor from the
-lone shores of the vast lake of Champlain, whose vista receded away
-for miles upon my right. Even if the night-herons were wading among
-its waters I could not hear them, and the whistle of the cat-bird was
-silent.
-
-"Through the dark, I could see where the wild sumach, with its white
-blossoms and scarlet berries, waved over the graves of those who had
-perished on this fatal out-post. Their aspect was solemnizing in
-such a dark and silent hour, and the familiar faces of the dead men
-seemed to hover before me. But there was something mysterious and
-unaccountable in the total disappearance of those whose blood we had
-only traced upon the grass of the prairie.
-
-"Around where I stood this grass was more than a yard in height and
-thick as ripened corn. It was waving steadily to and fro as the
-breath of the night wind agitated it.
-
-"I had been in that solitary place about two hours, and midnight was
-at hand, when an emotion like a thrill--a tremor, not of fear, but of
-_warning_--a 'grue,' as we Scots call it, came over me. I felt the
-approach of some unseen thing, and cast a hurried glance around me.
-Something unusual about the appearance of the prairie-grass caught my
-eye.
-
-"Where, when hitherto I had looked in a direct line to the front, the
-surface, while swaying to and fro, seemed a flat and unbroken mass,
-there was now visible a dark line, a hollow furrow, as if some animal
-was crawling slowly and stealthily through it.
-
-"With every nerve braced, with all the powers of vision concentrated,
-I watched this new appearance, and the hollow track seemed to draw
-nearer and nearer _to me_, slowly, silently, and almost
-imperceptibly, as if a snake or some such reptile were crawling
-towards my post; and, ere long, it was not more than fifteen yards
-distant.
-
-"I placed a handkerchief over the lock of my musket to muffle the
-click of the lock in cocking, then I took a steady aim and fired!
-
-"On this, 'piercing the night's dull ear,' there rang a wild, shrill,
-and savage cry--a cry like that we had heard on the preceding
-night--and a dark figure, bounding from among the grass, came rushing
-towards me, but I stood, with bayonet charged, ready to receive him
-on its point.
-
-"He was an Indian, brandishing a tomahawk; but, within a few feet of
-where I stood, he fell prone on his face, wallowing in blood. The
-report of my musket, and his cry, brought all the picquet to the
-front. We dragged him into the log-hut, and discovered that I had
-shot our missing scout, the Delaware, Le Vipre Noir, the ball having
-entered his left shoulder, and traversed nearly the entire length of
-his body. He was mortally wounded, but the powers of life were
-strong within him. I was greatly concerned by this misfortune, which
-might procure us the enmity of his entire tribe; but why was he
-stealing upon our post in the manner he had done?
-
-"Before this could be resolved, and while we were staunching the
-welling blood, and doing all in our humble power to soothe suffering
-and prolong existence, a pale and bloody figure, who had given our
-sentries the pass-word, staggered into the hut, and sunk, half
-fainting, against the guard-bed. He was old Abe Treherne, the scout,
-cut, gashed, and apparently dying.
-
-"He was almost as speechless as the Delaware; but, on seeing each
-other, though weak and deplorable their condition, the eyes of these
-men glared with rage and hate, and they made such incredible efforts
-to reach each other, knife in hand, that the soldiers of my picquet
-had to hold them asunder by force.
-
-"'Search the hunting-pouch of the darned thief--the accursed
-red-skin!' said Treherne, in a hollow voice. 'May I never hew
-hickory again if I don't have his scalp and his heart tew!'
-
-"I was about to make the search, when Charley Halket anticipated me,
-and shudderingly drew forth its cold and clammy contents.
-
-"There were four human scalps; three were recognised as belonging to
-our own men, the murdered sentinels, and the fourth had attached to
-it the long, black, silky hair of a woman--the soft and ripply
-tresses of Ella Carleton!
-
-"'The red-skin fell on us suddenly in the bush, with knife and
-tomahawk,' said Treherne, speaking with difficulty, and at intervals;
-'he took me unawares from behind, and well nigh clove my head--darned
-if I don't think the tommy's stickin' there yet! I fought hard for
-my precious life--harder for the poor lady, I guess; but I swowned,
-after a time, and then he dragged her into the bush.'
-
-"'Ella--Ella!' exclaimed Halket, wringing his hands.
-
-"'The last I saw, 'tween the leaves and the blood that poured into my
-eyes, was the glitter of his scalping-knife; and the last I heard was
-her death-cry. Shoot the varmint, captain! I searched the bush for
-her till I was weary. Shoot the critter dead, soldiers! Ah! he was
-well named Le Vipre Noir, by that son of a Delaware dog, his father.'
-
-"The savage scarcely heard the end of this, for Halket, maddened by
-the contents of the hunting-pouch, and brief story of Treherne,
-placed a foot upon the prostrate body of the Delaware, then, slowly
-and deliberately, while his teeth were set, his eyes flashing fire,
-his brows knit by rage and grief, and, while an unuttered malediction
-hovered on his lips, he passed his sword-blade twice through the
-heart of the scout. The latter, for a moment, writhed upward on the
-steel, like a dying serpent, and then expired.
-
-"Poor Abe Treherne died soon after, for his wounds were mortal.
-
-"So our false Delaware proved, after all, to have been in the
-American interest, and inspired by some real or imaginary wrongs, to
-have been the assassin of our sentinels.*
-
-
-* Several sentinels of an outpost were thus actually assassinated
-during the American war. A Scottish periodical of the time gives a
-Highland regiment--the 74th, I think--the credit of furnishing the
-victims.
-
-
-"Fort St. John soon after fell into the hands of the Yankees under
-General Montgomery; we were all made prisoners of war, and my poor
-friend, Charley Halket, died, and (far from his kindred, who lie in
-the Abbey Kirk of Culross) we buried him amid the snow as we were
-being marched, under escort, up the lakes, towards Ticonderoga."
-
-
-Such was the major's story of _the advanced picquet_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-COSMO JOINS.
-
- "Ye'll try the world soon, my lad,
- And Andrew, dear, believe me,
- Ye'll find mankind an unco squad,
- And muckle may they grieve ye.
- For care and trouble set your thought,
- Even when your end's attained;
- And a' your views may come to nought,
- When every nerve is strained."--BURNS.
-
-
-After a careful search through some of the old dog-eared Army Lists,
-which, with Burns' poems, Brown's "Self-interpreting Bible," and
-Abercrombie's "Martial Achievements of the Scots Nation," formed the
-chief literary stores in his snuggery, the old quartermaster
-discovered that in the 94th, the famous old Scots brigade, there was
-a Captain Richard Warriston. He was the only one of that name in the
-service, and doubtless the same officer whom Quentin had mentioned in
-his letter as having so kindly befriended him; and by Lord
-Rohallion's direction, Girvan at once addressed a letter to the
-officer commanding the regiment for some information regarding the
-runaway.
-
-In due time an answer came from Colonel James Campbell, to state
-"that no volunteer named Quentin Kennedy had attached himself to the
-94th Regiment," thus the household of the old castle were sorely
-perplexed what to do, and had to trust to time or to Quentin himself
-for clearing up the mystery that overhung his actions.
-
-In little more than ten days after Cosmo's name had appeared in the
-War Office _Gazette_, Quentin received the unwelcome information that
-the new lieutenant-colonel, his enemy, had arrived at head-quarters,
-and that a parade in full marching order was to take place on the
-morrow, when he would formally take over the command of the corps
-from poor Major Middleton.
-
-Though daily expected, these tidings fell like a knell upon Quentin's
-heart, and the old sickly emotion that came over him, when Warriston
-brought the fatal _Gazette_ to the mess-room, returned again in all
-its force.
-
-"I think this Guardsman will prove a thorough Tartar," said Captain
-Askerne, in whose rooms Quentin first heard Cosmo's arrival
-canvassed; "and I fear that he won't make himself popular among the
-Borderers."
-
-"From what do you infer that?" said some one.
-
-"He refused to let the drums beat the 'Point of War' this morning."
-
-"The devil he did!" said Colville.
-
-"That looks ill, damme!" added Monkton.
-
-"I do not understand," said Quentin, as if looking for information.
-
-"It is," said Askerne, "a custom as old as the days of Queen
-Anne--older, perhaps, for aught that I know--for the drums and fifes
-of a corps to assemble before the quarters of every officer who is
-newly appointed to it, and there to honour the king's commission by
-beating the 'Point of War.' Though dying out now, and frequently
-'more honoured in the breach than the observance,' it is a good old
-custom, peculiar to many of our Scottish regiments. The officer then
-gives to the drummers a few crowns or guineas, as the case may be, to
-drink his health; but the Master of Rohallion bluntly and haughtily
-told the drum-major that he 'would have no such d--d nonsense, and to
-dismiss!'"
-
-"The deuce! this augurs ill," said Colville, with his affected lisp,
-as he arranged his hair in Askerne's little camp mirror.
-
-"Perhaps his exchequer is in a bad way."
-
-"Not improbable, Monkton," said Askerne; "he was one of the most
-lavish fellows in the household brigade, and he played and betted
-deeply; but there goes the drum for parade; in a few minutes we shall
-see what like our new man is."
-
-We shall not afflict the reader with details of this most formal
-parade, during which the regiment marched past Cosmo in slow and
-quick time in open column of companies; then followed an inspection
-of the men, their clothing, arms, accoutrements, and everything, from
-the regimental colours to the pioneers' hand-saws; but thanks to old
-Middleton's unwearying zeal and pride in the Borderers, the somewhat
-fractious lieutenant-colonel discovered nothing to find fault with.
-
-Mounted on a fine dark charger, with gold-laced saddlecloth and
-holsters, Cosmo, in his new regimentals, looked every inch a handsome
-and stately soldier; and his appearance, together with his clear,
-full, mellow voice, when commanding, impressed the corps favourably.
-Quentin, from the rear rank of Askerne's company, surveyed him
-earnestly, anxiously, and with secret misgivings; for every feature
-of his cold, keen, and aristocratic face brought back vividly the
-mortifying and unpleasant passages in which they had both borne a
-part at Rohallion, and sadly and bitterly he felt that the worst was
-yet to come.
-
-The parade over, the regiment was dismissed, but the orderly bugle
-summoned the officers to the front, where they gathered around Cosmo,
-who had dismounted and haughtily tossed his reins to an orderly
-(Allan Grange, the crest-fallen and reduced sergeant), his
-gentleman's gentleman--that town-bred appendage who had excited
-alternately the wrath and contempt of sturdy old Jack Andrews, had
-resigned, having no fancy for the chances of war as a camp-follower;
-so the Master had to content himself with such unfashionable "helps"
-as soldiers and batmen.
-
-Quentin, lingering irresolutely, and half hoping to escape
-observation, was about to retire to his quarters, when Askerne called
-to him with a friendly smile--
-
-"Kennedy, come to the front; Middleton is about to introduce the
-officers, and you must not be omitted."
-
-Poor Quentin felt that his doom had come, and he could feel, too,
-that as his heart sank, the blood left his cheeks. But honest anger
-and just indignation came to the rescue, and gave him courage.
-
-"Why should I dread this man--why shrink from one I have never
-wronged?" he asked of himself. "Of what am I afraid? The sooner
-this introduction is over, and that I know on what terms we are to
-be, the better. Perhaps he may be desirous of forgetting the past,
-of committing to oblivion all that has occurred, and may be the first
-to hold out a friendly hand. Heaven grant it may be so!"
-
-But this suggestion of his own generous heart was little likely to be
-realized.
-
-With studied politeness and grace, if not with pure cordiality, Cosmo
-received each officer as he was presented according to his rank,
-until the junior ensign, Boyle, was introduced.
-
-"Ah!" said Cosmo, detecting one present without epaulettes, "you have
-a volunteer with you, I see."
-
-"One," said Middleton, "whom I wish especially to introduce to your
-notice and future care, colonel, as a most promising young soldier,
-who in a few weeks has passed through all his drills, and is now fit
-for any duty. Mr. Quentin Kennedy--Colonel Crawford."
-
-The nervous start given by Cosmo, the changing colour of his cheek,
-the shrinking and dilation of his cat-like eyes, as he raised and
-almost nervously let fall his eye-glass, were apparent to several;
-and Quentin saw the whole. Cosmo bowed with marked coldness, and
-turned so sharply on his heel, that his spurs rasped on the gravel of
-the barrack-yard.
-
-"Major Middleton," said he, haughtily, before retiring, "tell that
-young man, Mr.--what's his name----?"
-
-"Mr. Kennedy, sir."
-
-"That when speaking to an officer, he should bring his musket to the
-_recover_."
-
-And so ended this--to Quentin--most crushing interview.
-
-"What the devil is up now?" said Monkton to Colville; "it is evident
-that our new bashaw doesn't like gentlemen volunteers."
-
-"Then he is devilishly unjust--that's all," said Askerne the
-Grenadier who had begun his military life as a volunteer.
-
-Quentin could have furnished the clue to all this; but to speak of
-the friendless childhood which cast him among the household at
-Rohallion, and, more than all, to speak of Flora Warrender, and to
-make her name the jest of the heedless or unfeeling, were thoughts
-that could not be endured. He was, silent, and his tongue seemed as
-if cleaving to the roof of his mouth, while wearily and sadly he
-turned away to seek the solitude of his bare and scantily-furnished
-little room.
-
-Middleton, who had followed unobserved, entered after him, and just
-when Quentin, to relieve his overcharged heart, was on the point of
-giving way to a paroxysm of rage, even to tears, the worthy old field
-officer caught his hand kindly, and said with earnestness--
-
-"Don't be cast down, my boy, by what has occurred to-day. He was
-cold and haughty to every one of us, but it is evidently his way, and
-may wear off after a time. I hope so, for our Borderers won't stand
-it. Take courage, lad--take courage, and don't fret about it; Jack
-Middleton will always be your friend, though a hostile commanding
-officer is a dangerous rock ahead."
-
-"Oh, major, you are indeed kind and good," said Quentin, as he seated
-himself at the hard wood table, and covered his burning face with his
-trembling hands; "but you know not all I have suffered--all I think,
-and feel, and fear!"
-
-"Chut, Kennedy, look up! 'The English pluck that storms a breach or
-heads a charge is the very same quality that sustains a man on the
-long dark road of adverse fortune,' says an author--I forget who--not
-he of the 'Eighteen Manœuvres,' however; so, Quentin; don't, let
-Scottish pluck be behind it. To follow the drum is your true road in
-life, boy, and who but God can tell when that road may end?"
-
-"Major Middleton," said Quentin, bitterly, "the colonel's chilling
-manner, and more than you can ever know, have crushed the heart
-within me. I never knew my father--of my mother I have barely a
-memory," he continued in a broken voice--"a memory, a dream! Fate
-has made me early a victim--a plaything--a toy! Advise me--I feel my
-condition so desolate, so friendless again. What future can there be
-for me, if I continue to serve under him; and how can I hope for
-happiness, for justice, or advancement under such as he?"
-
-"Obey and suffer in silence; bear and forbear, and you will be sure
-to triumph in the end. 'He that tholes overcomes,' says our Scottish
-proverb, and the poor soldier has much to _thole_ indeed; but do your
-duty diligently, and you may defy any man--even the king himself."
-
-Quentin strove to take courage from the good major's words, and
-ultimately did so; but Middleton knew not the past of those he spoke
-of, and was ignorant of the secret rivalry and settled hatred that
-existed between them, especially in the heart of Cosmo; while
-Quentin, in his ignorance of military matters, knew not that the
-Master, if he chose to exert his powers arbitrarily, might dismiss
-him from the corps at once, unquestioned by any authority for doing
-so; and that by the stigma thus attached to his name, the chance of
-any other commanding officer accepting him as a volunteer would be
-utterly precluded; and that Cosmo did not do so was, perhaps, only by
-a lingering emotion of justice or of shame for what his family, and
-chiefly Flora Warrender and that huge bugbear "the world," would say
-if the story got abroad.
-
-"Better trust to the _chances_ of war," thought Cosmo, grimly, as he
-lay sullenly at length, smoking, on a luxurious fauteuil in his ample
-quarters, which were furnished with all the comforts and elegance
-with which a Jew broker could surround him; "a brat, a boy, a
-chick--a d--ned foundling! With all my conscious superiority of
-rank, birth, and, what are better, strength of mind and character,
-why do I dread this Quentin Kennedy? Why and how does he seem to be
-so inextricably woven up with me, my fate and fortune--it may be,
-with the house of Rohallion itself? Last of all, why the devil do I
-find him here?" (This question he almost shouted aloud as he kicked
-away the cushion of the fauteuil.) "Why do I dread him?
-_Dread_--I--shame! what delusion is this--what depression is it that
-his presence--the very idea of his existence--and contact bring upon
-me? In all this there is some strange fate--I know not what; but I
-shall trust to the chances of war for a riddance, and to the perilous
-work I shall cut out for _him_ in particular."
-
-And so he trusted; but with what success we shall see ere long.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE DEPARTURE.
-
- "Our native land--our native vale--
- A long and last adieu;
- Farewell to bonny Teviotdale,
- And Cheviot mountains blue!
- The battle-mound, the border-tower,
- That Scotia's annals tell;
- The martyr's grave--the lover's bower--
- To each, to all--farewell."--PRINGLE.
-
-
-Cosmo studiously and ungenerously omitted the slightest mention of
-Quentin's name or existence in the letters which he wrote home to
-Carrick, well knowing that if he did so, the kind old general, his
-father, would at once address the authorities at the Horse Guards on
-the subject of the young volunteer's advancement; and he knew, that
-if appointed to any other corps than the Borderers, Quentin would be
-beyond his influence, and free from the wiles and perils in which he
-had mentally proposed to involve his future career.
-
-At last came the day so long looked forward to by all the
-regiment--the day of its departure for foreign service, as it proved
-in the Spanish Peninsula, the land to which, after several useless
-and bloody expeditions to Holland, Flanders, Sweden, and Italy, the
-thoughts and hopes and all the sympathies of Britain turned, with the
-desire of driving out the victorious French, and restoring the
-Bourbon dynasty--almost an old story now, so remote have the
-struggles before Sebastopol and the wars of India made the great
-battles of those days seem to be.
-
-The regiment had been under orders, and in a state of readiness for
-weeks; but until, for it and for others, the _route_ came in the
-sabretasche of an orderly dragoon who rode spurring in "hot haste" to
-Colchester Barracks, its members knew not for what country they were
-destined.
-
-The drums beat the _générale_, the signal for marching, early in the
-morning of a soft September day, and the four pipers of the regiment
-played loud and high a piobroch, that rang wildly, in all its various
-parts, through the calm air, waking every echo of the old barrack
-square; for the piobroch, we may inform the uninitiated, is a regular
-piece of music, containing several portions; beginning with an alarm,
-after which follow the muster, the march, the fury of the charge, the
-shrill triumph of victory, and the low sad wail for the slain.
-
-With our battalion of the Borderers, there were to march on this
-morning another of the Gordon Highlanders--the 92nd--one of the most
-noble of our national corps, together with a strong detachment of the
-91th, under Captain Warriston, so the enthusiasm of all was at its
-height when, in heavy marching order, with great coats rolled on the
-knapsacks, blankets folded behind them, havresacks and wooden
-canteens slung, the companies fell in, and there seemed to be a
-rivalry between the kilted pipers of the 92nd and the Borderers as to
-who should excel most, or (as Cosmo, who was not inspired by overmuch
-nationality, said to Middleton) who should "make the most infernal
-noise."
-
-Silent and grim, and keeping somewhat haughtily aloof from all his
-officers, Cosmo sat on his black horse, gnawing the chin-strap of his
-shako, as if controlling some secret irritation, while watching the
-formation of the corps, looking very much the while as if longing to
-find fault with some one.
-
-"And so we are destined to reinforce the army under Sir John Moore?"
-said Quentin, for lack of something more important to remark.
-
-"Yes," said Askerne, as he adjusted the cheek-scales of his tall
-grenadier cap; "Sir John is a glorious fellow, and quite the man of
-to-day."
-
-"I would rather be the man of _to-morrow_," said Monkton, with an air
-that implied a joke, though there was something prophetic in the wish.
-
-"I knew Moore when he was serving as a subaltern with the 82nd in
-America--he is a brave, good fellow, and a countryman of our own,
-too," said Middleton, whose orderly brought forward his horse at that
-moment; "and now," he added, putting his foot in the stirrup, "a long
-good-bye to the land of roast-beef, and to poor old Scotland, too! I
-wonder who among us here will see her heather hills and grassy glens
-again--God bless them all!" And reverentially the fine old man
-raised his hand to his cap as he spoke.
-
-A crowd formed by the soldiers' wives and children of the regiment,
-now gathered round him, for the old major knew all their names and
-little necessities, and was adored by them all. Now he was
-distributing among them money, advice, and letters of recommendation
-to parish ministers and others, and to none was he more kind than to
-the weeping wife of Allan Grange, who, by his reduction to the ranks,
-lost nearly every chance of accompanying the troops abroad.
-
-To the screaming of the bagpipes had now succeeded the wailing of
-women, for many soldiers' wives and children were to be left behind,
-and to be transferred to their several parishes in Scotland; many to
-remote glens that are desolate wildernesses now; and it was touching
-to see these poor creatures, looking so pale and miserable in the
-cold grey light of the early morning, each with her wondering little
-brood clinging to her skirts, as she hovered about the company to
-which her husband belonged, his quivering lip and glistening eye
-alone revealing the heart that ached beneath the coarse red coat,
-amid the monotony of calling rolls and inspecting arms.
-
-On one of the waggons which was piled high with baggage, huge chests
-of spare arms, iron-bound trunks, camp-beds and folded tents, Quentin
-tossed the little portmanteau which contained his entire worldly
-possessions; then the baggage-guard, looking so serviceable and
-warlike with their havresacks and canteens slung crosswise, came with
-bayonets fixed, and the great wains rumbled away through the echoing,
-and as yet empty streets of Colchester.
-
-None of the officers were married men, fortunately for themselves
-perhaps, at such a juncture. The colours were brought forth with
-their black oilskin cases on; the advanced guard marched off, and
-just as the sun began to gild the church vanes and chimney-tops, and
-while reiterated cheers rang from the thousands of soldiers who
-crowded the barrack windows, and whose turn would come anon, the
-troops moved off, the brass bands of other regiments--the usual
-courtesy--playing them out, the whole being under the command of the
-senior officer present, Lieutenant-Colonel Napier of Blackstone, who
-afterwards fell at the head of the 92nd Highlanders on the field of
-Corunna.
-
-In the excitement of the scene, Quentin felt all its influences and
-marched happily on. He forgot his affronts, his piques and
-jealousies, and as the young blood coursed lightly through his veins,
-he felt that he could forgive even Cosmo, were it only for Lady
-Winifred's sake, when he saw him riding with so stately and
-soldier-like an air between Major Middleton and Buckle the adjutant,
-at the end of the column, where the splendid grenadiers with their
-black bearskin caps and braided wings, made a martial show such as no
-company of the line could do in the shorn uniform of the present day.
-
-All the happy impulses of youth made Quentin's spirit buoyant; thus
-his light heart beat responsive to the crash of the drums and
-cymbals, and to every note of the brass band. Thus, when on looking
-to the rear, he saw so many hundred bayonets and clear barrels (they
-were not browned in those days) flashing in the sun, with the long
-array of plumed Highlanders that wound through the streets after his
-own regiment, he forgot, we say, his grievances, and the cold and
-haughty Master--we believe he forgot even Flora Warrender--he forgot
-all but that he was a soldier--one of the old 25th, and bound for the
-seat of war! Ah, there is something glorious in these emotions--this
-flushing up of the spirit in a young and generous breast; but alas!
-the time comes when we look back to the long-past days with envy,
-regret, and, it may be--wonder!
-
-The sorrowful parting, the hurried embraces, the last kisses, the sad
-and lingering glances of farewell being exchanged along the line of
-march every moment, by husbands and wives, by parents and children,
-as group after group gradually dropped to the rear of the column they
-could but follow with their eyes and hearts, ceased after a time to
-impress him by their very number and frequency; thus he soon laughed
-with the gay, and enjoyed all the silly banter of the heedless, as
-the officers began to group by twos and threes, after Colchester was
-left behind, and the troops were permitted to "march at ease" along
-the dusty highway between the meadows and ploughed fields.
-
-"I have never seen so jolly a morning as this," said Ensign Boyle, as
-he trudged along with the regimental colour crossed on his left
-shoulder; "never since first I saw my own name in print!"
-
-"How in print?" asked Quentin, with simplicity; "you do not mean on
-the title-page of a book?"
-
-"Not at all--nothing so stupid--I mean in the Army List----"
-
-"Where you have never been tired of contemplating it since--eh,
-Pimple?" asked Monkton; "but I hope you have left your flirting
-jacket and best epaulettes with the heavy baggage--you only need your
-fighting traps now."
-
-"I say, Pimple," said Colyear, the senior ensign, who, of course, had
-the King's colour, "how much of the ready had that flax-spinner's
-daughter, about whom Monkton quizzes you so much?"
-
-"Rumour said twenty thousand pounds."
-
-"The devil! You might have done worse--aw--eh!"
-
-"We're all doing worse, damme, marching for embarkation on this fine
-sunny morning," said Monkton. "There goes the band again to the old
-air; but, save you, Pimple, few among us leave 'girls behind us' with
-twenty thousand pounds."
-
-"Adieu to Colchester, its morning drills and monotonous guards, and
-that devilish incessant patter of little drum-boys practising their
-da-da, ma-ma, on the drum from sunrise till sunset," said Colville,
-looking back to where the strong old Saxon castle and the brick
-steeple of St. Peter were being shrouded in yellow morning haze
-exhaled by the sun from the river Colne.
-
-"Bon voyage," cried a gay staff-officer, lifting his plumed cocked
-hat, as he cantered gaily past; "good-bye, gentlemen."
-
-"Adieu, Conyers," replied Monkton; "can I do anything for you?"
-
-"Where?"
-
-"Among the ladies in Lisbon?"
-
-The officer made no reply, but rode hurriedly on.
-
-"That is the fellow who had to quit Wellesley's staff for eloping
-with some hidalgo's wife, the night after Vimiera," said Askerne.
-"Monkton, you hit him hard there."
-
-"Don't you think old Jack Middleton looks dull this morning?" asked
-some one.
-
-"The colonel is in a devil of a temper, I think," replied Askerne.
-
-"Perhaps he has left his love behind him," suggested Boyle, raising
-his stupid white eyebrows sentimentally; "don't you think so,
-Kennedy?"
-
-"Pimple, allow me to rebuke you," said Monkton, with an air of mock
-severity. "An ensign may wear a faded rose next his beating heart;
-but in a field-officer, such an insane proceeding is not to be
-thought of."
-
-While this empty talk was in progress, about eight miles from
-Colchester, a troop of the Scots Greys approached en route for that
-place; and, as they drew near, the drums and fifes of the Borderers
-struck up a lively national quick step; the Greys brandished their
-swords, and gave a hearty cheer on coming abreast of the colours of
-each regiment, and loud were the hurrahs which responded.
-
-This little episode, and the thoughtless banter which preceded it,
-had raised Quentin's spirits to a high state of effervescence. Fresh
-hope had come with all her ruddiest tints to brighten the future and
-blot out the past, and with all the glorious confidence of youth, he
-was again building castles in the air, on this morning march, when
-the sun that shone so joyously on the green English landscape, added
-to the brilliance of his thoughts and enhanced his joy and happiness.
-
-From his day-dreams, however, he was roughly awakened by the harsh
-voice of the Master of Rohallion, who half reined in his horse, and
-turning round with his right hand planted on the crupper, said with
-great sternness:
-
-"Captain Askerne, I must remind you that, though officers may
-converse together when the men are marching at ease, such a privilege
-can by no means be accorded to a mere volunteer. Mr. Kennedy, rejoin
-your section, and keep your place, sir!"
-
-Askerne's dark and handsome face coloured up to the rim of his
-bearskin cap, and his eyes sparkled with rage at the colonel's
-petulant wantonness; while poor Quentin, who, lost in his bright
-day-dreamings, had certainly, but unconsciously, diverged a few paces
-from the line of march to converse with his friends, fell sadly back
-into the ranks, and felt that the dark cloud was enveloping him again.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-ON THE SEA.
-
- "A varied scene the changeful vision showed,
- For where the ocean mingled with the cloud,
- A gallant navy stemmed the billows broad.
- Blent with the silver cross to Scotland dear,
- From mast and stern, St. George's symbol flow'd,
- Mottling the sea their landward barges row'd,
- And flashed the sun on bayonet, brand, and spear,
- And the wild beach returned the seaman's jovial cheer."
- _Vision of Don Roderick._
-
-
-The kingdom of Spain was at this time the great centre of European
-political interest. France, Prussia, and Russia had scarcely
-sheathed their swords at Tilsit, when the terrible conspiracy of
-Ferdinand, the Prince of the Asturias, against his father, Charles
-IV.--a plot imputed to Michael Godoy, who, from a simple cavalier of
-the Royal Guard, had, by the queen's too partial favour, obtained the
-blasphemous title of the Prince of Peace--afforded the Emperor
-Napoleon, whose creature he was, a pretext for interfering in the
-affairs of the Spanish Bourbons. He decoyed the royal family to
-Bayonne, compelled their renunciation of the crown and kingdom of
-Spain, into which he poured at once his vast armies, and, after the
-fashion of the cat in the fable, who absorbed the whole matter in
-dispute by the monkeys, he solved the problem by seizing the Spanish
-empire, and gifting it to his brother Joseph, formerly King of Naples.
-
-Portugal, at this juncture, deserted by her government and by her
-pitiful king, who fled to Rio de Janeiro, in Brazil, fell easily into
-the power of a French army, under Marshal Junot, who was thereupon
-created Duke of Abrantes, a town on the Portuguese frontier.
-
-All Europe cried aloud at these lawless proceedings, and the
-Spaniards, so long our enemies, with our old allies the Portuguese,
-were alike filled with fury and resentment. The peasantry flew to
-arms, and the provinces became filled by bands of guerillas, brave
-but reckless; so the whole peninsula was full of tumult, treason,
-bloodshed, and crime.
-
-"England," says General Napier, "both at home and abroad, was, in
-1808, scorned as a military power, when she possessed (without a
-frontier to swallow up large armies in expensive fortresses) at least
-two hundred thousand of the best equipped and best disciplined
-soldiers in the universe, together with an immense recruiting
-establishment through the medium of the militia."
-
-War, not "Peace at any price," was the generous John Bull's motto,
-and, to aid these patriots, a British army proceeded to the peninsula
-in June, 1808, under the command of Lieutenant-General Sir Arthur
-Wellesley. Some sharp fighting ensued along the coast, the prologue
-to the long and bloody, but glorious drama, that was only to
-terminate on the plains of Waterloo.
-
-On the 21st of August we fought and won the battle of Vimiera, and
-nine days after followed the convention of Cintra, by which the
-French troops were compelled to evacuate the ancient Lusitania, and
-were conveyed home in British ships; but still the marshals of the
-empire, with vast armies, the heroes of Jena, Austerlitz, and a
-hundred other battles so glorious to France, were covering all the
-provinces of Spain, from the steeps of the Pyrenees to the arid
-plains of Estremadura.
-
-"Soldiers, I have need of you," says the emperor, in one of his
-bulletins. "The hideous presence of the leopard contaminates the
-peninsula of Spain and Portugal. In terror he must fly before you!
-Let us bear our triumphal eagles to the pillars of Hercules, for
-there also we have injuries to avenge! Soldiers, you have surpassed
-the renown of modern armies, but have you yet equalled the glory of
-those Romans, who, in one and the same campaign, were victorious upon
-the Rhine and the Euphrates, in Illyria and upon the Tagus? A long
-peace and lasting prosperity shall be the reward of your labours."
-
-The standard of freedom was first raised among the Asturians, the
-hardy descendants of the ancient Goths, and in Galicia; then Don José
-Palafox, by his valiant defence of the crumbling walls of Zaragossa,
-showed the Spaniards what brave men might do when fighting for their
-hearths and homes.
-
-"In a few days," said Napoleon, boastfully, in the October of 1808,
-"I go to put myself at the head of my armies, and, with the aid of
-God, to crown the King of Spain in Madrid, and plant my eagles on the
-towers of Lisbon."
-
-The Junta of the Asturias craved the assistance of Britain, even
-while the shattered wrecks of Trafalgar lay rotting on the sandy
-coast of Andalusia. Three years had committed those days of strife
-to oblivion, or nearly so, and arms, ammunition, clothing, and money
-were freely given to the patriots, while all the Spanish prisoners
-were sent home. Then, Sir John Moore, who commanded the British
-forces in Portugal, a small but determined "handful," was ordered to
-advance into Spain against the vast forces of the Duke of Dalmatia,
-which brings us now to the exact period of our own humble story, from
-which we have no intention of diverging again into the history of
-Europe.
-
-The body of troops among which our hero formed a unit, sailed in
-transports from Spithead, and in the Channel, and when Portland
-lights were twinkling out upon the weather-beam, poor Quentin endured
-for the first time the horrors of sea-sickness, and lay for hours
-half-stifled in a close dark berth, unheeded and forgotten,
-overpowered by the odour of tar, paint, and bilge, and by a thirst
-which he had not the means of quenching, for he was helpless, unable
-to move and longed only for death.
-
-It was no spacious, airy, and gigantic _Himalaya_, no magnificent
-screw-propeller like the _Urgent_, the _Perseverance_, or any other
-of our noble steam transports that, on this occasion received the
-head-quarters of the "King's Own Borderers," but a clumsy, old, and
-leaky tub, bluff-bowed and pinck-built, with her top-masts stayed
-forward, and her bowsprit tilted up at an angle of 45 degrees, and
-having a jack-staff rigged thereon. She was a black-painted bark of
-some four hundred tons, with the figures "200 T."--(signifying
-Transport No. 200)--of giant size appearing on her headrails.
-Between floors or decks hastily constructed for the purpose, the poor
-soldiers were stowed in darkness, discomfort, and filth. The
-officers were little better off in the cabin, and hourly their
-servants scrambled, quarrelled, and swore in the cooks' galley, about
-their several masters' rank and seniority in the order of boiling
-kettles and arranging frying-pans, whilst the hissing spray swept
-over them every time the old tub staggered under her fore course, and
-shipped a sea instead of riding buoyantly over it.
-
-In the mighty stride taken by civilization of late years, when steam
-and electricity alike conduce to the annihilation of time and space,
-the soldiers of the Victorian age know little of what their fathers
-in the service underwent, when old George III. was King. In stench,
-uncleanness, and lack of comfort and accommodation, our shipping were
-then unchanged from those which landed Orange William's Dutchmen at
-Torbay, or which conveyed our luckless troops in after years to the
-storming of the Havannah or the bombardment of Bocca Chica.
-
-After Quentin had recovered his strength (got his "sea-legs" as the
-sailors have it) he presented his pale, wan face on deck one morning,
-when the whole fleet, with the convoy, a stately 74-gun ship, were
-scattered, with drenched canvas, like sea-birds with dripping wings,
-as they scudded before a heavy gale, through the dark grey waters of
-the Bay of Biscay, the waves of which were rolling in foam, under a
-cold and cheerless October sky.
-
-On that comfortless voyage to the seat of war, many were the secret
-heart-burnings he felt; many were the cutting slights put upon him by
-his cold and hostile commanding officer, who went the tyrannical
-length of even raising doubts as to whether he should mess in the
-cabin or among the soldiers; but to Cosmo's ill-concealed rage and
-confusion, the motion was carried unanimously and emphatically in the
-poor lad's favour; that the cabin was his place, as a candidate for
-his Majesty's commission.
-
-Cosmo gave a smile somewhat singular in expression, and unfathomable
-in meaning, when Major Middleton communicated to him the decision of
-the officers; but though victorious in this instance, young as he
-was, the new affront sank deep in Quentin's heart, and he felt that
-there was "a shadow on his path" there could be no avoiding now.
-
-So rapidly had events succeeded each other since that evening on
-which the Master had so savagely struck him down in the avenue, that
-Quentin frequently wondered whether his past or his present life were
-a dream. His last meeting with Flora Warrender among the old and
-shady sycamores--Flora so loving, so tender, and true!--his last
-farewell of old John Girvan (but one of whose guineas remained
-unchanged); that horrid episode of the dead gipsy, when he sought
-shelter in the ruined vault of Kilhenzie; the drive in the carrier's
-waggon; his volunteering at Ayr; the march to Edinburgh, with the
-voyage to England in the armed smack, and his subsequent military
-life, all appeared but a long dream, in which events succeeded each
-other with pantomimic rapidity; and it was difficult to believe that
-only months and not years, must have elapsed since the kind and
-fatherly quartermaster closed the gate of Rohallion Castle behind
-him. And now he was sailing far away upon the open sea, bound for
-Spain--a soldier going to meet the victorious veterans of Napoleon,
-in England alike the bugbear of the politician and the truant
-school-boy; and he was in the 25th too--that corps of which, from
-childhood, he had heard so much, and under the orders, it might be
-said truly at the mercy, of his personal enemy and bad angel, the
-cold, proud Master of Rohallion!
-
-He found it difficult indeed to realize the whole and disentangle
-fact from fancy--reality from imagination; but that the faces of
-Monkton, Boyle, and the good Captain Warriston, when he saw him
-occasionally, were as links in the chain of events, and gave them
-coherency.
-
-At times, especially after dreams of home (for such he could not but
-consider Rohallion), there came keen longings in his heart to see
-Flora once again and hear her voice, which often came plainly,
-sweetly, and distinctly to his ear in sleep. Of her, alas! he had
-not one single memento; not a ring, a miniature, a ribbon, a
-glove--not even a lock of her soft hair--the hair that had swept his
-face on that delightful day when he carried her through the Kelpie's
-pool in the Girvan, and which he had kissed and caressed, in many a
-delicious hour spent with her in the yew labyrinth of the old garden,
-by the antique arch that spanned the Lollards' Linn, under the
-venerable sycamores that cast their shadows on the haunted gate, or
-where the honey bee hummed on the heather braes that sloped so
-sweetly in the evening sunshine towards the blue Firth of Clyde.
-
-From soft day-dreams of those past hours of happiness he was roused
-on the evening of the 3rd October by the boom of a heavy gun from the
-convoy, and several signals soon fluttered amid the smoke that curled
-upward through her lofty rigging. They were to the effect that land
-ivas in sight--the fleet of transports to close in upon the
-convoy--the swift sailers to take the dull in tow; and now from the
-grey Atlantic rose a greyer streak, which gradually became broken and
-violet-coloured in the sheen of the sun that was setting in the
-western waves, as the hills of Portuguese Estremadura came gradually
-into form and tint, on the lee-bow of the transport.
-
-Next morning, when day broke, he found the whole fleet at anchor in
-Maciera Bay, and all the hurry and bustle on board of immediate
-preparations to land the troops on the open and sandy beach, where,
-when the tide meets the river, a dangerous surf rolls at times, and
-from thence they were, without delay, to march to the front.
-
-It was a glorious day, though in the last month of autumn. The ruddy
-sun of Lusitania was shining gaily on the hills and valley of
-Maciera, and on the plain beyond, where already the grass was growing
-green above the graves of our soldiers, who fell three months before
-at the battle of Vimiera. But little recked the newcomers of that,
-as the boats of the fleet covered all the bay, whose surface was
-churned into foam by hundreds of oars, while clouds of shakos and
-Highland bonnets were waved in the air, and swords and bayonets were
-brandished in the sunshine, as with loud hurrahs, that were repeated
-from the ships, and re-echoed by the rocks and indentations of the
-shore, the soldiers of the Borderers and the 92nd anticipated a share
-in the laurels that had been won at Rolica and Vimiera--hopes many
-were destined never to realize; for like the thousands who,
-elsewhere, were marching under Moore and others, towards Castile and
-Leon, full of youth and health, joy and spirit, many were doomed but
-to suffer and die, unhonoured and unurned.
-
-Portugal, as we have stated, having been rescued from the grasp of
-the French by the treaty of Cintra, and Sir John Moore having been
-ordered to advance into Spain, notification came that a fresh force
-from Britain, under the orders of Sir David Baird, would land at
-Corunna, to co-operate with him. Thus the troops on board the little
-fleet in Maciera Bay were ordered at once to cross the Tagus,
-traverse Portugal, and join him on the frontiers--a march of more
-than one hundred and twenty miles, in a land where the art of
-road-making had died out with the Romans.
-
-At this time the British forces in the Peninsula numbered forty-eight
-thousand three hundred and forty-one, bayonets and sabres.
-
-On the 15th of the next month the French in Spain, commanded by the
-Emperor in person made a grand total of three hundred and thirty-five
-thousand two hundred and twenty-three men, with upwards of sixty
-thousand horses; yet, with hearts that knew no fear, our soldiers
-marched to begin that struggle so perilous and unequal, but so
-glorious in the end!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-PORTALEGRE.
-
- "You ask what's campaigning? As out the truth must,
- 'Tis a round of complaining, vexation, disgust,
- Night marches and day, in pursuit of our foes,
- Up hill or down dale, without prog or dry clothes;
- And to add to our pleasure in every shape,
- The French give us doses of round shot and grape."
- _Military Panorama_, vol. ii.
-
-
-On the evening of the 11th October, the armed guerillas who hovered
-on the wooded mountains which look down on the rough old winding
-Roman highway that leads from the dilapidated citadel of Crato to
-Portalegre, saw the glitter of arms in the yellow sunshine, the
-flashing of polished barrels and bright bayonets, and the waving of
-uncased colours, amid the clouds of rolling dust that betoken the
-march of troops; and ere long, the same picturesque gentry, in their
-mantles, sombreros, and sheepskin zamarras, might have heard the
-martial rattle of the British drum, and the shrill notes of the fife,
-together with wilder strain of the Scottish bagpipe, echoing between
-the green and fertile ranges of the sierra that there forms the
-northern boundary of Alentejo, and the sides of which are clothed in
-many places by groves of olive, laurel and orange trees; but from the
-latter the golden fruit had long since been gathered, ere it was
-quite ripe, to save it alike from the marauding soldiery of friend
-and foe.
-
-Covered with the dust of a march of twenty miles from the rustic
-village of Gaviao, they were our old friends of the 25th, the
-Highlanders, and Warriston's detachment, that were now approaching
-the head-quarters of the division to which they were to be attached.
-
-On this route from the Bay of Maciera, Quentin had undergone all the
-misery of a soldier's life during the wet season in Portugal, where
-the towns were then in ruins and desolate, the country utterly
-destroyed, and where every one who was not in arms seemed to have
-fled towards the coast, for, like the breath of a destroying angel,
-the armies of France had passed over the entire length of the land
-from Algarve to Galicia, laying all desolate in that wicked spirit of
-waste which has been so peculiar to the French soldier in all ages.
-
-Each day, in lieu of the old Scottish reveille welcoming the morning,
-Quentin had heard the sharp note of the warning bugle, or of the
-drummer beating hastily the _générale_, through the ruined streets of
-Santarem, of Abrantes or elsewhere; through the equally silent lines
-of tents when they encamped on the mountains, or the miserable
-bivouac when they halted in some wild place where whilom maize or
-Indian corn grew, summoning the drowsy and weary soldiers to their
-ranks for the monotonous march of another day.
-
-From the bare boards, the hard-tiled floor, or perhaps the cold
-ground, whereon our volunteer had slept with his knapsack for a
-pillow, he had been roused by the voices of the sergeant-major, or
-Buckle the adjutant, shouting in the grey morning, "Fall in,
-25th--stand to your arms--turn out the whole!" while the rain that
-swept in sheet-like torrents along the desolate streets, and the gale
-that tore in angry gusts among the ruined gables and shattered
-windows, formed no pleasant prelude to a day's march that was to be
-begun without other breakfast, perhaps, than a ration biscuit soaked
-in the half-stale fluid that filled his wooden canteen.
-
-In camp, the tents were made to hold twelve soldiers each; but some
-of these were always on duty. All lay with their feet to the pole
-and their heads to the wall or curtain. Each man's pack was his
-pillow, and each slept, if he could, with a blanket half under and
-half over him. The rain always sputtered and filtered through in
-their faces, till the drenched canvas tightened, and the water was
-carried off by a little circular trench.
-
-Quentin shared Askerne's tent with his two subalterns.
-
-So the night would pass, till the cry of "Rouse!" rang along the
-lines, and the bugles sounded the assembly, when the blankets were
-rolled up and strapped to the knapsacks; the wet tents were struck
-and folded; the pegs and mallets replaced in their bags, and the
-troops prepared to march in the grey morning haze, weary, wet, stiff
-and sore, by reposing on the damp sod.
-
-Quentin had always fancied a bivouac a species of military pic-nic,
-minus the ladies, pink cream, and champagne; but on the first night
-he lay in one, when the baggage guard was lagging in the rear and no
-tents were pitched, as he was drenched in a soaking blanket under the
-cold October wind that swept down the rocky sierra, he began to have
-serious doubts whether man was really a warm-blooded animal.
-
-"Ugh!" grumbled Monkton on this night, "who, with brains in his
-head-piece, would become a soldier?"
-
-"You remind me," said Askerne, as he shook the water for the
-twentieth time from his bear-skin cap, "of a story I have heard of
-Maitland, one of our early colonels who served on the staff of the
-Duke of Marlborough. It was at Blenheim, I think, when he was riding
-along the line accompanied by the colonel and another aide-de-camp,
-whose head was suddenly shattered by a cannon shot from the Bavarian
-artillery. Perceiving that Maitland looked long and fixedly at the
-fallen man, Marlborough said angrily--
-
-"'Colonel Maitland, what the devil are you wondering at?'
-
-"'Simply, that how a man possessed of so much brains as our poor
-friend, ever became a soldier,' replied Maitland, and the phlegmatic
-victor of Blenheim and Ramilies smiled as he rode on."
-
-Then the dinner during a halt on the march was not tempting, and the
-cuisine was so decidedly bad that even Monkton could not joke about
-it. The slices of beef fried in a camp-kettle lid, or broiled on an
-old ramrod--beef that had never been _cold_ (the miserable ration
-bullocks after being goaded in rear of the troops for miles by
-muleteers and mounted guerillas, being shot, flayed and cut up the
-moment the drum beat to prepare for dinner) was always tough as
-india-rubber; while the soup which the soldiers tried to make with a
-few handfuls of rice and the bones of the said bullocks, lacked only
-the snails mentioned by Peregrine Pickle, to make it resemble the
-famous black broth of the Spartans.
-
-A little more of this common-place detail, and then we have done.
-
-For all Quentin suffered, the novelty of treading a new soil and all
-the varied scenery of Portugal could scarcely make amends; yet there
-were times when he could not but view with interest and pleasure the
-old arches and aqueducts, the stony skeletons of departed Rome, the
-ruined amphitheatres and temples, especially that of Diana which
-Quintus Sertorius built at Evora, while remains of baths and
-cisterns, columns, capitals and cornices of marble and jasper lying
-prostrate among the reeds and weeds in wild places, made him think of
-Dominie Skaill and the rapture with which he would have lingered over
-them. Then there were the beautiful vineyards, the verdant valleys
-where the lemon and orange trees grew; the steep frowning sierras,
-wild and barren, but majestic; the fertile plain overlooked by the
-thirteen spires of Santarem; and the old Roman bridges, spanning
-rivers that rushed in foam down the granite steeps to mingle with the
-Tagus.
-
-Little convents perched in solitudes where the French had failed to
-penetrate, and where now the bells rang in welcome to the British;
-tiny wayside chapels and holy wells, presided over by local saints;
-wooden crosses and cairns that marked where some paisano or guerilla
-had been shot by the French--green mounds that marked where the
-French, butchered in their turn, had been buried without coffin or
-shroud, all seemed to tell of the new and strange land he traversed.
-
-Though stout and hardy, poor Quentin's powers of endurance were
-sorely taxed. In his knapsack were all the necessaries of a
-soldier--to wit, one pair of shoes and long gaiters of black cloth,
-shirts, socks, and mitts; a forage cap, brushes, black-ball,
-pipeclay, hair-ribbon, and leather. He had to carry a blanket and
-great-coat, a canteen of wood for water, and a canvas havresack for
-provisions was slung over the right shoulder; a pouch with sixty
-rounds of ball cartridge was over the left; add to these his musket,
-bayonet, belts, and grenadier cap, and the reader may believe that
-the poor volunteer felt life a burden before he saw the hill and
-spires of Portalegre.
-
-Stiff, sore, and weary, on halting he was unable to remove his
-trappings, or even to take off his cap without the assistance of his
-servant; and he usually found himself all over livid marks, as if he
-had been beaten about the back and shoulders with a stick. Not the
-least of his discomforts was to march under the hot morning sun after
-a night of rain, with two wet pipeclayed cross-belts smoking upon his
-chest.
-
-"Ah, if Flora Warrender or Lady Rohallion could see me now!" he would
-think, when, at the close of each day's march, he lay breathless and
-powerless on the floor of a billet, or the sod of a camp, or whatever
-it might chance to be!
-
-Use, however, becomes second nature, and after a time Quentin learned
-to carry all his harness with ease, or ceased to feel it a burden.
-
-"Châteaux en Espagne!" He was a skilful builder of such edifices,
-and had often erected one of great comfort and magnificence for
-himself; but he found a difficulty in dreaming of them while lying
-under a drenched blanket, or in a tent on the sides of which the rain
-was rushing like Rounceval peas, while he had only a knapsack for a
-pillow, and Brown Bess for a bedfellow.
-
-In the Highland regiments the gentlemen volunteers carried simply a
-claymore and dirk; in other regiments generally a musket only; but
-Cosmo was resolved to _grind_ Quentin to the utmost; thus he
-compelled the poor lad to carry all the trappings of the stoutest
-grenadier.
-
-Rowland Askerne, who loved the lad for his unrepining temper, manly
-spirit, and gentleness, and who, like the entire regiment, saw how
-studiously the haughty colonel ignored his existence, was unremitting
-in kindness to him; and Monkton never ceased to encourage him in his
-own fashion.
-
-"Well, well," he would say, "it's queer work just now, of course; but
-some of these fine days you will receive a parchment from the king,
-greeting you as his 'trusty and well-beloved,' appointing you ensign
-to that company, whereof, I hope, Richard Monkton, Esquire, is
-captain; so take courage, Kennedy, my boy!"
-
-He strove to do so, but felt thankful with all his heart for the
-prospect of a few days' halt, as the regiment approached the western
-gate of Portalegre, where a captain's guard of Cazadores was under
-arms as the Borderers marched in with bayonets fixed and colours
-flying, their band playing General Leslie's march, "All the Blue
-Bonnets are bound for the Border," since 1689 their invariable quick
-step. And now its lively measure woke all the echoes of this
-singularly picturesque old Portuguese town, which crowns the summit
-of a hill, where its narrow, dark, and tortuous streets, with quaint
-mansions overhanging the roadway, are surrounded by an old wall,
-among the ruins of which may be traced the foundations of twelve
-great towers, and a castle where, as the monks tell us, dwelt Lysias
-the son of Bacchus!
-
-The town was crowded by the regiments composing the division of Sir
-John Hope; thus, the deserted convents, the two hospitals, and even
-the episcopal palace, had all become temporary barracks; and now in
-the stately chambers where the Bishops of Lisbon and the Counts of
-Gaviao, of old the Lords of Portalegre, with their white-robed
-prebends, or their steel-clad titulados, held their chapters and
-courts, and where a hundred years before the period of our story,
-Philip, Duke of Avignon, received the submission of the ancient city,
-the rollicking Irishman sung "Garryowen" as he pipeclayed his belts
-or polished his musket; the grave and stern Scottish sergeant daily
-and nightly called the roll, and John Bull in his shirt sleeves or
-shell jacket might be seen cooking his rations under a splendid
-marble mantelpiece, which bore the bishop's mitre and the count's
-coronet, with the knightly _paete gules_ of Christ, and the green
-_fleur de lis_ of St. Avis, while the fuel was supplied by the cedar
-wood of fine old cabinets, or gilded furniture that had survived the
-sojourn of the Marshal Duke d'Abrantes and his suite in the same
-place.
-
-The grenadiers of the Borderers were all billeted in a narrow and
-antique street, which was overshadowed by the vast façade of the
-cathedral; and there, from the open lattices of their room (in a
-house the proprietors of which were either dead or had fled) Askerne
-and Quentin sat smoking cigars and enjoying some of the purple wine
-of Oporto, from the cool, vaulted _bodega_ of a neighbouring
-wine-house, and with their feet planted on a charcoal _brasero_, they
-felt, on the evening after their arrival, for the first time, that
-they were somewhat at home and could take their ease, with belts off
-and coats unbuttoned. And so they sat and watched, almost in
-silence, the swift-coming shadows of the October evening as they
-deepened in the quaint vista of the old Portuguese street, where the
-costumes were so striking and singular; the citizen who seemed to
-have no lawful occupation but smoking, in his ragged mantle and broad
-sombrero; a secular priest with his ample paunch and shovel-shaped
-chapeau; a white-robed Carmelite or grey Franciscan, flitting,
-ghostlike, amid the masses of red coats who lounged about the doors
-and arcades, most of them smoking, and all chatting and laughing,
-till the stars came out, when the bugles would sound tattoo, and when
-all loiterers would have to turn in, save the quarter guards and
-inlying picquet.
-
-These were ordered to be of considerable strength, as a numerous band
-of homeless and lawless Spanish and Portuguese guerillas, under a
-runaway student of Salamanca, named Baltasar de Saldos, hovered among
-the hills. This band was of somewhat dubious loyalty, as the members
-of it, more than once, had scuffles with the British foraging
-parties, and even fired on them--the alliance between this country
-and Spain being so recent, that after the long and vexatious wars of
-the preceding century, the people could not understand it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-COSMO'S CRAFT.
-
- "Small occasions in the path of life,
- Lie thickly sown, while great are rarely scattered.
- * * * * *
- Shame seize me, if I would not rather be
- The man thou art, than court-created chief
- Known only by the dates of his promotion!"
- JOANNA BAILLIE.
-
-
-The two first days after Quentin's arrival in Portalegre, were varied
-by the flogging of soldiers for marauding, when they were four months
-in arrears of pay. One of these men was flogged by tap of drum; a
-measure by which half a minute was allowed to elapse between each
-stroke, greatly enhancing the agony; and this process went on during
-more than four hundred lashes, till the bare muscles were seen to
-quiver under the cats, and then he was removed.
-
-On the second day, the troops that had recently arrived from England,
-together with a battalion of Cazadores from Lisbon, were paraded
-outside the walls of the little mountain city for the inspection of
-the lieutenant-general commanding.
-
-Their new uniform and accoutrements contrasted strongly with the
-ragged, patched, and war-worn trappings of the corps which had served
-during the preceding campaign, and had so rapidly cleared Portugal of
-the French.
-
-The Cazadores were active, bustling, and soldier-like little
-Portuguese light infantry, all clad in dark green uniforms of London
-make, with smart shakos, having green plumes. Their ranks were ever
-redolent of garlic and tobacco, to all who had the misfortune to
-march to leeward of them, while their snubby round noses, thick lips,
-and dark complexions reminded all who saw them of their Moorish
-descent.
-
-Prior to the infusion of British officers among them, the Portuguese
-soldiery were every way contemptible. Murphy tells us that in the
-beginning of the war in 1762, "their army was in a most wretched
-state, scarcely amounting to ten thousand men, most of whom were
-peasants, without uniform or arms, asking charity, while the officers
-served at the tables of their colonels;" and matters were not much
-improved when Sir Arthur Wellesley arrived to uphold the interests of
-the House of Braganza, after which he had few better or braver troops
-than the Lusitanian Legion.
-
-The general of division, Sir John Hope of Rankeillour, took
-particular notice of the Borderers, having been colonel of the
-regiment about fifteen years before. He had been wounded on the
-Helder, like Cosmo Crawford, and had served in the first campaign of
-Egypt with great distinction.
-
-He complimented Cosmo in strong terms upon the appearance and
-discipline of the battalion, both of which high qualities the Master
-had not the candour or the generosity to say were due to the
-enthusiasm, exertions, and genuine _esprit de corps_ of Major
-Middleton; and as Sir John rode along the line, wearing a glazed
-cocked-hat, an old telescope slung across his well-worn red coat, the
-lace and aiguilette of which were frayed by service and blackened by
-gunpowder, he looked a thorough soldier. He was tall, well formed,
-and in the prime of life, being in his forty-second year; and Quentin
-regarded him with deep interest, for he was informed by Askerne, in a
-whisper, that "Sir John had joined the army as a volunteer in his
-fifteenth year, prior to his first commission as a cornet, in the
-10th Light Dragoons."
-
-"As we are about to enter Spain by the way of Badajoz," said the
-general to Cosmo, after the troops had been dismissed to their
-quarters, "I am particularly anxious to open a communication with El
-Estudiente."
-
-"Is this a town which lies near it?" asked Cosmo.
-
-"Oh, no. El Estudiente is a man,' replied Sir John, laughing, while
-the staff joined, as in duty bound, and Cosmo reddened with anger.
-
-"Who, or what is he?" he asked, coldly.
-
-"A guerilla chief--Baltasar de Saldos, a personage of savage
-character, and very doubtful reputation."
-
-"You recommend him badly, general."
-
-"But truly, though."
-
-"In what way can I assist you in the matter?" asked Cosmo, with
-increasing coldness of manner, as he began to fear that the
-unpleasant duty of opening the "communication" in question, was,
-perhaps, to devolve on him.
-
-"I wish a messenger to convey a despatch from me to him--one of
-yours--not an officer, whose life would be too valuable; but if you
-have any private, a troublesome fellow, worthless, frequently in the
-defaulters' book--you understand me, colonel?"
-
-"I think that I do, Sir John," replied Cosmo, whose green eyes shrunk
-as he inserted his glass in one, and gazed at the general, keenly;
-"but is the risk of delivering a message so great in Portugal, after
-you have cleared it of the French?"
-
-"Stragglers, orderlies, and solitary individuals are at all times
-liable to be cut off, we scarcely know by whom, the country is so
-lawless; but this fellow, Baltasar, is somewhere among the mountains
-near Herreruela, beyond the Spanish frontier; and to say nothing of
-the wolves that infest the wild places hereabouts, there are three
-chances to one against any messenger returning alive, even after he
-has delivered our letter to Baltasar."
-
-"A lively duty!"
-
-"Portugal and Spain are not without traitors in the French interest
-ready to assassinate a redcoat; others are ready to do it merely to
-procure his clothing and arms, and some of the low wayside tabernas
-are kept by people who would cut any man's throat for the chance of
-finding half a vintin in his pocket. Then there are the hazards of
-being hanged as a spy by the French, of losing one's way among the
-wild, depopulated Sierras, and dying there of starvation, or being
-devoured by the black wolves, or by those wild dogs, of which the
-Duke of Abrantes strove in vain to clear the country."
-
-"A pleasant country for a sketching tour!" said Cosmo.
-
-"Yet Sir John Moore has distinctly ordered me to communicate with
-these guerillas, to strengthen us and cover the flank of our advance
-towards the Guadiana, as it is not impossible that the enemy may push
-forward from Valladolid, and cut off our communication with the main
-body of the army, and as scouts and sharpshooters, the guerillas are
-invaluable."
-
-"If your messenger did not return, what proof would you have that he
-had ever delivered your letter?" asked Cosmo, with one of his strange
-smiles.
-
-"The presence of Baltasar's armed guerillas on our flank as we
-advance through Spanish Estremadura, would be all the reply I wish.
-Colonel Napier, of the Highlanders, has said that he would rather go
-in person than sacrifice one of his men; but----"
-
-"I am not so chivalrous," said Cosmo, laughing, as he shrugged his
-shoulders and toyed with his gathered reins alternately on each side
-of his charger's silky mane; "I have a fellow whom I can very well
-spare, one who is a nuisance to the regiment in general, and to me in
-particular--one of whom I should like to be handsomely rid: he is
-clever, sharp, and resolute, too," he added, as he and the general
-rode slowly side by side into Portalegre.
-
-"He is the very kind of man I require; but," said the worthy general,
-hesitating and colouring, "it is not a duty on which I should wish to
-risk a valuable life--you understand me, Colonel Crawford?"
-
-"Oh, perfectly; when will your letter be ready?"
-
-"Before sunset; but what is the name of the bearer, for however
-numerous his chances of failure may be, I must duly accredit him in
-my mission to the guerilla chief--those Spaniards are so suspicious."
-
-Cosmo took one of his own calling cards, and pencilling on it the
-name of Quentin Kennedy, handed it to the unsuspecting general.
-
-"His rank?" asked the latter.
-
-"Volunteer," was the curt reply.
-
-"A volunteer, Colonel Crawford!" exclaimed the general; "I spoke of
-some private soldier, whose conduct made him worthless. The bearing
-of a volunteer must be careful--his honour spotless."
-
-"Such are not his," said Cosmo, angrily, for this cross-questioning
-fretted his fierce and crafty temper; "and I have said that I wish to
-be handsomely rid of him."
-
-"Very good--you are the best judge of how to handle your command; but
-if in your place, I should send him back to his friends in Britain."
-
-"The letter," began Cosmo impatiently.
-
-"My orderly will bring it to your quarters within an hour. Adieu,
-colonel."
-
-"To-night, then, perhaps to-night!" muttered Cosmo, half aloud,
-through his clenched teeth, and with a sombre smile, as he saluted
-the general and rode off in search of Buckle, his adjutant. "A
-volunteer must always be the first man for duty; I swore to work this
-fellow to an oil, and egad! the game for him is only beginning.
-Good! to think of the simple general baiting the very trap into which
-he is to fall. Once handsomely rid of him, I shall deceive the old
-folks at home anew, and pretend that the letters in which I mentioned
-that he was serving under me have _miscarried_."
-
-He cast one of his sinister smiles after Sir John Hope, and spurred
-his horse impatiently up one of the streets of Portalegre, towards
-the Bishop's palace, where his quarters were, and where the colours
-of the Borderers were lodged under a sergeant's guard.
-
-Sir John Hope was that distinguished Scottish officer, who, after
-Waterloo, was created Lord Niddry for his many brilliant services,
-and who, two years subsequently, succeeded to the old Earldom of
-Hopetoun. Concerning him a very singular story is still current in
-the French army.
-
-It is to the effect, that the eldest son of Marshal Ney challenged
-the Duke of Wellington to a mortal duel, for his alleged share in his
-father's death--the place of combat to be any spot in Europe he chose
-to select. On receiving this cartel, the Duke is said to have
-replied:
-
-"My life belongs to my country and must not be lightly risked in
-trifles!"
-
-On this, one of his aides-de-camp, the Scottish Earl of Hopetoun,
-whom he had always mentioned with honour in his despatches, accepted
-the challenge in his place, and leaving Scotland, without bidding
-adieu to his Countess, Louisa Wedderburn, or their eleven children,
-repaired straight to Paris, and met young Ney on the Bois de
-Boulogne, where they fired at once. The story adds, that Hopetoun
-fell pierced by a ball in the head, in the very place where he had
-been wounded during the famous sortie from Bayonne in February, 1814,
-and that as he fell, young Ney flung his pistol in the air,
-exclaiming--
-
-"Sacré Dieu! the Prince of Moskwa is revenged!"*
-
-* Unfortunately for this story (which contains some strange grains of
-truth, and which was told me by the Lieutenant of Marshal St.
-Arnaud's Spain troop in the Crimea) the gallant Earl of Hopetoun died
-in his bed, from natural causes, at Paris, on the 27th August, 1823.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-QUENTIN DEPARTS.
-
- "Would ye my death? Can that avail you?
- Or life? what life will ye to give?
- For this existence, grief-embittered,
- Doth hourly die, yet dying live.
- My sorrows, if ye fain would slay me,
- Your blows so fierce, so fast to deal,
- It needs not: one the least, the lightest,
- Would task endurance strong as steel."
- _Portuguese of Rodriguez Lobo._
-
-
-On the same evening when Quentin received the despatch from the
-adjutant, with instructions to start forthwith by the nearest road
-that led towards the frontier, Monkton was preparing to give a little
-supper in his billet, and was superintending the cooking thereof in
-person.
-
-The house he occupied had belonged to some titulado of Portugese
-Estremadura. The ceilings were lofty, and the cornices of the heavy
-and florid Palladian style were elaborately gilded, and everywhere
-the green fleur-de-lis of St. Avis (an order founded by Alphonso, for
-defence against the Moors, from whom he took Santarem and Lisbon) was
-reproduced among the decorations.
-
-The floors were of polished oak; the furniture, in many instances
-richly gilded, was all of crimson velvet stuffed with down, and the
-cabinets of ebony were covered with carvings, some representing the
-past discoveries, victories, and glories, real or imaginary, of the
-kings of Portugal. Many fine paintings bore marks of additions
-received from the French in the shape of bayonet stabs and bullet
-holes, with finishing touches in burnt cork, by which Venuses and
-Madonnas were liberally supplied with moustachios and so forth; while
-the frescoes bore such lovely delineations of fair-skinned,
-golden-haired, and ripe-lipped goddesses and nymphs, that, as Monkton
-said, "they made one long for pagan times again." Over a Venus being
-attired in scanty garments by some completely nude graces, was the
-motto "_Si non caste tantum modo caute_."
-
-"Which means?" asked Askerne, who had been trying to make it out.
-
-"In good Portuguese, 'If you can't be chaste, at least be cautious,'
-an old-fashioned aphorism," said Monkton.
-
-"Poor Portugal!" said Askerne, thoughtfully; "she is left now but
-with mere traditions of her past; a country without kings, warriors,
-poets or painters. The land of Camoens, of Rodriguez Lobo, of
-Antonio Ferreria, Bernardez, the captive of Alcazalquiver, of Andrade
-de Cominha, cannot now produce one patriotic song!"
-
-In one corner of the apartment a dark stain on the floor showed where
-blood had been lately shed, and there were the marks of a woman's
-hand upon the wall and oak boards, as if she had been dragged from
-place to place, thus telling of some terrible outrage--an episode of
-its recent occupants, the French.
-
-"Now, what the devil is the meaning of this?" asked Monkton, looking
-up from his culinary operations as Buckle entered; "Kennedy can't be
-the first man for duty."
-
-"No, he is not," replied Buckle, curtly, for having on his sword and
-gorget, he felt and looked official.
-
-"Then why the----"
-
-"Why select him, you would ask, with the addition of some unpleasant
-adjective?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Because a volunteer is always the first man for any duty that is
-dangerous."
-
-"And is this duty so?" asked Quentin, with very excusable interest.
-
-"Undoubtedly--there is no use concealing the fact, as foreknowledge
-will make you wary; and if successful, it will be reported favourably
-to head-quarters, 'that negotiations with the formidable guerilla
-chief--what's his infernal name--have been honourably concluded,
-through the courage and diplomatic skill of that very distinguished
-volunteer, Mr. Quentin Kennedy, now serving with the 25th Foot, whom
-I recommend most warmly to your Royal Highness's most earnest and
-favourable consideration'--that is the sort of thing," added the
-adjutant, putting aside his sword and belt, as the odour of the
-cooking reached his olfactory nerves.
-
-"You think, Mr. Buckle, that the colonel will recommend me thus?"
-asked Quentin, his young heart throbbing with delight.
-
-"And Sir John Hope, too--of course; they can do nothing else," was
-the confident reply, for the adjutant believed in what he said.
-
-Hope, pride, and enthusiasm swelled up in the poor lad's breast as
-the adjutant spoke.
-
-"Ah," thought he, "I should have offered my hand to Cosmo, and shall
-do so when I return."
-
-"Congratulate me, major," he exclaimed, hastening to Middleton, who
-entered at that moment; "I have been chosen for an important duty
-already."
-
-"So I have heard--so I have heard," he replied, quickly, shaking his
-head and his pigtail with it.
-
-"And what do you think of it? Here is the despatch, addressed 'Al
-Senor Don Baltasar de Saldos, Herreruela, _viâ_ Valencia de
-Alcantara.'
-
-"You are particularly to avoid that town," said Buckle, emphatically.
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Because a French garrison occupy it--some of General de
-Ribeaupierre's brigade."
-
-"It is a little way across the frontier," said Quentin; "so, my dear
-sir, what do you think of the duty?"
-
-"Think--that the whole affair is a cruelty and a shame!" exclaimed
-the old major, bluntly. "I've been looking at the map, and see that
-the place is some miles beyond the frontier--in the enemy's country,
-in fact."
-
-"Come, major, don't discourage him," said Buckle; "he must go now,
-and there is an end of it."
-
-"I wish there was. Does he go in uniform?"
-
-"Yes; it is safer."
-
-"How?"
-
-"In mufti he might be taken for a spy."
-
-"Uniform did not protect my poor friend André of the 26th, when taken
-on a similar mission."
-
-"Come, come, I'll bet you a pony apiece that Kennedy comes off with
-flying colours," said Monkton. "Some more butter, Askerne--where's
-the pepper-box?--Quentin is a devilish sharp fellow, and always keeps
-his weather eye open, as the sailors say."
-
-"What is the distance between this and Herreruela?" asked Askerne,
-who had hitherto remained silent.
-
-"About thirty British miles, as a crow flies."
-
-"And he is to proceed on foot?"
-
-"But he can do so at leisure--there is no word of breaking up our
-cantonments here yet."
-
-"But in this country miles seem to vary very much, Mr. Buckle," said
-Quentin; "when am I supposed to be back?"
-
-"Back?" repeated Buckle, rather puzzled.
-
-"Excuse my asking," said the lad, modestly; "but I am so ignorant of
-the country, and so forth."
-
-"True, Kennedy. Well, supposing that you see this Baltasar de
-Saldos--fine melodramatic name, isn't it?--he is doubtless a fellow
-in a steeple-crowned hat and seven-league boots, all stuck over
-pistols and daggers--supposing you sec him at once, there is nothing
-to prevent you being back in six days, at latest."
-
-"So we are about to make a night of it, the first jolly one we have
-had since landing at the mouth of the Maciera, and, damme, here is
-poor Quentin going to leave us!" said Monkton, who in his shirt
-sleeves was devilling a huge dish of kidneys over a brasero, for the
-orthodox fuel of which (charcoal) he had substituted the shutter of a
-window, torn down and broken to pieces. "One glass more of Oporto
-for the gravy, another dash of pepper, and the banquet is complete.
-You must have supper with us to-night, ere you go, Quentin."
-
-The same readily found fuel was roasting on the marble slab of the
-richly carved fireplace, a goodly row of sputtering castanos, which
-were superintended by Rowland Askerne.
-
-"Where is Pimple to-night?" he asked, looking up.
-
-"With Colville, on the quarter guard," said Monkton; "and, rosaries
-and wrinkles! where do you think they are stationed?"
-
-"By your exclamation, opposite a convent, probably."
-
-"Exactly--el Convento de Santa Engracia; but it hasn't a window to
-the street, so they might as well have the wall of China to
-contemplate."
-
-A borrachio skin of Herrera del Duque (the famous wine of the Badajoz
-district), of which Monkton had somehow become possessed, lay on the
-beautiful marqueterie table, like a bloated bagpipe, while tin
-canteens, silver-rimmed drinking-horns, tea-cups, everything but
-crystal vessels, were ranged round to imbibe the contents from.
-
-The plates and other appurtenances of the table were of the same
-varied description, and were furnished by the guests themselves, as
-the French had carried off or destroyed nearly everything in the
-house. A canteen of brandy and a loaf of fine white bread completed
-the repast, to which all brought good humour and appetites that were
-quite startling, better than any they could ever procure for the
-dainties of the mess-table at Colchester.
-
-Servants were entirely dispensed with; thus the conversation was free
-and unrestrained, like the jests and laughter.
-
-"I can scarcely assure myself that you are actually going to-night,"
-said the major to Quentin; "the whole arrangement is a black, burning
-shame; an older man, one of more experience, one who has been longer
-in the country and had served the campaign in Portugal, should have
-been sent on this duty."
-
-"But the greater is my chance of honour!" said Quentin, cheerfully.
-
-"And peril too. Your health--and success, boy! This wine is
-excellent, Monkton--but the service is going to the devil! we have
-never been the men we were since the abolition of hair-powder and
-pigtails, brigadier wigs and Nivernois hats! Think of a garrison
-court-martial according four hundred and odd lashes to a poor devil
-yesterday, for borrowing a loaf of bread like this, when we are all
-so far in arrears of pay; and yet, I remember when we ate Jack
-Andrews' baby in America, men were tucked up to the next tree for
-just as little."
-
-"Jack Andrews' baby," said Quentin, looking up from his devilled
-kidneys at the familiar name.
-
-"It is an old regimental story," said the major, laughing, as he
-filled his horn with wine from the gushing borrachio; "it happened
-when we were in garrison at Fort St. John on the Richelieu River (a
-place I have often told you about); provisions were scarce, for the
-Yankees had intercepted all our supplies, so that at times we were
-literally starving, while to conciliate the colonists, strict orders
-were issued against plundering. It was as much as your life was
-worth if the provost marshal caught you stealing anything, even a
-kiss from a girl in Vermont or New York, so such a thing as levanting
-with a sucking-pig or a turkey-poult, was not to be thought of even
-in our wildest dreams: moreover they would not have _sold_ a chicken
-for thrice its weight in gold, to a red-coat!
-
-"Some weeks passed over thus; we were getting very lanky and lean,
-and though our lovely countenances were ruddied by the American
-frost, we were always hungry, always thirsty, and longed in our
-day-dreams for a cooper of the old mess port, or a devilled
-drumstick; but these were only to be had at the head-quarters of the
-Borderers and Cameronians, then far away in the Jerseys, in pursuit
-of the rebels, under Lord Stirling; and we often shivered with hunger
-as well as with cold under the ice-covered roofs of our wooden
-barracks at night.
-
-"Lord Rohallion of ours, had a servant named Jack Andrews, a knowing
-old file, from his own place in Carrick, who contrived to make off
-with a sheep. How or where Jack did it, the Lord only knows, and we
-never enquired; but the owner, a Pennsylvanian quaker, made an outcry
-about it, and the Provost's guard were speedily on poor Jack's track
-with the gallows rope. A stab with a bayonet in the throat soon
-silenced the sheep, and Jack brought it under his greatcoat to our
-quarters, and while the provost, with Simon Pure, was overhauling the
-soldiers' barrack, we tucked up the spoil in a cradle, with a blanket
-over it and a muslin cap round its head. We set a piper's wife to
-rock it, while Jack pretended to make caudle at the fire, and in this
-occupation they were found, when the provost came in, intent on
-death, and Broadbrim on retribution.
-
- "Hush-a-by, baby, on the tree-top,
- When the wind blows the cradle will rock,"
-
-sung the piper's wife, patting the sheep tenderly.
-
-"'Hush,' said Jack to the intruders; 'don't stir for the life that is
-in you!'
-
-"'Why--what is the matter with the baby?'
-
-"'It's either measles or small-pox; we don't know which,' said Jack.
-
-"'Yea verily--aye--ho, hum,' snivelled the Quaker.
-
-"'All right,' said the provost, as he withdrew with his guard to
-search elsewhere. The sheep was soon cut up, divided, and a
-sumptuous supper Major André, Rohallion and a select few of us had
-that night, and ere morning all traces of it had disappeared, save
-the skin, which, to the rage of the provost, was found concealed, no
-one knew by whom, between the sheets of his bed. Long after the fort
-was taken by the Yankees, and none had a fear of coming to the
-drumhead, the whole story came out, and many a laugh we had at the
-provost marshal and Jack Andrews' baby."
-
-The names mentioned thus incidentally by the good major recalled so
-much of home and of old associations to Quentin, that his warm heart
-swelled with kind and affectionate memories; and now, when on the eve
-of departing from friends that he loved so well, and who had a regard
-so great for him--departing on a lonely and decidedly perilous
-duty--he was on the point of telling them the story of his earlier
-life, so that, if aught occurred to him, his military companions
-might write to Rohallion; but thoughts of the haughty Master chilled
-him, and he repressed the suddenly-conceived idea.
-
-And now the time came when he was compelled to depart.
-
-He had three days' cooked provisions in his havresack, and he had
-still money enough remaining for his wants in a land where he had to
-journey almost by stealth, and where the French had left so little
-either to buy or to sell.
-
-He took with him his great-coat and forage-cap; in lieu of his heavy
-musket, Askerne gave him a sword, and Middleton a pair of pistols;
-and the former accompanied him nearly two miles on the road from
-Portalegre.
-
-"You dare danger fearlessly, Quentin," said he.
-
-"I dare it as those who are friendless and alone do! The knowledge
-that I have few, perhaps none, who would really regret me, renders
-life of little value."
-
-"Come, Kennedy, egad! this bitterness is ungrateful," said Askerne,
-in a tone of reproach.
-
-"True, my friend, forgive me! I believe that you, at least, with
-Middleton and Warriston--he's on duty, remember me to him--Monkton,
-and a few _others_ that are far, far away, have, indeed, a sincere
-regard for me."
-
-"Well, then, how many more, or what more would you have? The world
-is not so bad after all," said Askerne, laughing, as he shook his
-hand warmly and bade him adieu, after giving him much good advice
-concerning prudence and care of consorting with strangers on the way;
-for Askerne and his brother officers saw, or suspected that the
-colonel's selection of the lad was the result of bad feeling; while
-Quentin deemed it but a part of his hard and venturesome lot as a
-gentleman volunteer.
-
-Often he turned to wave a farewell to Askerne, whose erect and
-soldier-like figure was lessening in the distance, as he walked back
-to Portalegre. At last, a turn of the road, where it wound suddenly
-between some olive groves, hid him entirely; and, for the first time,
-an emotion of utter loneliness came over Quentin's heart as he
-hastened towards the darkening hills.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-ANXIOUS FRIENDS.
-
- "Oh, Leolyn, be obstinately just;
- Indulge no passion and deceive no trust.
- Let never man be bold enough to say,
- Thus, and no farther, shall my passion stray;
- The first crime past compels us into more,
- And guilt grows _fate_, which was but _choice_ before."
- AARON HILL.
-
-
-The third day and the fourth passed away at Portalegre; on the fifth
-and sixth, Major Middleton and others, who felt a friendly interest
-in Quentin Kennedy, began to surmise, when they met on the morning or
-evening parade, or in each other's billets, or so forth, that it was
-time now he had reported his return, and the good or bad success of
-his journey, to the colonel and general commanding the division.
-
-Other days passed; it was whispered about from staff-office officials
-that ere long the division would leave Portalegre, as the whole army
-was about to advance against the enemy; and then Captain Askerne,
-Monkton, Buckle, the adjutant, and others, became doubly anxious
-about the lad, and were interested as much as men could be under
-their circumstances, when human life is deemed of so little value as
-it is when on active service and before an enemy.
-
-As for Warriston of the 94th, not being under the immediate command
-of Colonel Crawford, he openly and bitterly inveighed against "the
-iniquity of having sacrificed a mere youth in such a manner," and
-threatened "to bring the matter prominently before Sir John Moore,"
-who commanded the forces in Portugal.
-
-"He has, perhaps, gone over to the enemy--a despatch is sometimes
-well paid for," said Cosmo, in his sneering manner, when some of
-these remarks reached him on parade, one morning.
-
-"Impossible, my dear sir--impossible!" said Middleton, testily, while
-spurring and reining in his horse; "I know the lad as if he were my
-own son, and feel assured that he is the soul of honour; that he was
-all ardour for the service, and that he would die rather than
-disgrace himself."
-
-"Indeed--ah-aw--you think so?" drawled Cosmo, with his glass in his
-sinister eye, as he surveyed the major with a glance of somewhat
-mingled cast.
-
-"I do, colonel," was the emphatic rejoinder.
-
-"He has disappeared at all events--a dubious phrase. If the fellow
-has not levanted to the Duke of Dalmatia with General Hope's
-despatch, may his heart not have failed him? may he not have shown
-the white feather? Better men than he, among the Belem Rangers, have
-done so ere now."
-
-The imaginary corps referred to contained one of the most offensive
-imputations to the ears of Peninsula men; thus Captain Askerne
-exclaimed--
-
-"Cowardice, Colonel Crawford--would you infer cowardice?"
-
-"I infer nothing, gentlemen, but that better men than he have shown
-the white feather."
-
-"Not in _the Line_, that I am aware of," was the somewhat pointed
-remark of Middleton; and Cosmo, who had lately come from the Guards,
-crimsoned with suppressed passion.
-
-"A volunteer is a soldier of fortune, and none such can ever be a
-coward," said Askerne, stoutly.
-
-"Of course not--the idea is absurd," added Middleton, looking round
-the group of officers, who glanced their approval.
-
-"You are warm, Major Middleton," said Cosmo, sternly, while his eyes
-gleamed with their most dangerous expression; "somewhat unnecessarily
-warm on this trivial subject, I think."
-
-"I am at least honest, colonel, as he must be who defends the absent
-or the dead."
-
-"We have had enough of this--to your companies--fall in, gentlemen!"
-said the colonel, sternly and impatiently, as he spurred his horse,
-unsheathed his sword, and the formula of the parade began, after
-which he revenged himself by drilling the corps, under a drizzling
-rain, for nearly two hours, forcing Askerne's grenadiers to skirmish
-in a swamp, and making old Major Middleton put the battalion twice
-through the eighteen manoeuvres.
-
-About this time a patrol of Portuguese cavalry found near the high
-road that led through a desert towards the Spanish frontier, the
-remains of a man, almost reduced to a skeleton, picked, gnawed, and
-torn asunder, to all appearance recently, by those devouring wolves
-and wild dogs which infest the mountains of the district.
-
-Terrible surmises of Quentin's fate were now whispered among the
-Borderers; the officer in command of the patrol was closely
-questioned by Middleton, Warriston, and others; but he constantly
-stated that the victim had probably been stripped by robbers before
-being devoured, as nothing had been found near the remains that might
-lead to their identification, or in any way connect them with the
-missing Quentin Kennedy. Thus, in default of other proof, as time
-wore on, the members of the regiment made up their minds to consider
-the poor bones as his, and concluded that he had perished miserably
-in the wilderness.
-
-To do Cosmo Crawford justice, there were times when he was not
-without secret emotions of shame, and even of compunction, for the
-part he had acted to Quentin. His own conscience, the small still
-voice that would speak, could not acquit him; but those gleams of the
-better spirit came only briefly and at intervals, and such unwelcome
-thoughts were always eventually stifled by the constitutional
-malignity of his nature, and he would mutter to himself--
-
-"Pshaw! he is well away; what the devil was he to me, or I to him?"
-
-It was while the troops were lingering at Portalegre and elsewhere
-along the Spanish frontier, that Lord Castlereagh's despatch,
-containing the first organized plan of the future campaign, arrived
-in Lisbon.
-
-In the northern provinces of Spain, thirty-five thousand horse and
-foot were to be employed; ten thousand of these were to be embarked
-from British ports, and the rest to be drafted from our army of
-occupation in Portugal; and these were supposed to be equal to cope
-with the vast hosts pouring through the many passes of the Pyrenees
-from France and Germany, and those which already blackened all the
-plains of Castile and Arragon.
-
-We have elsewhere mentioned the vast strength of the French army,
-whose head-quarters were at Vittoria.
-
-The brave but ill-fated Sir John Moore was ordered to take the field
-without delay with the troops that were under his own command. Some
-fortress or city (unnamed) in Galicia, or on the borders of the
-kingdom of Leon, was to be the place for concentrating the whole
-allied armies of Britain, Spain, and Portugal; and his specific plan
-of operations was _afterwards_ to be concerted with the stupid,
-jealous, and uncompromising local juntas, and the obstinate and
-impracticable Spanish generals.
-
-These orders were perilous, loose, and vague; they promised nothing,
-but only that war at any hazard was to be waged in Old Castile and on
-the banks of the Ebro.
-
-And now for a time let us change the scene to a not less tuneful or
-classic locality--the rocky hills and heather braes of Carrick's
-western shore.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-THE PARAGRAPH.
-
- "My kindred are dead, my love is fled;
- Courage, my heart, thou canst love no more;
- Pale is my cheek, my body is weak;
- Courage, my heart, 'twill soon be o'er.
- Dim are my eyes with tears of sorrow,
- They ache for a night without a morrow!"
- M.N.S.
-
-
-It was towards the end of the month--the last days of October, now.
-
-The acorns were falling from the moss-grown oaks, the hollies and
-hedge-rows were gay with scarlet berries and haws, the grey sea-gulls
-were often seen mingling with the black gleds and hoodie-crows far
-afield inshore. The redwing, the fieldfare, and the woodcock had
-come again to their old haunts on the braes of Rohallion, in the
-oakwood shaw, in the hawthorn birks that overhang the Girvan, and the
-deep carse land where the rushes grew and the water flowed of old.
-
-The autumn winds, as they swept through the hollow glen, shook down
-the last brown leaves of the old sycamores, and the spoils of the
-past summer lay in rustling heaps about the haunted gate and the guns
-of La Bonne Citoyenne on the battery before the castle-keep. From
-the tall square chimneys of the old feudal stronghold on the
-storm-beaten bluff, the gudeman of Elsie Irvine and other fishermen
-from the coves, saw the smoke of the rousing fires ascending into the
-grey autumn sky, and the evening lights glittering early in the great
-towers, a land-mark now to them as it had been to their forefathers
-long ages ago, when the Scot and the Saxon found work nearer home for
-their swords than fighting for conquered Spain or ravaged Portugal.
-
-"People now-a-days, with the help of the penny-post and the
-telegraph, and the endless means of communication and of coming and
-going, are certainly able to _care for_ a greater number of persons
-than they could have done a hundred years ago," says a recent writer
-in the "Cornhill;" but he might have said thirty years ago, so far as
-the people of Scotland are concerned. Thus, secluded by her own
-retiring habits and personal circumstances, as well as by those
-incident to the time, content to reside in her narrow circle, and
-chiefly among her husband's household and dependents, Lady
-Rohallion's heart yearned with all a mother's love for her lost
-protégé, the more, perhaps, that the cold and repulsive manner of her
-only son Cosmo had cast her warm and affectionate heart somewhat
-back, as it were, upon herself; though the memory of much if not all
-his shortcomings in the way of filial reverence and regard were now
-by her forgotten, or merged in the idea of his absence at the seat of
-war.
-
-Quentin's memory she cherished chiefly in silence; for, still
-fostering her hopes or views with regard to Cosmo and the wilful
-little heiress of Ardgour, she spoke of the lost one but reservedly,
-and at long intervals, to the latter; though, sooth to say, young
-Fernie of Fernwoodlee, a neighbouring proprietor, had become so
-frequent a visitor at the castle, that, so far as good looks,
-assiduity, and unwearying industry as an admirer might go, he bade
-fair--gossips said--to supplant both Quentin and the Master of
-Rohallion, for a lover lost, and another commencing a campaign, were
-just as satisfactory as no lover at all.
-
-It was about this time that the post-bag brought by John Legate, the
-running-footman, from Maybole, was opened before Lord Rohallion by
-his faithful old henchman Jack Andrews, and emptied on the
-breakfast-table.
-
-One small missive, bearing Fernwoodlee's crest--a fern leaf all
-proper--he handed to Flora, who coloured slightly and said it
-referred to a proposed ride as far as the ruins of Kilhenzie, to see
-the Eglinton hounds throw off, as the keeper had promised to find a
-leash of foxes in the cover there.
-
-"These fox-hunting fools are beginning their work betimes--why, this
-is only October," said his lordship, drily; "they would be better
-employed riding in the light dragoons against the enemies of Europe."
-
-Pushing the rest of the letters across the table to Lady Rohallion,
-as if for perusal at her leisure, he opened the latest newspaper, and
-betook himself, with true military instinct, to the gazette and
-matters pertaining to the war against France and the Corsican, by
-land and sea.
-
-Erelong, it was with an exclamation of astonishment that shook the
-powder from his venerable pigtail, that made Lady Rohallion permit
-the urn to overrun her teacup, Flora to start nervously, Mr. Spillsby
-to drop the egg-stand with its contents, and Jack Andrews to spring
-mechanically to "attention" on his lame leg, that his lordship,
-raising his voice to an unusually high pitch, read the following
-paragraph:--
-
-"On the 6th October, the final despatch of the premier reached the
-general commanding at Lisbon, and by this time the whole army will
-have been in motion across the Spanish frontier, to chastise the
-barbarian hordes of the Corsican tyrant, under whose sway the people
-of France and Spain alike are groaning. We rejoice to say that
-before marching from Portalegre, Lieutenant-General Sir John Hope of
-Rankeillour most successfully opened a communication with the famous
-guerilla, El Estudiente, a matter fully and finally arranged by the
-skill and courage of Mr. Quentin Kennedy, a young volunteer, then
-serving with H.M. 25th Regiment, or 'King's Own Borderers.'"
-
-"Quentin!" exclaimed Flora, rushing behind Lord Rohallion's chair,
-her cheeks flushing red, as she peeped over his shoulder.
-
-"Quentin Kennedy!" said Lady Rohallion, in a breathless voice, as she
-grew pale and trembled.
-
-"The boy is found--found at last! There, read the paragraph for
-yourselves," said his lordship, flourishing the paper over his head.
-
-Poor Lady Rohallion made many ineffectual efforts to do as he bid
-her; but her eyes were full of tears, and her spectacles were quite
-obscured.
-
-"Spillsby--Andrews, send for John Girvan: zounds! the 25th, too--the
-blessed old number!--here's news for him! The lost is found again!
-You'll write him, Winny--and Flora, too--gad, we'll all write!"
-continued the old Lord, in a very incoherent way. "The cunning
-rogue, to keep us in suspense so long, and to be wearing the buttons
-of the old Borderers all the time. It must be he: there can't be two
-Quentin Kennedies; oh, no--of course it must be he!"
-
-"There is something strange in this," said Lady Rohallion, finding
-relief in tears; "how many letters, Flora, have we had from Cosmo
-since he left us?"
-
-"Five."
-
-"Five letters!"
-
-"One from Colchester; others from Santarem and Abrantes; and two from
-Portalegre."
-
-"Exactly," said Lord Rohallion, on whose benign brow a cloud
-gathered; "five letters, and in none of them has one word escaped him
-concerning the poor lad who joined the corps before him--the dear old
-25th, of my earliest memories. It is not generous, Winny; I don't
-envy Quentin his commanding officer; it shows a bad animus, and I am
-sorry our boy should behave so."
-
-Lady Winifred was silent, for she felt the truth of what her husband
-said; and Flora, full of her own joyous thoughts, was silent too.
-
-"Read over the paragraph again, Flora, darling; egad, I must cut it
-out, and send it over to Earl Hugh, at Eglinton;" and while Flora
-read, Rohallion walked to and fro, rubbing his hands with intense
-satisfaction and delight.
-
-"But, good heavens, my lord," she suddenly exclaimed, while the
-colour left her face, "what is this that follows? there is here
-another paragraph, about--about----"
-
-"About what?"
-
-"Poor Quentin," she added, faintly.
-
-"Read it!" said Rohallion, impetuously.
-
-"'We regret to have to add, it is feared that after accomplishing
-this valuable public service with the guerilla, our enterprising
-young soldier has fallen a sacrifice to his zeal, or the lawless
-state of the country, as--as he has not been heard of since.'" .....
-
-Flora's sweet voice died away almost in a tremulous whisper as she
-read this blighting paragraph, which Lord Rohallion, after hastily
-snatching the paper from her, read again and again, with his brows
-deeply knit.
-
-It did not fall upon him with the crushing effect it had upon the two
-ladies, who sat silently weeping, for the words of the paragraph
-were, to them, terribly suggestive and vague; and now the old
-quartermaster, who had been noisily summoned by his veteran comrade
-the valet, arrived to join the conclave; and truly, had a
-thirteen-inch bombshell, shot from a mortar of similar diameter,
-exploded among the breakfast equipage, worthy John Girvan could not
-have seemed more astonished and bewildered than he did by the whole
-affair.
-
-Lord Rohallion and he, as old soldiers, endeavoured to explain the
-matter away, and to speak from past experience of many instances of
-men reported as "missing" who always turned up again; newspaper
-paragraphs in general they treated with great contempt, and expressed
-their certain conviction that "by this time," no doubt, he had
-rejoined the corps.
-
-Indeed, so certain were they of this that Lord Rohallion desired the
-quartermaster to write at once; Flora, with charming frankness,
-offered to enclose a tiny note, and the old general wrote at once by
-the next mail to the Horse Guards, urging "the immediate promotion of
-his young friend to the first ensigncy at the disposal of His Royal
-Highness the Field Marshal Commanding-in-Chief--in the 25th Foot, if
-practicable."
-
-This done, the male part of the household, though full of the affair,
-and their innumerable yarns of the corps, which it had called to
-memory, felt more composed on the subject. The quartermaster
-furbished up his old red coat, and remained to dinner: Flora's
-engagement to ride with young Fernwoodlee and the meet at Kilhenzie,
-were committed to oblivion, and were utterly forgotten, as she sat
-alone, full of thought, on the old mossgrown garden-seat, with the
-autumn leaves whirling round her.
-
-Through the branches of the stripped trees on which the rooks were
-cawing, the sunlight fell aslant upon the copper gnomon of the
-ancient sun and moon dial, which occupied the centre of the quaint
-Scoto-French garden, and round the pedestal of which Quentin, to
-please her, during the last spring, had trained a creeping plant.
-
-The plant was still there, but its tendrils and trailers were dead,
-withered, and yellow, and sadly Flora felt in her heart that she was
-lonely, and that Rohallion was now a _broken home_--broken, indeed,
-as if Death himself had been there!
-
-Lady Winifred was also alone.
-
-The noonday sun was streaming as of old into the yellow damask
-drawing-room, and the sea-coal fire crackled on the hearth between
-the delft-lined jambs cheerily and brightly. Before it, on the thick
-cosy rug, a sleek tom-cat sat winking and purring, and the favourite
-terrier of Quentin, coiled up round as a ball, was there too, but
-fast asleep beside the many-spotted Dalmatian dog, which always
-followed the old-fashioned family carriage.
-
-The antique ormolu clock, that ticked so loudly on the mantelpiece on
-the night when Quentin was rescued from the wreck, and his father's
-corpse was cast on the surf-beaten sand, and when he, a wailing
-child, was brought by Elsie Irvine to Rohallion, was ticking there
-still, quietly, regularly, and monotonously, and Lady Winifred looked
-at its quaint dial wistfully, as she might have done in the face of
-an old and familiar friend.
-
-Now Quentin and her beloved and only son were both far, far away;
-both were to encounter the perils of war, and she might never see
-them more! How much and how many things had happened, she thought,
-and still the old clock ticked there monotonously, even as it had
-done when, on an evening now many, many years ago, she came a
-blooming bride to the old castle by the sea; and so it might continue
-to tick, long after she, and her comely and affectionate old Lord,
-lay side by side among the Crawfords of past centuries in the
-Rohallion aisle of the venerable kirk whose tower she could see
-terminating the woody vista of yonder lonely glen.
-
-The paragraph of the morning had called up a multitude of sad
-thoughts that had long been buried, and she felt melancholy, almost
-miserable, and opening her escritoire, she looked long and earnestly
-on the relics of Quentin's father--his commission in the French
-service, the letter in the poor man's pocket-book, and the ring that
-was taken from his finger, bearing the name of Josephine--the boy's
-mother, doubtless.
-
-The dominie, to whom the quartermaster lost no time in hastening with
-the intelligence, like the old Lord, was stout in his belief that
-Quentin would, as he phrased it, "cast up again."
-
-"Disappeared," he repeated two or three times; "the bairn no since
-heard o'; the thing's no possible! He will, he shall return again,
-be assured, to receive his reward, for he is worthy of a crown of
-gold--worthy of it, yea, as ever were Manlius Torquatus or Valerius
-Corvus, ilk ane o' wham, as we are told in Livy, slew a Gaul in
-single combat."
-
-This classic reward did not seem very probable, when a few weeks
-after, a long official letter was brought to Rohallion, and added
-greatly to the anxiety and perplexity of the inmates thereof.
-
-In this missive the military secretary, by direction of H.R.H. the
-Duke of York, "presented his compliments to Major-General Lord
-Rohallion, K.C.B., and regretted to acquaint him that it was
-impossible to entertain his request with regard to Mr. Quentin
-Kennedy, a volunteer with the 25th Foot, as matters had transpired
-which might render his clearance before a general court-martial
-necessary."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-THE WAYSIDE CROSS AND WELL.
-
- "If in this exile dark and drear,
- To which my fate has doomed me now,
- I should unnoticed die--what tear,
- What tear of sympathy will flow?
- For I have sought an exile's woe,
- And fashioned my own misery;
- Who then will pity me?"
- _Cancionero de Amberes_, 1557.
-
-
-As Quentin walked on in solitude after Rowland Askerne left him, he
-could not help musing, as he frequently did, on the changes a short
-time had wrought in him and in his ideas. It would seem that from a
-mere day-dreaming schoolboy, whose most onerous purposes were to fill
-his basket with trout from the Girvan, the Doon, or the Lollards'
-Linn; to supply the cook with an occasional brace of ptarmigan from
-the oakwood shaw, or of blackcock from the Mains of Kilhenzie; from
-trying a pad for Flora, or culling the flowers which he knew she
-loved most, he had risen to be a man and a soldier, valued by his
-comrades, all officers of bravery and position, trusted by his
-superiors, and charged with a great and confidential duty--a portion
-of the vast game of war and politics now played by Britain for the
-deliverance of Spain; and yet, withal, he longed for a companion, and
-to hear the voice of a friend, for a sense of intense loneliness
-gradually stole over him as the twilight deepened, and the purple
-shadows grew more sombre on the hills of Portuguese Estremadura.
-
-To Quentin it seemed that his bodily strength and bulk had increased,
-for drill and marching had developed every muscle to the fullest
-extent; thus he was stronger, more active and hardy than before.
-
-He felt too, that the time had come when youth was no longer a libel
-against him; the time for doing something worthy of being mentioned
-in a despatch of the commander-in-chief, in the government gazette,
-in general orders--something gallant, manly, and dashing; and that he
-would turn the occasion to its best account, and achieve something
-glorious, "or," as romances and melo-dramas have it, "perish in the
-attempt."
-
-"If I acquit myself well in this, my first duty, it shall in itself
-prove a revenge upon Cosmo!" thought he.
-
-And so he trod manfully and hopefully on, dreaming of the future,
-knowing but little of the path he was at present to pursue, and less
-of the perils and pit-falls that were around it.
-
-As the evening deepened into night with great rapidity, for there is
-very little twilight in those regions--the mighty shadows of the
-sierra fell eastward in a sombre mass across the valley through which
-lay the road--a mere bridle path--towards the Spanish frontier, while
-the ranges of peaks that faced the west were still glowing in ruddy
-saffron or pale purple against the blue dome of the star-studded sky.
-
-About twelve miles from Portalegre, the road pursued by Quentin
-enters a narrow gorge or immense chasm or cleft which rends the
-mountains from their summit to their base. Down the steep wall of
-rock on one side, a spring trickles for some hundred feet, and at the
-foot, near the road-way, it is received into the quaintly carved
-basin of an ancient stone fountain, behind which stands a memorial
-cross.
-
-A niche in the shaft of the latter contains a little wayside altar.
-An image of the Madonna was rudely and gaudily painted in the recess,
-and before it a copper lamp was always kept burning. This shrine,
-once reputed to be of great sanctity, had been mutilated and its lamp
-destroyed by the French; but it had been replaced by another, which
-was always supplied with wick and oil by the passing muleteers,
-contrabandists, guerillas, and others.
-
-The rays of this lamp were burning feebly in the vast rocky solitude,
-forming a strange and picturesque feature in the deep dark dell, the
-silence of which was broken only by the plash of the slender thread
-of liquid that filtered or trickled down the granite face of the
-dissevered mountain.
-
-This cross and well had been built by Alphonso I., in the year that
-he achieved his greatest victory over the united arms of five Moorish
-sovereigns. It had been deemed holy even in those days, for there he
-had halted and prayed when on the march with his mail-clad knights to
-the capture of Santarem; and an inscription, frequently renewed,
-invited the passer to say a prayer for the repose of his soul, and
-the souls of all the good and true Portuguese who drew their swords
-against the Moslem.
-
-A long ray of light shed by the rising moon, shone down the cleft at
-the bottom of which the road lay, casting the shadows of the well and
-votive cross far along the narrow gorge. The thick foliage of some
-gigantic Portuguese laurels, which grew in the interstices of the
-rocks, glittered like bronze gemmed with silver sheen, and offered a
-resting place for the night; so Quentin, as he felt weary, crept
-under the branches, which formed a pleasant shelter.
-
-The turf below was soft and dry, and to him, who had slept so often
-on the bare earth during his march to the frontier, it seemed a
-comfortable couch enough. The shaft of King Alphonso's cross on one
-side and the wall of rock on the other protected him from prowling
-wolves in the front and rear; the stems of the giant laurels formed
-barrier on a third side, and the fourth, which was open, he might
-defend with his weapons if attacked.
-
-He took a draught from his canteen, which was filled with rum and
-water, and placing it under his head for a pillow, with his sword and
-loaded pistols ready by his side, he addressed himself to sleep.
-
-The air was filled with a strange but delicious perfume, which came
-from those little aromatic shrubs that grow wild everywhere
-throughout Spain and Portugal. The intense stillness of the place,
-the only sounds there being the trickle of the far-falling water and
-the croakings of some bull-frogs among the long grass, made him
-wakeful for a time.
-
-He felt neither alarm nor anxiety, but utterly lonely, and he said
-over a prayer that in infancy he had often repeated at Lady
-Rohallion's knee; then something holy and placid stole over his
-heart; sleep at last closed his eyes and he slumbered peacefully
-besides the old stone cross of our Lady of Battles.
-
-So passed the first night of his absence from head-quarters.
-
-When Quentin awoke next morning after a long and sound slumber, the
-result of youth, high health, and the toil of the past day, though he
-had acquired all a soldier's facility for sleeping in strange places
-and strange beds, or without other couch than the bare sod, he was at
-first somewhat confused and puzzled on perceiving the bower of leaves
-above him, and a minute elapsed before he could remember where he
-was, and how he came to be roosting under those huge Portuguese
-laurels.
-
-Then the despatch rushed upon his memory; he searched his breast
-pocket, and found the important document was safe; his weapons were
-all right, and he was about to creep forth, when he suddenly
-perceived the figure of a man near the well, and, remembering the
-reiterated advices of Askerne and others, he paused to observe him.
-
-His first idea was that the stranger must be a robber, for, to a
-Briton, Portuguese and Spaniards too have usually that unpleasant
-character in their aspect. Their sallow visages, deep dark eyes,
-densely black beards and moustaches, with their slouching sombrero,
-and large, many-folded cloak of dark brown stuff, together with a
-certain fixed scrutiny of expression when observing strangers, give
-them all the bravo look and bearing of the "sensation" ruffian or
-mysterious bandit of a minor melo-drama; thus, says a recent writer,
-"in consequence of the difficulty of outliving what has been learnt
-in the nursery, many of our countrymen have, with the best
-intentions, set down the bulk of the population of the Peninsula as
-one gang of robbers."
-
-The Spaniard in question, for such he seemed to be, was a young man
-of powerful and athletic form; his face was sallow and colourless,
-and his hair and eyes were black. He was closely shaven, save a
-heavy moustache, which had a very ferocious twist across each cheek
-towards the tip of the ear. His features were very handsome, and his
-whole appearance was eminently striking.
-
-He had a huge cloak--what Spaniard has not, generally to cover his
-rags rather than his finery--but this he had flung aside, and Quentin
-could perceive that he had a well-worn zamarra of sheepskin over a
-gaily embroidered shirt, a pair of crimson pantaloons, which seemed
-to have belonged to a hussar, and they ended in strong leather
-_abarcas_, which were laced with thongs from the ankle to the knee.
-He had a dagger and pair of pistols in his flowing yellow sash, and
-close by him lay one of those long, old-fashioned travelling staffs,
-shod with iron and loaded with lead, called by the Portuguese a
-_cajado_.
-
-Thus, upon the whole, considering the difference of their stature and
-bodily strength, Quentin prudently thought that the stranger was not
-a personage to be intruded upon without due consideration.
-
-Reverently removing his black sombrero, which was rather battered and
-rusty, and had a gilt image of our Lady del Pilar on the gay broad
-scarlet band thereof, the Spaniard approached the wayside shrine, and
-kneeling before it, crossed himself three times with great devotion,
-while muttering a short prayer. Then seating himself on the grassy
-sward behind the well, he pulled a little book from the pocket of his
-zamarra, and began to peruse it very leisurely while smoking a
-cigarito and making his frugal breakfast on a few dry raisins and a
-crust of hard bread, which he dipped from time to time in the cool
-water of the gurgling fountain.
-
-"This cannot be a bad kind of fellow," thought Quentin, who felt
-somewhat ashamed of lurking from one man; so he half-cocked his
-pistols, placed them in his girdle, and crept forth from behind the
-stone cross, saying:
-
-"_Buenos dias_, senor."
-
-"Senor, good morrow," replied the Spaniard, with a hand on his
-dagger, while he surveyed Quentin with a quietly grim, but unmoved
-countenance, without rising from his recumbent posture; "are there
-any more of you under these bushes?"
-
-"No--I am alone."
-
-"_Por mi vida_, but you chose a strange hiding-place!" said the
-other, with a glance of distrust.
-
-"A strange sleeping-place, you should say rather, senor--yet not a
-bad one," said Quentin, laughing, and willing to conciliate the
-stranger, who closed his book after quietly turning down a leaf to
-mark his place; "I crept in over night, and have slept there until
-now."
-
-"Signs of a good digestion or a clear conscience."
-
-"Of both, I hope, thank Heaven."
-
-"I am indifferently provided with either; yet I can breakfast on this
-poor crust, and be thankful to God and our Blessed Lady for it."
-
-"I can give you something better, Senor Portuguese," said Quentin,
-unbuttoning his havresack.
-
-"_Muchos gracias_," replied the other; "but remember, senor, that I
-am a Castilian, and in Spain we have a belief that a bad Spaniard
-makes a tolerably good Portuguese."
-
-"I beg pardon, senor, but your dress----"
-
-"My dress!" interrupted the other, with a sardonic grin; "_oh, por el
-vida del Satanos_, the less you say about that the better. I was not
-wont to sport such a costume when rendering Virgil into Castilian,
-and Las Comedias de Calderon into Latin, in the Arzobispo College at
-old Salamanca."
-
-"A student?"
-
-"Perhaps--it was as might be," replied the other, with sudden
-reserve; "and you are----"
-
-"What you see me."
-
-Quentin gave a portion of his ration-beef and biscuit to the
-Spaniard, who took them with many thanks, and with an air that showed
-he was a man of breeding far above what his present paisano costume
-seemed to indicate. His hands were strong, white, and muscular, yet
-seemed never to have been used to work, and a valuable diamond
-sparkled in a ring on one of his fingers. In the course of
-conversation, Quentin could gather that he was remarkably well
-informed of the strength, number, position, and divisions of the
-British Army, together with the probable movements towards Castile,
-thus he felt the necessity of acting with the greatest reserve, and
-getting rid of him as soon as possible; for the most subtle, wily,
-and dangerous Spaniards were those in the French interest, which, at
-first, he feared his new friend to be.
-
-"By my life, Senor Inglese," said the Spaniard, laughing, "with all
-this victual in your wallet, 'tis a miracle of our Lady's Cross that
-the wolves did not come snuffing about you in the night."
-
-"You are a traveller?" observed Quentin, after a pause, during which
-they had been observing each other furtively.
-
-"I hinted that I had been a student among Salamanquinos," replied the
-Spaniard, coldly.
-
-"And you are now----"
-
-"What the Fiend and the French have made me!" said he, with a lurid
-gleam in his fine dark eyes.
-
-"And that is----"
-
-"My secret, senor," said the other, bluntly, adding "_muchos
-gracias_," as Quentin smilingly proffered his canteen, the contents
-of which he declined to taste. "The well of our Blessed Lady will
-suffice for me," he said, and proceeded to twist up another cigarito.
-"You are very curious about me, senor; but pray what are you?"
-
-"What my uniform declares me," said Quentin, showing the scarlet
-uniform, which his grey coat had concealed; "a British soldier."
-
-"Bueno! Your hand. And whither go you?"
-
-"On duty."
-
-"Where--to whom?"
-
-"That is _my secret_," retorted Quentin, laughing. But a dark
-expression began to gather in the Spaniard's face, and he looked
-searchingly at the young volunteer.
-
-"Are you going to the front?" he asked.
-
-"Yes, senor."
-
-"Strange!"
-
-"How so?"
-
-"The British troops have not yet begun to cross the frontier into
-Spain. They are still in quarters."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"You are not going to the French head-quarters?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Still monosyllables!" said the Spaniard, impetuously. "I must be
-plain, I find. You are a deserter!"
-
-"I have said that I am going on duty," replied Quentin, haughtily.
-"You need question me no further. I am not bound to satisfy the
-curiosity of every wayfarer I may meet."
-
-"_Morte de Dios!_" swore the Spaniard, with a scowl in his deep eye,
-and a hand on his stiletto.
-
-"I, too, have arms to repress insolence," said Quentin, grasping his
-sword.
-
-On this the Spaniard laughed, and said--
-
-"Come--don't let us quarrel. You are a brave boy, and your little
-breakfast came to me most opportunely. Let us enjoy the present
-without thinking of the future. _Demonio!_ Neither of us may be
-what we seem. We more often look like spits than swords in this
-world!"
-
-"Senor, excuse me; but I don't understand your proverb."
-
-"It means simply, that all men are not what they seem. To you I
-appear a _gitano_, a _mendigo_--it may be, a _ladrone_; you appear to
-me a deserter; so our circumstances may change--you prove the spit,
-and I the sword."
-
-"Spit again!" said Quentin, angrily, as he conceived there was some
-sarcasm concealed in the word.
-
-"It is a fable. Listen while I read to you what, I suppose, you
-never heard before."
-
-And, opening his book, which proved to be the little pocket edition
-of the quaint old literary fables of Don Tomaso de Yriarte, he
-rapidly read over the story of the "Spit and Espada."
-
-"Once upon a time there was a rapier of Toledo; a better was never
-seen in the Alcazar, or tempered in the waters of the Tagus. After
-having been in many battles, and belonging to many brave cavaliers,
-by one of the vicissitudes of fortune which lay the greatest low, it
-came at length to lie forgotten in the corner of a scurvy posada.
-
-"There, desirous in vain to breathe a vein and flash once more in
-battle, it lay long unnoticed and covered with rust, till, by command
-of her master, a greasy kitchen-wench stuck it through a large capon,
-and thus forced that which had been a rapier of high renown, arming
-the hands of the noble and valiant, to degenerate into a mere spit!
-
-"About this time, it likewise chanced that a clownish paisano, by the
-sport of fortune became a hidalgo at court, and as he must needs have
-a sword, he repaired to the booth of an espadero, who no sooner saw
-the kind of customer he had to deal with, than he knew that anything
-having a hilt and scabbard would do, and so desired him to call next
-day.
-
-"Against the time of his coming he furbished up an old spit that lay
-in his kitchen, and sold it to our courtier as Tisona, the very same
-blade with which the Cid Rodrigo of Bivar made the Arabian Khalifs
-skip at Cordova, and the Moorish dogs at Jaen. Hence we see that the
-innkeeper was a very great fool, and the espadero a very great rogue."
-
-"And what am I to understand by all this?" asked Quentin, who with
-some impatience had permitted the Spaniard to read thus far.
-
-"Simply, senor, that though by the vicissitudes of fortune, I seem a
-spit at present, I may prove in the end to be a good Toledo blade;
-for we should never judge solely by appearances;" and pointing to a
-hole in his sheepskin zamarra, he laughed and added, "Farewell--I go
-towards the mountains."
-
-"And I towards Spain: I have but two wishes--to reach Herreruela, and
-to avoid the French in Valencia."
-
-"Truly, they are well and wisely avoided," said the Spaniard through
-his clenched teeth, while his face became distorted and convulsed by
-concentrated hate and passion. "Save myself and another, my whole
-family have perished under their hands. Not even our aged mother was
-spared, for she died like my helpless old father by their bayonets,
-on the night that Junot entered Salamanca; and well would it have
-been if some of the young had suffered the same fate _first_. I had
-three sisters, senor--three lovelier girls, or three more loving,
-good, and gentle, God's blessed sun never shone on. Two suffered
-such wrongs on that night of horrors at Salamanca, that they could
-not or would not survive them; the youngest, Isidora, happily escaped
-by being in the convent of Santa Engracia, at Portalegre."
-
-Impressed by the undoubted earnestness of the Spaniard, Quentin said--
-
-"I am bound to the frontier, bearer of a secret despatch."
-
-"To whom?"
-
-"Honour ties my tongue for the present, senor."
-
-"Enough, then; continue to pursue this road for some miles, you will
-find a branch to the left where it runs parallel with the river
-Figuero, and leads to Castello de Vide. Proceed straight on and you
-will come to Marvao; six miles further on is Valencia de Alcantara,
-garrisoned by the French; cross the river Sever, and a league or so
-further brings you to Herreruela. Ere long I, too, shall be there,
-so we may meet again; but remember that the whole country swarms with
-the accursed French, and that your red coat will ensure your
-captivity or death."
-
-"I shall be wary."
-
-"Be so, or, Santos! I would not give a _claco_ for your life! Do
-you see yonder hill?" asked the Spaniard, pointing to a lofty
-peak--the highest of the mountain range.
-
-"Yes--a vapour hovers near it."
-
-"I am going there to see what news the eagles have for the loyal
-Portuguese."
-
-"The eagles!"
-
-"Exactly--but I forget that you are a stranger and don't understand
-me," replied the other, laughing.
-
-"Adios, senor," said Quentin, preparing to start.
-
-"Adios, senor soldado--adios, vaya!"
-
-The Spaniard pocketed his book of fables, threw his mantle over his
-left shoulder, grasped his cajado, and waving his hat, proceeded to
-ascend with great activity a steep zigzag path up the mountain side,
-while Quentin Kennedy pursued his solitary way, which opened into a
-level district covered with green orange, lemon, and olive groves;
-and though the warnings of his late acquaintance did not fail to
-impress him with anxiety, he felt hopeful that he would achieve in
-safety and with honour the duty assigned him--escaping the perils
-that might be set him, and the deadly snare into which Cosmo hoped he
-might fall.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE MULETEERS.
-
- "Riper occasions will thy valour claim,
- Danger comes on; Typhœus-like it comes,
- Whose fabled stature every hour increased."
- AQUILEIA--_Old Tragedy._
-
-
-While Quentin travelled onward, thinking over his recent meeting at
-the well, and puzzling himself about the enigma that was probably
-concealed by the words of the stranger concerning the eagles having
-news for Portugal, he was roused from his reverie by the jangling of
-bells, and ere long a string of mules, all sleek, well-fed, of
-dapple-colour, and in size larger than any he had ever seen, appeared
-in view, descending with sure and steady steps a narrow rocky path
-between the olive and orange groves that covered the steep mountain
-side.
-
-He paused for a moment to permit the string or line, which consisted
-of twelve mules, to pass along the road in front; but the three
-muleteers in charge, all hardy and sturdy fellows in gaudily braided
-and embroidered jackets of purple or olive green cloth, smart
-sombreros, and gay scarfs, accoutred with ivory-hafted knives and
-brass-butted pistols, hailed him immediately, asked whither he was
-going, and courteously, with cries of "Viva los Inglesos! viva el
-Rey!" offered him a draught of wine from the leathern bota that hung
-at the neck of Madrina, and in a trice he found himself accompanying
-them on their way.
-
-Perceiving that he belonged to the British army, they were very
-inquisitive to know what he was doing there alone; but Quentin had
-heard that some of those muleteers could make their way from the
-heart of Castile (then swarming with French troops) to the
-cantonments of the British army, along the Portuguese frontier,
-evading all infantry outposts and cavalry patrols by their superior
-knowledge of the country and its secret paths. He had heard also
-that they frequently acted as spies and traitors on both sides: thus
-he deemed extreme reserve necessary, and, with a prudence beyond his
-years and experience, parried their inquiries, and turned the
-conversation to general subjects, chiefly the various merits of their
-mules, which were laden with Indian corn, Oporto wine, pulse, flour,
-and tobacco; and he failed not, in particular, to extol the beauty of
-Madrina, a stately old mare, nearly sixteen hands in height, which
-had round her neck and on her gaudy red and yellow worsted head-gear
-a row of larger bells than the rest of the train.
-
-The clear sound of those bells being known to them all, they followed
-her with wonderful instinct, docility, and affection.
-
-So far as he could gather from the conversation, these muleteers were
-of Old Castile, the principal arriero being Ramon Campillo from
-Miranda del Ebro; he was a short, thick-set fellow, with a pleasant
-and sun-burned face, and a beard and head of hair so black and dense
-that made Quentin think the process of sheep-shearing might, in his
-instance, have been resorted to with ease and comfort. This shaggy
-mop he had gathered into a red silk hair-net, over which he wore his
-hat of coarse brown velvet, adorned by a band and bob of scarlet
-plush.
-
-These three men carolled and sung as they proceeded along, cracking
-their whips, indulging in scraps of old warlike ballads, of
-love-songs and seguidillas, pausing now and then to mutter an Ave on
-passing a cross or a cairn that had some dark story of bloodshed and
-crime. And many a boast they made of their sunny Castile which
-France should never, NEVER conquer! and many a story they told of the
-Cid Rodrigo, of our Lady of Zaragosa, the Holy Virgin del Pilar, of
-miracles and robbers, all pell-mell; but their chief themes were the
-recent exploits of their guerilla chiefs, then rising into power; of
-Don Julian Sanchez with the hare lip, and his glorious Castilian
-lancers; of El Pastor, the shepherd; El Medico, the doctor; El Manco,
-the cripple; of Don Juan Martin, the Empecinado, who, when his whole
-family had been murdered by the French, after the ladies of his house
-had endured horrors worse than death, in the first outburst of his
-grief, smeared himself with pitch, and vowed never to sheath his
-sword while a Frenchman remained alive in Spain; and who, when the
-French nailed a number of patriots to the oaks of the Guadarama,
-nailed up thrice that number of French soldiers in their place, to
-fill the forest with their dying groans. With enthusiasm they
-extolled all those wild spirits whom the war of invasion and
-independence had brought forth, calling it a _Guerra de moros contra
-estos infideles!_
-
-But their local hero of heroes seemed to be Don Baltasar de Saldos,
-whom they described as partly a Cid and partly a devil in his hatred
-of France and Frenchmen. The mention of his name proved of deep
-interest to Quentin, and finding him a ready and wondering listener,
-many were the stories they told of him and of his band, which was
-composed of Spanish deserters, run-away students, ruined nobles,
-unfrocked friars, and all manner of wild fellows who loved him with
-ardour and obeyed him with devotion.
-
-He was the flower of Castilian guerilla chiefs!
-
-"I have seen and heard enough of French atrocity in our
-peregrinations throughout the kingdoms of Andalusia, Castile, Leon,
-and Arragon, to make me imbibe somewhat of the same spirit of
-vengeance that inspires Baltasar de Saldos--aye, senor, to the full!"
-said Ramon, in his energy, spitting away the end of his cigarito, and
-crushing it under his heel.
-
-"In your line one must see much of life," said Quentin.
-
-"Much--maladita! I should think so. I was present in Madrid on the
-23rd of last April, when one hundred and twenty defenceless citizens
-were slaughtered in cold blood by the troops of Murat--shot down by
-platoons, and for what? For el Santos de los Santos! only because
-the epaulettes of his aide-de-camp, the gay Colonel de la Grange,
-were splashed with mud by some rash students at the gate of Alcala."
-
-"A slight cause, surely."
-
-"But that night, hombre, we had a terrible retribution," said the
-second muleteer, through his clenched teeth, as he gave a fierce
-twist to the scarlet silk handkerchief which encircled his head, and
-the fringed ends of which came from under his sombrero and floated
-over his shoulders.
-
-"Retribution, Ignacio Noain, I think we had, amigo mio!" replied
-Ramon, with a bitter laugh; "for it was on that night Baltasar threw
-off his student's gown and betook him to knife and musket, and rushed
-through the streets, shouting 'Guerra al cuchillo, Salamanquinos!'
-and 'Viva el Rey de Espana!' before the head-quarters of Marshal
-Murat; and sure vengeance he took, for ere morning the gutters of the
-Prado were gorged with the blood of more than seven hundred
-Frenchmen, who fell by the muskets and daggers of the loyal
-Castilians."
-
-"Then," said the third muleteer, with a smiling face and in an
-encomiastic tone, "it was Baltasar who slew Don Miguel de Saavedra."
-
-"To the devil with him!"
-
-"The traitorous governor of Valencia," added the other two.
-
-"And it was he," said Ramon, "who with his namesake, the Padre
-Baltasar Calvo, for twelve days and nights followed the fugitive
-French and Valencian traitors, the tools and followers of Godoy,
-through the streets, knife in hand, slaying them in cellars, vaults,
-and bodegas, till the last who was false to Spain had breathed out
-his dog's life, and his heart, reeking on a bayonet, was thrown on
-the altar of St. Isidor."
-
-The fiery energy of the speakers, the expression of their dark
-flashing eyes, their picturesque costumes, and the modulation of the
-grand old language in which they spoke, made those fierce and
-barbarous recitals doubly striking to Quentin Kennedy, who heard them
-with something bordering on astonishment, for the English press had
-no "own correspondents" then, to let the people at home know what was
-enacted abroad.
-
-"Then, senor," said Ignacio Noam, "it was Baltasar de Saldos who
-suggested the singular death to which the Spanish regiment of Navarre
-put the timid Italian, Filangheri."
-
-"And this mode of death?" asked Quentin, whom, sooth to say, the grim
-energy and suddenly developed ferocity of the hitherto jolly
-muleteers somewhat scared.
-
-"I shall tell you," said Ramon, "for I saw it. You must know, senor
-soldado, that this Italian was Governor of Corunna and a loyal
-cavalier to the King; but, terrified or hopeless by the overwhelming
-power of Bonaparte, he showed some signs of wavering, and refused to
-issue a proclamation of war against the French."
-
-"Might it not have been wisdom to temporize for a time?"
-
-"Santos! this is no time for trifling; so Baltasar rushed among the
-soldiers of our regiment of Navarre, and incited them to seize the
-governor at Villa Franca-del-Vierzo, a town on the road which leads
-from Corunna to Madrid, where they dragged him, almost naked, from
-the Marquis's palace.
-
-"'Muera al Filangheri!" shouted Baltasar to the soldiers; 'unfix your
-bayonets, plant the ground with them, and toss the traitor in a
-blanket!'
-
-"With shouts of acclamation at a suggestion so novel, they hastened
-to do as he suggested. The ground was soon planted thickly with
-three hundred bayonets, their sockets fixed in the earth, their sharp
-points upward. The breathless governor, pale and imploring mercy,
-was tossed thrice into the air from a blanket, as dogs are tossed on
-Shrove Tuesday. After the third toss, the blanket was withdrawn, and
-the hapless Filangheri fell crash on the bayonets. He was impaled in
-every part of his body at once; after this, leaving him miserably to
-die, the soldiers dispersed to join Baltasar's band of guerillas in
-the mountains of Herreruela; but this destruction of a king's officer
-caused Sir John Moore to deem him false to Ferdinand VII."
-
-"How horrible is all this!" exclaimed Quentin.
-
-"Desperate times and men, require desperate hearts and stern
-measures," said the muleteer Ramon, as he slung his long
-musket--which no doubt had a goodly charge of slugs in its
-barrel--and took a guitar which hung at the collar of one of his
-mules. "But we must not scare you, senor Inglese, as we shall surely
-do, if we talk longer thus; so now for something more cheerful:" and
-he began at once to sing, with a very mellow voice, a little romance,
-in which his companions joined with much laughter, and which began
-thus,--
-
- "Tiempo es el Caballero,
- The world will all divine;
- Now my girdle is too narrow,
- They'll see my shame--and thine!
-
- "Tiempo es el Caballero--
- When the maids my garments bring,
- I see them wink and nod their heads,
- I hear them tittering."*
-
-* Poetry of Spain.
-
-
-"We have come from Arronches and are going to Castello Branco, in
-Lower Beira, along the Portuguese frontier," said Ramon, "and yonder
-is the puebla at which we are to halt," he added, pointing to a few
-ruined walls that bordered the highway.
-
-"What walled town is that on the hill, with an old castle?" asked
-Quentin.
-
-"About two leagues beyond?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"That is Castello de Vide, famous for its cloth factory."
-
-"Castello de Vide--good Heavens, senores arrieros, your pleasant
-society has lured me out of my proper way."
-
-"I am sorry to hear it," said Ramon, drily.
-
-"I should have gone to the right."
-
-"Madre de Dios!"
-
-"To the right?"
-
-"Towards the French lines?"
-
-Such were the exclamations of the muleteers as their frowns deepened.
-
-"I should have gone somewhat in that direction, at all events," said
-Quentin, reddening with the annoyance and confusion natural to an
-honourable person when viewed with mistrust.
-
-"Senor Inglese, in what capacity, or for what purpose are you
-travelling on foot alone, and in this suspicious fashion, towards the
-outposts of General de Ribeaupierre, the commander in Valencia?"
-asked the muleteer Ramon, sternly, as he drew himself up, and
-proceeded very deliberately to examine the flint and priming of his
-long musket.
-
-"By what right do you ask?" demanded Quentin, whose heart beat
-tumultuously at the prospect of being butchered far from help or
-justice.
-
-"Take your hand from your pistol--dare you question us, senor--one to
-three?"
-
-"Yes, I do--by what right do you molest me?"
-
-"The right of loyal and true Castilians," replied the three
-muleteers, with one voice, as the other two, who had not yet spoken,
-unslung their bell-mouthed trabucos or blunderbusses, and all their
-faces assumed that very formidable scowl, which appears nowhere so
-grimly as in the dark and sallow visages of those sons of old Iberia.
-
-Now ensued a brief, but somewhat unpleasant and exciting pause; and
-finding that matters had come to this dangerous pass with him,
-Quentin, on reflection, drew forth his sealed missive, and showing
-the address to Ramon, said:
-
-"I am the bearer of this despatch from Lieutenant-General Sir John
-Hope, to Don Baltasar de Saldos, the guerilla chief, and if you are
-loyal Spaniards, as you say, you will put up those weapons, and
-direct me by the nearest and safest route to the hills near
-Herreruela."
-
-"Oh, par todos Santos, but this alters the case entirely!" said
-Ramon, as they relinquished their weapons, wreathed their grim fronts
-with sudden smiles, and cordially shook hands with him.
-
-"Why did you not tell us all this at first?" asked the muleteer
-Ignacio Noain.
-
-"Well, even Madrina, I suppose, does not like to be sharply taken by
-the bridle," said Quentin, smiling, and feeling considerably relieved
-in his mind.
-
-"No more does she, the old beauty, she would lash out at her own
-madre. You have somewhat overshot the way, senor, for a mile or two
-along the Figuero; however, you shall not leave us yet awhile. Dine
-with us at the old puebla--the French have not left many stones of it
-together. Ay de mi! it was a jovial place once; many a bolero and
-fandango I have danced with the girls here, and where are they all
-now? We have only bacallao (dried ling) and biscuits, with a
-mouthful of good wine--real vino de Alicant--to offer you."
-
-"Thanks, senores, but evening is almost at hand."
-
-"It will be nightfall when you reach the base of yonder mountain,"
-said Ramon, pointing to a lofty hill, whose granite brows were all
-empurpled by the sunshine; "there Gil Llano, a poor vinedresser,
-lives--a Portuguese, who for my sake, if not for your own, will
-gladly give you shelter; be sure, however, to show him this."
-
-With these words, Ramon disengaged from one of the four dozen of
-brass bell buttons, with which his jacket was adorned, one of the
-many consecrated copper medals that hung thereat, and placed it in
-Quentin's hand, just as they entered the ill-fated puebla (village),
-which was totally roofless and ruined. Fragments of charred
-furniture, broken crocks, cans, and plates strewed the now untrodden
-street, where the grass was springing. The broad-leaved vines grew
-wild about the crumbling walls and open windows; and a rude cross
-here and there marked the hastily made graves of the slaughtered
-villagers.
-
-There, as elsewhere, the wings of the Imperial Eagle, like those of a
-destroying angel, had spread desolation and death!
-
-"When," asked the poor Portuguese, in one of their manifestoes after
-the horrors of Coimbra, "did the laws of man authorize the outrage of
-women, the slaughter of aged and other defenceless inhabitants of
-places which made no resistance; the assassination of men who were
-accounted rich, only because they could not furnish that quantity of
-treasure of which it was said they were possessed!"
-
-Halting by the old village well, the muleteers attended first to the
-wants of Madrina and her sleek companions.
-
-"_Arre, arre_, old woman," said Ramon, "thou shalt have a deep cool
-draught at last; _arre, arre_!"
-
-This is an old Moorish term (literally gee-up), whence the muleteers
-are familiarly termed arrieros. They then shared with Quentin their
-dried fish and hard biscuits, with a few olives and luscious oranges,
-that had become golden among the groves that cast their shadows on
-the Ebro; and they frequently patted him on the shoulder, and
-expressed regret for their suspicions, and the mischief these might
-have led to.
-
-The group around this lonely well, which bubbled through a grotesque
-stone face, under an old Roman arch, and the scene around, were
-wonderfully striking and picturesque.
-
-In the immediate foreground were the swarthy Castilian muleteers in
-their gaudy dress, and their gaily trapped mules, all resting on the
-bright green sward; close by was the ruined puebla; northward rose
-Castello de Vide in the distance on its verdant hill, the round
-towers of its ancient fortress and ruined walls, that had more than
-once withstood the tide of Moorish and Castilian chivalry; to the
-east and south rose the great sierras that form the boundary between
-Spain and Portugal, all crimsoned with the light of the gorgeous sun
-that was setting in gold and saffron behind the cork tree groves that
-clothe the hills of St. Mames.
-
-The frugal repast was barely over when the tinkle of a clear and
-silvery bell that rung in some solitary hermitage, concealed afar off
-among the chestnut woods in some hollow of the mountains, came at
-intervals on the evening wind.
-
-"Vespers," said Ramon Campillo, taking off his sombrero; "amigos
-mios, to prayers."
-
-Then, with a simple devotion that impressed him deeply, Quentin
-Kennedy saw those sturdy and jovial, but rather reckless fellows,
-who, but a few minutes before, were (we are compelled to admit it)
-quite disposed to knock him on the head, kneel down and pray very
-earnestly for a minute or so.
-
-A few minutes more saw them on their way to Castello de Vide, and him
-progressing towards the mountains. They waved their hats to him
-repeatedly, and then as the twilight deepened, the breeze of the
-valley as it swept over the odorous orange groves brought pleasantly
-to his ear the jingle of the mule-bells, and the tinkle of Ramon's
-guitar dying away in the distance, with a verse of the song the three
-arrieros sung--an old Valencian evening hymn.
-
- "Thou who all our sins didst bear,
- All our sorrows suffering there,
- _O Agnus Dei!_
- Lead us where thy promise led
- That poor dying thief who said,
- _Memento mei!"_
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-GIL LLANO.
-
- "Still, however fate may thwart me,
- Unconvinced, unchanged I live;
- From those dreams I cannot part me,
- That such dear delusions give;
- Hoping yet in countless years,
- One bright day unstained with tears."
- RODRIGUEZ LOBO.
-
-
-The outrages of the French invaders in Spain and Portugal were
-doubtless of the worst description; but those reprisals which the
-patriots were not slow in making were equal in atrocity. The stories
-he had heard of these shook Quentin's confidence in his own safety,
-and in his powers mental and physical; they caused him to regard with
-something of suspicion, repugnance, and mistrust the dwellers in the
-land, and to wish himself well out of it, or at least safe once more
-under the colours of the Old Borderers.
-
-He remembered the intense bitterness, the momentary but clamorous
-anxiety caused by his late episode, and how keenly the foretasted
-agony of death entered his soul, when the three muleteers threatened
-him with their weapons, and when there seemed every prospect of his
-falling by their hand in that mountain solitude, and being left there
-dead to the wolves; his fate and story alike unknown to all who might
-feel the slightest interest therein. He remembered all this, we say,
-and he had no desire to endure such an agony again.
-
-He felt his isolation, his helplessness in many respects, and longed
-anxiously for the end of his task, and for the society of his
-comrades and friends, of Askerne, Middleton, and others by whom he
-was esteemed and trusted.
-
-This very anxiety made him quicken his pace, and thus about an hour
-after parting from the muleteers at the puebla, he saw a light
-twinkling on the roadway at the base of the dark green mountain;
-then, after passing under some half-ruined trellis where the vines
-were carefully trained and made a leafy tunnel, he reached the
-dwelling of Gil Llano (pronounced Yano) the vine-dresser, a wayside
-cottage, with a few smaller adjuncts where the galinas roosted and
-the porkers snorted.
-
-He knocked at the door, which was slowly opened after some delay, and
-after he had been reconnoitred by a pair of keen black eyes through
-an eyelet hole; then the proprietor, a swarthy and stout little
-Portuguese, black bearded and snub-nosed, appeared with a bare knife
-clenched between his teeth and a cocked musket in his hands, to
-demand who was there.
-
-"_Quien es?_" he asked, angrily.
-
-"_Gente de paez_," replied Quentin, in a conciliating tone.
-
-"_Pho!_ indeed--your dress doesn't say you are a man of peace."
-
-"I am a British soldier travelling on duty," said Quentin.
-
-"How can I assist you, senor?"
-
-"The muleteer, Ramon Campillo, of Miranda del Ebro, who is now on his
-way to Castello Branco, informed me that you are a loyal
-Portuguese----"
-
-"None more loyal!" responded the other, slapping the butt of his
-musket.
-
-"I was to show you this medal, and, if not intruding, remain with you
-for the night."
-
-"Ramon is my good friend," said the Portuguese, carefully looking at
-the brass medal, which bore the image of St. Elizabeth, "and this was
-my gift to him. You are welcome, senor, to such poor accommodation
-as the French have left me to offer."
-
-The Portuguese conducted Quentin into his cottage, the interior of
-which, by its squalor and poverty, showed that poor Gil Llano's
-circumstances had not been improved by the influences of the war.
-
-A candle, in a clay-holder, flickered on the bare table, an iron
-brasero, full of charcoal and dry leaves, smouldered on the hearth;
-above the mantelpiece were a little stucco Madonna and some gaudy
-little Lisbon prints of holy personages, such as St. Anthony of
-Portugal, with his beloved pig; St. Elizabeth the queen, who died at
-Estremoz in 1336; St. Ignatius Loyola, and others in scarlet and blue
-drapery, with golden halos, all pasted on the whitewashed wall.
-
-The cottage appeared to consist of three or four small apartments,
-all roofed with large red tiles, through the holes in which Quentin
-could see the stars shining, and suggesting an idea of umbrellas in
-case of rain. The rafters were thickly hung with bunches of dried
-raisins, by the sale of which to the passing muleteers and
-contrabandistas, Gil and his family subsisted. But even this humble
-place bore traces of the retreating French. One of the little
-windows had been dashed to pieces by a musket-butt, and most of the
-woodwork had gone for fuel when Junot's voltigeurs bivouacked among
-the vine trellis, half of which they tore down and destroyed.
-
-Poor Gil Llano, whose whole attire consisted of a zamarra, a pair of
-red cotton breeches, a yellow sash, and the net which confined his
-hair, made Quentin Kennedy heartily welcome, and spoke with
-enthusiasm and gratitude of the British, who had swept Portugal of
-the French; and he exulted about the recent battle of Vimiera, which
-he had witnessed from the Torres Vedras, where, he frankly admitted,
-he had hovered among the cork-trees, and, with his musket, had
-"potted" successfully some of Ribeaupierre's dragoons as they fell
-back in disorder before the furious advance of General Anstruther's
-column.
-
-Quentin soon felt himself at home, and shared with Llano's family the
-supper of ham and eggs, cooked in a crock between the brasero and one
-of the stones of Antas, which are supposed, when once heated, to
-continue so for two days. He might have excused the flavour of
-garlic, but found an Abrantes melon sliced with sugar, and a flask of
-Oporto wine, very acceptable.
-
-The half-clad mother and her meagre, dark-skinned brood, with their
-large black eyes, he could perceive regarded him as a heretic and
-soldier, doubtfully, even fearfully, and askance--an English heretic
-being always associated, in the minds of Peninsula people, with
-priestly denunciations and the _autos de fé_ of the Holy Office in
-its palmy days. However, after a time, as he manifested no desire to
-eat any of the children, but bestowed upon them all he could
-afford--a handful of half-vintins, part of the poor quartermaster's
-parting gift--confidence became established, and little bare-legged
-Pedrillo crept close to his knee; Babieta peeped slily at him from
-behind her mother's skirts, and, when he hung Ramon's brass medal
-round the tawny neck of Gil, the nursling, the goodwoman Llano's
-heart opened to him at once.
-
-Perceiving that Quentin was so young, she asked, while her dark eyes
-filled with a tender expression, if his mother sorrowed for him, and
-if she had many other sons, that she could spare him; adding that,
-after all she had seen of war, she would rather die than permit
-either of her boys to become soldiers, even to fight for Portugal.
-
-"Ere long Portugal shall have stronger hands than we could furnish to
-fight for her," said Gil, confidently. "No miracle the blessed
-saints of heaven have ever worked has been half so wonderful as these
-marvellous and prophetic eggs that have been found by Don Julian
-Sanchez, by El Pastor, the Alcalde of Portalegre and others, in the
-nests among the mountains. True it is, senor," he continued, on
-perceiving Quentin's glance of inquiry and surprise, "that eggs have
-been found laid in the mountains by the birds of the air--eggs
-bearing inscriptions which foretell that as Portugal has been
-deserted at her utmost need by the House of Braganza, our brave old
-king, Don Sebastian, of pious and glorious memory, will come to
-protect and rule over us again."
-
-"Don Sebastian," said Quentin, who had heard this farrago of words
-with some wonder; "how long is it ago since he was king?"
-
-Gil reckoned on his brown fingers, and then said--
-
-"About two hundred and thirty years."
-
-"How--what?" exclaimed Quentin, thinking that he had not heard aright.
-
-"Exactly, senor; he was taken--some say killed--in battle by the
-Moorish dogs at the battle of Alcazal-quiver, on the coast of Fez, in
-1578; but his restoration to us is certain now."
-
-"And _eggs_, do you say, have prophesied this?"
-
-"By the soul of St. Anthony of Lisbon, yes! The miraculous legends
-written on their shells told us so. I saw one with my own eyes as it
-lay on the altar of the Estrella convent, where it had been brought
-by the Marquis d'Almeida, who found it on the mountain of Cintra."
-
-"And you read the legend?"
-
-"No, senor--I cannot read; moreover, it was written in old Latin."
-
-"By whom, Senor Gil?"
-
-"God and St. Anthony only know," replied Gil, crossing himself after
-dipping his fingers in a little clay font of _agua-bendita_ that hung
-beside the mantelpiece.
-
-Now Quentin remembered the words of the stranger whom he had met by
-the wayside cross, and whom he had last seen toiling up the mountain
-with the aid of his staff, as he alleged, in search of eagles' nests.
-He had some trouble to preserve his gravity, and probably nothing
-enabled him to do so but his wonder at the perfect simplicity and the
-good faith of this Portuguese peasant in the return of Lusitania's
-long-lost hero.
-
-On inquiring further, he learned, for the first time, that there
-still existed in Portugal the sect called of old "Sebastianists,"
-fondly cherishing a belief that their crusader king (who fell in
-battle against Muley Moloc) was detained in an enchanted island,
-where he was supernaturally preserved; and that they also cherished a
-belief that he would reappear with all his paladins to deliver
-Lusitania when at her utmost need!
-
-Portugal's utmost need had come and gone; Roleia and Vimiera had been
-fought and won by Sir Arthur Wellesley; but still the Sebastianists
-believed in the ultimate return and intervention of their favourite
-hero, and eggs marked by the more cunning with some chemical agency,
-bearing legends foretelling the event, were opportunely found and
-exhibited: a puerile trick, which Marshal Junot, General de
-Ribeaupierre, and others soon contrived to turn against the
-inventors; for _other_ eggs bearing mottoes of very different import
-were frequently found in the same places.
-
-A belief similar to that of the Sebastianists long lingered among the
-Scots relative to their beloved James IV., who fell at Flodden; among
-the Germans, regarding Frederick Barbarossa, who filled all Asia with
-the terror of his name, and died on the banks of the Cydnus; among
-the Britons concerning their fabulous Arthur of the Round Table; and
-among the ancient Irish concerning some now unknown warrior named
-Dharra Dheeling. But it was left for the poor Portuguese to be among
-the last to console themselves under defeat and disaster with such
-delusive hopes; and thus in the year of Vimiera, "many people," says
-General Napier, "and those not of the most uneducated classes, were
-often observed upon the highest points of the hills, casting earnest
-looks towards the ocean, in the hopes of descrying the enchanted
-island in which their long-lost hero was detained."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-DANGER IN THE PATH.
-
- "Beloved of glory, Spain! hail, holy ground!
- All hail! thou chosen scene of deeds renown'd,
- By warriors wrought in each progressive age,
- Who struggled to repel th' oppressor's rage.
- Tell thou the world how on thy favoured coast,
- Our Wellesley fought, and Gaul her sceptre lost."
- _Roncevalles--a Poem._
-
-
-Proceeding eastward next morning, Quentin was guided by Gil Llano for
-some miles towards the Spanish frontier. To avoid all chance of
-being seen by cavalry or foraging parties, the officers commanding
-which were sometimes really ignorant rather than oblivious of the
-actual line of demarcation between Spain and Portugal, the worthy
-vinedresser conducted him by unfrequented but steep and devious
-mountain paths, which left far on their right flank the little town
-and fortress of Marvao, that lies in the Comarca of Portalegre, and
-as they were now within six miles of Valencia de Alcantara, which was
-the head-quarters of Ribeaupierre's cavalry brigade, the utmost
-circumspection was necessary.
-
-The morning was one of singular loveliness; the white mists were
-rolling up the green mountain sides from the greener valleys below,
-and there was a peculiar freshness and fragrance in the atmosphere
-which made Quentin feel buoyant and happy, for a time at least; the
-sun was high in heaven, the dew was glittering on every herb and
-tree, and the mountain scenery looked bright and glorious.
-
-The blood of our soldiers who fell at Roleia and Vimiera had not been
-shed in vain for Portugal. Already signs of peace were visible in
-her valleys and towns, and all was in repose along her frontier.
-Thus Quentin could hear the lowing of oxen and the bleating of sheep
-come pleasantly on the morning wind that passed over the green
-sierra, bearing with it the odour of the orange groves in the valley
-and of the flowering arbutus that bordered the way.
-
-In a hollow of the hills, Llano showed Quentin a lake, on the borders
-of which some of the miraculous eggs had been found by Baltasar de
-Saldos in a cypress grove; and he alleged that its waters had the
-power of swallowing or sucking into the bowels of the earth whatever
-was thrown therein, consequently not a leaf, or reed, or lotus were
-to be seen floating there.
-
-"But its power, senor, is a mere joke when compared with that of the
-lake of Cedima, which lies about eight leagues from Coimbra, and
-which instantly swallows up the largest logs and trees, if cast
-therein."
-
-"Is there a whirlpool in the centre?" asked Quentin.
-
-"Saints and angels only know what is in the centre; but in my
-father's days--he was a farmer, senor, in the Quinta das
-Lagrimas--there came a Danish cavalier who refused to credit the
-story, and offered, mockingly, to cross the lake on horseback, in
-presence of the Juiz-de-fora, the Reformator of the University, the
-Alcalde of the city, and all the great lords of Coimbra.
-
-"After hearing the bishop (who is always Conde de Arganuil) say mass
-in the church of Santa Cruz, and after partaking of the Holy
-Communion before the altar there, he mounted his horse, and, in
-presence of a vast multitude, proceeded to the lake of Cedima. Then
-when he saw its black and ominous water that lay without a ripple in
-the sunshine, his heart somewhat failed him, and lest the story of
-the lake might be true, and lest his life might indeed be lost, on
-perceiving a great stake, or the trunk of an old chestnut tree near
-the edge, he tied a thick rope to it, securing the other end to his
-right leg. Another rope of similar strength he tied to the neck of
-his horse, a fine Spanish gennet, and giving him the spur, he uttered
-a shout and plunged headlong into the water.
-
-"A little way the horse swam snorting, and then began to sink; ere
-long his ears alone were visible! Then they too disappeared; the
-water bubbled above his nostrils as his head went down; then the dark
-water flowed over the rider's shoulders--then over his head, and
-while a cry of dismay rose from the terrified people, the steed and
-the stranger vanished together and were seen no more."
-
-"So the ropes proved of no service?" said Quentin.
-
-"The one that was about the neck of the horse was snapped right
-through the centre; but at the end of the other was found the right
-leg of the unfortunate Dane, torn off by the thigh, doubtless as the
-downward current whirled him into the vortex; and so from that day a
-belief in the waters of Cedima has been stronger than ever in
-Portugal."
-
-"After the marvellous eggs and the enchanted island, I can easily
-think so," said Quentin.
-
-When worthy Gil Llano (who expressed a hope to see him again if he
-returned that way) had left him, with the information that from the
-top of the next hill he would see Spain and the spires of Valencia de
-Alcantara, Quentin proceeded all the more rapidly that he was now
-alone, and his steps kept pace with the busy current of his thoughts.
-
-His whole ideas of the duty on which he had been sent were somewhat
-vague. He had but three instructions given him: first, to avoid
-Valencia (which the reader must not confound with the capital of the
-kingdom of the same name); second, to reach Hereruela how he best
-could; third, to deliver his despatch; and for the execution of this
-he had been sent from Portalegre unsupplied either with money or
-credentials to any Alcalde, Juiz-de-fora, or other civil or military
-authority, in case of any difficulty arising.
-
-There were times--and this was one--when Quentin felt as if he were
-again at Rohallion--at his home, for such he felt it to be--relating
-all these adventures to those who were now there; to the kind and
-soldier-like old Lord; to the courteous and gentle Lady Winifred; to
-the old quartermaster, with his kind red face and yellow wig, while
-Mr. Spillsby the butler and Jack Andrews loitered near to listen; to
-the dominie, with his rusty blacks, his square shoe-buckles, and his
-musty memories of the classics; and more than all, to Flora Warrender!
-
-And then, with these thoughts, there seemed to come to his ears the
-pleasant rustle of the aged sycamores as the west wind shook their
-branches, the cawing of the black rooks on the old grey keep, the
-rush of the Lollards' Linn pouring under its arch and over its ledge
-of rock; and to his fancy's eye the sierras of Portugal gave place to
-the brown hills of Carrick, the distant Craigs of Kyle, and "the
-bonnie blooming heather," or the waves of the Clyde as they boiled in
-foam over the Partan Craig and climbed the dark headland of Rohallion.
-
-So the past returned and the present fled!
-
-Amid those cherished scenes he had long since left his happy boyhood.
-Now he felt himself, as we have said, every inch a soldier and a man,
-inspired by a sense of duty, of trust, and not a little by the love
-of adventure natural to youth. The inborn ambition which the solid
-weight of his knapsack and accoutrements, and all his sufferings when
-on the march from Maciera Bay, had somewhat chilled; the high spirit
-that Cosmo's hatred and cutting coldness had striven to crush, both
-sprung up anew in his buoyant heart, and he felt it glowing with
-hope, energy, and enthusiasm; and now, when he had reached the summit
-of the mountain over which the road passed, and on issuing from a
-narrow rocky defile, saw a vast extent of open country beyond, a
-glorious and fertile landscape, all vibrating apparently in the rays
-of the cloudless sun, he waved his cap and almost cried "hurrah!" for
-he knew that he looked down on----Spain!
-
-Before him, as on a map, he saw the vast extent of Spanish
-Estremadura stretching into distance far away, all steeped in a
-lovely golden glow, the almost universal verdure of the landscape
-relieved here and there by the water of the Salor and other minor
-tributaries of the Tagus, winding like blue silk threads through
-velvet of emerald green, dotted by thickets of chestnut, orange, and
-cork trees; and there, too, were the strong embattled towers and the
-spires of Valencia de Alcantara, with the tricolour on its greatest
-bastion; and in the distance, half hid in saffron haze, through which
-they loomed in purple tint, the ramparts of Albuquerque, on its steep
-hill, the heritage of the Condes de Ledesma. Between these cities
-lay a little puebla, which he knew must be San Vincente, near, but
-not through which, lay his path to the hills that overlooked the
-plain.
-
-Thoughts of the poetry, of the beauty, and romance of Spain came
-thronging on his memory, and we must confess they formed an odd chaos
-of cloaked cavaliers with guitars and rapiers; dark eyed donnas in
-balconies, fluttering fans and veils; lurking rivals, with mask and
-dagger; mountain robbers in high-crowned hats, with their legs
-swathed in red bandages, after the orthodox fashion of all
-melodramatic banditti. These, together with the solid splendour and
-wonderful stories of the Alhambra, the wars of the high-spirited
-Moors of Granada, ending so sadly in _el suspiro del Moro_, when the
-warriors of Ferdinand and Isabella rent the banner of the Prophet
-from the weak hand of Boabdil el Chico, not unnaturally made up his
-stock ideas of the sunny land he looked upon.
-
-But it was the land of the Cid Campeador--he at whose name the eyes
-of even the most unlettered Spaniard will lighten--for he was the
-veritable and redoubtable Wallace of Castile against the enemies of
-Christianity and the Christian's God. Such memories as these rushed
-on Quentin's mind as he looked down on Estremadura; nor could he
-forget, though last not least, that it was the native land of him
-"who laughed Spain's chivalry away"--the illustrious Cervantes, the
-one-handed soldier of Lepanto.
-
-A distant but unmistakeable sound of musketry reverberating among the
-mountain peaks on his left, roused him somewhat unpleasantly from his
-dream, bringing him all at once from the romance of the past to the
-reality of present Spanish life.
-
-Several shots he heard distinctly pealing through the air; others
-followed, and after an interval, two dropping shots, but at a greater
-distance, as if they proceeded from some flying skirmishers. Then
-all became still, and he heard only the voices of the birds as they
-wheeled aloft in the sunshine or twittered among the arbutus leaves.
-
-The road, a narrow and rugged path now as it descended, passed
-through a dark grove of wild pines; on issuing from which, Quentin's
-nerves received somewhat of a shock on seeing a French light dragoon,
-in pale green uniform, lying on his back quite dead, with the foam of
-past agony on his lips, and the blood of a recent wound still oozing
-from his left temple, through which a musket shot had passed.
-Crushed, apparently by a horse's hoof, his light brass helmet lay
-beside him. A few yards off lay another _Chasseur à cheval_, and
-further off still lay a third, who seemed to have been dragged some
-distance by his horse ere his foot had been disengaged from the
-stirrup, for a bloody and dusty track was visible from where Quentin
-stood to where the Chasseur lay.
-
-Quentin paused, for his heart beat wildly, and instinctively he
-looked to the flints and pans of his pistols, his hands trembling as
-he did so--with an excitement justifiable in one so young--but _not_
-with fear.
-
-These three unfortunates were the first Frenchmen--the first
-slain--and, in fact (save the dead gipsy in the vault of Kilhenzie)
-they were the _first_ dead men he had looked upon; thus he glanced
-timidly, and while his heart swelled with pity, from one to the other.
-
-There they were, three smart and handsome young men, clad in showy
-light cavalry uniforms, each perhaps a mother's pride and father's
-hope, left dead and abandoned to the ravens, in that wild place, with
-their white faces and glazed eyes staring stonily at the glorious
-noonday sun, while the little birds came hopping and twittering about
-them.
-
-Quentin's gentle soul was stirred within him; he was new to this
-butcherly work, and war seemed wicked indeed! Those three rigid
-figures--those three pale faces with fallen jaws, and those bloody
-wounds, made a scaring and terrible impression upon him; but as he
-continued hastily to descend the hill, and left them behind, he
-foresaw not the callous heart and time that use and wont would bring.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-THE CHASSEUR À CHEVAL.
-
- "The soldier little quiet finds,
- But is exposed to stormy winds,
- And weather."--L'ESTRANGE.
-
-
-After proceeding a little way, the sound of voices, as if engaged in
-fierce altercation, made him pause and look round warily, pistol in
-hand. He drew behind a gigantic Portuguese cypress that overshadowed
-the way, and on reconnoitring, discovered two men engaged in a fierce
-and deadly struggle. They were a French cavalry officer and a
-Spanish guerilla.
-
-The Frenchman was almost in rags, for his silver epaulettes and green
-uniform, covered with elaborate braiding, had been torn in his
-conflict with the Spaniard, for, as they grappled, they rolled over
-each other down a gravelly bank into the dry bed of a mountain
-stream, where they only paused to draw breath before renewing the
-contest, in which the guerilla was apparently getting the mastery.
-He had a broadbladed dagger in his sash; but, as the Frenchman held
-his wrists with a death-clutch, he was unable to use it.
-
-"Ah, sacré Dieu!" cried the officer, on whose breast the knees of the
-guerilla were pressed without mercy; "I will yield on the promise of
-quarter--even from you."
-
-"Dog of a Frenchman! May thy foot be heavy on my neck if I spare
-thee!" was the hoarse and fierce response of the Spaniard, in whom
-Quentin, with considerable interest, recognised his friend of the
-wayside cross, whom he last saw going bird-nesting up the mountains
-in search of the miraculous eggs.
-
-"Espanole," said the Frenchman, in tones of rage and entreaty
-mingled, "would you kill a defenceless and unarmed man?"
-
-"Why not, if he is French? Who slew my aged father? Who slew my
-mother--my sisters--all--all? Who deluged our home with blood, and
-desolated it with fire?"
-
-"Not I--not I--spare me," exclaimed the Frenchman, as he felt his
-strength failing him fast; "my mother, Spaniard--hound!--ah, ma
-mère--ma mère--mon Dieu!" he added, with a hopeless groan; and these
-two French words stirred some deep, keen chord, some long-forgotten
-memory in the heart of Quentin, who felt his temples throbbing.
-
-"Maledita! the strife of our forefathers is but renewed," continued
-the Spaniard, in his noble and forcible Castilian, through his
-clenched teeth, while his eyes flashed fire, and his moustaches
-seemed to bristle; "it is a war to the knife against dogs and
-infidels, for what are Frenchmen but dogs and infidels, even as the
-Moors were of old?"
-
-Again, without avail, the hapless Chasseur pleaded for his life; but
-the more powerful conqueror heard him to an end, and then laughed
-exultingly.
-
-"I am guiltless of all, of everything but doing my duty," he urged.
-
-"Duty!" repeated the other; "shall I tell you of our pillaged altars
-and desecrated churches, of ruined cities and desolated villages;
-shall I tell you of our slaughtered brethren, our outraged wives,
-sisters, and ladies of the holy orders, some of whom have been bound
-to gun-carriages, stripped, and exposed in the common streets and
-plazas? Par Dios! these things are enough to call down Heaven's
-thunder on the head of your accursed Corsican!"
-
-"Ah, morbleu!" gasped the Frenchman, "what a devil of a savage it is!
-Peste! I assure you, monsieur, I have never touched even the tip of
-a woman's hand since I had the misfortune to cross the Pyrenees.
-Tudieu! the Emperor finds us other work and other things to think of."
-
-By a violent wrench the Spaniard now got his right hand free, and in
-an instant, like a gleam of light, his long knife glittered as he
-upheld it at arm's length above the poor young Frenchman, whose pale
-face and dark eyes assumed a most despairing aspect.
-
-Quentin could no longer look on unmoved.
-
-"Hold--hold!" he exclaimed, and sprang towards them threateningly.
-
-"Oho, amigo mio," said the Spaniard, looking round with a saturnine
-smile; "'tis my friend of the laurel bushes--the spit that looked
-like a sword."
-
-"Hold, I say, Spaniard--would you murder him in cold blood?"
-
-"Demonio, yes; and you, too, if you would protect a soldier of the
-false Corsican. Begone, and leave us, or it may be worse for you."
-
-"I shall not."
-
-"Maladita!" said the Spaniard, grinding his teeth, and clutching the
-throat of the fallen man.
-
-"Release him, I say," demanded Quentin, resolutely.
-
-"Vaya usted con cien mill demonios," (Begone, with a hundred thousand
-devils), said the Spaniard, absolutely, gnashing his strong white
-teeth, which glistened beneath his black moustache.
-
-"Oh, sauvez moi, mon camarade," implored the poor Frenchman.
-
-"Thus, then, die--die en el santo nombre de Dios!"
-
-With this impious shout, the furious guerilla, or whatever he was,
-raised the dagger which he had lowered for a moment; but ere it could
-descend; Quentin, with lightning speed, snatched up the heavy cajado
-which lay at his feet, and, loth to use a more deadly weapon against
-a Spaniard, struck the guerilla a blow on the head and rolled him
-over. A heavy malediction escaped him, and then he lay motionless
-and still, completely stunned.
-
-Breathless with his recent struggle and its terrors, the French
-officer lost no time in springing to his feet.
-
-"A thousand thanks to you, monsieur! But for you--there--there had
-been a vacancy in my troop to-night. But here--come this way; we
-have not a moment to lose, for the hills are full of these guerillas.
-Peste! they are as thick as bees hereabout; and believe me, the men
-of Baltasar de Saldos are not to be trifled with."
-
-As the Frenchman spoke, he seized Quentin by the sleeve, and half
-led, half dragged him through the grove of pines; after which, they
-ran down hill for more than a mile, till they reached the main-road
-that led directly to Valencia the lesser, when Quentin paused, and
-began to reflect that he was going very oddly about the deliverance
-of Sir John Hope's despatch, a document that probably announced the
-day on which the entire army would break up from its cantonments and
-advance into Spain!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-EUGENE DE RIBEAUPIERRE.
-
- "Ford. Well, he's not here I seek for.
- Page. No, nor nowhere else but in your brain.
- Ford. Help me to search my house this one time: if I
- find not what I seek, show me no colour for my extremity,
- let me for ever be your table sport; let them say of me, 'As
- jealous as Ford, that searched hollow walnuts for his wife's
- leman.'"--_Merry Wives of Windsor._
-
-
-Quentin Kennedy was only master of a certain amount of the Spanish
-language, which he had rapidly acquired through the medium of his
-friend the dominie's sonorous Scottish latinity; but fortunately the
-young Frenchman, who seemed to be highly accomplished, spoke English
-with remarkable fluency.
-
-His uniform, we have said, was in rags; his epaulettes had gone in
-the recent struggle, the straps of lace for retaining them on the
-shoulders alone remained. A hole in the breast of his light green
-jacket showed where the gold cross of the Legion had been rent away
-by some guerilla's hand, and the state of his scarlet pantaloons made
-one see the advantage of wearing a kilt for pugnacious casualties, as
-they were now reduced to mere shreds.
-
-He was a slender young man, in appearance only a year or two older
-than Quentin, though really many years his senior in experience of
-the world and of life generally. His hair, which he wore in
-profusion, was dark brown and silky, and his hands, on one of which
-sparkled a splendid ring, were white and almost ladylike. An
-incipient moustache shaded his short upper lip; his features were
-very regular, and he was so decidedly good-looking, that Quentin
-could not help thinking that if he had a sister like him, she must be
-charming!
-
-They quitted the highway and entered a dense thicket by the wayside,
-where breathless, hot, and weary, they cast themselves on the cool
-deep grass that grew under the leafy shade, and the last of the
-contents of Quentin's canteen, divided between them, proved very
-acceptable to both.
-
-"I perceive that you are a French officer," said Quentin; "may I ask
-whom I have had the honour of succouring?"
-
-"Certainly, mon camarade; I am a sous-lieutenant of my father's
-regiment, the 24th Chasseurs à Cheval--my name is Eugene de
-Ribeaupierre."
-
-"Any relation of the general who commands in Valencia?"
-
-"A very near one," said he, laughing; "I am his son, and monsieur's
-very obedient servant. Come! let us rest ourselves and talk a
-little. The tap on the head you gave that Spaniard was most critical
-and serviceable to me."
-
-"True--it only came just in time!"
-
-"I hope it may have despatched him outright."
-
-"I trust not, now that the end was accomplished."
-
-"Now that we have breathing time, you will perhaps excuse my little
-curiosity, and say how you came to be here, within two or three miles
-of our sentinels?"
-
-"The country is quite open," said Quentin, evasively, with a smile.
-
-"Your troops, we have heard, are closing up from Lisbon and
-elsewhere; but have not as yet been rash enough to enter Spain, the
-territories of King Joseph."
-
-"Rash, monsieur?"
-
-"Peste! I suppose your generals have not forgotten the sharp lessons
-we taught them at Roleia and Vimiera?"
-
-Quentin laughed to hear the pleasant tone in which the Frenchman
-spoke of two very important defeats of the Emperor's troops as
-"lessons" to the British, but he said plainly enough,
-
-"I am here because I was sent on duty."
-
-"To whom, monsieur?"
-
-Quentin hesitated.
-
-"Nay, out with it, man--trust me, on my honour--I may well pledge it
-to one who has saved me from a barbarous death within this hour, and
-earned my warmest gratitude."
-
-"Well, then, I go to Don Baltasar de Saldos."
-
-"Diable! the man's a guerilla chief, and we have just had a severe
-brush with his people. My patrol, consisting of a sergeant, a
-corporal, and twelve chasseurs, were riding leisurely along the road
-from San Vincente towards the summit of yonder mountain, when, from a
-grove of cork and cypress trees, there flashed out some twenty
-muskets. It was an ambush; the leading section of them fell dead;
-the rest broke through, sabre à la main, and fled, pursued by the
-guerillas, who sprang after them with the yells of fiends and the
-activity of squirrels, leaping from bank to rock, and from rock to
-tree, firing and reloading so long as we were in range. Struck by a
-ball in the counter, my horse reared wildly up, and threw me; for
-some minutes I was insensible, and on recovering, found myself in the
-paws of yonder Spanish bear, who was thrice my bulk and strength.
-You know the rest. I thought it was all up with me. As Francis said
-at Pavia, 'tout est perdu, sauf l'honneur!' Baltasar's head-quarters
-are in a mountain puebla near Herreruela, where he successfully
-defies my father's cavalry. Am I right in supposing that you have
-been sent to invite his co-operation in some projected movement?"
-
-"My orders were simply to deliver to him a despatch and rejoin my
-regiment."
-
-"It is a dangerous and desperate errand, my friend," said the young
-Frenchman, while regarding Quentin with some interest; "I mean
-desperate to be undertaken by one alone. It looks almost like a
-sacrifice of you!"
-
-"A sacrifice?" repeated Quentin, as his thoughts naturally wandered
-to Cosmo.
-
-"Parbleu, yes--to the exigencies of the service."
-
-"Some of my friends were not slow in saying as much," replied
-Quentin; "but then I--I am only a volunteer, and as such, must take
-any hazardous duty, I have been told."
-
-"Well, here we must lurk till nightfall--you to avoid our patrols,
-which are usually withdrawn for a few hours after the evening gun
-fires, when the inlying picquet gets under arms; I to avoid those
-pestilent guerillas. The shade here is cool, and if we had a bottle
-of wine, a sliced melon, and a little ice, our pleasure would be
-complete."
-
-"And you think I must conceal myself here?"
-
-"Undoubtedly, mon ami; our people are scouring all the highways, and
-would be sure to cut you off. Then there is that devilish
-Spaniard--ah, the brigand!--he will not be in haste to forget the
-knock you gave him on the head, and should he or his comrades fall in
-with you, I would not give you a sou for your safety!"
-
-"Strange, is it not, that the first man I have struck on Spanish
-ground should be a Spaniard?"
-
-"These dons have unpleasant memories for such little attentions, and
-here the secret shot or stab usually settles everything; but before
-we separate, I shall have the honour of showing you the direct path
-to the head-quarters of De Saldos, after which, you must look to your
-pistols and put your trust in Providence. I shall keep your secret,
-and if there is any other way in which I can serve you, command me."
-
-"I thank you; but I hope that to-night, or to-morrow morning at
-latest, will see my face turned towards Portugal, for I long to
-rejoin my corps."
-
-"The fugitives of my party will spread a calamitous report concerning
-me in Valencia, and my father, the poor old general, will suppose
-that I am lying shot on the mountains, instead of holding this
-pleasant _tête-à-tête_ with one of the sacré Anglais over the
-comfortable contents of his canteen," said Ribeaupierre, laughing.
-"What a droll world it is!"
-
-"And your mother--I think I heard you mention your mother. She----"
-
-"Happily will know nothing about it, as she is with Joseph's court.
-She is a gentle and loving creature, with a heart all tenderness.
-Ah, the seat of war, would never do for her, and, ma foi! it doesn't
-suit me either. It was not willingly I became a soldier, be assured;
-and yet, now that I am fairly in for it, and have won my epaulettes
-and cross, I should not like to find myself a mere citizen again.
-Peste! I shall not in a hurry forget the night on which, by a great
-malheur, a great mistake, I was forced to become a soldier."
-
-"Mistake--how?" asked Quentin, smiling at the young Frenchman's
-gestures and energy.
-
-"Mon camarade, a man says more when under the influences of
-eau-de-vie, or champagne, than he ever does under those of
-vin-ordinaire, cold water, or a bowl of gruel; and, as your
-remarkably potent rum-and-water has put me in that condition when a
-man reveals his loves and hates, and, more foolish still, sometimes
-his private history, I don't care if I tell you how I became a
-soldier.
-
-"My father," began the garrulous chasseur, "is an officer of the old
-days of the monarchy, and held his first commission, like the Emperor
-himself, from Louis XVI., the Most Christian King, and they were
-brother subalterns in the regiment of La Fere. To the friendship
-that grew up between them there, the old gentleman owes his brigade
-and the Grand Cross of the Legion, quite as much as to his own
-bravery in Germany, Italy, and Flanders. My mother (or she at least
-whom I have been taught to call my mother, for she is his second
-wife,) was a widow of rank, who lost her whole possessions in the
-stormy days of the Revolution. She was without children, and when my
-father was assisting the Little Corporal to play the devil at Toulon,
-Arcola, Lodi, Marengo, and elsewhere, she most affectionately took
-charge of me, and of my education in Paris.
-
-"As we were not rich, it was proposed to make a doctor of me, and so
-I was duly matriculated at the Ecole de Médecine, and commenced my
-studies there, not with much enthusiasm or industry either; but in
-the vague hope, nevertheless, that I might some day cut a figure and
-have my portrait hung among the full lengths of Ambrose Paré,
-Maréchal, La Peyronnie, and others in the school.
-
-"I look back with no small repugnance to the daily tasks I performed
-there, and to the horrors of the dissecting-room, after boyish
-curiosity grew satiated. My brain became addled by lectures on the
-maxillary sinus, on diseases of the stomach, of the pylorus, the
-hepatic and abdominal viscera; elephantiasis, aortic aneurism, the
-lacteal and glandular system, and Heaven alone knows all what more,
-till I imagined that I had alternately in my own person every ailment
-peculiar to man. We had plenty of subjects, for daily the guillotine
-was slicing away in the Place de la Grève, and I have seen the
-loveliest women and the noblest men in France laid on those tables to
-be stripped and dissected by the knife of the demonstrator.
-
-"I was soon voted the worst if not the most stupid student that ever
-put his foot within the college walls. The professors were in
-despair. They could make nothing of me; and to muddle my poor brain
-more, about this time I must needs fall in love. Ah! I perceive
-that you now become interested. I was not much over seventeen, and
-my first love----"
-
-"First?" said Quentin.
-
-"_Oui--ma foi!_ I have had a dozen--was Madame Lisette Thiebault, a
-friend of my mother."
-
-"A widow, of course?"
-
-"Not at all. She was unfortunately the wife of one of our doctors in
-the Rue de l'Ecole de Medecine;" replied the _étourdi_ young
-Frenchman.
-
-"Married!" said poor Quentin, somewhat aghast.
-
-"_Peste!_ of course she was; but we don't care for such little
-obstacles in Paris. Well, Lisette, for so I must name her, was
-nearly ten years my senior, and so had what she called a motherly
-interest in me. She was a very handsome woman, somewhat inclined to
-_embonpoint_, with a clear pale complexion and laughing eyes, exactly
-the colour of her hair, which was a rich deep brown. She was always
-gay, laughing and smiling, except when her husband, the doctor, was
-present, and one could no more make fun with him, than with old Bébé."
-
-"Who, or what was he?"
-
-"The mummy of the King of Poland's dwarf--_Ouf!_ what a horror it
-is!--which we have in the School of the Faculty at Paris. Lisette
-was very fond of me, and, being a little addicted to literature--she
-was fond of poetry, too--so we read much together.
-
-"Ere long, monsieur, the doctor began to think all this very
-improper, so he rudely and abruptly put a stop to our studies; he
-locked Ovid up, and me out. _Tudieu!_ here was an outrage! I
-thought of inviting him to breathe the morning air on the Bois de
-Boulogne; but a duel between a first-year's student and an old doctor
-was not to be thought of. Madame had a tender heart, so she pitied
-me. She considered her husband's conduct cruel, ungrateful,
-outrageous, barbarous; so, as it was necessary that my classical
-studies should not be neglected, we arranged a little code of
-signals. Thus, Lisette, by simply keeping a drawing-room window open
-or shut, or a muslin curtain festooned or closely drawn, could inform
-me when Bluebeard was at home or abroad; whether the breach was
-practicable or not; and thus we circumvented our tyrant for a time,
-and I returned with ardour to the study of classical poetry; but as
-for the dissecting-room, diable! it saw no more of me.
-
-"Of the doctor I had always a wholesome dread, as he was a
-_Septembriseur_."
-
-"What is that?" asked Quentin, perceiving a dark expression shade the
-face of Ribeaupierre.
-
-"'Tis a name we have in Paris for those who were concerned as aiders
-or abettors of the horrible September massacres--he would have
-thought no more of slily putting a bullet into me, than of killing a
-wasp; thus, you see, I pursued the acquisition of knowledge under
-difficulties.
-
-"Now came out the edict issued about eight years ago, for raising two
-hundred thousand men for the army and marine, and every young man in
-France had to inscribe his name for the conscription. I omitted--we
-shall call it delayed--to inscribe mine; but my learned friend, M. le
-Docteur Thiebault, unknown to me, performed that little service in my
-behalf. He was extremely loth that the Republic--it was the glorious
-indivisible Republic of liberty, equality, fraternity, and tyranny
-then--should be deprived of my valuable aid by land or sea.
-
-"About the time when he usually returned from visiting his patients,
-I had bidden adieu to madame, for our studies were over, and in the
-dusk of the evening was on my way home when surprised by a patrol of
-the police under a commissaire, at the corner of the Rue Ecole de
-Médecine. To avoid them I shrunk into a porch, but they invited me
-rather authoritatively to come forth, and on my doing so, a sergeant
-passed his lantern scrutinizingly across my face.
-
-"'A young man,' said the commissaire, who was new in the quartier;
-'who are you?'
-
-"'I am not obliged to say,' said I.
-
-"'Ah--we shall see that; what are you?'
-
-"'A student of the Faculty of Médecine. Vive la République! War to
-the cottage--peace to the castle!' I replied, waving my hat.
-
-"'Is your name inscribed for the levy, blunderer? You quote oddly
-for a student!'
-
-"'Of course my name is inscribed,' said I, boldly, though I little
-knew that it was so.
-
-"'Show me your card which certifies this.'
-
-"'Mon Dieu!' I exclaimed, as a brilliant thought occurred to me; 'do
-not speak so loud, monsieur.'
-
-"'Diable; may we not raise our voices in the streets of Paris?' he
-asked.
-
-"'Not if you knew the mischief an alarm would do me.'
-
-"'Tête Dieu! 'tis an odd fellow, this!'
-
-"'Monsieur, pity me!' said I, in a voice full of entreaty. 'I throw
-myself upon your generosity--I perceive that I melt your heart. I
-have not my card; it is with my wife----'
-
-"'Morbleu! you are very young to have a wife, my friend, with a chin
-like an apple,' said the grim old sergeant, as he passed his lantern
-across my face again; 'I hope she is fully grown; but to the point,
-my fine fellow, or we shall have to march you to the Conciergerie,
-and they have an unpleasant mode of pressing questions there.'
-
-"'Where is this wife of yours, my little friend?'
-
-"'In her house, M. le Commissaire, where you see that light above the
-lamp with the scarlet bottle. Ah, the perfidious! There she awaits
-a lover for whom I am watching.'
-
-"I acted my part to the life, though jealousy is not a peculiarity of
-French husbands.
-
-"'And this lover?' said the commissaire, becoming suddenly
-interested, perhaps from some fellow-feeling.
-
-"'He is a young brother student of mine.'
-
-"'His name?' said the commissaire, producing a note-book.
-
-"'Eugene de Ribeaupierre.'
-
-"'We know him,' said the other, 'for the greatest young rascal in all
-Paris. He destroyed a tree of liberty in the Palais Royal, and
-painted the nose of Equality red in the Jardin des Plantes.'
-
-"'The same, monsieur,' said I, in a whining voice; 'he will come here
-disguised in a grey wig and spectacles to delude you, M. le
-Commissaire, and me too, unhappy that I am. Ah, mon Dieu, there he
-is! there he is! Seize him, in the name of morality and justice, of
-the République Démocratique et Sociale!'
-
-"The patrol instantly laid violent hands on the person of Doctor
-Thiebault, who, to do him justice, made a violent resistance, and
-broke the sergeant's lantern, to the tune of twenty francs, before he
-was borne off to the Conciergerie, where he passed three days and
-nights in a horrid vault among thieves and malefactors, before he was
-brought up for examination, when it was discovered that it was not a
-young student, but an old professor of the healing art, standing high
-in the estimation of all Paris, who had been maltreated and carried
-off by the watch.
-
-"So the whole story came out, and on the fourth day I found myself
-off _en route_ to join my father's corps of Chasseurs à Cheval, then
-serving against the Austrians. My good mother shed abundance of
-tears at my departure; the Abbé Lebrun gave me abundance of good
-advice and a handful of louis d'or, which I considered of more value,
-and in a month after I found myself face to face with the white coats
-in the forest of Frisenheim, on the left bank of the Rhine.
-
-"As a parting gift my dear friend Lisette had given me a holy medal
-to save me from bullets and so forth; but, diable! it nearly cost me
-my life, for one of the first balls fired near Oggersheim beat it
-into my ribs; the ball came out, but the blessed medal stuck fast,
-and all the skill of our three doctors was required to extract it, so
-after three months I found myself again in my beloved Paris on sick
-leave."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-THE GALIOTE OF ST. CLOUD.
-
-"To be generous, guiltless, and of free disposition, is to take those
-things for bird-bolts that you deem cannon-bullets. There is no
-slander in an allowed fool, though he do nothing but rail; nor no
-railing in a known discreet man, though he do nothing but
-reprove."--_Twelfth Night._
-
-
-"So," resumed Ribeaupierre, "this was the way in which I became one
-of the 24th Chasseurs à Cheval, in the service of the Republic one
-and indivisible, as it boasted to be, as well as democratic and
-social; and how I now find myself a sous-lieutenant, under the
-Emperor, whom God long preserve!"
-
-"And Lisette?----"
-
-"Bah! in my absence I found that she had taken to study poetry with
-M. Grobbin, a grenadier of the Consular Guard, the same who was the
-cause of the First Consul issuing his remarkable order of the day,
-concerning that Parisian weakness for destroying oneself, in the
-passion named love. Did you never hear of it?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Ma foi! You English know nothing that is acted out of your foggy
-little island."
-
-"And this order----"
-
-"Stated that as the Grenadier Grobbin had destroyed himself in
-despair, for his dismissal by Madame de Thiebault, the First Consul
-directed that it should be inserted in the order of the day for the
-Consular Guard, 'that a soldier ought to know how to subdue sorrow
-and the agitation of the passions; that there is as much courage in
-enduring with firmness the pains of the heart as remaining steady
-under the grape-shot of a battery; and to abandon oneself to grief
-without resistance, to kill oneself in order to escape from it, is to
-fly from the field of battle before one is conquered!' The order was
-signed by Bonaparte, as First Consul, and countersigned by Jean
-Baptiste Bessières."
-
-"Have you ever seen the Emperor?" asked Quentin.
-
-"Once, mon ami--only once."
-
-"In the field?"
-
-"No; but nearer than I ever wish to see him again, under the same
-circumstances at least. Shall I tell you how it was?"
-
-"If you please."
-
-"Well, monsieur, it happened in this way. I had just been appointed
-a sous-lieutenant in the 24th Chasseurs à Cheval; we had returned
-from service in Italy, and were quartered at St. Cloud, where we were
-soon tired of the gardens, cafés, waterworks, and so forth. A few of
-us had been on leave in Paris for some days, where our spare cash and
-prize money were soon spent among the theatres, operas, feasting, and
-other means of emptying one's purse, so we were returning cheaply to
-barracks by the galiote, which then used to traverse the great bend
-of the Seine every morning, leaving the Pont Royal about ten o'clock
-for St. Cloud; the voyage usually lasted about two hours, and cost us
-only sixteen sous each.
-
-"On this occasion, as the morning was very wet, the canvas covering
-was drawn close, and as we had the galiote all to ourselves--save one
-person, a stranger--we were very merry, very noisy, and very much at
-home indeed, proceeding to smoke without the ceremony of asking this
-person's permission, for which, indeed, we cared very little, as he
-appeared to be a plain little citizen some five feet high, about
-thirty-six years of age, and possessing a very sombre cast of face,
-over which he wore a rather shabby hat drawn well down, a grey
-greatcoat with a queer cape, and long boots; and he appeared to be
-completely immersed in the columns of his newspaper.
-
-"We were conversing with great freedom concerning the consulate,
-which was just on the point of expanding into an empire, and our
-senior lieutenant, Jules de Marbœuf (now our lieutenant-colonel)
-was named by us 'Monseigneur le Maréchal Duc de Marbœuf, and
-master of the horse to Pepin le Bref.' Then we ridiculed
-unmercifully the proposal of the Tribune Citizen Curée, that the
-First Consul should be proclaimed Emperor, and in this quality
-continue the government of the French _Republic_.
-
-"'Peste! what a paradox it is!' exclaimed Jules, emitting a mighty
-puff of smoke, as he lounged at length upon the cushioned seat of the
-galiote.
-
-"'And the Imperial dignity is to be declared hereditary in his
-family,' I added, impudently, reclosing one of the openings in the
-awning, which the quiet stranger had opened, as our smoking evidently
-annoyed him.
-
-"'In three days _the pear will be ripe_; France will become an
-appanage of Corsica, and I shall obtain my diploma as peer and
-marshal of France,' exclaimed Jules with loud voice; 'and you,
-Eugene----'
-
-"'Oh, I shall be Minister of War to the Little Corporal.'
-
-"'Bravo!' said the others, clapping their hands; 'we shall all pick
-up something among the ruins of this vulgar and tiresome Republic.'
-
-"'M. le Citoyen,' said Jules, with affected courtesy, 'I perceive the
-smoke annoys you--you don't like it--eh?'
-
-"'No, monsieur,' replied the other briefly and sternly.
-
-"'Then M. le Citoyen had better land, for before we reach St. Cloud,
-he will be smoked like a Westphalian ham.'
-
-"'Take care, Jules,' said I, 'the citizen may be a fire-eater--some
-devil of a fellow who spends half his days in a shooting gallery.'
-
-"'_Parbleu_, he doesn't look much like a fire-eater; but perhaps
-monsieur is an editor--an author?' suggested Jules, with another long
-puff.
-
-"'Exactly,' said I; 'he is an author.'
-
-"'Of what?'
-
-"'The famous _Voyage à Saint Cloud par mer, et retour par terre_,
-taking notes for a new edition.'
-
-"This sally produced a roar of laughter, on which the citizen
-suddenly folded his paper and prepared to rise, as we were now close
-to St. Cloud.
-
-"'Don't forget to record, M. l'Editeur, that last week I pulled a
-charming young girl out of the river close by.'
-
-"'Trust you didn't pull her hair up by the roots, Jules,' said one.
-
-"'Or rumple her dress?' said another.
-
-"'Fie!' I exclaimed; 'but you will give us each a copy, M. l'Editeur?'
-
-"'On receiving your cards, messieurs,' replied the other with a grim
-smile.
-
-"'Here is mine--and mine--and mine,' said we, thrusting them upon him.
-
-"'And here is mine' said he, presenting to Jules an embossed card, on
-which was engraved 'Napoleon Bonaparte, First Consul.'
-
-"We remained as if paralysed, unable either to speak or move; but the
-justly incensed First Consul, after quitting the galiote, which was
-now moored alongside the quay, said to a gentleman whose uniform
-proclaimed him a general officer, and who seemed to be waiting
-there,--
-
-"'Bessières, take the swords of these gentlemen, who are to be placed
-under close arrest, and send the colonel of the 24th Chasseurs to me
-instantly.'
-
-"His massive features were pale as marble; his keen dark eyes shot
-forth a lurid glare; his lips were compressed with concealed fury,
-and we all trembled before the terrible glance of this little man in
-long boots. Ah, mon Dieu! what a moment it was! How foolish, how
-triste, how crestfallen we all looked.
-
-"'Your name, monsieur?' said he suddenly to me.
-
-"'Eugene de Ribeaupierre,' said I, with a profound salute.
-
-"'Any relation to the officer who bears that name, and who was
-captain-lieutenant in the Regiment de La Fere?'
-
-"'I am his only son, monseigneur.'
-
-"'That reply has saved you and your companions from degradation and
-imprisonment; but still you must be taught, messieurs, that to
-protect, and not to insult the citizen, is the first duty of a
-soldier. To your quarters, messieurs, and report yourselves under
-arrest until further orders!'
-
-"The authoritative wave of his hand was enough, and we slunk away
-with terrible forebodings of the future. A severe reprimand was
-administered through Bessières; but whether it was that our political
-opinions had been uttered too freely, or that the First Consul had no
-wish to see the 24th figure in the forthcoming pageant of his
-coronation as Emperor, I know not, but on the day following our
-precious voyage to St. Cloud, we got the route for Genoa, so that was
-my first and last meeting with our glorious Emperor, whose name I
-have made a _cri de guerre_ in many a battle and skirmish, and for
-whom I am ready to die!" he added, with genuine enthusiasm. "Sunset!
-there goes the gun in Valencia," he exclaimed, as the boom of a
-cannon pealed through the still air. "The evening is advancing,
-monsieur, and we must part, unless you will accompany me to Valencia."
-
-"Impossible!" said Quentin.
-
-"I will gage my word of honour for your safety there and safe-conduct
-to the mountains," said he, as they issued cautiously from the
-thicket upon the highway.
-
-"I thank you, but I am most anxious to complete my task."
-
-"_Tres bien_--so be it; then we part at yonder cypress-tree. Hola!
-what have we here--a dead horse--the charger of one of my men?"
-exclaimed Ribeaupierre, as they came suddenly upon a cavalry-horse
-lying dead, with all his housings and trappings on, by the wayside.
-"It is the horse of Corporal Raoul, one of the three men who fell in
-the ambuscade--several bullets have struck the poor nag, and it has
-galloped here only to bleed to death. Raoul was a devil of a fellow
-for plunder; I know that he always carried something else than
-pistols in his holsters--let us see."
-
-Unbuttoning the flaps of the holsters, Ribeaupierre drew forth a
-pistol from each, and these, as they were loaded, he retained; but at
-the bottom of one holster-pipe he found a canvas bag. "Parbleu, look
-here! Raoul, poor devil, thought no doubt to spend these among the
-girls in Paris. Plunder, every sou of it," he added, tumbling among
-the grass a heap of gold moidores, which are Portuguese coins, each
-worth twenty-seven shillings sterling. "This is Raoul's share of the
-sacking of Coimbra, which the Portuguese permitted themselves to make
-such a hideous bawling about. It was the plunder of the living, so
-you may as well have a share of it _now_ that it is the spoil of the
-dead."
-
-"Who--I?" said Quentin, hesitating.
-
-"Take it--_ma foi!_"
-
-"Can I do so?"
-
-"I should think so; what--would you leave it here to fall into
-Spanish hands, or be buried with a dead horse?" said Ribeaupierre, as
-he rapidly divided the money, which amounted to one hundred and sixty
-pieces in all. "'Tis eighty moidores each; a sum like that is not to
-be found often by the wayside."
-
-He almost thrust his share into Quentin's pocket, and a few minutes
-after, they bade each other warmly adieu, with little expectation of
-ever meeting again.
-
-Ribeaupierre pursued his way towards Valencia de Alcantara, while,
-following his direction, Quentin proceeded towards the hills near
-Herreruela, the rocky peaks of which were yet gleaming in crimson
-light, though the sun had set.
-
-He seemed still to hear the pleasant voice, and to see the dark and
-expressive face of his recent companion as he trod lightly on,
-clinking his moidores, happy that he was now master of a sum
-amounting to more than a hundred pounds sterling, which would enable
-him to repay his dear old friend the quartermaster, and would amply
-supply his own wants while on service, for some time at least.
-
-It was a remarkable stroke of good fortune, and he reflected that but
-for his meeting with Ribeaupierre, he might have passed without
-examining the dead troop-horse that lay by the wayside; he reflected
-further, that but for the turn taken happily by the episodes of the
-day, he might have fallen into the hands of a French patrol, and been
-now, with his despatch, in safe keeping within the walls of Valencia.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-THE GUERILLA HEAD-QUARTERS.
-
- "I made a mountain brook my guide,
- Through a wild Spanish glen,
- And wandered, on its grassy side,
- Far from the homes of men.
- It lured me with a singing tone,
- And many a sunny glance,
- To a green spot of beauty lone,
- A haunt for old romance."--MRS. HEMANS.
-
-
-Save in the west, where the hues of crimson and gold predominated,
-the sunset sky was all of a pale violet. Though the mountain peaks
-were rough and barren, and the plains of Estremadura, long abandoned
-and for ages uncultivated, were waste and wild in general, the road
-by which Quentin proceeded towards Herreruela lay through rich
-scenery and land that was fertile.
-
-The tall Indian corn had been reaped, but its thick brown stubble
-remained. In some places it had too evidently been destroyed by fire
-to keep it from the French, or by them to harass and distress the
-Spaniards. The olive and the vine grew wild by the wayside; the
-orange tree and the leafy lime, the fig, and the prickly pear were
-frequently mingled in the same place with the variegated holly, while
-the myrtle and the lavender flower loaded the air with sweet perfume.
-
-Darkness came rapidly on; the reddened summits of the sierra grew
-sombre, the western flush of light died away, and ere long Quentin
-found himself traversing a steep and gloomy road, that led right into
-the heart of the mountains.
-
-A sound that came on the night wind made him pause and listen.
-
-It was the great bell of Valencia de Alcantara--the same that had
-rung so joyously when the Christian cavaliers of Salamanca defended
-the wild gorge through which the Tagus rolls at Al-Kantarah (_the
-bridge_ of the Moors)--and it was now tolling the hour of ten.
-
-Ribeaupierre was now with his friends and comrades, doubtless
-recounting his adventures and his escape, by the aid of a British
-soldier. A knowledge of this caused Quentin some anxiety, lest among
-the listeners, there might be some who had neither the gratitude nor
-the chivalry of the young chasseur, and who might take means to cut
-off his return to Portugal, for he was now fully aware of the risk he
-ran on the Spanish side, and began to see something of the snare into
-which he had fallen.
-
-As the last stroke of the bell died away on the wind, a sense of
-intense loneliness came over Quentin's heart; the sound seemed to
-come from a vast distance, and the narrow road he was traversing
-penetrated into the mountains, which seemed to become darker and
-steeper on each side of it; but there is something intoxicating in
-the idea of peril to a gallant soul. It kindles a glorious
-enthusiasm at times, and thus he marched manfully on till a voice in
-Spanish, loud, sonorous, and ringing, demanded in a military manner--
-
-"_Quien esta ahi?_" (Who comes there?)
-
-"_Gente de paez_," replied Quentin, while the rattle of a musket and
-the click of the lock as it was cocked came to his ear, and he saw
-the dark outline of a human figure appear suddenly in the centre of
-the path.
-
-"_Estere ahi_ (Stay there), and say from whence you come," said the
-challenger again.
-
-Quentin naturally paused before replying, as he know not by whom he
-was confronted, and could only make out a tall figure wearing a
-slouched sombrero, by the pale light of the stars.
-
-"Presto--quick!" continued the stranger, slapping the butt of his
-musket; "from whence come you?"
-
-"The British cantonments," replied Quentin, conceiving the truth to
-be the wisest answer to a Spaniard.
-
-"_Bueno!_ why didn't you say so at once?" exclaimed the other; "but
-what seek you here?"
-
-"I am bearer of a despatch for Don Baltasar dc Saldos. Am I right in
-supposing you are one of his people?"
-
-"Si, senor; this is his head-quarters."
-
-By this time Quentin had come close to the questioner, who still kept
-his bayonet at the charge, and who seemed to be a Spanish peasant,
-accoutred with crossbelts and cartridge-box. He was posted on the
-summit of a hastily-constructed earthwork, which was formed across
-the road in a kind of gorge through which it passed; and there, too,
-were in position three brass field-pieces, French apparently, loaded
-no doubt with grape or canister to sweep the steep and narrow
-approach.
-
-Beside them lounged a guard of some forty men or so, muffled in their
-cloaks, smoking or sleeping, but all of whom sprang to their feet and
-to their weapons as Quentin approached. He had now taken off his
-grey coat to display his scarlet uniform, and, when one of the guard
-held up a lantern to take a survey of him, loud vivas and mutterings
-of satisfaction and welcome greeted him on all sides.
-
-"Senors, where shall I find Don Baltasar?" he inquired.
-
-"At his quarters in the puebla, senor. Lazarillo, conduct the senor
-to De Soldas," said one who seemed to exercise some authority over
-the rest: "but I fear you will find him busy at present. At what
-time are those French prisoners to be despatched?"
-
-"Midnight, Senor Conde," replied he whom he had named Lazarillo.
-
-"It wants but half an hour to that," said the guerilla officer, who
-was no other than the Conde de Maciera, as he looked at his watch;
-and it was with emotions of intense pleasure and satisfaction that
-Quentin found himself proceeding towards the mountain village which
-formed the head-quarters of the formidable guerilla chief, and thus
-acting, as he hoped, the last scene in the task assigned him; but he
-knew little of the people among whom he was thrown, for in character
-they are unlike all the rest of Europe.
-
-"Nature and the natives," says a traveller, "have long combined to
-isolate still more their peninsula, which is already moated round by
-the unsocial sea. The Inquisition all but reduced the Spanish man to
-the condition of a monk in a wall-enclosed convent, by standing
-sentinel and keeping watch and ward against the foreigner and his
-perilous novelties. Spain, thus unvisited and unvisiting, became
-arranged for _Spaniards only_, and has scarcely required conveniences
-which are more suited to the curious wants of other Europeans and
-strangers, who here are neither liked, wished for, or even thought
-of--natives who never travel except on compulsion, and never for
-amusement--why, indeed, should they?"
-
-Late though the hour, the guerillas, a loose and, of course,
-disorderly force at all times, seemed all astir in their quarters.
-By the clear starlight Quentin could see that the street consisted of
-humble cottages bordering the way, with red-tiled roofs, over nearly
-every one of which a huge old knotty vine was straggling. At one end
-rose a strong old archway, "old," Lazarillo said, "as the days of
-King Bomba," and there, when the puebla had been a place of greater
-pretension, a gate had closed the thoroughfare by night.
-
-Now there was no barrier save a bank of earth and rubbish, hastily
-thrown up, and a couple of field-pieces mounted thereon seemed to
-hint the rigour with which intruders would be prosecuted; in short,
-it prevented any sudden surprise in that direction. There were
-lights--pine-torches or candles--burning in all the houses, and, as
-he passed the windows, Quentin could perceive the dark-bearded faces,
-the striking figures, and varied costumes of the guerillas. Various
-groups of them thronged the little street, and a company of them were
-parading, under arms, before the largest house in the puebla.
-
-"That is the posada, senor," said Quentin's guide. "There Don
-Baltasar resides; but we have come too late to speak with him, at
-least until his work is done."
-
-"His work," repeated Quentin, inquiringly; "what is about to be done?"
-
-"_Por Dios!_ you shall soon see," he replied with a grin, as a number
-of men bearing blazing pine torches issued from the large house,
-which the guide styled the posada, and, by the united light of these,
-Quentin was enabled to behold a strange, a wild, and very awful scene.
-
-As a drum only half braced was hoarsely beaten, the guerillas came
-swarming out of the wayside cottages in hundreds, and a singularly
-savage but picturesque set of fellows they were. All were strong and
-hardy Castilians; many were exceedingly handsome both in face and
-form, and there was scarcely one among them that might not have
-served as a model for a sculptor or a study for an artist.
-
-Their Spanish peasant costumes, in some instances were sombre and
-tattered, in others new and gay; the jackets, olive or claret colour,
-being gaudily embroidered, and worn over the scarlet or yellow sashes
-which girt the short, loose trousers. Many were bare-legged and
-bare-footed, and many wore long leather abarcas. Not a few wore
-fanciful uniforms of all colours, among which Quentin recognised the
-brown coats of the Spanish line, and a few scarlet, which had no
-doubt been stripped from the dead at Roleia and Vimiera, as they
-seemed to have belonged to the 29th regiment, and the Argyllshire
-Highlanders.
-
-Most of them wore the native sombreros; many had their coal-black
-locks gathered in a net of scarlet twine, or bound by a large yellow
-handkerchief, the fringed end of which floated on the left shoulder,
-while others sported regimental shakos and staff cocked-hats. All
-were armed with long Spanish guns, sabres, pistols, and daggers, and
-all nearly were cross-belted with cartridge-box and bayonet.
-
-In one or two instances the closely-shaven chin and the tonsure, but
-ill-concealed by the half-grown hair, indicated the unfrocked friar,
-who had taken up arms inspired by patriotism or revenge against the
-destroyers of convents, or it might be to have a turn once more in
-the world, while the state of Spain loosed all ties, divine as well
-as human.
-
-Half hidden in the shadow of the starlight night, and half thrown
-forward into the strong red glare of the upheld pine torches that
-streamed in the wind, the figures of those in the foreground and
-those flitting about in the rear--the varied colours of their
-costumes, their black beards and glittering eyes, their flashing
-weapons, together with the rude mountain village, with its old and
-time-worn archway, made altogether a strangely wild and picturesque
-scene.
-
-But its darker and more terrible features are yet to be described.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-A REPRISAL.
-
- "Proud of the favours mighty Jove has shown,
- On certain dangers we too rashly run;
- If 'tis His will our haughty foes to tame,
- Oh, may this instant end the Grecian name!
- Here far from Argos let their heroes fall,
- And one great day destroy and bury all!"
- _Iliad_ xiii.
-
-
-Quentin's nerves received something like an electric shock when, on
-proceeding a little further forward, he saw a line consisting of
-sixteen poor French prisoners, partly bound by ropes, standing in
-front of the rudely-formed rampart which closed up the archway, and
-in front of them were four large pits, whose appalling shape and
-aspect left no doubt that they were to be the premature graves of the
-unfortunate men who now stood in health and strength beside them.
-
-Those sixteen persons were of various ranks, as four at least seemed
-by their silver epaulettes to be officers, and medals and crosses
-glittered on the breasts of several. Their uniform was dark blue,
-lapelled with red, and all the privates wore large shoulder-knots of
-scarlet worsted. They were all French infantry men, taken in some
-recent skirmish. Bareheaded, they stood a sad-looking line, and in
-their pale but war-bronzed faces, on which the flickering glare of
-the torches fell with weird and wavering gleams, there seemed to be
-no ray of hope for mercy or reprieve at the hands of their captors,
-who were about to sacrifice them in the horrid spirit of reprisal
-which then existed between the Spanish guerillas and the French
-invaders.
-
-"Good heavens!" said Quentin, in an agitated whisper; "are these men
-about to be shot?"
-
-"Si, senor--every one of them!"
-
-"For what reason?"
-
-"Being on the wrong side of the Pyrenees," replied the Spaniard, with
-a cruel grin.
-
-"Shot--and without mercy?"
-
-"Precisely so, senor."
-
-"By whose order?"
-
-"One who does not like his orders questioned--Don Baltasar de Saldos."
-
-"Is he capable of such an act?"
-
-"Capable! Santiago! The French have made his heart as hard as if it
-had been dipped in the well of Estremoz (beyond the mountains), which
-turns everything to flinty rock."
-
-As if to enhance the torture of their anticipated doom, the Spaniards
-went slowly and deliberately about the selection of a firing party,
-which consisted of no less than sixty men, who loaded in a very
-irregular manner, and, as their steel ramrods flashed in the
-torch-light and went home with a dull thud on the ball cartridges, a
-thrill seemed to pass through the prisoners.
-
-One, a grim-visaged and grey-moustached old captain of grenadiers,
-folded his arms, shrugged his shoulders, and smiled in scorn and
-defiance. Doubtless, since the fall of the Bastile and the days of
-the barricades, he had seen human lives lavished with a recklessness
-that hardened him; but there was another officer who covered his face
-with his handkerchief and wept; not in cowardice, for his gallant
-breast was covered with the medals of many an honourable field; but
-perhaps his heart at that moment was far away with his wife and
-little ones in some sunny vale of Languedoc, or by the banks of the
-silvery Garonne.
-
-Some had their teeth clenched, and their eyes wearing a wild glare of
-hate, of fear, and defiance mingled; some there were who seemed
-scarcely conscious of the awful doom prepared for them, and some
-glanced wistfully and fearfully at the newly-dug pits which were to
-receive them when all was over.
-
-Some were occupied by external objects, and the eyes of one followed
-earnestly the course of a falling star of great beauty and
-brilliance, which vanished behind the hills of Albuquerque.
-
-A guerilla, clad in somewhat tattered black velvet, now took off his
-sombrero, and in doing so, displayed, by a pretty plain tonsure, that
-he was an unfrocked or degraded priest; but now inspired by something
-of his former holy office, he held up a small crucifix, and
-exclaimed--
-
-"Frenchmen, if any man among you is a true son of the Church, I pray
-God and the Blessed Madonna to receive him, and have mercy on his
-soul!"
-
-"That is the Padre Trevino, our second in command," whispered
-Lazarillo; "and he is the best shot among us."
-
-As Trevino spoke, the sixteen prisoners and all the onlookers,
-crossed themselves very devoutly. Some of the doomed closed their
-eyes, and by their muttering, seemed to be praying very earnestly.
-Intensity of emotion seemed to render them all more or less athirst,
-as they were seen to moisten their pale lips with their tongues.
-
-The stern grey-haired captain on the right alone seemed unmoved; he
-had neither a prayer to give to Heaven or to earth, and thus stood
-gazing stonily and grimly at his destroyers.
-
-"On your knees, senors! on your knees!" said Trevino.
-
-"Never to Spaniards!" replied the old captain.
-
-"Are they really in earnest, M. le Capitaine?" asked the prisoner
-next him, a mere youth.
-
-"Earnest--ma foi! I should think so, Louis."
-
-"Ah, mon Dieu--to be shot thus--it is terrible!" he exclaimed, in a
-piercing voice.
-
-"On your knees, Frenchmen," repeated the militant friar, "not to us,
-but to God!"
-
-"To the blessed God, then," said the old captain; "kneel, comrades;
-'tis the last word of command you will ever hear from me."
-
-They all knelt, and now the firing party came forward three paces--
-
- ----"a death-determined band,
- Hell in their face and horror in their hand."
-
-And forming line about twenty paces from the prisoners, shouldered
-arms. Then Quentin felt his excited heart beating painfully in his
-breast, and he held his breath as if suffocating. From the shoulder
-the muskets were cast to the "ready," and then followed the terrible
-clicking of the sixty locks, a sound that made the youngest victim,
-who had been named Louis, a fair-haired lad (some poor conscript,
-torn from his mother's arms, perhaps), to shudder very perceptibly
-and close his eyes; and now came the three fatal and final words of
-command from the unfrocked friar.
-
-"Camaradas, preparen las armas!"
-
-"Apunten!"
-
-("Vive la France! Vive l'Empereur!" cried the old captain,
-defiantly.)
-
-"FUEGO!"
-
-The straggling volley of musketry broke like a thunder peal upon the
-silence of the night, and echoed with a hundred reverberations among
-the mountains, till it was heard, perhaps, by the sentinels in
-Valencia. Red blood spirted from the wounds of the victims, some of
-whom leaped wildly up and fell heavily on the ground. The grey smoke
-rolled over them in the torch-light, and when it was lifted upward
-like a vapoury curtain by the midnight wind, Quentin could see the
-sixteen hapless Frenchmen all lying upon the earth. Six were
-screaming in agony, imploring the Spaniards to end it--to finish the
-vile work they had begun--writhing in blood and beating the ground
-with their heels; but then there were ten, who, alas! lay still
-enough, with red currents streaming from the wounds in their yet
-quivering corpses.
-
-Half killed and gasping painfully, the old French captain struggled
-into a sitting posture, but fell back again, as another volley poured
-in at ten paces ended the butchery.
-
-In a few minutes more they were stripped, even to their boots, and
-flung quite nude and scarcely cold into the pits at the foot of the
-breastwork, four being cast into each.
-
-In the pocket of the poor officer who had wept there was found a
-lady's miniature, and three locks of fair hair that had evidently
-belonged to little children. The loose earth was heaped over the
-dead, the torches were extinguished, and, like a dissolving view or
-some horrible phantasmagoria, the whole affair passed away and was
-over.
-
-In the horror excited by the scene and all its details, Quentin
-forgot his mission, his despatch, almost his own identity; a sickness
-and giddiness came over him, till he was roused by the voice of
-Lazarillo, his guide, who said in the most matter-of-fact way--
-
-"Follow me, senor--perhaps Don Baltasar can receive you now."
-
-The house to which he was conducted was the most important in the
-place, and had been for ages its chief posada or caravanserie, where
-the muleteers passing between Oporto, Lisbon, and the southern and
-eastern provinces of Spain, had been wont to halt and refresh. It
-was said to have been for a time the residence of the Scoto-Spaniard
-Don Iago Stuart, who, with the _Sabrina_ and _Ceres_, two Spanish
-frigates, fought Lord Nelson for three hours in the Mediterranean, in
-1796, with the loss of one hundred and sixty men.
-
-The under story was appropriated to the stabling of horses, mules,
-and burros, and from thence a rickety wooden stair led to the upper
-floor, the walls of which were cleanly whitewashed, the floors
-covered, not with carpets, which in Spain would soon become
-intolerable with insects, but with thin matting made of the esparto
-grass or wild rush.
-
-Military arms and household utensils were hung upon the walls or
-placed on the wooden shelves; the stiff-backed chairs and sofas were
-already occupied by some of the before-mentioned picturesque and
-motley actors in the late scene, and a large branch candlestick, that
-whilom had evidently figured on the altar of some stately church,
-with its cluster of sputtering candles, gave light to the long
-apartment, and enabled Quentin to examine it, and to see seated at
-the upper end, a man in a kind of uniform, writing, occasionally
-consulting an old and coarsely engraved map of Alentejo, and
-referring from time to time to the Padre Trevino and others, who
-leaned on their muskets, and who, lounging and laughing, smoked their
-cigaritos about his chair.
-
-This personage wore a black velvet jacket fancifully embroidered with
-silver; a pair of British Light Infantry wings, also of silver,
-probably stripped from some poor 29th man who fell at Roleia, were on
-his shoulders. He wore a gorgeous Spanish sash, with a buff cavalry
-waist-belt and heavy Toledo sabre in a steel scabbard. His sombrero,
-adorned by a gold band and large scarlet plume, was stuck very much
-on one side of his head, as if he were somewhat of a dandy; but
-underneath it was tied a handkerchief, deeply saturated with the
-blood of a recent wound.
-
-"Senor Don Baltasar," said Lazarillo very respectfully, "a messenger
-from the British cantonments on the frontier."
-
-He of the silver wings and Toledo sabre looked up, and Quentin was
-thunderstruck on finding himself face to face with the stranger of
-the wayside well, the same personage from whom he had rescued Eugene
-de Ribeaupierre, and whom he had stunned like an ox by a blow of the
-cajado!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-DON BALTASAR DE SALDOS.
-
- "We must not fail, we must not fail,
- However fraud or force assail;
- By honour, pride, or policy,
- By Heaven itself! we must be free.
- We spurned the thought, our prison burst,
- And dared the despot to the worst;
- Renewed the strife of centuries,
- And flung our banner to the breeze."--DAVIS.
-
-
-A start of extreme astonishment deepening into a black scowl, which
-anon changed to something of a scornful smile in the Spaniard's
-sallow visage, was Quentin Kennedy's first greeting from the Guerilla
-Chief, who then bowed haughtily, and said with an unpleasant
-emphasis--
-
-"Oho, senor; so you are the messenger! Santos--why didn't you tell
-me your errand on the day we met by the cross of King Alphonso? You
-would thus have saved yourself a devil of a journey and me this knock
-on the head."
-
-"It would have been unwise to reveal my mission to the first stranger
-I met; I deplore the result of our second interview, senor; but I
-would not stand by and see an unarmed man killed without interfering."
-
-"A Frenchman!" said Baltasar with intense scorn.
-
-"Maledito," said the Padre Trevino, a man with a pair of quiet and
-deeply set, but the most treacherous looking dark eyes that ever
-glanced out of a human head,. "Maledito!" he repeated, while playing
-with the knife in his sash, "so this is the fellow who wounded you
-and rescued the French officer?"
-
-"Yes, Padre; but that is my affair, not yours," said Baltasar,
-haughtily.
-
-"And your precious Frenchman--you conducted him no doubt to
-Valencia?" said the Padre, anxious apparently to make mischief.
-
-"I left him very near it--indeed, he was my guide part of the way
-here," replied Quentin with composure.
-
-"Very accommodating of him, certainly," said Baltasar, in whose face
-the scowl returned; it was evident, apart from his indignation at
-Quentin, that he had found some of the wrong eggs, the legends on
-which foretold the early abandonment of the entire Peninsula by the
-British, for his mind was full of ill-concealed anger and
-apprehension. "You see now, senor," he resumed with a malevolent
-grimace, "you see now that the spit has become a sword, and the sword
-only a spit. Por vida del demonio! but Don Tomaso Yriarte was right
-after all, for we must never take men or things for what they may
-appear."
-
-While Quentin was pondering what reply to make to this strange
-speech, a drop of blood fell from the wound in Baltasar's head, and
-made a large scarlet spot on the open map of Alentejo. On seeing
-this the eyes of the Spaniard flashed fire, his nostrils seemed to
-dilate, and, striking the table with the haft of his dagger, he
-exclaimed--
-
-"But that the fact of shooting the bearer of a British despatch--a
-messenger of Don Juan Hope, as Lazarillo says you are--might
-compromise me with the Junta of Castile as well as with your general,
-and thus injure the budding Spanish cause, by the Holy Face of Jaen!
-I would send you to keep company with those sixteen dogs whom Trevino
-shot to-night!"
-
-"Senor, I was innocent of intending evil against _you_," urged poor
-Quentin.
-
-"And this despatch which you bring, if it be as my soul forebodes, a
-notification that I am only to cover the retreat of the British when
-falling back upon Lisbon and the sea, _then_ say over any prayer your
-heretic mother may have taught you, for you, Inglese, shall not see
-the sun of to-morrow rise. I never forgive an insult--a word or a
-blow!"
-
-Though Quentin had been told at Portalegre somewhat of the contents
-of the despatch, he knew so little of the great game of war and
-politics about to be played in Spain that his mind misgave him, and
-he trembled in his heart lest the treasured paper which he now handed
-to this ferocious Spaniard, might indeed prove his death-warrant, and
-seal his doom! He thought of his pistols, and cast a glance around
-him--escape was hopeless, and a cruel smile wreathed the thin wicked
-lips of the Padre Trevino.
-
-Baltasar tore open the long official sheet of paper, and when his
-piercing eyes had run rapidly over the contents, to Quentin's great
-relief of mind, a smile that was almost pleasant spread over his
-sallow visage, like sunshine on a lake.
-
-"Hombres," he exclaimed to those around him, "listen! There are none
-here but true Castilians, so all may share my joy. On the second day
-of the ensuing November, the first division of the British army which
-is to rescue Spain will enter Castile by the Badajoz road, led by Sir
-John Hope, whose advance we are to cover by a collateral movement
-along the mountains by the hill ef Albuera. Long live Ferdinand the
-Seventh!"
-
-"Viva el Rey de Espana!"
-
-"Viva el nombre de Jesus!"
-
-Such were the kind of shouts that were raised by a hundred voices,
-while sundry faces, ere while darkened by hostile and suspicious
-scowls, were now wreathed with broad smiles, and many a battered
-sombrero and greasy bandanna were flourished aloft, while to the
-triumphant vivas the musket-butts clattered an accompaniment on the
-esparto-covered floor; and many a somewhat dingy hand shook Quentin's
-with energy, while, in token of friendship and alliance, wine,
-cigaritos, and tobacco pouches were proffered him on all sides.
-
-When the hubbub was somewhat over, Quentin (with some anxiety for his
-departure, as the atmosphere of the guerilla head-quarters seemed a
-dangerous one) said to the chief--
-
-"Don Baltasar, my orders were and my most earnest wishes are to join
-my regiment at Portalegre, so I should wish to set out by daybreak
-to-morrow."
-
-"But the army will soon be advancing--why not remain with us till it
-comes up?"
-
-"Impossible!" said Quentin, whose heart sank at the suggestion.
-
-"Perhaps you think that you have seen enough of us; but in a war of
-independence, the invaded must not be too tender-hearted."
-
-"Nay, senor; but if it would please you to give me to-night your
-reply to the general commanding our division, it would favour me
-greatly."
-
-This simple question seemed to raise some undefinable suspicion, or
-recall something unpleasant to the Spaniard's mind, for, knitting his
-thick black brows over his deeply-set and lynx-like eyes, he regarded
-Quentin with a steady scrutiny, and said:
-
-"You are not an officer, it would seem? (How often had this remark
-stung poor Quentin.) You have no sash, gorget, or epaulettes?"
-
-"No, senor," replied Quentin, with a sigh; "I have not the good
-fortune."
-
-"What are you then--a simple soldado?"
-
-"Senor," replied Quentin, with growing irritation, for, in truth, he
-was very weary of his long day's journey, and its exciting episodes;
-"the letter you have just read, I believe, tells you what you require
-to know."
-
-"Santos! you are a bold fellow to bear yourself thus to _me_."
-
-"I am a British soldier on military duty," replied Quentin, loftily,
-as he saw that hardihood was the only quality appreciated by his new
-acquaintances.
-
-"What is this? You are styled, _voluntario del Regimiento Viente y
-Cinco--Fronteros del Rey_--is that it?"
-
-"A volunteer of the King's Own Borderers--yes."
-
-"An English corps, of course, by your uniform?" remarked Baltasar,
-while twisting up a cigarito.
-
-"No, senor."
-
-"_Maledito_--what then?" he asked, pausing, as he lit it.
-
-"Escotos."
-
-"_Demonio_! I saw them at Vimiera, and thought all the Escotos were
-bare-legged, and wore Biscayner's bonnets with great plumes. But you
-shall have the answer you wish this instant. I am not a man for
-delay."
-
-"A guide also, senor, will be necessary, so that I may avoid the
-French patrols."
-
-"You made your way here without one," said the Spaniard, with one of
-his keen and suspicious glances; "moreover, I suppose you are not
-without at least one French friend in Valencia; but a guide you shall
-have, if we can spare one," he added, dipping a pen in an ink-horn,
-and, drawing before him a sheet of paper, he wrote hastily the
-following brief despatch, for El Estudiente, as he was sometimes
-named, had been well educated by his father, a professor at the
-University of Salamanca.
-
-
-"SENOR GENERAL,--I have had the high honour of receiving your
-despatch announcing the day of your march into Castile, and, with the
-help of God, Madonna, and the saints, I shall be in motion at the
-same time towards the hill of Albuera, with my guerilla force, now
-two thousand strong, with five 12-pounders, to cover your flank, if
-necessary, from the cavalry of Ribeaupierre, who occupy all the
-district in and about Valencia. With the most profound esteem, I
-have the honour to be, illustrious Senor and General, &c. &c.--
-
-"BALTASAR DE SALDOS Y SALAMANCA."
-
-
-While addressing this letter, which he handed to Quentin, he turned
-to the Padre Trevino, who had stood all the while leaning on his long
-musket, and said, with a sombre expression on his dark face:--
-
-"Padre, now that I have a moment to spare, I shall be glad to learn
-how your plan for ridding us of General de Ribeaupierre has failed,
-and what has become of your remarkably luxuriant beard and whiskers,
-which were ample enough to have frightened Murillo himself? You are
-now shaven as bare----"
-
-"As when I threw my gown and sandals over the Dominican gate at
-Salamanca," interrupted the ex-friar, with a grin.
-
-"Exactly so."
-
-"Well, Baltasar, _amigo mio_, when I entered Valencia this morning, I
-had, as you know, a goodly natural crop of black beard and whiskers,
-with a wig that for length of matted locks rivalled those of
-Lazarillo here. Over these I had a high-crowned sombrero, with a
-tricoloured cockade, emblematical of my zealous loyalty to Joseph,
-the Corsican. Clad in an old brown mantle, I assumed the character
-of a poor, meek man, the bearer of a petition to the French general,
-De Ribeaupierre, whom I meant to stab to the heart as he read
-it--aye, _por Dios!_ though surrounded by all his staff and
-quarter-guard, for I was well mounted, and they never would have
-overtaken or stopped me, save by closing the city gate.
-
-"I reached the head-quarters just as the whole staff were turning
-out, for tidings had come that the guerillas of that devil of a
-fellow Baltasar the Salamanquino, had cut off a cavalry patrol, and
-shot the general's only son, a lieutenant of chasseurs. The
-excitement was great in the garrison, where there was such mounting
-and spurring, drumming and so forth, that I was almost unheeded,
-while noisily importuning the staff-officers that I had a petition
-for the general.
-
-"'Here, Spaniard, give it to me,' said one who was covered with
-orders, pausing, as with his foot in the stirrup, he was just about
-to mount his horse.
-
-"I measured him with a glance--I looked stealthily all round me to
-see that the streets were clear for a start, as he opened my petition
-and read it.
-
-"I drew closer; the red cloud I have seemed to see on _former
-occasions_, came before my eyes; my heart beat wildly, my hand, hot
-and feverish, was on my knife. Another moment it was buried in his
-heart, and I was spurring along the street towards the southern gate,
-which I reached only to find it shut!"
-
-"A thousand devils!" said Baltasar.
-
-"_Por Baccho!_" muttered the listeners, with their eyes dilated.
-
-"Dismounting, I quitted my horse, rushed down an alley, where I saw
-the door of a bodega open, and plunged down into it unseen, scrambled
-over the borrachio skins into a dark corner and crept behind a heap
-of them. There I lay panting and breathless, dreading the proprietor
-(but he had been hanged that morning as a spy), and also the French,
-armed parties of whom passed and repassed, swearing and threatening;
-and from what they said, I learned that I had not killed the
-general----"
-
-"_Not_ killed him? what the devil, Padre!--I thought you always
-struck home!"
-
-"So I do, and so I _did_, but the knife had reached only the heart of
-his military secretary."
-
-"Well, then, 'tis one more Frenchman gone the downward road, the way
-we hope to send them all. And you----"
-
-"I lay for some time in the cool wine vault, among the cobwebs and
-dirty borrachio skins. One of them--for the temptation was too
-great--I pierced with my yet bloody knife, and a long, long draught
-of the vino de Alicante, cold, dry, mellow, delicious,
-golden-coloured----"
-
-"Ha, ha, ha! Bravo Padre Trevino!" chorussed all the laughing
-listeners, as they clattered away with their musket-butts in applause
-of his atrocious narrative.
-
-"Thou wert revived, no doubt?" said Baltasar, impatiently.
-
-"_Amiga mio_, I should think so; it brightened my intellects; it gave
-me new ideas--I drew inspiration from that beloved borrachio skin. I
-cast away my ample wig, drew from my wallet shaving apparatus, and in
-a trice I was shaven to the eyes, as you see me. Abandoning my
-cloak, I concealed my dagger in my left sleeve, took a wine skin
-under my arm, and walking deliberately to the officer in command of
-the guard at the south gate, offered the wine for sale at half its
-value, seeming to all appearance a very quiet citizen, anxious in
-these hard times to do a little business, even with the enemy. He
-took the skin from me, bid me go to the devil for payment; the
-sentinel opened the wicket, and I was thrust out of Valencia--the
-very thing I wanted. I said nothing about my poor wife or starving
-little ones, lest their hearts might relent, but turned my face to
-the mountains, and I am here."
-
-This savage story met, we have said, with great applause, and
-Quentin, after the scene he had witnessed in the street of the
-puebla, felt no surprise that it did so; but his horror of the Padre
-was great, and he felt his repugnance for the guerillas increase
-every moment.
-
-Policy and necessity forced him to dissemble; yet, in that mountain
-village there seemed such an atmosphere of blood, dishonourable
-warfare, and patriotism gone mad, that he longed intensely to be out
-of it, and once again in the more congenial and civilized society he
-had left.
-
-"Supper, senor," said Don Baltasar, rising from the table and
-gathering up his papers; "let us rest now, for you must be weary, and
-in truth so am I; and then to bed, for the hour is late, and we have
-both work to do upon the morrow. Trevino, who has the quarter-guard?"
-
-"El Conde de Maciera, senor," replied the Padre.
-
-"Good--not a bat will stir between this and Valencia without his
-hearing of it. This way, then," added Baltasar, ushering them into
-an inner apartment, where a very different face from any Quentin had
-yet seen in the Peninsula shed a light upon the scene.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-DONNA ISIDORA.
-
- "She sung of love--while o'er her lyre
- The rosy rays of evening fell,
- As if to feed with their soft fire
- The soul within that trembling shell.
- The same rich light hung o'er her cheek,
- And played around those lips that sung,
- And spoke as flowers would sing and speak,
- If love could lend their leaves a tongue."
- MOORE.
-
-
-Unpleasant though his new acquaintances were in many ways, Quentin
-felt a certain sense of lofty satisfaction that he was a successful
-though humble actor in the great European drama. His mission was
-achieved! The junction with the first division would doubtless be
-effected by the guerillas, and as he thought of the castle of
-Rohallion and those who were there, of gentle Flora Warrender and his
-boyish love, he began to hope--indeed to believe--that he was
-actually destined for great things after all.
-
-In such a mind as Quentin's there was much of chivalry, nobility, and
-enthusiasm that mingled with his deep love for a pure and beautiful
-young girl like Flora.
-
-In some respects, the companionship, aspect, equipment, and bearing
-of those half-lawless, but wholly patriotic soldiers, seemed a
-realization of those day-dreams or imaginary adventures his romance
-reading had led him to weave and fashion; but the awful episode of
-the night, though fully illustrative of the Spanish character, and of
-the mode in which the patriots were disposed to carry on the war, was
-a feature in guerilla life never to be forgotten!
-
-"My sister, the Senora Donna Isidora," said Baltasar, assuming much
-of the courtly bearing of a true Spanish gentleman, while introducing
-Quentin to a very handsome girl; "Donna Ximena, the mother of our
-comrade Trevino," he added, with a deeper reverence, on presenting
-him to a woman, so old, little, dark, and hideous, that, after
-bowing, he hastened to look again at the younger lady.
-
-"The senor will kiss your hand, Isidora," said Don Baltasar.
-
-Quentin did so, just touching with his lip a very lovely little hand,
-but, happily for him, the leathern paw of the venerable Trevino was
-not presented. Then the party, which consisted of Baltasar, Trevino,
-two other Spaniards, whose names are of no consequence, the two
-ladies, and their youthful guest, seated themselves at table.
-
-The mother of the ungodly Trevino was a deaf old crone who seldom
-spoke, but always crossed herself with great devotion when Quentin
-looked her way, having a proper horror of all heretics, whom she
-believed to be the children of the devil, and all to be more or less
-possessed of the evil eye.
-
-Beauty belongs to no particular country, and is to be found, more or
-less, everywhere, yet most travellers now begin to admit that Spanish
-beauty is somewhat of a delusion or a dream, which poets and
-novelists think it proper or necessary to indulge in and rave about;
-and some of the aforesaid travellers begin to assert that, beyond a
-pair of dark eyes and a set of regular teeth, it cannot be honestly
-said that the women of Spain have much to boast of.
-
-Be that as it may, Isidora de Saldos was a singularly lovely girl, in
-somewhere about her eighteenth year, a very ripe age in the sunny
-land of Castile. Her eyes indeed were marvellous, they were so soft
-and dark, and alternately so sparkling, languishing, and expressive
-of earnestness, all the more striking from the pale complexion of her
-little face. In their deep setting and with their long thick upper
-and lower lashes, those seductive eyes seemed to be black, while, in
-reality, they were of the darkest grey. Her dark brown hair was
-long, rich in colour, and unrivalled in softness. It was of that
-texture which, unhappily, never lasts long, and which often, ere
-five-and-twenty comes, has lost alike its length and profusion.
-
-Her Spanish dress became her blooming years, her figure (which was
-rather petite), and the piquant character of her beauty. It
-consisted of a scarlet velvet corset, and short but ample skirts of
-alternate black and scarlet flounces, all very full; slippers of
-Cordovan leather, with high heels, and scarlet stockings, clocked
-almost to the knee, over the tightest of ankles.
-
-A white muslin handkerchief, prettily disposed over her bosom, a high
-comb at the back of her head, round which her magnificent dark hair
-was gathered and fastened by a long gold pin, that looked
-unpleasantly like a poniard (indeed, it could be used as such), with
-silver bracelets on her slender wrists, long pendants that glittered
-at her tiny ears, a large medal bearing the image of the Madonna hung
-round her neck, and a black lace mantilla, depending from the comb
-and flowing over all, completed her attire.
-
-The medal was of pure gold, and bore the inscription, "_O Marie,
-concue sans péché, priez pour nous qui avons recours à vous_," and
-was, as she afterwards informed Quentin, the gift of the Padre
-Trevino, who found it on the body of a Frenchman whom he had shot
-near Albuquerque.
-
-"Did you ever taste a real Spanish olla, senor?" asked Baltasar, as
-the covers were removed, and the odour of a steaming and savoury dish
-pervaded the apartment.
-
-Quentin declared that he had not.
-
-"Then thou shalt taste it to-night. My sister is a famous cook,"
-said Baltasar; "an olla she excels in--it was the favourite dish of
-our old father, the professor at Salamanca, and is the most noble
-dish in the world!"
-
-"If Spanish, it must be," said Quentin, flatteringly.
-
-"True," said Baltasar, gravely, while giving each of his enormous
-moustaches an upward twist; "we consider everything Spanish supremely
-good."
-
-"We are rather a proud people, you see, senor," said Donna Isidora,
-laughing; "and so far is pride carried, that to touch royalty is to
-die."
-
-"Manuel Godoy touched royalty pretty often," said Trevino, with a
-grim smile, "and we never heard that Her Majesty of Spain resented it
-particularly."
-
-"Did you ever hear of the escape of the sister of Philip III., senor?"
-
-"I regret to say, Don Baltasar, that I never heard of Philip
-himself," replied Quentin.
-
-"About two hundred years ago our royal family were residing at
-Aranjuez," said Baltasar, while filling his own and Quentin's glass
-with wine; "it is a country palace twenty miles south of Madrid, and
-is remarkable for its size and beauty. One night it caught fire; the
-court and all the attendants took to flight, leaving the youngest
-sister of Don Philip to perish. She was seen at one of the windows
-wringing her hands and imploring the saints to succour her, but a
-young arquebusier of the royal guard proved of more avail. He
-bravely dashed through the flames, raised her in his arms, and bore
-her forth in safety. But Spanish etiquette was shocked that the hand
-of a subject--of a man especially--had touched royalty; nay, worse,
-that he should have entered her bed-chamber, so the soldier was cast
-into a dungeon, chained to a heavy bar, and condemned to _die_! But
-the princess graciously pardoned him, and he was sent away to fight
-the Flemings under the Duke of Alva. His name was De Saldos, and
-from him we are descended."
-
-Spanish etiquette made Donna Isidora rather silent and reserved; she
-somewhat uselessly addressed the old crone Donna Ximena from time to
-time, and that worthy matron only responded by mutterings, shaking
-her palsied head, or signing the cross beneath the table. At other
-times Isidora made an occasional remark to Trevino, by whom she was
-evidently greatly admired, for his keen stealthy eyes were seldom off
-her face, and a malevolent gleam shot from them whenever, in
-dispensing the courtesies of the table, she addressed Quentin Kennedy.
-
-The past day's skirmish among the mountains, the capture and
-slaughter of the sixteen French prisoners, had appetized Baltasar and
-his three companions; and though Spanish cookery is seldom very
-excellent, Quentin was quite hungry enough to enjoy the olla podrida
-of beef, chicken, and bacon, boiled with sliced gourd, carrots,
-beans, red sausages, and heaven knows what more, well peppered and
-spiced.
-
-A few strings of rusks, a dish of raisins, with plenty of good
-Valdepenas in jolly flasks, closed the repast, after which the
-invariable cigars were resorted to, prior to repose.
-
-As the whitewashed room, though scantily furnished, was close and
-warm, and as fighting was over for the night, Baltasar and his
-comrades unbuttoned their jackets, and each disencumbered himself of
-a _peto_ or wadded stuffing, which was supposed to turn a bullet, all
-the better that there was pasted thereon a coloured print of some
-local saint.
-
-The conversation ran chiefly on the new war about to be waged by the
-allies in Spain, the various routes likely to be taken by the several
-divisions, the probable points of concentration, and so forth. These
-were chiefly discussed by Baltasar and his three companions, all of
-whom had already seen much service against the French. The extreme
-youth of Quentin, and his total ignorance of the country, made them
-somewhat ignore his presence, notwithstanding the important despatch
-he had brought, the scarlet coat he wore, and that he was the herald
-of that great strife that was not to cease, even at the Hill of
-Toulouse!
-
-He sedulously avoided addressing or coming in contact in any way with
-the Padre Trevino, of whom he naturally had a proper horror, as an
-apostate priest who, exceeding his duty as a guerilla, became an
-assassin, and so coolly avowed his deadly design upon the father of
-Ribeaupierre.
-
-The youth, the fair complexion, the gentleness of voice and eye the
-donna saw in Quentin, together with certain unmistakeable signs of
-good breeding, when contrasted with the dark, fierce aspect and
-brusque bearing of those about her now, failed not to interest her
-deeply.
-
-The solitary mission on which he had come; the distance from his own
-country, of the exact situation of which, in her strange Spanish
-notions of geography (though passably educated for a Castilian), she
-had not the slightest idea, for in those points her countrymen are
-not much improved since Vasco de Lobiera wrote of the fair Olinda
-taking ship in Norway, and sailing to the King of England's "Island
-of Windsor;" the knowledge that Quentin was come to fight, it might
-be to _die_, for her beloved Spain, all served to present him in a
-most favourable light to her very lovely eyes, which rested on him so
-frequently that the sharp-sighted Trevino more than once bit his ugly
-nether lip with suppressed irritation, while Quentin felt his pulses
-quicken with pleasure, for the dark little beauty, in her picturesque
-national costume, was a delightful object to gaze upon; thus, a
-longer residence than he intended in that mountain puebla might
-perhaps have led we are not prepared to say to what species of
-mischief.
-
-As the wine circulated, and the conversation still turned on the war,
-Quentin ventured the remark--a perilous one amid such gentry--that he
-thought the scene he had recently witnessed was not favourable to the
-good success of the Spanish cause.
-
-Every brow loured as he said this, and the gentle donna looked uneasy.
-
-"Madre divina! you don't know what you talk about, senor," said
-Baltasar, gravely; "had you seen your countrymen, as I have mine,
-shot down in poor defenceless groups of thirty or forty at a time, on
-the open Prado of Madrid, you would think less harshly of us."
-
-"And, senor," urged Isidora, in her soft and musical tones, "the poor
-people of the city were forced to illuminate their houses in honour
-of the sacrifice. Was not such cruelty horrible?"
-
-"Horrible indeed, senora," replied Quentin, feeling that it really
-was so, though sooth to say he would have agreed with anything she
-might have advanced, for there was no withstanding those earnest eyes
-and that seductive voice.
-
-"Light as noonday were the streets on that awful night," said
-Baltasar, as the fierce gleam came into his eyes and the pallor of
-passion passed over each of his sallow cheeks; "ten thousand lamps
-and candles shed their glare upon the heaps of slain, where women
-were searching for their husbands, children for parents and parents
-for children, while the cannon thundered from the Retiro, and the
-volleying musketry rang in many a street and square. What says the
-Junta of Seville in its address to the people of Madrid? 'We, all
-Spain, exclaim--the Spanish blood shed in Madrid cries aloud for
-revenge! Comfort yourselves, we are your brethren: we will fight
-like you until the last of us perish in defence of our king and
-country!' Senor, the massacres of the 2nd of May were a sight to
-shudder at--to treasure in the heart and to remember!"
-
-"And by our holy Lady of Battles and of Covadonga, we are not likely
-to forget!" swore Trevino, striking the table with the hilt of his
-knife.
-
-"The spirits of the Cid Rodrigo, of Pelayo the Asturian, and all the
-loyal and brave men of old, are among us again," said Baltasar, with
-enthusiasm, "and we shall crush the slaves of the Corsican to whom
-Manuel Godoy betrayed us!"
-
-"Godoy," said a guerilla who had scarcely yet spoken, but who seemed
-inspired by the same ferocious spirit; "oh that I may yet some day
-despatch him as Pinto Ribiero slew that similar traitor, Vasconcella
-the false Portuguese."
-
-"Always blood!" thought Quentin, beginning to fear that from
-indulging in bluster and rodomontade, they might fall on him, were it
-for nothing more but to keep their hands in practice.
-
-"I perceive you look frequently at my guitar," said Donna Isidora, on
-seeing that Quentin evidently disliked the ferocious tone adopted by
-her brother and his companions; "do you sing, senor?"
-
-"No, senora."
-
-"Or play?"
-
-"The guitar is scarcely known in my country; but if you would favour
-us----"
-
-"With pleasure, senor," said she, with a charming smile.
-
-"Bueno, Dora," said her brother, taking from its peg the guitar and
-handing it to her; on which she threw its broad scarlet riband over
-her shoulder, ran her white and slender fingers through the strings,
-and then a lovely Spanish picture, that Phillips might have doted on,
-was complete.
-
-"What shall it be, Baltasar?" she asked; adding with a swift glance
-at Quentin's scarlet coat, "'_Mia Madre no caro soldados aqui_'--eh?"
-
-"Nay, Dora, that would scarcely be courteous to our guest, who is a
-soldier."
-
-"What then, mi hermano?"
-
-"Give us one of Lope de Vega's songs. There is that ballad which
-compliments the English king who came to seek a wife in Spain."
-
-Then with great sweetness she sang Lope's verses, which begin--
-
- "Carlos Stuardo soy,
- Qui siendo amor mi guia,
- Al cielo de Espana voy,
- Por ver mi estrella Maria."
-
-While she sang, Quentin thought of the old Jacobite enthusiasm of
-Lady Winifred and Lord Rohallion, and how they would have admired
-alike the song and the singer; and while his eyes were fixed on her
-soft pale face and thick downcast eyelashes, he neither heard the
-accompaniment Baltasar beat with a pair of castanets, or by the Padre
-Trevino with the haft of a remarkably ugly knife, which seemed alike
-his favourite weapon and plaything.
-
-In a few minutes after this they had all separated for the night, and
-Quentin, without undressing, as he proposed to start early on the
-following morning, stretched on a hard pallet and muffled in his
-great coat, with his sabre and pistols under his head, soon sank into
-slumber, the sound, deep slumber induced by intense fatigue; and from
-this not even the horrors of the recent massacre, the louring visage
-of the suspicious Trevino, the voice, the eyes, of the lovely young
-donna, or any other memory, could disturb him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-THE JOURNEY.
-
- "Meanwhile the gathering clouds obscure the skies,
- From pole to pole the forky lightning flies,
- The rattling thunders roll, and Juno pours
- A wintry deluge down and sounding showers;
- The company dispersed to coverts ride,
- And seek the homely cots or mountain side."
- Æneis iv.
-
-
-From this long and dreamless sleep Quentin Kennedy started and awoke
-next morning, but not betimes, as the sun's altitude, when shining on
-the whitewashed walls of the posada, informed him. He sprang up and
-proceeded to make a hasty toilet.
-
-"Breakfast, a guide, and then to be gone!" thought he, joyfully.
-
-On issuing from his scantily-furnished chamber into the large room of
-the posada, or rather what was once the posada, he found a number of
-the guerillas busy making up ball-cartridges. Heaps of loose powder
-lay on the oak table, and the nonchalant makers were smoking their
-cigars over it as coolly as if it were only brickdust or oatmeal.
-
-The guitar that hung by its broad scarlet riband from a peg on the
-wall, brought to memory all the episodes of last night, and Quentin
-sighed when reflecting that a girl so lovely as its owner should be
-lost among such society, for to him, those patriot volunteers of his
-Majesty Ferdinand VII. had very much the air and aspect of banditti.
-
-He looked forth from the open windows into the street of the puebla;
-the morning was a lovely one. The unclouded sun shone joyously on
-the bright green mountain sides, while a pleasant breeze shook the
-autumnal foliage of the woods, and tossed the large and now yellow
-leaves of the ancient vines that covered all the walls of the old
-posada, growing in at each door and opening; but Quentin could not
-repress a shudder when he saw the four large graves at the foot of
-the archway, for the faces and forms of the poor victims came before
-his eye in fancy with painful distinctness--the rigid figure of the
-grey-haired captain, the other officer who wept for his wife and
-children, the conscript whom they named Louis--the manly and
-unflinching courage of all!
-
-Baltasar de Saldos twisted up his enormous whiskerando-like
-moustaches, and smiled grimly as only a taciturn Spaniard can smile,
-when he perceived this, as he conceived it to be, childish emotion of
-his guest.
-
-"The ladies await us, senor," said Baltasar; and Quentin, on turning,
-found the dark and deeply-lashed eyes of Isidora bent on his, as she
-smilingly presented her plump little hand to be kissed, and then the
-same party who had met last night again seated themselves at table,
-and a slight breakfast of thick chocolate, eggs, and white bread, was
-rapidly discussed. As soon as it was over, the brilliant young donna
-and the withered old one withdrew, bidding Quentin farewell, and
-adding that as he was to depart so soon, they should see him no more.
-
-Quentin, with a heart full of pleasure, belted on his sabre and
-assumed his forage cap; he also drew the charges of his pistols and
-loaded them anew.
-
-"And now, Don Baltasar, with a thousand thanks for your kindness, I
-shall take my departure," said he. "But how about a guide to avoid
-the main road, and escape the enemy's patrols?"
-
-"As we are so soon to leave this, and commence active and desperate
-operations, the end or extent of which none of us can foresee, the
-Padre Trevino, who is the very model and mirror of sons, has decided
-on sending that excellent lady his mother (a slight smile spread over
-the Spaniard's sombre visage as he spoke) across the frontier for
-safety. She goes to the convent of Engracia, at Portalegre; and, as
-she knows the whole country hereabouts as if it were her own
-inheritance, she shall be your guide."
-
-"She--Donna Trevino?" exclaimed Quentin, who was by no means
-enchanted by the offer of such an encumbrance.
-
-"Si, senor. You will be sure to take great care of her."
-
-"But--but, Don Baltasar, that old dame! (devil he had nearly
-said)--why not send one of your band?"
-
-"I cannot spare a single man. Spain will need them all. The senora
-is very deaf and old, you need scarcely ever address her, and, as she
-is taciturn, she will not incommode you. Besides our Spanish
-mistrust of strangers, she has--excuse me, senor--a horror of all who
-are beyond the pale of the Church."
-
-"But, senor," urged poor Quentin, "to travel for two or three days
-with a deaf old lady!"
-
-"What are you speaking of, senor? We are only a little more than
-thirty miles from Portalegre as a bird flies. You lost your way, and
-rambled sadly in coming here; but I shall mount her on a mule, and
-you on a horse, and you may easily be there, even though proceeding
-by the most steep and devious route, before the sun sets."
-
-"To-night!"
-
-"Exactly. There is, as you are aware, a vast difference in
-travelling on horseback with a guide, and a-foot, in a strange
-country, without one."
-
-"I thank you, senor," said Quentin, considerably relieved, "and shall
-commit myself to the guidance of the old lady, though I fear that she
-views me with no favourable eye."
-
-"Here come your cattle."
-
-"A noble horse, by Jove!"
-
-"I have filled your canteen with aguardiente."
-
-"Thanks, senor."
-
-"I know that you Inglesos can neither march nor fight, as we
-Spaniards do, on mere cold water, with the whiff of a cigar."
-
-They were now at the door of the posada, where a group of dark, idle,
-slouching, and somewhat villanous-looking guerillas were loitering,
-to witness the departure.
-
-"Ah, if these fellows only knew that my pockets were so well lined
-with moidores!" thought Quentin.
-
-Lazarillo held the horse (which had evidently been a French cavalry
-charger) and the mule by their bridles. The former had a fine switch
-tail, which was now tied or doubled up in the Spanish fashion, as he
-had to perform a journey. The latter was a tall, sleek, and handsome
-animal, whose figure indicated great speed and strength.
-
-The saddles were Moorish (the fashion still in Spain), made with high
-peak and croup behind; the stirrup-irons were triangular boxes, and
-the bridles, bridoons, and cruppers, with their brass bosses, scarlet
-fringes, tassels, and trumpery ornaments, closely resembled the
-harness of the circus.
-
-At the pommel of the horse's saddle, hung a leather bottle of wine,
-and behind was a handsome alforja, or travelling bag, ornamented with
-an infinity of tassels, and containing bread, sausages, a boiled
-fowl, and other edibles to be consumed on the journey. Nothing was
-forgotten, and as Quentin mounted his horse, the old lady was led
-forth by Trevino, who, with Baltasar's assistance, lifted her into
-the mule's saddle.
-
-The venerable donna was muffled up in a large loose garment of
-striped stuff, purple and white; it covered her from head to foot,
-and but for her thick veil, which entirely concealed her withered
-visage, she might have passed for an old Bedouin in a burnous.
-
-"Senor, this lady is one in whom I am so deeply interested," said
-Trevino, with the keen, fierce, and impressive glance peculiar to
-him, and with a hand, by force of habit, perhaps, on his knife; "I
-say, one in whom I am so deeply interested, that I trust to your care
-and honour in seeing her, without hindrance or delay, safe to
-Portalegre."
-
-"I shall see her safe to the gate of the Engracia convent," said
-Quentin; "and how about returning the cattle, Don Baltasar?"
-
-"Leave them there, too--my free gift to the convent. And now,
-adios," said he, with a low bow; "doubtless we shall meet again when
-the army is in motion."
-
-"I hope not," muttered Quentin. "Adios, senores."
-
-A few minutes more and they had left the puebla, with its lawless
-garrison, its cannon, and earthen bastions, on which the scarlet and
-yellow ensign of Castile and Leon was waving, far behind them, and
-were riding at a rapid trot down the green mountain path which
-Quentin had travelled alone last night.
-
-Soon he saw the place where the road branched off to Valencia, and
-where he had parted from Ribeaupierre; and, ere long, he passed the
-dead horse, already torn and disembowelled by the wolves or the
-wandering dogs which infested all the wild parts of Estremadura.
-
-How changed were the scene, the circumstances, and the companionship
-since he had last been in the saddle, cantering along the road to
-Maybole, escorting Flora Warrender!
-
-Leaving this path, and striking off to the left, Donna Ximena, to
-whose guidance he silently and implicitly committed himself, and who
-rode a little way in front, managing her mule with ease, and,
-considering her years, with undoubted grace, conducted him up a steep
-and narrow track that led into the wildest part of the mountains,
-where the summits of slaty granite were already beginning to be
-powdered by frost and snow in the early hours of morning, and where
-the valleys, which the industry of the Moors made gardens that teemed
-with fertility and beauty, are now desert wastes, abounding only in
-rank pasturage.
-
-Their cattle soon became blown, and, as the pleasant breeze that
-fanned the foliage in the forenoon, had already died away, and been
-succeeded by an oppressive and sultry closeness, they proceeded
-slowly, and now Quentin thought he might venture to converse a little
-with his silent companion, for the monotony of travelling thus became
-tiresome in the extreme.
-
-"Donna Ximena," said he, as their nags walked slowly up the mountain
-path. "Donna Ximena!" he repeated, in a louder key, before she said,
-without turning her head--
-
-"Well, senor?"
-
-"It surprises me much that Don Baltasar permits a girl so lovely as
-his sister to reside among those dangerous guerillas."
-
-To this remark the haughty old lady made no response, so, raising his
-voice, he added--
-
-"He may now be without a home to leave her in; but, certainly,
-Isidora is, without exception, the most beautiful and winning girl I
-ever saw--in her own style, at least," he concluded, as he thought of
-Flora Warrender.
-
-He had to shout this remark at the utmost pitch of his voice before
-the old lady replied, with a gloved hand at her right ear,--
-
-"Yes, senor--she put a large and beautiful sausage into the alforja."
-
-"Bother the old frump!" said Quentin; then shouting louder still, he
-added, "Your head, senora, is so muffled in that mantle and veil,
-that it is quite impossible you can hear me."
-
-"Were you speaking, senor?"
-
-"The devil! I should think so--yes!"
-
-"Speak louder."
-
-"I cannot possibly speak louder, senora; but I was remarking the
-danger that might accrue to a girl of such wonderful beauty as Donna
-Isidora among the companions of her brother."
-
-"It is Valdepenas, senor."
-
-"_What_ is Valdepenas?"
-
-"The wine in the bota--taste it if you wish--I filled it for you."
-
-Quentin relinquished in despair any further attempt to make himself
-heard or understood, and for some miles they proceeded, as before, in
-total silence, while the gathering of the clouds betokened a storm,
-and Quentin was certain he heard thunder at a distance; but a few
-minutes after, the sound proved to be that of a brass drum
-reverberating between the mountain slopes! As these drums were then
-used by the French alone, he instinctively reined up, and his silent
-guide, to whom he did not deem it worth while to communicate his
-alarm, did so too.
-
-"Ah--you heard that, my venerable friend," said he aloud.
-
-The sound now became continuous and steady, and his horse, an old
-trooper we have said, snorted and pricked up his ears intelligently.
-It was the regular but monotonous beating of a single drummer, who
-was timing the quickstep for the troops in the old fashion still
-retained by the French, when on the line of march, as it proves an
-excellent method, in lieu of other music, for getting soldiers
-rapidly on.
-
-Desirous of reconnoitring, Quentin somewhat unceremoniously pushed
-his horse past the mule of his fair, but exceedingly tiresome
-companion, and dismounting, led it forward by the bridle.
-
-The path, rugged and narrow, here went right over the steep crest of
-a hill between some volcanic rocks that were covered with dark-green
-clumps of the Portuguese laurel and wild olive tree; and from thence
-it dipped abruptly down into a little green valley where stood a farm
-house in ruins.
-
-There by the wayside was a human skull, white and bleached, stuck
-upon the summit of a pole, the grim memorial of some act of
-retributive justice for murder and robbery.
-
-Proceeding slowly and listening intently as he went, for the sound of
-the drum was coming every moment nearer, Quentin peeped over the
-eminence and found himself almost face to face with the first section
-of the advanced guard of a French regiment of infantry; they were
-scarcely a hundred yards distant, and were toiling up the steep
-ascent.
-
-In heavy marching order, with their blankets and blue great-coats
-rolled, they were clad in long white tunics of coarse linen, with
-large red epaulettes, high bearskin caps, each with a scarlet plume
-on the left side; the legs of their scarlet trousers were rolled up
-above the ankles; all had their muskets slung, and they were
-chatting, laughing, smoking, and marching, some with their hands in
-their pockets, and others arm-in-arm, in that slouching and free
-manner peculiar to all troops when "marching at ease," but more
-especially to the French.
-
-On seeing the alarming sight, Quentin leaped on his horse, and cried--
-
-"Away, Donna Ximena for your life--here are a body of the enemy--we
-shall be either shot or taken prisoners!"
-
-And very ungallantly caring little whether his venerable friend, the
-mother of the worthy Trevino, fell into the hands of the French,
-provided that he escaped them, Quentin goaded the sides of his horse
-with his Spanish stirrup-irons, and lashed its flanks with a switch
-which he had torn from an olive tree.
-
-It sprung off with a wild bound; the lady's mule also struck out, and
-away they went headlong down the mountain side together at a
-break-neck pace, followed by shouts from the French, the first
-section of whom were now on the crest of the eminence, and who
-unslung their muskets and opened a fire upon them.
-
-Every shot rung with a hundred reverberations between the mountain
-peaks; Quentin, however, never looked back, but rode recklessly and
-breathlessly on, thinking as the old lady scoured after him on her
-mule, and as he lashed his horse without mercy, that he somewhat
-resembled Tam o' Shanter pursued by Cuttie Sark.
-
-There was no contingency of war of which he had a greater horror than
-that of becoming a prisoner. If taken by the enemy, years might pass
-on and still find him in their hands, and when released or exchanged,
-he would be little better than a private soldier--not so good, in
-fact. His time for promotion would be irrevocably past, and all the
-stories he had heard of the sufferings to which the French Republican
-and Imperial officers subjected our troops when prisoners in the
-impregnable citadel of Bitche, the fortress of Verdun, and elsewhere,
-crowded on his mind, with a consciousness of the beggared and
-hopeless life to which the event might ultimately consign him, even
-if he survived the captivity, which, in his restless and irritable
-horror of all restraint, he very much doubted.
-
-Fortunately for him the long-barrelled muskets of the French infantry
-were very dissimilar to Enfield rifles in the precision of their
-fire; thus, he and his companion were soon beyond all range, and an
-opaque vapour, alternating between purple and brown in its tint, that
-descended on the mountains, while a storm of blinding rain and
-bellowing wind broke forth, put an end to all chance of pursuit; but
-they rode on fully ten miles without knowing in what direction, when
-the fury of the storm compelled them to take refuge in a thicket.
-
-Dismounting, Quentin was too breathless and blown to attempt to
-outbellow the wind in making excuses to old Donna Ximena; he simply
-lifted that good lady off her mule, and conducted her under the
-stately chestnut trees, which gave them shelter. He then unslung the
-bota and the alforja from his crusader-like demipique, and was
-proceeding to secure the bridles of their nags to a branch, when
-there burst a shriek from his companion, with the exclamation--
-
-"Madre divina! O Madre de Dios!"
-
-At that instant there shot forth a terrific glare which seemed to
-envelop them, and to fill the whole thicket with dazzling light,
-showing every knot and twisted branch, and every gnarled stem.
-
-Then there was a tremendous crash, as a thunderbolt ground a giant
-chestnut to pieces, literally splitting its solid trunk from top to
-bottom; next rang the roar of the thunder peal as it rolled away over
-the vapour-hidden mountain peaks, leaving the dense and murky air
-full of sulphurous heat and odour.
-
-Stunned by the torrent of sound, and half blinded by the lurid glare,
-more than a minute elapsed before Quentin discovered that, startled
-alike by the flash and the thunder-clap, the horse and mule had torn
-their bridles from his hands and galloped madly away, he knew not
-whither.
-
-Even the faintest sound of their hoofs could no longer be heard amid
-the ceaseless hiss of the descending rain, every drop of which was
-nearly the size of a walnut; so now, there were he and old Donna
-Ximena (who crept closer to him than he cared for) left a-foot he
-knew not where, in that gloomy thicket, evening coming on and night
-to follow, a storm raging, and the French in motion in the
-neighbourhood!
-
-"Here's a devil of a mess!" sighed poor Quentin.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-A SURPRISE.
-
- "Preciosa. Is this a dream? O, if it be a dream,
- Let me sleep on, and do not wake me yet!
- Repeat thy story! say I'm not deceived!
- Say that I do not dream! I am awake;
- This is the gipsy camp; and this Victorian."
- _The Spanish Student._
-
-
-To address or to consult his old and deaf companion would have been
-worse than useless, so Quentin angrily sat down to reflect, and,
-unfortunately, in sitting down, did so on a prickly pear. Now, there
-are more pleasant sensations in the world than to sit upon such an
-esculent, or a Scots thistle (when one is inclined to ponder and to
-"chew the cud of sweet and bitter fancy"), with their bristling
-stamens, especially if one wears the stockingweb regimental
-pantaloons then worn; so Quentin sprang up, and issuing from the
-thicket, perceived with great satisfaction, that though the rain was
-then falling, the clouds were rising and the wind abating; in fact
-that the storm, which had most probably concealed their flight from
-the French, was gradually passing away; but whether or not, one fact
-was evident--that the donna and he must pass the night in the thicket.
-
-It was fortunate that he had rendered the flight of their cattle of
-less consequence, by previously securing the bota of wine and the bag
-of provisions, and also that he had ridden with his pistols at his
-girdle, and not in holsters.
-
-As the light increased a little when the clouds dispersed, he
-perceived a ruined arch, the use or origin of which it would be
-difficult to determine. It seemed to be a portion of a small
-aqueduct or vault, Roman, Gothic, or Moorish perhaps--anything but
-Spanish. It stood amid the great old trees of the chestnut grove,
-and was half hidden by the luxuriant grass, the gorgeous wild
-flowers, and odoriferous creepers. It was about six feet in height,
-but several more in depth, and heaps of fallen masonry, covered with
-moss and lavender-flowers, enclosed it on one side.
-
-Quentin examined the ruin, and finding it strewed with dry and
-withered leaves, blown thither by the wind, he led in his trembling
-companion, who seated herself near him, and with muttered thanks
-drank a mouthful of wine from the bota, while he drew forth the
-contents of the alforja, to wit, a huge loaf of fine white bread, a
-boiled fowl, and a red sausage, that, of course, smelt villanously of
-garlic. It was in vain, however, that he pressed Donna Ximena to
-partake of the guerillas' good cheer. The old lady had evidently no
-objection to a comforting drop of the generous Valdepenas, but when
-he offered her food she only buried her head in her veil and rocked
-herself to-and-fro, as if overcome by weariness or alarm.
-
-Placing his mouth near her ear, Quentin endeavoured, by roaring as if
-he were in a gale of wind at sea, to discover if she knew whereabouts
-they were--whether near Valencia de Alcantara or Albuquerque; whether
-near Marvao or San Vincente; whether on the Spanish or Portuguese
-side of the frontier; but she only shook her head, and made signs of
-the cross, as the twilight deepened.
-
-Quentin thought that Don Baltasar had certainly selected his guide,
-as the Dean of St. Patrick counselled all housemaids should be, for
-their years and lack of personal charms.
-
-"By Jove--the plot thickens!" said he, as he tugged away at a
-drumstick of the boiled galina and consoled himself with a hearty
-pull at the bota, while his companion laid her old muffled head on a
-heap of leaves, and appeared to fall sound asleep; at least Quentin
-never cared to enquire whether she was so or not.
-
-There were moments when he seriously considered whether he was not
-justified in marching off quietly without beat of drum, and leaving
-this venerable bore to shift for herself, while he made the best of
-his way to Portalegre, as he had left it, a-foot; but there seemed to
-be something so ungallant and ungenerous in leaving an elderly female
-(not that the fact of her being the maternal parent of Padre Trevino
-enhanced her value) alone, in such a place and at night too, that he
-resolved to wait till morning dawned, and then he would see what a
-night might bring forth; and this resolution he formed all the more
-readily that the rain was still pouring in a ceaseless torrent.
-
-Hour after hour passed in silence, no sound coming to his ear save
-the monotonous patter of the rain falling on the brown autumnal
-leaves; to Quentin it proved alike a weary and dreary time, until the
-shower began to abate, and for the first time in his life he heard a
-nightingale pouring its plaintive and varying notes upon the air.
-
-Quentin placed their provender and his pistols in a dry place,
-gathered a heap of leaves for a pillow, and coiling himself up at the
-other end of the ruin, _i.e._, as far away as possible from old Donna
-Ximena, he followed her example and courted sleep.
-
-With the first blink of the day he started from his nest of leaves.
-Grey dawn was stealing between the great rough stems of the chestnut
-wood. The rain and the wind were over; the vapours of the night had
-dispersed, and no trace remained of the past storm save the scathed
-and thunder-riven tree, the ruins of which were scattered around its
-root.
-
-The green slopes of the distant hills were visible, dotted by the
-drenched merino sheep, thousands of which are annually driven into
-Estremadura, to fatten on the rich wild grass of its pastures. In
-the distance, and darkly defined against the increasing pink and
-violet tints of the sky, were two windmills, quaint and old, like
-those which the Knight of La Mancha assailed; their wheels were
-broken, and the fans hung motionless and in tatters.
-
-A herd of wild swine rushed through the grove, snorting and grunting
-in their headlong career, but the Donna Trevino still slept soundly,
-if Quentin might judge by her breathing, which was low and regular.
-After stepping forth to reconnoitre, and finding the whole vicinity
-of the thicket silent, and no appearance of either friend or foe on
-the roads in any direction, he deemed this the wisest and safest time
-to set forth, and returned to wake his companion, whom he really
-began to wish--we shall not say where, or with whom--but safe at
-least with her son, the Padre Trevino.
-
-On approaching he perceived that the loose and ample garment of
-alternate white and purple stripes in which she was enveloped, was
-partly deranged, and the thick black lace veil which covered her head
-was open in front, for now one half of it floated over her right
-shoulder. Then, on drawing nearer, how great was his astonishment to
-behold in the sleeper, not the wrinkled and withered visage of the
-deaf old woman, whom all yesterday and all last night he supposed to
-be his bore and companion, whom he had left to shift for herself when
-the French appeared, and from whom he had crept as far away as
-possible in the singular den they tenanted--not the faded visage, we
-say, of Donna Ximena, but the pale and delicately cut features, the
-wondrously long black eyelashes, and the lovely little face of Donna
-Isidora!
-
-The red pouting lips were parted, and the pearly teeth below were
-visible, imparting to her expression a charming air of child-like
-innocence and repose. Ungloved now, one white and slender hand,
-grasping her gathered veil, was pressed upon her bosom; her left
-cheek reposed upon her outstretched arm, and the partial
-disarrangement of her picturesque costume, as she had turned in her
-sleep, left visible rather more than her short Spanish skirts usually
-revealed of two remarkably pretty ankles, cased in their tight
-scarlet stockings.
-
-The hardships to which her brother's recent guerilla life had
-subjected her, evidently enabled the adventurous girl to "rough it,"
-as soldiers say; thus she still slept soundly, while Quentin, half
-kneeling down, surveyed with wonder, perplexity, and pleasure, the
-beauties thus suddenly revealed by the open veil.
-
-Touching her hand, he awoke her.
-
-She started up with an exclamation of alarm, and her hand seemed
-instinctively to feel for the bodkin which confined her hair. Aware
-that she was discovered now, she assumed a sitting posture, threw
-back her thick veil, and a singular expression, half angry and half
-droll, came into her dark eyes, as she said--
-
-"You have been looking at me as I slept! Was it proper to penetrate
-my disguise, senor?"
-
-"Pardon me, senora; I did not, indeed; I came but to wake you, and
-found your veil open; could I refrain from looking--from admiring?"
-
-"And you have discovered me----"
-
-"To be young and beautiful----"
-
-"When you thought me old and hideous--is it not so?" she asked,
-laughing.
-
-"I confess it, and with pleasure, senora. This is very
-enchanting--but what romance is it--what absurd comedy is this you
-are acting?"
-
-"Absurd?"
-
-"Pardon me again; but though it is a game or drama that charms me
-very much, it is not without peril.'"
-
-"To whom?"
-
-"To both--perhaps most of all to you, senora."
-
-She replied only by a haughty smile, so Quentin continued--
-
-"Now we shall make our way together delightfully to Portalegre, and
-there can be no more deafness; or can it be that you and Donna Ximena
-changed places here in the night? Oh, tell me what does all this
-mean?"
-
-"I shall tell you, senor," said the now blushing girl; "it means
-simply that my brother was most anxious that I, and not Donna Ximena,
-should reach the St. Engracia convent, as a place of permanent safety
-till these wars and tumults are over. He also wished to supply you
-with a guide to Portalegre, where, but for the loss of our horses, we
-should have been last night. Thus my brother----"
-
-"Deemed that as old Donna Ximena you would be safer with me than in
-your own character?"
-
-"Exactly," she replied, laughing; "we thought there would be little
-chance of your attentions annoying her."
-
-"Do you imagine that when the French appeared I would have turned my
-horse's head and left you without thought or ceremony, as I left
-her--she whom I considered an old, deaf bore and encumbrance? You
-have acted well your part, senora. How you made me roar and shout,
-as if I was commanding a whole brigade!"
-
-"And now, senor, that you know I am not Donna Ximena, will you
-respect me the less?"
-
-"On the contrary, I shall respect you a great deal more," said
-Quentin with enthusiasm, as he took her hand in his; but she withdrew
-it as if to adjust her veil.
-
-"Then, am I to understand that in your country, youth is more
-honourable than age?"
-
-"Nay, it is not, but youth is more pleasing, certainly."
-
-"You have been most kind to me, senor."
-
-"Kind, senora?" Quentin thought she was quizzing him.
-
-"Yes; I cannot forget how, even as old Ximena, you lifted me from my
-mule, conveyed me in here, made a couch and pillow for me, and so
-forth. _Beso usted la mano, caballero_ (I kiss your hand, sir)," she
-added, taking his hand in hers.
-
-"Oh, Donna Isidora, I cannot permit you to do this--unless----"
-
-"Do you not know the customs of Castile? Well, unless what?"
-
-"You permit me to kiss yours."
-
-"How simple! there, senor," she added, presenting a very lovely
-little hand, which he pressed to his lips.
-
-"Your cheek now--ah, you will permit me?" urged Quentin, becoming a
-little bewildered by the whole situation, and by the clear dark eyes
-that looked so softly into his.
-
-"Do so, senor."
-
-Quentin was promptly pressing forward, when the point of a very
-unpleasant looking little stiletto met his cheek!
-
-"Senora," he exclaimed, "what do you mean?"
-
-"That I shall stab you to the heart if you molest me--that is all!"
-said she, as a gleam came into her dark eyes that vividly reminded
-Quentin of Baltasar.
-
-"So, so, senora," said Quentin, with an air of pique, "you are
-certainly able to take care of yourself."
-
-"I live in times when it is necessary I should be so," was the dry
-retort.
-
-Quentin surveyed her with growing interest, for her beauty was very
-remarkable in its delicacy and darkness. She had a short crimson
-upper lip, that seemed to quiver with every passing thought, for she
-was an impressionable, enthusiastic, and high-spirited girl. After a
-pause,
-
-"Now that you have done admiring me, I suppose," said she, "you will
-kindly say what we are to do?"
-
-"How?"
-
-"We cannot remain here among the leaves, like a couple of gitanos, or
-two rooks in search of a nest."
-
-"We shall continue our journey to Portalegre, with your permission,
-senora; and now that you have recovered your hearing, and that I am
-not obliged to bellow like a madman, you will perhaps, if in your
-power, tell me where we are?"
-
-Donna Isidora laughed and presented her hand; Quentin assisted her to
-rise, and on issuing from the ruined arch, she looked about her for
-some time.
-
-"By those two windmills," said she, "I know that we are not far from
-Salorino."
-
-"A town, senora?"
-
-"Yes; it lies at the base of yonder lofty mountain, on the left bank
-of the river Salor."
-
-"Is it large?"
-
-"A considerable place for manufactures. This purple and white
-striped woollen stuff is made there; but the town must be avoided, as
-it is occupied by a troop of Polish Lancers."
-
-"Then did we ride the wrong way in the rain last night?"
-
-"Yes; we are still fully thirty miles from Portalegre."
-
-"Thirty miles yet, senora!"
-
-"Yes, and Valencia de Alcantara, where the French Light Cavalry are,
-lies exactly midway, on the main road, between us and it."
-
-Quentin's heart sunk at this information.
-
-"You are certain of all this, senora?" said he, laying his hand
-lightly on her arm.
-
-"Quite, senor."
-
-"We cannot--you, at least, cannot--proceed thirty miles on foot; so
-what in heaven's name shall we do?" said Quentin in great perplexity.
-
-"The Conde de Maciera, who serves in my brother's band of guerillas
-as captain of a hundred lancers, has a villa at the foot of yonder
-hill near the Salor; I remember that the wildest bull we ever had in
-the arena at Salamanca came from thence. The place is scarcely two
-miles distant from this, and could we but reach it, doubtless some of
-his domestics might assist us."
-
-"The idea is excellent; let us set out at once!"
-
-"Be advised by me, senor, and take some breakfast first," said the
-Spanish girl, laughing; "it is a custom we guerillas have, always to
-eat when provisions can be had, lest we halt where there are none."
-
-Quentin at once assented, and opening the alforja produced the fowl
-and other edibles, on which they made a slight repast before setting
-forth.
-
-Seating herself within the ruined arch, her head reclined upon her
-left hand, Isidora displayed to perfection a lovely rounded arm, and
-a pair of taper ankles and little feet, towards which Quentin's eyes
-wandered from time to time.
-
-"You look at me very earnestly, senora," said he, while his cheek
-reddened and his heart fluttered on finding the dark searching eyes
-of the young donna fixed on him more than once.
-
-"There is, I can see, a sad expression in your eyes, senor."
-
-"Do you think so?" asked Quentin, smiling.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"But how, or why do you suppose so?"
-
-"I don't know; I perceive that you are a mere boy (muchacho), and
-yet--and yet----"
-
-"What, senora?"
-
-"Ave Maria purissima! I can't say--there is something that speaks to
-me of thought, reflection, care beyond your years."
-
-"It may well be so, dear senora; I have never known a relative in the
-world; I have been an orphan from infancy, and----"
-
-"And now," said she, presenting him with her hand, "you are a soldier
-who comes to fight for Spain!"
-
-"And for _you_, too, senora," he added, as he touched her fingers
-with his lips, and with a devotion that somewhat surprised himself.
-"But are you afraid of me, as old Donna Ximena was?"
-
-"No--why do you think I am?"
-
-"You sign the cross so often."
-
-"Because, senor--excuse me, but the morning air is excessively chilly
-here, and I yawn frequently."
-
-"And you do so?----"
-
-"For fear Satanas should dart down my throat unseen and unfelt. It
-is a belief--superstition you may deem it--that we have in Castile;
-though you, perhaps, who have, unfortunately, been educated among
-heretics, may know neither the dread nor the holy sign. I know that
-it is not used in your country, senor--because I can read."
-
-"I should think so," said Quentin, amused by her simplicity; "is not
-every lady educated?"
-
-"No--not in Spain."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"Lest, if handsome, they should write to their lovers."
-
-"And yet, senora, they had the rashness to teach you."
-
-"Do you mean that I am handsome, or that I must have lovers?"
-
-"I mean both--that being the first of necessity leads to your
-possessing the last."
-
-"My poor father, the good old professor, who was so barbarously slain
-by the French, was careful to teach me many things, though our female
-literary accomplishments are usually confined to our prayers and
-rehearsing legends of the saints, songs of the Cid Rodrigo, or by
-Lope de la Vega. In England I believe you have women who could lead
-the Junta or shine in the Cortes itself; but what matters their
-education, when it only serves to confirm their heresies? And now,
-senor, place the bota in the alforja, and sling that over your
-shoulder; let us go, and I shall be your guide to Villa de Maciera."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-THE VILLA DE MACIERA.
-
- "Innocence makes him careless now.
- * * * *
- Youth hath its whimsies, nor are we
- To examine all their paths too strictly:
- We went awry ourselves when we were young."
- _Old Tragedy._
-
-
-Donna Isidora had now divested herself of the large and loose woollen
-weed in which she had travelled yesterday, and threw it gracefully
-over her arm. In her short but amply flounced skirt she tripped--as
-we are writing of a Spanish girl we should have it glided--along by
-the side of Quentin, who moderated his pace to suit hers.
-
-The rain of last night had completely laid the dust; the morning air
-was cool and delightful, and save a Franciscan friar of Medellin,
-travelling like themselves on foot, with a canvas wallet slung on his
-back and a long knotted staff in his hand, they met no one.
-
-The heavy clouds were banking up from the westward, but the sky was
-beautiful overhead, and, refreshed by the torrents of last night,
-every herb, flower, and leaf wore their brightest hues. The Salor, a
-river which flows from the mountains southward of Caceres, in
-Estremadura, and joins the Tagus near Rosmaninhal, in the province of
-Beira, and the bed of which frequently becomes quite dry in summer,
-now came in sight, swollen by the recent rains, and flowing red and
-muddy between groves of olive trees, which were still in full leaf,
-as in those regions the olive harvest usually occurs about the month
-of December.
-
-On the surface of the rushing river the large flowers of the white
-and purple lotus floated, or sunk to rise again, bobbing in the
-eddies; and some brightly feathered birds, though summer was long
-since past, twittered about, filling the air with melody and song.
-
-But the western clouds, we have said, came gathering fast and
-heavily, and in sombre masses that alternated between purple and inky
-grey, while the wind rose in hot or cold puffs that gradually grew to
-gusts; and these, with other indications that rough weather was again
-at hand, made the two pedestrians hasten on.
-
-Ere they crossed the old Roman bridge that spans the Salor, by arches
-that must whilom have echoed to the marching legions of Quintus
-Sertorius, the sound of distant thunder was heard among the
-mountains, and then the clouds gathered so fast, that ere long every
-vestige of blue was completely hidden in the sky.
-
-"If rain comes, what a situation for you, Donna Isidora!" said
-Quentin, turning to his companion, to whose usually colourless cheek,
-the early morning air and the exercise of walking had imparted a
-lovely flush; in fact she seemed radiantly beautiful!
-
-"Oh, fear not for me, senor, though to have one's only dress wetted,
-is rather unpleasant," she replied; "besides, the villa of the Conde
-is close at hand."
-
-At that moment one or two large drops of warm rain plashed on the
-road they traversed, causing them to quicken their steps.
-
-Striking off from the main highway, Isidora led Quentin between two
-gate pillars, each of which was surmounted by a marble lion, seated
-on its haunches, with its fore paws resting on a shield. This gave
-access to an avenue, where two rows of giant beeches, now brown and
-yellow, mingled with ilex (whose leaves seem red as blood when viewed
-in the sunshine), cast their shadows on two lesser rows of dense and
-dark-leaved Portuguese laurels, myrtle and wild gentian; but in this
-silent and untrodden avenue, the rank grass and weeds were already
-sprouting.
-
-"This is the villa," said Donna Isidora, as they came suddenly in
-sight of a chateau of very imposing aspect; "but Madre Maria! what is
-this? It seems quite deserted!"
-
-A double flight of white marble steps led from a green lawn to a
-noble terrace, the balustrades of which were elaborately carved, and
-had at regular intervals square pedestals bearing each an enormous
-porphyry vase filled with flowers that diffused a delicious aroma.
-From the architecture of the villa, a large square mansion with
-wings, which rose from the plateau of this stately terrace, and by
-its Palladian style, many of the pediments, cornices, capitals, and
-especially the statues that adorned it, seemed to have been taken
-from the various Roman ruins in the vicinity.
-
-Around this terrace was a row of orange trees, the fruit of which had
-never been gathered, as it lay in heaps under each, just as it had
-fallen from the branches when dead ripe.
-
-The plashing water of a beautiful bronze fountain, where four Tritons
-shot each a jet of pure crystal from a trumpet-shaped conch into a
-yellow marble basin, alone broke the silence and stillness of the
-place. Torn from its elaborate hinges, the front door lay flat on
-the tesselated marble floor of the vestibule, having evidently been
-beaten in by the simple application of a large stone which still lay
-above it; and the tendrils of the gorgeous acacias that covered the
-front wall of the villa, had already begun to find their way in at
-the open door, and to creep through the shattered windows.
-
-"The French have been here!" said Isidora, with a dark expression in
-her eyes; "De Ribeaupierre's dragoons have done this."
-
-"The villa is quite deserted, senora," said Quentin, as they stood in
-irresolution and perplexity on the terrace. "How far are we from
-Salorino?"
-
-"Six miles at least."
-
-Quentin hallooed loudly two or three times, but the echoes of the
-tenantless abode alone responded, and the deathlike stillness there
-made Isidora shrink close to his side.
-
-"I was not prepared for this," she said, while her eyes filled with
-tears; "yet what else can we expect while a Frenchman remains alive
-on this side of the Pyrenees?" she added, bitterly.
-
-"There seems to be no living thing here, senora; not even a household
-dog."
-
-"What shall we do, senor?" she asked, earnestly.
-
-"Whatever we do ultimately, senora, we must take shelter now, for
-here comes the storm again, and with vengeance, too!"
-
-So intent had they been in observing the indications of desertion and
-decay about this noble villa, that they had failed to see how fast
-the storm had gathered round them. A gust of wind tore past the
-edifice, strewing the terrace with withered acacia flowers and orange
-leaves, and then the rain descended in torrents, driving the
-travellers for shelter into the open vestibule.
-
-In blinding sheets it rushed along the earth, from which it seemed to
-rise again like smoke or mist, then the thunder hurtled across the
-darkening sky, and the yellow lightning played like wild-fire about
-the bare granite scalps of the distant sierras, throwing forward
-every peak in strong outline from the dusky masses of cloud, amid
-which they "were an instant seen, and instant lost."
-
-"_Madre de Dios!_ there seems a fatality in all this!" exclaimed
-Isidora, as the overstrained and half Moorish ideas of etiquette and
-female propriety which prevail in Spain and Portugal occurred to her;
-then, looking at Quentin, while a blush suffused her cheek, she
-added, "to be wandering in this manner is a most awkward situation,
-especially for me."
-
-Quentin made some well-bred reply, he knew not what; but with all its
-awkwardness he felt that "the situation had its charm," as he took
-her hand and suggested that they should investigate the premises and
-see whether the villa was really so deserted as it appeared.
-
-From the splendid vestibule, the lofty walls and rich cornices of
-which were covered with armorial bearings of the past Condes de
-Maciera, many of their escutcheons being collared by the orders of
-Santiago de Compostella, Santiago de Montesa, the Dove of Castile,
-and the Golden Fleece, with the crossed batons that showed how many
-had of old commanded the Monteros de Espinosa, or Ancient Archers of
-the Spanish Royal Guard, Quentin and Donna Isidora ascended a marble
-stair to a large corridor, off which several suites of apartments
-opened, and through these they proceeded, every moment fearful of
-coming suddenly upon some sight of horror, as the French were seldom
-slow in using their bayonets against any household that received them
-unwillingly, and the battered state of the entrance door showed that
-the villa had been entered forcibly.
-
-The great corridor, like many of the rooms, was hung with portraits
-of grisly saints and meek-eyed Madonnas, and of many a lank-visaged
-and long-bearded hidalgo, with breast-plate, high ruff, and
-bowl-hilted toledo, looking with calm pride, or it might be defiance,
-from the flapping canvas, which had been slashed in mere wantonness
-by the sabres of the French dragoons.
-
-Save that a number of chairs were overthrown, that several lockfast
-places had been broken open, and that many empty bottles strewed the
-floors, the furniture appeared to have been left untouched. The gilt
-clocks on the marble mantel-pieces ticked no more, and the spiders
-had spun their webs over the hour-hands and dials, thus showing that
-the villa must have been deserted by the family and servants of the
-count for some weeks. The damask sofas and ottomans were covered
-with dust, and many books lay strewn about on the dry and now musty
-esparto grass that covered some of the floors, which were nearly all
-of highly polished oak.
-
-Quentin picked up a lady's white kid glove, and a black fan covered
-with silver spangles.
-
-"These have belonged to the mother of the Conde, who resided here;
-where can the poor lady have fled--what may have become of her?" said
-Isidora as they wandered on, her voice and Quentin's sounding strange
-and hollow in the emptiness of the great villa.
-
-All the bed-chambers were untouched, save in some instances where a
-mirror or cheval glass was starred or smashed by a pistol-shot; and
-so, ere long, the visitors in their search found themselves in the
-chapel, a little gothic oratory of very florid architecture, which
-had evidently formed a portion of a much older edifice than the
-present villa; for there, on a pedestal tomb, having a row of carved
-weepers round it, and little niches and sockets for twelve votive
-lamps, lay side by side the effigies of two knights in chain-armour,
-with their cross-hilted swords and military girdles on, and their
-hands folded in prayer. Quentin drew near them with interest, for he
-remembered the quaint effigy of Sir Ranulph Crawford, Keeper of the
-Palace of Carrick, in the old kirk of Rohallion, and while Isidora
-knelt for a moment before the little altar, he read on a brass plate
-this inscription:
-
-"Aqui yazen el noble y valiente Conde, Don Fernando de Estremera, y
-su hijo, Don Antonio, Condes de Maciera y Estremera; fueron muertos
-en una batalla con los Infieles, en tiempo del Rey Don Alfonso de
-Castile, Leon, y Galicia. Requiescant in pace."
-
-"More than seven hundred years ago," thought Quentin. "Sir Ranulph's
-tomb is a thing of yesterday compared with this."
-
-He surveyed with emotions of pleasure and interest this little
-oratory, the sanctuary of which, with its half Moorish and
-arabesque-like carvings was a miracle of art and a mass of gilding.
-It must have been erected almost immediately after the expulsion of
-the Arabs from that part of Castile, and so those Counts of Maciera
-had lived and died before the days of the Cid himself,
-
- "The venging scourge of Moors and traitors,
- The mighty thunderbolt of war!
- Mirror bright of chivalry,
- Ruy, my Cid Campeador!"
-
-for he had been born when Canute the Dane swayed his sceptre over
-England, and when Malcolm of Scotland--Rex Victoriosissimus--was
-nailing the hides of the Norsemen on the doors of his parish
-churches. It was a remote period to look back to, and yet, in some
-of her national features, particularly in a proneness to bloodshed,
-Spain was pretty much the same as when the Cid shook his lance before
-the walls of Zamora.
-
-Light, many hued, crimson, blue, and green, streamed, with flakes of
-dusky yellow, through the chapel's deep-arched windows, shedding a
-warm glow on its carved pillars, ribbed arches, and lettered stones
-that marked the graves of the dead below, where the Condes de
-Maciera, "el noble--el magno," were mingling with the dust; but now
-their dwelling-place was desolate, and the heir of all their titles,
-a half-desperate outlaw and soldier, was serving as a guerilla in the
-band of Baltasar the Salamanquino.
-
-Various stools and hassocks were still disposed near the oak rail of
-the sanctuary, as if to mark where several of the fugitive household
-had knelt but recently.
-
-The chapel suddenly grew very dark, but was lightened as quickly by a
-terrific flash without. Against this glare of light the mullions and
-tracery of the windows were darkly but distinctly defined, and, as it
-passed away, a peal of thunder that seemed directly over their heads,
-shook the place. Crossing herself, Donna Isidora sprang close to
-Quentin's side, and taking her by the hand, he led her back to a more
-cheerful part of the voiceless mansion.
-
-The weather was completely broken now, and to Quentin it seemed that
-unless there was some change, of which there was no probability, as
-the year was closing, the army were likely to have a fine time of it,
-after breaking up from their snug cantonments in Portugal to open a
-campaign in Spain.
-
-There was not the slightest appearance of the rain abating, so
-feeling the necessity for making themselves as comfortable as
-circumstances would permit, Quentin set about closing all the doors
-and windows, and selecting a room that had evidently been the boudoir
-of the Condesa, as its walls were covered by white silk starred with
-gold; there, too, were pale-blue damask hangings, starred with
-silver, a piano and guitar, with piles of music, illuminated books,
-sketches, statuettes, and ornaments, all indicative of a graceful
-taste and refined mind.
-
-These were all untouched, so there Quentin installed his companion,
-whose eye was the first to detect a gilt cage, at the bottom of which
-a former friend and favourite, a little singing bird, lay dead and
-covered with dust.
-
-She seated herself near the window to watch the black clouds whirling
-in masses around the peaks of the great mountain ranges that lay
-between her and her temporary home in Portugal, and on the rain
-plashing frothily on the marble terrace, gorging the gurgoyles of the
-parapet and the basin of the bronze fountain, which had long since
-overflowed.
-
-Meanwhile Quentin bustled about; to have the run of such a house was
-not without interest. He soon procured a brasero, which he filled
-with charcoal, and lighted by flashing some powder in the pan of a
-pistol; and for warmth, he made Isidora place her dainty little feet
-upon it. Canisters of biscuits and of fruit of various kinds,
-several flasks of Valdepenas and Champagne, a ham, and several other
-matters which he found in overhauling the cook's department and
-butler's pantry, with all the appurtenances of the table, he
-appropriated with a campaigner's readiness, and insisted upon his
-fair companion partaking of a repast with him.
-
-The storm--the rain, at least, as we shall have to show--continued
-much longer than they anticipated. But if it lasted for a fortnight,
-there seemed to be still provisions enough in the old villa to
-prevent them from being starved out even in that time.
-
-For a period both were now perplexed and thoughtful.
-
-Donna Isidora was considering how all this unlooked-for deviation and
-delay were to be explained to her brother, who, as a Spaniard, was
-naturally suspicious, and of whom she stood in considerable awe. The
-latter emotion made her conceive that the most peaceful and prudent
-course would be, to say nothing whatever about the casual discovery
-of her disguise, or her wanderings on the way before reaching
-Portalegre; but then, how was she to account for the absence of the
-horse and mule, but for the loss of which, after their flight from
-the French, she and Quentin would have been last night safe and
-separated at the place of their destination!
-
-Then when remembering the haughty temper of Cosmo, and the cold and
-hostile manner in which he was treated by him, Quentin felt some
-alarm lest his honour might be impugned by the protracted delay in
-rejoining the Borderers; while his own experience, and the hints he
-had received from Major Middleton, made him now resolve, however
-great his reluctance would be in leaving that fine old soldier and
-Askerne, Monkton, and other 25th men, to volunteer into some other
-regiment--perhaps in the 94th, if his friend Captain Warriston could
-scheme it for him.
-
-The moidores which Ribeaupierre had so generously shared with him,
-made a transfer of this kind appear the more easy in a monetary point
-of view; and luckily the army had not yet begun to move, so his
-courage was still unimpeachable.
-
-Reflection showed that Cosmo would render his life intolerable, and
-make promotion an impossibility.
-
-"I shall seek out another colonel, if he can be found in the service.
-I can only fail in the attempt, and be no worse than I am," said
-Quentin, unintentionally aloud, so that the dark eyes of the Spanish
-girl rested inquiringly on him.
-
-He now seated himself in the same window opposite Isidora, who having
-her own thoughts, was silent. Evening was drawing near--the short
-evening of a dark November day, and the ceaseless rain still plashed
-heavily down, while the wind howled drearily around the solitary
-villa.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-OUR LADY DEL PILAR.
-
- "The foe retires--she heads the sallying host,
- Who can appease like her a lover's ghost?
- Who can so well appease a lover's fall?
- What maid retrieve when man's flushed hope is lost?
- Who hang so fiercely on the flying Gaul,
- Foiled by a woman's hand before a battered wall."
- BYRON.
-
-
-"What a singular adventure this is," thought Quentin; "and what a
-perplexing position for us both! It is very romantic, certainly. A
-deserted house, a lovely girl, and all that. 'Tis very like some
-incidents I have read of, and some I have imagined; but, by Jove! I
-wish I could see my way handsomely out of it."
-
-The last desire resulted from the unpleasant recollection of the
-Padre Trevino's face and intonation of voice, when he spoke so
-impressively of the _interest he_ felt in the lady committed to his
-care, and the sternly expressed anxiety that she should reach
-Portalegre "without hindrance or _delay_."
-
-Was the fellow only acting a part, or could it be that the ugly ogre
-actually had some tender fancy for Isidora? Whether he had or not,
-an unfrocked friar, especially of his peculiar character, had not
-much chance of success with the sister or support from the brother,
-so Quentin dismissed the idea.
-
-"How charming she looks!" he thought, stealing a glance at the long
-lashes of the now pensive eyes, the soft features half shaded by the
-black lace veil, and the graceful contour of her bust and shoulders,
-in her low-cut scarlet velvet corset. "How delightful, if, instead
-of being lost in this barbarous place, she were at Rohallion or
-Ardgour; what a lovely friend and companion for Flora!"
-
-Poor Quentin! Alas, this was but the sophistry of the heart, and
-was, perhaps, its first impulse towards the donna herself, and might
-end by her image supplanting Flora's there.
-
-"Such desecration, that her hand should even be touched by such a
-wretch as Trevino!"
-
-He had muttered his last thought aloud, so Donna Isidora looked up
-and said--
-
-"You mentioned the Padre Trevino?"
-
-"Did I?--surely not?" replied Quentin, as the colour rushed into his
-face.
-
-"Yes--what of him, senor?" she asked, fixing her soft, dark eyes on
-him inquiringly.
-
-"I must have been dreaming."
-
-"Scarcely," said she, smiling, "while the thunder makes such a noise;
-you were thinking aloud."
-
-"Perhaps."
-
-"Of what? I insist on knowing."
-
-"I cannot help reflecting, senora, that such actions as those in
-which Trevino seems to exult, must damage the Spanish cause in the
-eyes of Europe and of humanity, and thus--excuse me----but I begin to
-lose faith in your countrymen, even before we test alliance with them
-fully."
-
-"And what say you of the recent siege of Zaragossa?"
-
-"Ah, Don José Palafox is a brave man, certainly; and brave too, is
-Augustina, the Maid of Zaragossa, who led the cannoneers in the
-defence of the Portillo against Lefebre."
-
-"She had lost her lover in the siege, so apart from inspiration, her
-courage was no marvel."
-
-"And you, senora--if you lost a lover?"
-
-"I have lost several; but if I lost one whom I loved, you mean?"
-
-"Yes--and who loved you well and truly?"
-
-"I would face ten thousand cannon to avenge him!--Augustina did
-nothing that I would not dare and do!" replied Isidora, as her eyes
-sparkled, and she pressed her clenched hand into the soft cheek that
-rested on it.
-
-"A beautiful little spitfire!" thought Quentin.
-
-"But, senor, you must be aware that neither Palafox the Arragonese
-nor the girl Augustina could have achieved all they did, save for the
-aid of our Lady del Pilar?"
-
-"What lady is she?" asked Quentin.
-
-"Madre divina, listen to him! It grieves me sadly, amigo mio, to
-think--to think----"
-
-"What?" asked Quentin, as she paused.
-
-"That you are a heretic, innocently, through no fault of your own,
-and yet born to perdition."
-
-"You are not very complimentary, yet I pardon you, my dear senora,"
-replied Quentin, laughing as he kissed her hand--which we fear he did
-rather frequently now.
-
-"Shall I try to teach you, and lead your heart as I would wish it?"
-she asked, with a gentle smile.
-
-"If you please, senora."
-
-"I mean, to instil a proper spirit of adoration in it?"
-
-"If it is adoration of yourself, senora, I fear my heart is learning
-that fast enough already," replied Quentin, with such a caballero air
-that the donna laughed and coloured, but accepted the answer as a
-mere compliment; "then tell me," he added, "about this Lady del
-Pilar, who aided Don José Palafox."
-
-"She is the guardian saint of the city of Zaragossa, and save but for
-her assistance, he had never withstood the arms of France so long;
-for it was faith in her, and her only, that inspired Palafox to make
-a resistance so terrible!"
-
-"But tell me about her, Donna Isidora."
-
-"You must learn, senor, that after the resurrection of our blessed
-Lord, when the twelve apostles separated and went to preach the
-gospel in different parts of the world, St. George set out for
-England, St. Anthony for Italy, and the others went elsewhere; but
-Santiago the elder set out for Spain, a land which, say our annals,
-the Saviour commended to his peculiar care.
-
-"Before departing from Judea, he went to the humble dwelling of the
-blessed Virgin--the same little hut that is now at Loretto--to kiss
-her hand, on his knees to obtain her permission to set forth, and her
-blessing on his labours. After bestowing it, she adjured him to
-build a church unto her honour in that city of Spain where he should
-make the most important, or the greatest number of converts.
-
-"So the saint set sail in a Roman galley, but was driven through the
-Pillars of Hercules into the Atlantic ocean, and after enduring great
-perils along the shores of Lusitania, he landed in the kingdom of
-Galicia. Proceeding through the land, he went barefooted, preaching
-the gospel, teaching and baptizing, but with little success, until he
-came to a fair city of Arragon, on the banks of the Ebro and the
-Guerva, in the midst of a vast and lovely plain. Surrounded by
-fertile fields of corn, and by groves of orange and lime trees, its
-stately towers were visible from afar, glittering white as snow in
-the sunshine; but in its marble temples false gods and goddesses were
-worshipped by the people.
-
-"Enchanted by the sight of a city so fair, the saint rested on his
-staff and asked of a wayfarer how it was named; and he was told that
-it was Cæsarea Augusta; so entering, he began to preach in the public
-thoroughfares, and ere long made eight disciples, who gave all they
-possessed to the poor, and followed him.
-
-"Full of joy with his success he retired, one evening, to a little
-grove on the banks of the Ebro, with his eight new friends, and
-there, after long and holy converse, they fell asleep under the
-orange trees; but between the night and morning they were awakened by
-hearing a choir, possessed of a harmony that was divine, singing 'Ave
-Maria gratia plena, Dominus tecum;' yet they saw not from whence the
-sound proceeded.
-
-"Louder swelled this mysterious harmony, and louder still, until they
-seemed to be in the midst of it.
-
-"Listening in wonder and awe they fell on their knees, and lo, senor!
-a marvellous silver light, brighter than that of day, filled all the
-orange grove, and amid a choir of angels, whose golden hair floated
-over their shoulders, whose wings and robes were white as the new
-fallen snow, and whose faces bloomed with the purity and radiance of
-heaven, there, on the summit of a white marble pillar, stood the
-blessed Madonna, with her fair brow crowned by thirteen stars, and
-her robe all of a dazzling brightness. With a divine smile on her
-face, she listened to the choir, who went through the whole of her
-matin service.
-
-"When it was ended, when the voices of the angels were hushed, their
-eyes cast down, and their hands meekly folded on their bosoms,
-
-"'Santiago,' said she, 'here on this spot raise them the church of
-which I told thee, and build it round this pillar, which I have
-brought hither by the hands of angels; here shall it abide until the
-end of the world, and all the powers of hell shall not prevail
-against it!'
-
-"The saint and his eight disciples, who were all on their knees in
-reverence and awe, bowed low at this command; when they looked up,
-the Virgin had disappeared with all her shining choir, and nothing
-remained but the miraculous pillar of polished marble, standing cold,
-white, and solitary, amid the moonlight, by the bank of the Ebro.
-
-"So around that column he built the famous church of Our Lady del
-Pilar, which has been the scene of a thousand miracles; about it, ere
-long, grew the vast Christian city now named Zaragossa, which, as my
-father the professor always assured me, is but a corruption of the
-original name, Cæsarea-Augusta.
-
-"Santiago rests from his holy labours in Compostella, where he was
-martyred by the barbarous Galicians, and where his bones were
-discovered in after years by a miraculous star that burned over his
-grave. When danger threatens Spain, the clashing of arms and of
-armour is heard within his tomb, for he is her tutelary guardian, and
-so greatly do we venerate him, that of the canons of his cathedral
-seven, at least, must be cardinal priests: and there, at Compostella,
-he appeared in a vision to the king, Don Ramiro, before his famous
-battle with the Moors, and promised him victory for withholding the
-annual tribute of a hundred Christian girls.
-
-"Time passed over Zaragossa, and even the infidel Moors respected the
-holy pillar, for it was found uninjured when the city was re-captured
-from them by Don Alphonso of Arragon.
-
-"And so last year, when the French had pushed their batteries along
-the right bank of the Guerva, and had beaten down the rampart; and
-when, at their head, General Ribeaupierre had cut a passage through
-the ranks of Palafox into the wide and stately Coso: when Lefebre
-assailed the Portillo, and was repulsed with the loss of two thousand
-men, but returned with renewed fury, when a carnage ensued that must
-have ended in the fall of Zaragossa and the capture of Don José,
-_then_ it was, senor, that the young girl Augustina, inspired by
-vengeance for her lover's fall, appeared among the soldiers, calling
-on Our Lady del Pilar to aid her chosen city.
-
-"Then springing over dead and dying, she snatched a lighted match
-from her dead lover's hand and discharged a twenty-six pounder loaded
-with grapeshot full at the advancing foe, and animated the citizens
-to continue that awful struggle by which Zaragossa was saved, though
-the flower of Arragon perished. Foot to foot and breast to breast
-they fought, contesting every street and house, from floor to floor,
-till the French retired. Augustina received a noble pension, and now
-wears on her sleeve a shield of honour with the city's name."
-
-By the time this story was ended, darkness had almost set in; the
-rain was still rushing down in a ceaseless flood, and the vivid
-lightning, with its green and ghastly glare, lit up from time to time
-the gloomy chambers of the silent villa.
-
-Remembering that he had seen a lamp in one of the rooms, Quentin was
-about to go in search of it, when the sound of a heavy door closing
-with a bang that echoed through all the mansion, made him pause, and
-as he was Scotsman enough to have certain undefined but superstitious
-notions, he turned to his companion, who on hearing this unexpected
-noise, had started from her seat with her eyes dilated and her lips
-parted.
-
-"You heard that, senora?" said he.
-
-"It is the private door of the chapel--the door through which we
-passed," she replied.
-
-"What has caused it to open and shut?"
-
-"The wind, probably."
-
-"It can be nothing else, senora, though in truth I was thinking of
-those two effigies that for seven hundred years have stood, with
-their stony eyes uplifted and their mailed hands clasped in prayer."
-
-"What of them?" she asked, with surprise.
-
-"What if they got off their pedestals and took a promenade through
-the villa on this stormy night?"
-
-"Ah, senor, don't talk of such things!" said Donna Isidora, as she
-shrunk close to him and laid her hand on his arm.
-
-
-
-END OF VOL. II.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The King's Own Borderers, Vol. II,
-by James Grant
-</title>
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The King's Own Borderers, Volume II (of 3), by James Grant</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
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-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The King's Own Borderers, Volume II (of 3)</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>A Military Romance</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: James Grant</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 22, 2022 [eBook #67227]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Al Haines</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KING'S OWN BORDERERS, VOLUME II (OF 3) ***</div>
-
-<h1>
-<br /><br />
- THE KING'S OWN BORDERERS.<br />
-</h1>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- A Military Romance.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- BY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- JAMES GRANT,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- AUTHOR OF<br />
- "SECOND TO NONE," "THE ROMANCE OF WAR," "THE YELLOW FRIGATE,"<br />
- ETC. ETC.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Memories fast are thronging o'er me,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of the grand old fields of Spain;<br />
- How he faced the charge of Junot,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And the fight where Moore was slain.<br />
- Oh the years of weary waiting<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For the glorious chance he sought,<br />
- For the slowly ripened harvest<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That life's latest autumn brought."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- IN THREE VOLUMES.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- VOL. II.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- LONDON:<br />
- GEORGE ROUTLEDGE AND SONS,<br />
- BROADWAY, LUDGATE HILL.<br />
-<br />
- 1865.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- LONDON:<br />
- SAVILL AND EDWARDS, PRINTERS, CHANDOS STREET,<br />
- COVENT GARDEN.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- CONTENTS<br />
- OF<br />
- THE SECOND VOLUME.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- CHAP.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- I. <a href="#chap01">A LAST REJECTION</a><br />
- II. <a href="#chap02">THE MESS</a><br />
- III. <a href="#chap03">THE PUNISHMENT PARADE</a><br />
- IV. <a href="#chap04">THE OLD REGIMENT OF EDINBURGH</a><br />
- V. <a href="#chap05">THE ADVANCED PICQUET</a><br />
- VI. <a href="#chap06">COSMO JOINS</a><br />
- VII. <a href="#chap07">THE DEPARTURE</a><br />
- VIII. <a href="#chap08">ON THE SEA</a><br />
- IX. <a href="#chap09">PORTALEGRE</a><br />
- X. <a href="#chap10">COSMO'S CRAFT</a><br />
- XI. <a href="#chap11">QUENTIN DEPARTS</a><br />
- XII. <a href="#chap12">ANXIOUS FRIENDS</a><br />
- XIII. <a href="#chap13">THE PARAGRAPH</a><br />
- XIV. <a href="#chap14">THE WAYSIDE CROSS AND WELL</a><br />
- XV. <a href="#chap15">THE MULETEERS</a><br />
- XVI. <a href="#chap16">GIL LLANO</a><br />
- XVII. <a href="#chap17">DANGER IN THE PATH</a><br />
- XVIII. <a href="#chap18">THE CHASSEUR À CHEVAL</a><br />
- XIX. <a href="#chap19">EUGÈNE DE RIBEAUPIERRE</a><br />
- XX. <a href="#chap20">THE GALIOTE OF ST. CLOUD</a><br />
- XXI. <a href="#chap21">THE GUERILLA HEAD-QUARTERS</a><br />
- XXII. <a href="#chap22">A REPRISAL</a><br />
- XXIII. <a href="#chap23">DON BALTASAR DE SALDOS</a><br />
- XXIV. <a href="#chap24">DONNA ISIDORA</a><br />
- XXV. <a href="#chap25">THE JOURNEY</a><br />
- XXVI. <a href="#chap26">A SURPRISE</a><br />
- XXVII. <a href="#chap27">THE VILLA DE MACIERA</a><br />
- XXVIII. <a href="#chap28">OUR LADY DEL PILAR</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
-THE KING'S OWN BORDERERS.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER I.
-<br /><br />
-A LAST REJECTION.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Ae fond kiss and then we sever!<br />
- Ae farewell, alas for ever!<br />
- Deep in heart-wrung tears I'll pledge thee,<br />
- Warring sighs and groans I'll wage thee;<br />
- Who shall say that Fortune grieves him<br />
- While the star of hope she leaves him?"<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;BURNS.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Ignoring the source or cause of the excitement
-among the household, Cosmo lounged into the
-breakfast-parlour, where the silver urns were
-hissing amid a very chaste equipage, and where
-the September sun was shining in through clusters
-of sweet briar and monthly roses, and as he
-seated himself he handed to his father a long
-official-like document, at the sight of which his
-mother changed colour, and even Flora, who
-looked charming in her smiling radiance, lace
-frills, and morning dress of spotted white muslin,
-lifted her dark eyelashes with interest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What's the matter, Cosmo?&mdash;your leave
-cancelled?" asked Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh no, my lord&mdash;nothing so bad as that."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A summons from headquarters, I see."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Something very like it," drawled Cosmo;
-"read it to the ladies. Spillsby, some coffee&mdash;no
-cream."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The letter ran briefly thus:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"Horse Guards, &amp;c., &amp;c.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"SIR,&mdash;I have the honour to acquaint you,
-by direction of His Royal Highness the Field-Marshal
-Commanding-in-Chief, that it is now in
-his power to appoint you to one of the second
-battalions lately raised for the line and for
-immediate foreign service, provided that within a
-fortnight you are prepared to assume the
-command, in which case your name shall appear in
-the next Gazette.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- "I have the honour to be, &amp;c., &amp;c.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- "Major the Hon. C. Crawford,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&amp;c., &amp;c."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"A fortnight!&mdash;are we to have you only for a
-fortnight, my dear, dear Cosmo?" exclaimed
-Lady Rohallion, all her maternal tenderness
-welling up at once.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You will not, I fear, have me so long, my dear
-mother," said he; "and you, Flora," he added in
-a low voice, as he purposely held his plate across
-her for a wing of grouse; "and you&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Give you full leave to go, with my dearest
-wishes, and your heart unbroken. Come, Cosmo,"
-she added in the same low voice, and with a
-soft smile; "let us part friends, at least."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cosmo's eyes seemed to shrink and dilate,
-while a cold and haughty smile spread over his
-otherwise handsome features, as he turned quietly
-to discuss his grouse, and said to the butler,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Spillsby, tell the groom to have a horse saddled
-for my man&mdash;take Minden, the bay mare&mdash;as I
-must despatch a letter to Maybole within an hour."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Breakfast was hurried over in silence and
-constraint, then Cosmo, kissing the brow of his
-mother, who was already in tears,&mdash;for the only
-real emotion that lingered in the Master's heart
-was a regard for his mother&mdash;played with the
-silk tassels of his luxurious dressing-gown, and
-lounged into the library to write his answer to
-the military secretary, and profess himself to be
-completely, as in duty bound, at the disposal of
-His Royal Highness, and proud to accept the
-command offered him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He soon penned the letter, and sealed it with
-the coronet, the shield <i>gules</i> and fess <i>ermine</i> of
-Rohallion, muttering as he did so,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The line&mdash;the line after all; a horrid bore
-indeed, to come down to that!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He threw open his dressing-gown, as if it
-stifled him, almost tearing the tasselled girdle as
-he did so, and planting his foot on the buhl
-writing-table, lounged back in an easy-chair,
-where he strove to read up Sir David Dundas's
-"Eighteen Manoeuvres," and fancied how he
-would handle his battalion without clubbing
-the companies or bringing the rear rank in front;
-by taking them into action with snappers instead
-of flints, as old Whitelock did at Buenos Ayres,
-or committing other little blunders, which might
-prove very awkward if a brigade of French
-twelve-pounders were throwing in grape and
-canister at half-musket range.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Soothed by pipe, and by the silence of the
-place, and by the subdued sunlight that stole
-through the deep windows of that old library,
-so quaint with its oak shelves of calf-bound and
-red-labelled folios and quartos, its buhl cabinets,
-and square-backed chairs of the Covenanting
-days, its half-curtained oriel window, through
-which were seen the ripe corn or stubble fields
-that stretched in distance far away to the brown
-hills of Carrick. Soothed, we say, by all this,
-Cosmo dawdled over the pages and the diagrams
-of the famous review at Potsdam for some time
-before he became conscious that Flora was seated
-near him, busy with a book of engravings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then begging pardon for his pipe and his
-free-and-easy position, a bachelor habit, as he said,
-he arose and joined her. Leaning over the back
-of his chair, as if to overlook the prints, while in
-reality his admiring eyes wandered alternately
-and admiringly over her fine glossy hair, the
-contour of her head, and little white ears (at each
-of which a rose diamond dangled), and her delicate
-neck, which rose so nobly from her back and
-beautifully curved shoulders, he said in a low
-voice, and with considerable softness of manner,
-for him at least,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Pon my honour, friend Flora, I believe you
-really begin to love me, after all."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How do you think so, or why?" she asked,
-looking half round, with her bewitching eyes full
-of wonder and amusement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Because we always quarrel when we meet, and
-that is called a Scots mode of wooing, isn't it?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So our nurses used to say, long ago."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And were they right?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now, dear Cosmo, let us talk of something
-else, if you please," she urged pleadingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why so?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A dangerous topic has a strange fascination
-for you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dangerous?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Unpleasant, at least," said Flora, pettishly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cosmo flung the "Eighteen Manœuvres" of
-Lieutenant-General Dundas very angrily and
-ignominiously to the extreme end of the library, and
-folding his arms stood haughtily erect before
-Flora, whose bright eyes were fixed on his, with
-a smiling expression of fear and perplexity combined.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Can it be possible," he began, "I ask you,
-can it be possible, Miss Warrender&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, you are about to address me officially&mdash;well,
-sir?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Can it be possible, Flora, that you still love
-this unknown protégé of my foolish mother&mdash;this
-nameless rascal, who has run away, heaven knows
-where? By-the-bye, I wonder if Spillsby has
-overhauled the plate chest since he went!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Flora was silent, but his <i>brusquerie</i> and
-categorical manner offended her, and filled her eyes
-with tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This weeping is enough," continued the
-exasperated Cosmo, who, though he had no great
-regard for Flora, felt his self-esteem&mdash;which was
-not small&mdash;most fearfully wounded; "you do
-love him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And what if I do?" she asked, very quietly,
-but withal rather defiantly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Very fine, Miss Warrender&mdash;very fine, 'pon
-my soul! That old jade, Anne Radcliffe, with
-her 'Romance of the Forest,' her 'Castles of
-Athlin and Dunbayne,' and this new Edinburgh
-fellow, Scott, with his 'Marmion,' and so forth,
-have perfected your education. Your teaching
-has been most creditable!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This taunting manner is not so to you,'
-replied Flora, resuming her inspection of the book
-of prints.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oho! we are in a passion again it seems?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Far from it, sir&mdash;I never was more cool in
-my life," said she, looking up with a wicked but
-glorious smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And where has this runaway gone? His
-friends in the servants' hall heard something of
-him last night or this morning, if I may judge
-from the pot-house row they made."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He has gone into the army," replied Flora,
-with a perceptible modulation of voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The army!" replied Cosmo, really surprised;
-"enlisted&mdash;for what?&mdash;a fifer or triangle boy?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No," replied Flora, curling her pretty nostril,
-while her eyes gleamed dangerously under their
-long thick lashes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"For what, on earth, has he gone then?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A gentleman volunteer."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A valuable acquisition to His Majesty's
-service!" said Cosmo, laughing, and, greatly to
-Flora's annoyance, seeming to be really amused;
-"do you know, friend Flora, what a volunteer is?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not exactly, sir," said Flora, again looking
-down on her book of prints with a sigh of anger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Shall I tell you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If you please."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We never had any in the Household Brigade&mdash;such
-fellows are usually to be found only with
-the line corps."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah&mdash;with corps that go abroad and really
-see service&mdash;I understand."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Miss Warrender, the Guards&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, <i>what</i> is a volunteer?" asked Flora,
-beating the carpet with a very pretty foot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A volunteer is a poor devil who is too proud
-to enlist, and is too friendless to procure a
-commission; who has all a private's duty to do, and
-has to carry a musket, pack, and havresack,
-wherein are his ration-beef, biscuits, and often
-his blackball and shoebrushes; who mounts
-guard and salutes me when I pass him, and whom
-I may handcuff and send to the cells or
-guard-house when I please; who is not a regular
-member of the mess and may never be; who
-gets a shilling per diem with the chance of
-Chelsea, a wooden leg, or an arm with an
-iron hook if his limbs are smashed by a round
-shot; who is neither officer, non-commissioned
-officer, nor private&mdash;neither fish, flesh, nor good
-red-herring (to use a camp phrase). Oh, Flora,
-Flora Warrender, can you be such a romantic
-little goose as to feel an interest in such a fellow
-as I have described?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mingling emotions, indignation at the Master's
-insulting bitterness, pity for Quentin, and pure
-anger at the annoyance to which she was subjected,
-made Flora's white bosom heave as she
-quietly turned her eyes, with a flashing expression
-however, upon the cat-like regards of the sneering
-questioner, and said,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who are you, sir, that would thus question
-or dictate to me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who am I?" he asked, while surveying her
-through his glass with amusement, perplexity,
-and something of sorrow in his tone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, sir&mdash;who are you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am, I believe, Cosmo, Master of Rohallion,
-and Colonel to be, of a very fine regiment; so
-I can afford to smile at the pride and petulance
-of a moon-struck girl."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, how unseemly this is! Whatever happens,
-let us part friends," said she politely,
-perhaps a little imploringly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So be it," said he, kissing her hand as
-she retired.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now, the sooner I am off from this dreary
-paternal den the better. Away to London at
-once. Andrews!&mdash;Jack Andrews," he shouted, in
-a tone almost of ferocity: "show me the last
-newspapers." They were soon brought, and
-Cosmo's sharp eyes ran rapidly over the
-advertisements. "Let me see," he pondered,
-"travelling by mail is intolerable; one never knows
-who the devil one may be boxed up with for a
-week, a fever patient or a lunatic, perhaps! The
-smacks are crowded with all manner of rubbish,
-travelling bagmen, linesmen going home on leave,
-sick mothers and squalling babies. What is
-this? The good ship <i>Edinburgh</i>, pinck-built,
-near the new quay at Leith, sails for England
-without convoy&mdash;carries six 12-pounders&mdash;master
-to be spoke with daily at the Cross&mdash;to be <i>spoke</i>
-with. Faugh! what says the next advertisement?
-'A widow lady, who is to set out for London
-next week in a post-chaise, would be glad to hear
-of a companion. Enquire at the <i>Courant</i> office,
-opposite the Old Fishmarket-close, Edinburgh.'
-Egad! the very thing&mdash;widow lady&mdash;hope she's
-young and good-looking. I'll answer <i>this</i>!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such advertisements in the London and Edinburgh
-papers were quite common in those days,
-when travelling expenses were enormous.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He replied to it, and departed from Rohallion
-in a great hurry soon after. Whether with a fair
-companion or not, we are unable to say.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We hope so, and that on the journey of about
-four hundred miles to London, the amenity of the
-fair widow consoled him for the final rebuff he
-met with from Flora Warrender.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER II.
-<br /><br />
-THE MESS.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "He is more fortunate! Yea, he hath finished;<br />
- For him there is no longer any future.<br />
- His life is bright; bright without spot it was,<br />
- And cannot cease to be.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O 'tis well with him,<br />
- But who knows what the coming hour,<br />
- Veiled in thick darkness, brings for us!<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Wallenstein.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The mess-room of the 2nd battalion of the 25th
-Foot, in old Colchester Barracks, was a long
-room, and for its size rather low in the ceiling,
-which was crossed by a massive dormant beam
-of oak. Good mahogany tables occupied the
-entire length of the room, with a row of hair-cloth
-chairs on each side thereof. It was destitute
-of all ornament save a few framed prints of
-the popular generals of the time, such as the
-Duke of York, so justly known as "the soldier's
-friend;" Sir Ralph Abercrombie, who fell in
-Egypt; Sir David Dundas, the hero of Tournay;
-Sir David Baird, flushed with triumph and
-revenge, leading on his stormers at Seringapatam;
-the sad and gentle Sir John Moore, and others.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The room was uncarpeted, but the number of
-tall wax candles, in silver branches, on the long
-table, and in girandoles, on the mantelpiece and
-sideboard, together with the quantity of rich
-plate that was displayed, and the brilliance of
-the assembled company, about thirty officers in
-full uniform, their scarlet coats all faced and
-lapelled to the waist with blue barred with gold,
-and all their bullion epaulettes glittering, had a
-very gay appearance; thus the general meagreness
-of the furniture passed unobserved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At mess the coats were then worn open, with
-the crimson silk sash inside and over a white
-waistcoat. Nearly all the seniors still indulged
-in powdered heads, while the juniors wore their
-hair in that curly profusion introduced by George
-IV., then Prince of Wales. A few who were on
-duty were distinguished by the pipe-clayed
-shoulder-belt and gilt gorget, which was slung
-round the neck by a ribbon which varied in
-every corps according to the colour of its facings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Amid much good-humour and a little banter,
-they seated themselves, and the president and
-vice-president&mdash;posts taken by every officer in
-rotation&mdash;proceeded to their tasks of dispensing
-the viands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin was seated next his host, Major
-Middleton, about the centre of the table, and he
-surveyed the gay scene with surprise and pleasure,
-though looking somewhat anxiously for the
-face of his kind friend Warriston, who was to
-be a guest that evening, but was still detained on
-duty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To him much of the conversation was a perfect
-mystery, being half jocular and half technical,
-or that which is stigmatized as "shop." It
-chiefly ran on drills, duties, and mistakes&mdash;how
-badly those 94th fellows marched past yesterday,
-and so forth; while the standing jokes about
-Buckle's nag-tailed charger, Monkton's old
-epaulettes, Pimple's last love-affair, and the old
-commandant's state of mind on discovering that
-Colville had a fair visitor in his guard-room,
-seemed to excite as much laughter as if they had
-all been quite new, and had not been heard there
-every day for the last six months.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some rapid changes would seem to have taken
-place at the headquarters of the 2nd battalion.
-The old colonel of whom Quentin heard on the
-march from Ayr, had sold out, and a Major Sir
-John Glendinning come in by purchase. One
-gazette contained a notice of this, and a second
-announced the death of Sir John in a duel with
-an officer of the Guards. The lieutenant-colonelcy
-was thus again vacant, and all present,
-even Monkton, hoped the step would be given in
-the regiment, that old Major Middleton would
-get the command; thus all would have a move
-upward, and who could say but Quentin Kennedy
-might obtain the ensigncy which would thus be
-rendered vacant? But poor Middleton had
-served so long, and had seen so many promoted
-over his head, that he ceased to be hopeful of
-anything.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some of the youngsters drank wine again and
-again with our young volunteer, a spirit of
-mischief being combined with their hospitality. To
-"screw a Johnny Raw" was one of the chief practical
-jokes at a mess-table then, as it is at some
-few still; but Middleton's influence soon repressed
-them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The cloth removed, the regimental mull, a
-gigantic ram's head, the horns of which were
-tipped with cairngorms and massive silver settings,
-was placed before the president, and was passed
-down the table from left to right, according to
-the custom of all Scottish messes. The mull
-was the farewell gift of Lord Rohallion, and the
-gallant ram was the flower of all that he could
-procure in Carrick.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The proposed expeditions to Spain and Holland
-soon formed the staple topics for discourse
-and surmise; but none present had the slightest
-idea on which of these the regiment might be
-despatched.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When Quentin looked round that long and
-glittering mess-table, and saw so many handsome,
-pleasant, and jovial fellows, all heedless
-and full of high spirits, who welcomed him
-among them, spoke cheeringly of his prospects
-and drank to his success, he felt a pang on
-reflecting that he must owe it to the death in
-battle of one at least among them!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was plenty of laughter, fun, and joking.
-Many of those present were more or less dandies;
-but the military Dundreary, the&mdash;to use a vulgar
-phrase&mdash;"heavy swell," who affects the style of
-Charles Mathews in "Used Up," was unknown
-in the days of the long, long war with France,
-for men joined the army to become soldiers
-indeed. Their predecessors were usually killed
-in action, and they had the immediate prospect
-of finding themselves before the bravest enemy in
-the world.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The solemn regimental snob, or yawning yahoo,
-whose private affairs became so "urgent" in
-the Crimea; the parvenu Lancer or lisping Hussar,
-cold, sarcastic, and unimpressionable, are entirely
-the growth of the piping times of peace, and to
-them the stern advice of the old officer of other
-times, "Be ever ready with your pistol," is
-meaningless now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I joined the service as a volunteer," said
-Rowland Askerne, the burly captain of the
-Grenadiers&mdash;as his massive gold rings announced
-him&mdash;turning to Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Were you long one?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Longer than I quite relished," replied
-Askerne, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Indeed!" said Quentin, anxiously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;four years; and long years they seemed
-to me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"On foreign service?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of course; and pretty sharp service, too,
-sometimes. I carried a musket with Middleton's
-company at the capture of Corsica, in '95, and
-again with the Gordon Highlanders on the
-recent expedition against Porto Ferrajo, in Elba,
-where I had the ill-luck to be the only man hit.
-A French tirailleur put a ball through my left
-leg, but he was shot the next moment by
-my covering file, Norman Calder, now a
-sergeant. Some of the Irish in '98 proved better
-marksmen than the French; they knocked a
-number of ours on the head, so I won my
-epaulettes fighting against the poor fellows under
-General Lake, at Vinegar Hill. I had many a
-heart-burning before they promoted me; (by <i>they</i>
-I mean the Horse Guards) and I swore that when
-the day came that they did so, I would tread on
-my sash and turn cobbler; but I had not the
-heart to quit, so I wear my harness still&mdash;a
-captain only&mdash;when I should be lieutenant-colonel
-by brevet, at least; but Middleton's case is a
-harder one than mine, for he has been longer in
-the service."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We are most likely bound for North Holland,"
-said the adjutant; "and there many an
-evil will be ended."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The French are in great strength there, and
-hard knocks will be going," added Monkton.
-"Many among us are fated perhaps to find a last
-abode among the swamps of Beveland; so, if you
-escape, Kennedy, you must certainly gain your
-pair of colours, with five shillings and threepence
-per diem&mdash;less the income-tax&mdash;to spend on the
-luxuries of life&mdash;damme!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Glad to hear we are to be off so soon,
-Monkton," said a smart, but somewhat blasé-looking
-young lieutenant, "for we have a most
-weary time of it here in Colchester. The course
-of drill&mdash;drill, always drill&mdash;with club, sword, or
-musket, and the whole routine of barrack duty,
-with inspections and guards, are decidedly a
-bore!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What the deuce would you have, Colville?"
-asked the adjutant, bluntly. "What did you come
-here for?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I came to be a soldier," replied the "used
-up" sub, with a suave smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To be a soldier?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;not to doze life away by marching to
-and fro at the goose-step, in that gravelled yard,
-or by lolling over the window in shirt-sleeves, to
-save my shell-jacket. Where are all the castles
-I built&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To storm, eh?" asked Buckle, glancing
-uneasily at the commanding officer, who was
-forming his walnut-shells in grand-division squares,
-for the edification of the second major.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;I had hoped to have achieved
-something decidedly brilliant ere this."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Console yourself, Colville, and pass the port.
-Ah, you consider yourself sharp&mdash;up to every
-sort of thing&mdash;a common delusion with young
-fellows of your age; but ten years' more soldiering,
-and the rubs of life between your twenties
-and thirties, to say nothing of those afterwards,
-will cure you of thinking so. Believe me,
-Colville, wherever we go, we shall find plenty of
-desperate work cut out for us all. Well,
-Monkton, in recruiting, you could not pick up an
-heiress&mdash;eh?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No. Heiresses are not to be found under
-every hedge."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In Scotland, especially."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have considered the matter maturely, my
-dear friend," said Monkton, in his bantering
-tone, "and have come to the sage conclusion
-that, if a man marries, with his pay only, he had
-better hang; if otherwise, and his wife have a
-long purse, and expectations, to enhance the
-charms of her blushes and orange-buds, let him
-send in his papers, and quit; so the service loses
-your Benedict any way."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Purse, or no purse," said Colville, "as Paragon
-says in the comedy we acted at York, 'when
-you see my wife, you shall see perfection, though I
-never met the woman I could conscientiously
-throw myself away upon.'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Pimple, we hear, has been romantically
-tender on a flax-spinner's daughter; and that the
-route came only in time to save him from the
-arms of Venus for those of Bellona, and he is
-burning now to forget his loved and lost one
-amid the smoke of battle," said Colville, with a
-tragic air. "Ah, there were great men even
-before old Agamemnon."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But Pimple shall show us by his glorious
-example, that we have at least one greater since."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Let me alone, Colville, and you also, Monkton,"
-said Boyle, becoming seriously angry; "I
-hope to do my duty with the best among you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Attention was speedily drawn from the
-irritation of the little ensign by the entrance of
-Warriston, who apologized briefly for being
-late, having been detained on duty at the
-quarters of his own regiment; then drawing
-a chair near his friend Middleton, he handed to
-him the last number of the <i>London Gazette</i>,
-pointing to a paragraph therein, and leisurely
-filling his glass with claret, passed the decanters.
-When Middleton read the passage referred to,
-a crimson flush passed over his features, and he
-crushed up the paper as if an emotion, of rage
-and pain thrilled through him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What is the matter, major?" asked half-a-dozen
-voices; "nothing unpleasant, I hope?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The lieutenant-colonelcy has been given <i>out</i>
-of the regiment," replied Middleton, with his
-brows knit, while his hand still crushed up the
-paper; then, as if remembering himself, he smiled,
-but very disdainfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He must have seen much service to be
-appointed over <i>your</i> head," said Monkton.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Service&mdash;yes, the Guards fight many bloody
-battles about Hounslow, Hyde Park, and the
-Fifteen Acres," replied the justly exasperated
-field-officer. "Here is my advancement stopped
-by the promotion of a fellow who has some
-petticoat interest about Carlton House, whose
-cousin is groom of the backstairs, and who has
-been compelled to 'eschew sack and loose
-company,' so he comes from the Household Brigade
-to the Line, and may go from the 25th to the
-devil, perhaps."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Be wary, my good friend&mdash;be wary," said
-Warriston, glancing round the table hastily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And <i>who</i> is he?" asked several, full of
-curiosity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The son of a general officer&mdash;the Master of
-Rohallion."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On hearing this name, Quentin felt as if
-petrified! Here, even here, his evil spirit seemed
-to be following him!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is an old name in the regiment," said
-Monkton.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes," replied the major; "his father was a
-gallant officer; I was his subaltern in America;
-but here it is;" and he read, "'25th Foot; to
-be Lieutenant-Colonel, Major the Honourable
-Cosmo Crawford, from the 1st Guards, vice Sir
-John Glendinning, deceased,' so he comes over us,
-in virtue of that court rank which is one of the
-worst abuses of our service."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Promotion is always slow among the Household
-troops, so they indemnify themselves at the
-expense of the line," said Warriston, in answer
-to a question of Quentin's; "every rank among
-them having a grade above us; but take courage,
-my good old friend, this kind of thing is not
-likely to happen again."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With a smile that grew scornful in spite of
-himself, the worthy old major strove to conceal
-the bitterness of his heart, though all present
-condoled with him on his disappointment and
-hard usage by the powers that be; and for reasons
-known to himself alone, none shared his chagrin
-more than Quentin Kennedy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had been formally enrolled as a member
-of the regiment, and had ordered his equipments
-for it; his name, as a volunteer, had
-been sent by Middleton to Sir Harry Calvert,
-the Adjutant General, at the Horse Guards,
-that he might obtain the first vacant ensigncy
-(<i>subject to the approval of the commanding
-officer</i>), and that he might have his passage
-abroad provided, either by the commissariat
-department, or by the commandant at Hillsea, near
-Portsmouth. His own honour, and all the
-circumstances under which he stood prevented him
-from quitting; but now, what hope had he of
-comfort or prosperity in remaining? His very
-chances of advancement depended on the veto,
-whim, and caprice of this Master of Rohallion,
-his bitterest enemy! Of what avail would now
-be the endurance of campaigning, the hardship
-of serving as a volunteer, and risking all the
-perils of war?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perhaps Flora Warrender may come with him
-as his bride was the next idea; and it added
-greatly to the bitterness of the others.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That night Quentin slept but little, and he
-seemed barely to have closed his eyes when he
-heard the drum beating the assembly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then he sprang from bed just as the grey
-dawn was breaking, and proceeded hastily to
-dress, remembering to have heard last evening
-that, at daybreak, the regiment was to have a
-"punishment parade," which, to his uninitiated
-ears, had a very unpleasant sound.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER III.
-<br /><br />
-THE PUNISHMENT PARADE.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Most worthy sergeant, I have seen thee lead,<br />
- Where men among us would be slow to follow;<br />
- Udsdaggers, yes! By trench and culverine,<br />
- Where men and horses too, lay foully heap'd<br />
- On other; and hath it come to this, good sergeant,<br />
- Beshrew my heart&mdash;a prisoner and afeared."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Old Play.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Plain though it was, being destitute of lace
-or epaulettes, poor Quentin was very proud of
-his volunteer uniform, and being eminently a
-handsome young man, he looked very well in it.
-The coarse buff crossbelts, the pouch, and bayonet,
-and, more especially, the Brown Bess he had
-to carry, did not suit his taste quite so well. He
-had imagined that he would have to shoulder a
-kind of Joe Manton, or something like a smart
-Enfield rifle of the present day, with a "draw"
-of ten pounds or less on the trigger, instead of a
-long blunderbuss like the regulation musket of
-those days, weighing fourteen pounds, with its
-enormous butt-plate of brass and so forth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thanks to the teaching of the old quartermaster,
-he proved himself so apt a pupil under the
-sergeant-major and old Norman Calder, that
-within a week he was reported as "fit for duty,"
-as Monkton said, "doing as much credit to his
-preceptors as to the cabbage-stalk," for so he
-designated the army tailor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But we are anticipating.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His first parade was an inauspicious one, in so
-far as it was for punishment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A sergeant of the regiment had been recently
-tried by a regimental court-martial for permitting
-spirits to be brought by a woman to the main
-guard-house at night, while he was in command,
-and by these means certain prisoners became
-intoxicated and riotous. He alleged that he was
-asleep on that luxurious couch, the guard bed,
-after posting his sentinels, and that the fault lay
-with his corporal and others; but the plea was
-urged in vain&mdash;the corps was under orders for
-foreign service&mdash;an example was necessary; so
-he was now to receive the award of his dereliction
-of duty, and as the drum-major had received some
-special instructions over night, all knew that it
-involved the application of the now (happily)
-almost obsolete instrument&mdash;the cat!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The degradation of a non-commissioned officer
-is always a painful duty; but when flogging is
-added thereto, it is doubly painful to the
-witnesses, and maddening to the culprit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I told you old Middleton was a Tartar," said
-Monkton, as he and Quentin hurried downstairs
-from their quarters; "he'd certainly flog ensigns
-if he could; and the <i>Gazette</i> of last night won't
-have improved his variable temper. But here he
-comes, mounted, with holsters and blue saddle-cloth,
-but looking for all the world like an old
-woman trotting to market with her butter and
-eggs. Such a seat&mdash;such a queer length, or rather
-want of length, in the stirrup-leathers! Good
-morning, Buckle&mdash;so we are to have a
-flogging&mdash;ugh? that isn't lively."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin being a young hand, felt somewhat
-awed, as he knew not what was about to ensue.
-The sun had not yet risen, and the September
-morning was chilly and misty; the men of the
-regiment were falling in by companies under
-arms in light marching order&mdash;the tall grenadiers
-on the right with their black bearskin caps; the
-smart light company on the left with green
-plumes in their shakos, and Saxon horns on all
-their appointments; the sergeants were calling
-the various rolls; the officers were gathered in a
-somewhat silent group, and the face of every man
-wore a sullen, or rather dejected expression, for
-a punishment parade is the kind of parade least
-liked by soldiers of all ranks. It acts as a damper
-on the spirits of all; on this morning the
-atmosphere was dense; the sombre sun seemed to
-linger behind the uplands of Suffolk, and the
-shadows to lie deeper in the silent barrack
-square.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Impressed by the taciturnity and gloomy
-expression of the men, whose faces wore the pallor
-incident to all who come from bed in haste at an
-unusual hour, Quentin remained silent and full
-of expectation and anxiety as he fell into the rear
-rank of Captain Askerne's company, to which he
-was to be permanently attached. He was sensible,
-however, that the soldiers viewed him with
-interest, as a volunteer is always popular. It
-was to rescue Thomas Grahame, when lying
-severely wounded, and then serving as a simple
-volunteer in the red coat of the Caledonian Hunt,
-that our troops in Holland made one of their
-most desperate rallies, and gained to the service
-the future Lord Lynedoch, the hero of Barossa.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The inspection of the companies and the drum
-for coverers rapidly followed the calling of the
-muster-rolls; a bugle sounded; the officers fell in;
-the bayonets were fixed, and the regiment, without
-music, was marched silently by sections to a
-secluded part of the barracks, where, surrounded by
-high stores and magazines, no stranger's eye could
-oversee the proceedings, and then it was formed in
-a hollow square, in the centre of which Quentin
-perceived three sergeants' pikes (weapons not
-disused till 1830) strapped together by the heads,
-an equilateral triangle being formed by the shafts,
-which were stuck in the earth. Near these were
-the drummers and drum-major, who carried in his
-hand a canvas bag, which, as Quentin was
-informed in a whisper by the next file on his
-right, contained "the cats."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The officer with the cocked hat, and without
-a sash, close by, is the doctor," he added.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The doctor&mdash;for what is he required?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You'll too soon see that, sir," was the
-ominous response.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Steady, rear rank&mdash;silence," growled old
-Sergeant Calder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At that moment one of the drummers drew
-forth a cat, and Quentin could perceive that it
-consisted of nine tails of whipcord, each having
-nine knots thereon, and these were firmly lashed
-to a handle about the length of a drum-stick. A
-slight shudder with an emotion of sickness came
-over him; and he looked anxiously at the face of
-Major Middleton, but it seemed immovable as he
-said to the sergeant-major with studied sternness
-of tone,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"March in the prisoner."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A section in the face of the square wheeled
-backward and permitted the unfortunate, with
-his escort, consisting of a corporal and two
-men of the barrack-guard, to march in and halt
-before the major, on which the culprit took off
-his forage-cap and stood bareheaded, the centre
-of all observation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He cast a haggard glance at the triangles;
-another half furtively and restlessly at the stolid
-faces round him, and then he seemed to become
-immovable. There was little need for Mr. Buckle,
-the adjutant, to read over the proceedings
-of the Court, for the hopeless sergeant knew
-at once his double degradation and his doom!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was to be reduced to the rank and pay of
-a private, and to receive <i>three hundred and fifty
-lashes</i>, the utmost number a regimental court could
-then award; with the option, if he would avoid
-this extreme punishment, of volunteering to serve
-for life (<i>i.e.</i> till disabled by wounds or age) in
-the York Chasseurs, or any other condemned
-corps, in Africa or the West Indies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His name was Allan Grange, the colour-sergeant
-of the Grenadiers, who always considered
-themselves the <i>corps d'élite</i> of a regiment.
-Altogether he was a model of a man, erect and
-strong in figure, his hair was a little grizzled
-about the temples, and his face was somewhat
-careworn, as if he had known or suffered much
-anxiety and trouble in his time. His eye was clear
-and keen, and save a little nervous twitching
-about the muscles of the mouth, he seemed
-unmoved and unflinching&mdash;unflinching as when on
-the glorious field of Egmont-op-Zee, he commanded
-the Grenadiers of the 25th, after all their
-officers had fallen, and with his pike broken in
-his hand by a musket shot, led them to that
-bloody hand-to-hand conflict on the road that
-leads to Haarlem.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perhaps the poor fellow was thinking of that
-signal and bloody day&mdash;perhaps of his boyhood
-and his home; it might be of the future, that
-was all a blank; for he seemed as in a dream
-while the adjutant read over the formula of the
-trial, the list of charges and the sentence, till he
-was roused by the drum-major proceeding to
-rip off with a penknife the three hard-won
-chevrons from his right arm. It was done
-gently, but "the iron seemed to enter his soul"
-at the moment, and a heavy sigh escaped him
-as his chin sank on his breast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Allan Grange," said Major Middleton, raising
-his voice clearly and distinctly, that the
-whole of the hollow square and even its
-supernumerary ranks might hear, "you are the last
-man in the whole Borderers whom I could have
-expected to see standing before us as you do
-to-day. In cutting off your stripes I feel extreme
-reluctance and sorrow, and I think you have
-known me long enough to be aware of that."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am, major&mdash;I am aware of it," said the
-reduced man in a hollow voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Allan Grange, you have come of a respectable
-old Scottish stock in Lothian: you were born in
-my native place, and are one of the many fine
-lads who came with me to the line from the
-Buccleugh Fencibles. I know well how, in your
-native village, the Stenhouse, your name and
-progress have been watched by early friends and old
-schoolfellows; by none more than your father,
-who now lies in Liberton kirkyard, by the good
-old mother who nursed you; by the old dominie
-who taught you; by the grey-haired minister
-who will ere long see your name affixed, as that
-of a degraded man, on the kirk-door. I know
-how, at the village inn on the braehead, in the
-smithy at the loan-end, at the mill beside the
-burn, it would be known that Allan Grange had
-been made a corporal&mdash;that he had gained his
-third stripe&mdash;that he had been made a
-colour-sergeant; and I can imagine how the listeners
-would drink to your health and to mine, in the
-hope that we should one day see you an officer;
-and now&mdash;<i>now</i>&mdash;by one act of folly you are
-again at the foot of the ladder!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A heavy sigh escaped the sergeant; the drum-major's
-knife gave a final rip, and he stood once
-more a private on parade!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The worst part of your sentence yet
-remains&mdash;unless&mdash;unless you volunteer into the York
-Chasseurs."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Major Middleton," said Grange, firmly, and
-standing erect, like a fine man as he was, "I'll
-not leave the regiment!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The man was fearfully pale, and it was evident
-to all that Middleton, though a strict and
-sometimes severe officer, was greatly moved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You will rather take three hundred and
-fifty lashes than volunteer?" he asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I'd volunteer for a forlorn hope; I've done
-so before now, sir, as you know well, but I'll not
-quit the old 25th for a condemned corps. I'll
-take my punishment&mdash;I've earned it like a fool,
-and with God's help, I hope to bear it like a man."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then strip, sir," said Middleton, playing
-nervously with the blue ribbons of his gorget.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All emotion seemed to pass away as the culprit
-proceeded deliberately to unclasp his leather
-stock and unbutton his coat; but before it was
-off the major exclaimed in a loud voice, as he
-drew a letter from his pocket&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Stop!</i>"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Grange paused, and looked up with a haggard
-and bloodshot eye.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I remit the rest of the sentence, for the
-sake of one who intercedes for you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sir?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have had a petition from your wife, and
-willingly grant it. Take away the triangles.
-Conduct yourself as you did till this misfortune
-came upon you, and ere long, Grange, you may
-regain the stripes you have to-day been deprived
-of. Rejoin your company."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I thank you, sir, for the sake of my poor
-wife and her bairnie. I have proved that I would
-rather take my punishment than leave the
-regiment and you; and&mdash;sir&mdash;sir&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Here Grange fairly broke down and sobbed
-aloud; and no man among the nine hundred
-there thought the less of him, because his stout
-heart, which even the terror of the lash could
-not appal, now became full of penitence and
-gratitude. At that moment many an eye
-glistened in the ranks, and many a heart was
-swelling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There, there&mdash;don't make a fuss," said Middleton,
-testily; "I hate scenes! Prepare to form
-quarter-distance column right in front&mdash;stand
-fast the Light Company."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so ended an episode, that, like the warm
-rising sun now shining cheerfully into the
-barrack-square, shed a brightness over every face,
-and lent a lightness&mdash;a sense of pleasure and
-relief to every heart, as the regiment marched
-back to quarters, and to what was of some
-importance after being two hours under arms in
-the morning air&mdash;breakfast.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IV.
-<br /><br />
-THE OLD REGIMENT OF EDINBURGH.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Such is our love of liberty, our country and our laws,<br />
- That like our ancestors of old, we'll stand in freedom's cause;<br />
- We'll bravely fight like heroes for honour and applause,<br />
- And defy the French, with all their art, to alter our laws."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>The Garb of Old Gaul.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-From Major Middleton, who took somewhat of
-a fatherly interest in him, Quentin learned much
-of the past history and achievements of the
-regiment he had joined.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was one with which the stories of his old
-military friends at Rohallion had made him
-familiar from boyhood; thus, he was in possession
-of so many old regimental names, so many
-stock stories and anecdotes, which Middleton
-deemed unknown beyond the circle of their
-mess-table and barrack-rooms, that he considered
-the lad an enigma, and was puzzled how, or
-where, he had gained all this information about
-the corps; for Quentin, though looking forward
-to the arrival of Cosmo with a disgust that
-almost amounted to terror, kept his own counsel
-with wonderful prudence, and never permitted
-the name of Rohallion to escape him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As there is no official record of the Borderers'
-achievements prior to 1808, the account given by
-the major is perhaps the only one extant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Under David Leslie, Earl of Leven, the 25th
-Foot were formed on the 10th of March, 1689,
-from a body of six thousand Covenanters, who,
-on the news of William of Orange landing at
-Torbay, marched from the West Country and
-laid siege to the castle of Edinburgh. On their
-banners were an open Bible, with the motto,
-"For Reformation according to the Word of God."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Marching north against the loyal Highlanders,
-they left their compatriots, all of whom served
-without pay or remuneration till the conclusion
-of the siege, when the fortress was surrendered
-by the Duke of Gordon after a noble defence,
-and after being warned by a spectre&mdash;pale as he
-"who drew Priam's curtain at the dead of night"&mdash;in
-fact, by the wraith of the terrible Claverhouse
-in his buff coat, cuirass, and cavalier wig,
-all stained with gouts of blood, that he had been
-shot by a silver bullet on the field of Killycrankie.
-In one of the rooms of the old fortress
-this vision is alleged to have appeared to
-Colin, Earl of Balcarris, then the duke's prisoner,
-and the truth of the episode is admitted by a
-delirious biographer of the viscount, who affirms
-that he is frequently in communion with the
-ghost in question, and with others.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Earl of Leven, though colonel of infantry
-under Frederick Wilhelm, Elector of Brandenburg,
-and of a regiment which came over with
-the Prince of Orange, who made him Governor
-of Edinburgh Castle and Master of the Scottish
-ordnance, was a Whig noble, chiefly famous for
-the rapidity of his flight from Killycrankie, and
-the vigour with which he horsewhipped the Lady
-Morton Hall. It is said that he rode six miles
-from the Pass without drawing his bridle, though
-his regiment, the future 25th, and Hastings, the
-future 13th, were the only troops that made any
-stand against the victorious Highlanders.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Leven's regiment having been raised in the
-capital while Sir John Hall, Knight, was Lord
-Provost, was designated of Edinburgh, and bore
-the insignia yet borne on its colours, the triple
-castle of the city, with its crest and motto, <i>Nisi
-Dominus Frustra</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As Leven's regiment&mdash;the same in which
-"my uncle Toby" fought at Landen, and with
-which he went to "mount guard in the trenches
-before the gate of St. Nicholas in his roquelaure"&mdash;it
-served in all King William's useless wars
-for the well-being of his darling Dutch, and all
-the great barrier towns of Europe have heard
-the drums of the 25th. It was the first British
-regiment which used the socket in lieu of the
-screw bayonet, which its lieutenant-colonel,
-Maxwell, adopted in imitation of the bayonets of the
-French Fusiliers. Prior to this, our bayonets
-were screwed into the muzzles of the muskets,
-and to fire with them fixed, was, of course, an
-impossibility. After fighting at Sheriffmuir, as
-Viscount Shannon's Foot, it served with distinction
-in the wars of the Spanish and Austrian
-succession, and shared in the disasters of
-Fontenoy, ere its soldiers had again to imbrue their
-hands in the blood of their own countrymen at
-Falkirk, at Culloden, and in defending the
-Comyn's Tower in the old Castle of Blair against
-Lord George Murray, till we find them again
-among the troops defeated at Val through the
-cowardice and incapacity of the Duke of Cumberland.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During the seven years' war it suffered severely
-at the siege of a small German castle, by the
-heroism of a sergeant of the enemy. Under
-Lord Rohallion a party of the Edinburgh
-Regiment had made themselves masters of an
-outwork, in which they established themselves at the
-point of the bayonet. <i>Under</i> this work was a
-secret mine, which (as the "Ecole Historique et
-Morale du Soldat" relates) was entrusted to a
-sergeant and a few soldiers of the Royal Piedmontese
-Guards. The mine was ready, the <i>saucisson</i> led
-through the gallery, the train was laid, and a single
-spark would blow all below and above to atoms!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With admirable coolness the sergeant desired
-his comrades to retire, and request the king to
-take charge of his wife and children. He then,
-inspired by a spirit of self-devotion, set fire to the
-train and perished, as the mine exploded. The
-outwork rose into the air and fell thundering
-into the fosse, Lord Rohallion, a corporal, and
-two men alone escaping, covered with bruises
-and cuts. The name of the sergeant was said to
-be Amadeus di Savillano, son of the Castellan of
-the fortress of that name in Piedmont.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Edinburgh regiment served at the battle
-of Minden. The Earl of Home was then its
-colonel, and it was in the second line, and on
-the left of Kingsley's famous brigade. Landing
-in England, on the homeward march, near the
-Borders, the old colours borne in the seven years'
-war were buried by its soldiers, with all honour,
-and three volleys were fired over them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In those days, when any regiment approached
-London, the colours were furled and cased, and
-no drum was beaten or fife blown during the
-march through its limits. The 3rd, or Old East
-Kentish Buffs, were alone excepted, and had the
-exclusive privilege of marching through the City
-of London with all the honours of war, in
-memory of having, at some period, been recruited
-from the City Trained Bands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Likewise no regiment could beat a drum
-within the walls, or through the portes of the
-Scottish capital, with the exception of the 25th,
-or old Edinburgh Regiment. But not long after
-the battle of Minden, it chanced that a certain
-thick-pated lord-provost objected to their drums
-beating up for recruits, on the plea that none
-should beat there but those of the City Guard.
-On this, the colonel, Lord George Henry Lennox
-(M.P. for the county of Sussex, who died in
-1805), was so incensed, that on his special application
-the title of the corps was changed, and its
-facings were altered from the royal yellow of
-Scotland to the royal blue of Britain, and after
-a time it was styled the "King's Own Borderers."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Egmont-op-zee, Martinique, and Egypt added
-fresh honours to those of other times; but still
-on drum and standard are borne unchanged
-the castle, triple-towered, with the anchor and
-motto, <i>Nisi Dominus Frustra</i>, usually the first
-little bit of latinity learned by the Edinburgh
-schoolboy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such is a rapid outline of the past history of
-this famous old corps, in the ranks of which
-Quentin Kennedy hoped to achieve for himself
-a position and a name&mdash;perhaps, rank and glory
-too! What boy does not look forward to some
-such vague but brilliant future,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
- "In life's morning march when the bosom is young."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The evening subsequent to the punishment
-parade was the <i>last</i> on which the battalion mess
-would assemble, and Quentin was Monkton's
-guest. He was again seated near the worthy
-major, and from him he learned much of what we
-have just narrated, many a quaint regimental
-story being woven up with what was actual
-military history.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You should tell him of that startling adventure,
-or rather, I should say, of those series of
-adventures, which happened to you when
-commanding an out-picquet in America," said
-Colville, with a significant but hasty glance at
-Monkton, for the frequent repetition of this story
-formed a kind of covert joke against the worthy
-major.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What&mdash;which out-picquet&mdash;at the siege of
-Fort St. John?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Exactly, Major," said Monkton.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"St. John, on the Richelieu River?" asked
-Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes," said Middleton, with an air of gratification;
-"you are a very intelligent young man, and
-have no doubt read of the defence of that place."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin hastened to say that he <i>had</i> heard of
-it; in fact, the defence with all its details&mdash;the
-bravery of Majors Preston and André of the
-Cameronians, and so forth&mdash;formed one of the
-stock stories of his old friends, the quartermaster
-and Jack Andrews; and so frequently had he
-heard it, that he was somewhat uncertain at
-times that he had not served there too.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But the episode of yours, with that devilish
-Indian fellow, may scare Kennedy when on
-sentry," said the adjutant, "a duty he must do
-as a volunteer."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Scare&mdash;not at all!" said Middleton, testily;
-"it is the very thing to sharpen his wits and
-to keep him wide awake. There are others
-here who never heard the story, and it is worth
-listening to; but before I begin we must send
-away the marines and replenish the decanters."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Right!" cried Askerne, who was president;
-"this is the last night of one of the jolliest
-messes in His Majesty's service. To-morrow
-the plate, which has glittered before us so
-long&mdash;the crystal from which we have imbibed the full
-bodied port, the creamy claret, and the choice
-Madeira, the sparkling champagne, the old hock,
-in fact, 'the entire plant,' to use a commercial
-phrase, will be packed up and stored away among
-dust and cobwebs, while the Borderers march in
-quest of 'fresh fields and pastures new.' A long
-farewell to our glorious mess!" exclaimed the
-handsome grenadier, as he poured a glass of port
-down his capacious throat. "Mr. Vice-President,
-order the last cooper of port before the
-major begins his story."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, the mess!" sighed Buckle, the adjutant;
-"when we come to be frying our ration beef in a
-camp-kettle lid, under a shower of rain, perhaps,
-there will be an exchange with a devil of a
-difference!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With the aforesaid "cooper" there came in
-hot whisky-toddy for the major and a few select
-seniors, for it was <i>then</i> the custom at the messes
-of Scots and Irish national corps to introduce
-the Farintosh and potheen; though I fear our
-dandies of the Victorian age (especially such as
-are horrified at the sight of a black bottle) might
-consider such a proceeding a deplorable solecism
-in good taste.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And now, major, for your story," said
-Askerne, while Colville, perhaps the only affected
-man in the regiment, gave his shoulders a shrug,
-perceptible only by the glittering of his epaulettes,
-and Monkton responded by a sly wink behind
-his glass of wine, while he pretended to be
-looking for the beeswing.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER V.
-<br /><br />
-THE ADVANCED PICQUET.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "All quiet along the Potomac, they say,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Except now and then a stray picquet,<br />
- Is shot as he walks on his beat to and fro,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By a rifleman hid in the thicket.<br />
- 'Tis nothing. A private or two now and then,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Will not count in the tale of the battle;<br />
- Not an officer lost&mdash;only one of the men,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Breathing out all alone the death-rattle."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"In the spring of the year '75, a party of ours,
-under Lord Rohallion, then a captain, was sent
-to the Fort of St. John, on the Richelieu River,
-to strengthen the garrison, which was composed
-of some companies of the 7th Fusiliers and the
-26th, or Cameronians, under Major Preston, of
-Valleyfield, in Fifeshire, as gallant a fellow as
-ever bore the King's commission.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We were in daily expectation of the advance
-of the rebel General Montgomery, with a great
-force, so the duties of guards and sentinels were
-performed with great vigilance, as the whole
-country for miles around, if not actually in
-possession of the armed colonists, was full of
-people who were favourable to their cause,
-and were consequently inimical to the king and
-to us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Montgomery was expected to approach
-through Vermont county (now one of the states)
-by the eastern shore of Lake Champlain, a long
-and narrow sheet of deep water, which forms the
-boundary between it and the State of New York;
-thus, on an eminence which commanded a
-considerable view of the country southward, and at
-the distance of two miles from Fort St. John,
-Major Preston, of the 26th, had an outpost or
-picquet, consisting of one officer and twenty men,
-stationed in a log-hut, from whence they were
-relieved every week. The officer in command of
-this advanced party had to throw forward a line
-of sentinels, extending across the road by which
-the Americans were expected to approach. At
-the hut was also a small piece of cannon, taken
-from a gunboat recently destroyed on the Lake,
-a 6-pounder, which was to be fired as a signal
-for the troops in Fort St. John to get under
-arms, and the picquet was well supplied with
-rockets to give the alarm by night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Our sentinels there had frequently been
-found dead and scalped, without a shot being
-fired. Sometimes they disappeared altogether,
-without leaving a trace, save a few spots of blood
-on the prairie grass. Their desertion was never
-suspected by those in authority; but that savages
-and assassins lurked in woods along the eastern
-and western shores of Lake Champlain we had
-not a doubt; thus the solitary outpost before the
-Fort of St. John was a duty disliked by all, and
-always undertaken with sensations of doubt and
-anxiety.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It was on a beautiful afternoon in the month
-of September, that with a sergeant and twenty
-men of the Borderers, I took possession of
-this log hut, relieving a Lieutenant Despard, of
-the Fusiliers, from whom I received over my
-orders, and posted my line of six sentinels at
-intervals across the highway and a kind of open
-prairie which it traversed. These orders were
-written and delivered with the parole and
-countersign, by Major André, of the Cameronians
-(afterwards named 'the unfortunate'), and they
-were simply, that during the night the sentinels
-were to face all persons approaching their posts,
-to stand firm in a state of preparation at
-half-cock with ported arms, and to fire instantly on
-all who could not give the countersign.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Despard informed me that excessive vigilance
-was necessary, as he had lost five sentinels in one
-week, information which made my fellows look
-somewhat blankly in each other's faces; 'and
-these assassinations have occurred,' he added,
-'though we have an Indian scout, Le Vipre
-Noir, an invaluable fellow, however unpleasant
-his name may sound, attached to the picquet-house.
-I would advise you to keep off that bit
-of prairie in front, Middleton. Zounds! one is
-always over the ankles in mud there, and mid-leg
-deep occasionally; so it's more like snipe-shooting
-in an Irish bog, than knocking over Yankees and
-Iroquois.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I now found that there was another scout, a
-Cornishman, named old Abe Treherne, attached
-to the post, as well as the native mentioned by
-Despard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Abe Treherne was a white-haired squatter and
-pioneer, who, for more than forty years, had been
-in the district, living by the use of his rifle and
-hatchet. He wore an Indian hunting-shirt and
-deer-skin mocassins, and had so completely forgotten
-the civilization of his native England, that
-he had almost become an Indian by habit, if not
-by speech. He was brave, however, and a most
-faithful fellow to us. Active and hardy, brown
-and weatherbeaten by constant exposure; privation
-could not impair, nor toil weary his strength,
-which was wonderful, for, by the wild life of
-nature he had led, every muscle had been
-developed, till it became like a band of iron.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The savage scout, Le Vipre Noir, as he was
-named, was one of the Lenni-Lenappe&mdash;or unmixed
-race as they boast themselves&mdash;who once
-occupied all the vast tract of country which lies
-between Penobscot and the shores of the Potomac;
-but we styled the most of them Delawares, and
-by that name they became known.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, this devil of a Delaware&mdash;I think I can
-see the fellow now!&mdash;was a model of muscular
-strength and manly beauty, so far as form and
-sinew go. He was like a colossal statue of
-polished copper. His usual expression was fierce
-and sullen; his eyes were keen, black, and glittering,
-and his red and yellow streaks of war-paint
-lent a fiendish aspect to his dusky visage, the
-features of which were otherwise clean cut and
-regular. He was somewhat of a dandy in his
-own way, as his fur mocassins and hunting-shirt
-were gaily ornamented with scarlet cloth,
-wampum, and beads, by the Delaware girls.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"His head had been denuded of hair entirely,
-save the scalp-lock, in which two feathers were
-stuck. At his girdle hung his pipe and hunting-pouch,
-a large musk-rat skin, in the tail of which
-his keen-edged scalping-knife was sheathed; he
-had also a pouch for ammunition, a long rifle, and
-a tomahawk, which were never from his side by
-night or day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This Delaware was from one of the native
-villages about the upper end of the Penobscot
-river, where the chiefs had signed a treaty of
-alliance, offensive and defensive, with our
-government, and had sworn to have no communication
-with the Americans or others, the king's enemies,
-without the knowledge of the officer commanding
-the British forces in North America.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"One of our men, named Jack Andrews, had
-quarrelled with the Delaware, about a wild goose
-they had shot. Blows were exchanged; the
-savage drew his scalping-knife; but the Borderer
-clubbed his musket, and laid the red-skin
-sprawling among the reeds. Peace was enforced
-between them; but the savage was more than ever
-sullen and reserved, doubtless brooding on the
-vengeance he meant to take.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Such was Le Vipre Noir, who will bear
-rather a conspicuous part in my little story.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It was a lovely evening, I have said, when we
-took possession of the sequestered picquet-house.
-The rays of the setting sun, as he sank beyond
-those grand and lofty mountain ranges, which rise
-between the source of the Hudson and Lake
-Champlain, shed a red glow across the water, and
-bathed in warm light the foliage of the mighty
-primeval forest, which for ages had clothed the
-shores of that magnificent lake. In the
-immediate foreground the bayonets of my sentinels
-seemed tipped with fire, as they trod slowly to
-and fro upon their posts in that voiceless solitude.
-Before the log-hut the arms were piled, and my
-soldiers, with the Cornishman, were cooking their
-supper, while the swarthy Indian scout was squatted
-on his hams at a little distance, smoking listlessly
-or half asleep, as the duty of searching in the
-woods usually devolved upon him after nightfall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I, too, lit my pipe, and the pouch from
-which I took my tobacco called back to mind
-some half-forgotten thoughts and fancies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"They were lovely hands that embroidered
-that pouch for me, and it was associated with
-many a promenade in Paul Street, when we were
-quartered in Montreal, with balls at <i>her</i> father's
-house, in the Rue de Notre Dame, flirtation and
-ices in the Place d'Armes, where the French
-troops used to parade of old&mdash;for, in short, that
-tobacco-pouch had been made for me by Ella
-Carleton, the belle of that old colonial city.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She had a dash of the old French blood in her,
-and hence her dark hair and eyes, which
-contrasted so wonderfully with her pure English
-skin, and hence her continental form of eyelid and
-drooping lash. So I sighed as I thought of a
-year ago&mdash;cursed the emergencies of the service
-that banished me to Fort St. John, and passed
-my fair Ella's present to the sergeant of the
-picquet, that he might supply himself, for active
-service is a true leveller, and without impairing
-discipline leads to a spirit of <i>camaraderie</i> not to
-be found in such tented fields as Hyde Park or
-the Phœnix at Dublin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"After the sun set and twilight stole on, I
-walked restlessly to and fro before the log-hut,
-within which my men were now gathered with
-their arms, as the dew was falling. I had seen
-all carefully loaded and had examined the flints
-and priming. I was resolved that due vigilance
-on my part should not be wanting if the post
-were attacked or my sentinels surprised; and to
-prevent them from wandering unconsciously from
-their beat in the dark, I had six white stakes
-placed in the ground, and gave orders that they
-were to remain close by them during the night,
-until relieved, and every hour I went in person
-with the reliefs, a most harassing duty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Leaving my sergeant at the picquet-house, a
-few minutes before midnight, I went with six
-men to relieve my sentinels, who were all posted
-on the skirts of an open spacs, a large tract of
-waste ground which for some miles was covered
-with long prairie grass, and which stretched away
-towards the forest that was traversed by the
-main road leading to Fort Edward on the Hudson,
-about sixty miles distant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Save the gurgle of a runnel that stole under
-the prairie grass, there was no sound in the
-air&mdash;not even the whistle of the cat-bird; there was
-no moon, but the stars were clear and bright,
-and guided by their light we went straight from
-post to post, relieving the sentinels; but as we
-approached the place where the sixth should have
-been, on the extreme left of the highway, we
-advanced <i>unchallenged</i> to the stake that marked
-his beat: the place was solitary and the man&mdash;was gone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"His musket, undischarged, was lying there,
-and a pool of blood beside it at once refuted any
-suspicion of desertion. But how came it that
-he had perished without resistance&mdash;without giving
-an alarm, and where was his body? All round
-the place we searched for it, but did so in vain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Posting another man, I gave him reiterated
-orders and injunctions to be on the alert, and
-wistfully the poor fellow looked after us as we
-returned to the picquet-house with the tidings
-of another mystery, which added to the consternation
-that prevailed concerning this devilish
-outpost. Neither le Vipre Noir nor Treherne
-had yet returned; they were as usual scouting
-in front of our advanced sentinels, and when they
-came back, not together, but separately, they
-each reported the country all quiet for miles
-towards the mountains. Who then was this
-determined assassin, unless it were Satan himself?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Next night the sentinel on the extreme right
-was missing, without leaving even a trace of blood,
-and without the grass being bruised or trodden
-near his beat; and on the night following, the
-sentinel on the roadway was found lying dead on
-his face; his musket was undischarged, his head
-cloven behind, and his scalp gone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The consternation of my picquet had now
-reached its height. Still our scouts asserted the
-country to be quiet around us, though, with a
-strange gleam in his eyes, the Indian said, that
-when he shouted in the woods he heard an echo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'From whence?' I asked, suspiciously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'From the great barrows by the lake&mdash;where
-the bones of my forefathers lie. The white man
-treads there now; but they were great warriors,
-and many were the scalps that dried before their
-tents.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I was but a young officer then, being fresh
-from our Scottish Fencibles, otherwise I would
-have doubled my sentinels; but the idea never
-occurred to me, and my sergeant failed to suggest
-it. The affair was becoming intolerable. This
-mysterious assassination of brave men roused my
-blood to fever heat, and I resolved that on the
-next night I should take the duty of sentinel
-with a firelock, and remain on my post as such,
-not for one hour merely, but for the entire night,
-in the hope of solving this terrible enigma.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"On the evening I came to this conclusion the
-post was visited by Charley Halket from the fort,
-the captain of our first company, who came
-cantering up on a fine bay horse. I was glad to
-see him, for Halket was one of the most lively
-and devil-may-care fellows in the corps, and he
-sang the best song and was the best stroke at
-billiards in our whole brigade. Charley would
-drink his two bottles at mess overnight and wing
-a fellow in the morning, without keeping his arm in
-a cold bath, and with an accuracy that showed he
-had a constitution of iron; he hunted fearlessly,
-shot fairly, rode like a mad-cap; gambled, but
-simply for excitement, and spent his money like a
-good-hearted fellow. He was always laughing and
-jovial, and I was about to relate the disasters
-that had befallen my party, when the pale and
-anxious expression of his usually merry face
-arrested me, and I feared that the fort had been
-taken by surprise in rear of our post.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'What the devil is the matter, Halket?' said
-I. 'I have always predicted to Preston that we
-should never have our legs under his mahogany
-at Valleyfield again&mdash;never taste his Fifeshire
-mutton, or test his fine old Burgundy. What
-is up? Has the fort fallen, Charley, that you
-come here with your bay thoroughbred covered
-with foam, even to its bang-up tail?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'No, my dear Middleton; but I wish to pass
-your post.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'To the front?' I asked, with astonishment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'It is impossible!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Even if out of uniform?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'In or out of uniform, none can pass or
-repass save our scouts, whose lives are of
-little value. Preston's orders are strict and
-decisive.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'But if in disguise?' he urged, earnestly, and
-lowering his tone, as he stooped from his saddle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Worse and worse!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'How? explain, pray,' he demanded, as his
-earnestness became tinged with irritation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'You might be deemed a deserter by General
-Burgoyne if found more than two miles from
-camp or quarters.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'A deserter!&mdash;I?&mdash;pooh, man, absurd!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'A general officer has joined the rebels
-already. Then you might be hanged as a spy by
-Montgomery, whose troops are certainly closing
-up, if we may judge from the murderous outrages
-committed by his Indian allies upon the
-picquets stationed here.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'It is for that very reason, Middleton, that
-I am most anxious to ride southward for about
-twelve miles into the country along the shore of
-the lake, towards Misiskoui.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'You could not return; my sentinels have
-positive orders to fire instantly on all&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Who have not the parole and countersign,'
-said he, smiling; 'they are <i>Quebec</i> and WOLFE.
-You see that I have both!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'From whom?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'My friend André, of the Cameronians&mdash;the
-fort-major.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'He is very rash! I wish he had this
-infernal picquet to command; the duty might
-teach him caution.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'But, my dear Middleton&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Say no more, Charley&mdash;come, don't be rash;
-duty is duty; and I must perform mine. Moreover,
-I value your life and my own honour too
-much to risk either to further some mad-cap
-ramble of yours.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Zounds, sir!' he began, furiously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Now don't call me out, Charley; I am on
-duty and can't go, and when I am relieved and
-you are cool, you won't ask me. But tell me,
-Charley, what affair is this that seems so urgent?
-The country in front is full of perils; already
-eight or nine sentinels have been assassinated,
-and yonder grave covers one of three fine fellows
-I have lost.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Listen to me, Jack,' said he, dismounting,
-and throwing the reins of his horse over his arm,
-and leading me a little way apart from the
-soldiers who were smoking and lounging before the
-log-hut; 'you remember Ella Carleton?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'I should rather think I do' said I, reddening,
-and giving him a very knowing wink, to
-which he made not the slightest response; 'Ella,
-whom we used to meet so much a year ago at
-Montreal.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'The same,' said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'I remember her perfectly&mdash;a charming girl,
-with features that were pale but beautifully
-regular, and with eyes and hair so dark.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Exactly,' said Halket, whose eyes sparkled
-with pleasure. 'Her father, you are aware, is a
-rich land-owner, in the American interest.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Many a bottle of champagne I have drunk
-in his house in the Rue de Notre Dame.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Yet he is an old curmudgeon who hates us
-red-coats, and for that reason, as well as for a
-few others that were more cogent, Ella and I
-were privately married about a year ago.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Married?&mdash;whew! Here's news for the mess
-to discuss over their wine and walnuts!' I
-exclaimed, while laughing to conceal an
-irrepressible emotion of pique.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'I depend on your honour,' said he, earnestly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'To the death, Charley; but you have quite
-taken my breath away. Married&mdash;you never
-looked a bit like it!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'We were married a year ago at the cathedral
-in the Place d'Armes unknown to all&mdash;even to
-yourself, Rohallion, and others my most intimate
-friends,' said Halket, speaking rapidly and
-with growing emotion; 'in a month she will be
-a mother&mdash;think of that, Jack! She is residing
-at one of her father's country clearings near the
-Missiskoui River, in an old hunting-lodge, built
-by Simon de Champlain, who first discovered the
-lake. She has written to me by a circuitous
-route, saying that Montgomery's advanced posts
-are within a few miles; that her father and all
-his men are with the rebels; that the Iroquois
-are ravaging the country, burning, killing, and
-scalping all before them; and thus, for the love
-I bear her, and for the sake of our child that is
-yet unborn, I must strive to save her, and have
-her conveyed to Fort St. John. This is all my
-story, Middleton. She is about twelve miles
-distant from this outpost; I think I know the
-way, and am certain I should be back before
-the morning-gun is fired. If not, I must risk
-all&mdash;commission, rank, reputation, everything&mdash;but
-Ella must be saved! You understand me
-now, don't you, my dear friend?' said he,
-earnestly, as he grasped my hand, and I could
-see that the poor fellow's eyes were filled with
-tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Perfectly, Charley; I would risk my life to
-save or serve her or you; but I think we may
-find those who will do both more effectually than
-either you or I.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Who do you mean?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'The Delaware scout, and old Abe Treherne,
-the hunter, will get over the ground in half the
-time, and knowing, as they do, every track and
-trail in the forest, with ten degrees more safety
-than you could ever hope for.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I at once proposed the affair to them, and
-Treherne entered into it with great readiness.
-His reward was to be a pair of handsome pistols
-and ten guineas. He knew the old hunting-lodge
-on Carleton's clearing quite well, and with
-the assistance of the horse, undertook to bring
-the lady to the picquet-house in safety, and long
-before sunrise. The Delaware, however, shook
-his head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Le Vipre Noir has some darned doubts, I
-guess,' said the hunter; 'the woods about the
-Missiskoui are full of the mocassin prints of the
-Yankees and the Iroquois; the tracks, I reckon,
-are dangerous enough; and there will be an
-almighty trouble in bringing a fine lady a-horse-back
-through the bush; for all that, Delaware,
-you'll venture to bring the White Chief his
-squaw safe from the hunting-place beyond the
-river?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'From the Missiskoui, where once I had a
-wigwam, and where my squaw and her little
-papooses perished at the hands of the white
-men?' said the savage, in a husky and guttural
-voice, while his stealthy eyes filled with a
-malevolent gleam, as he sat sullenly smoking under a
-tree.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'You're a darned fool, Vipre,' said Treherne,
-angrily. 'Look ye har&mdash;what's the use
-o' thinking o' that now? What's past is past,
-ain't it?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'She appealed to them, and they laughed at
-her. She appealed to Manitto, but his face was
-hidden behind a cloud, and he saw neither her
-nor what the pale-faces did to her. She is with
-Manitto now&mdash;but I yet am here.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'We may have a scrimmage, Delaware&mdash;can
-you bite yet?' asked Treherne, testily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The savage pointed to his scalping-knife and
-grinned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Will you venture with me for twelve bottles
-of the raal Jamaiky fire-water?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Oui, ja, yes!' said the savage, eagerly, in
-his mixed jargon; 'I neither fear the feathered
-arrows of the rebel Iroquois, or the lead bullets
-of the Yankees. Go! Le Vipre Noir is a warrior!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Delaware,' said I, patting his muscular
-shoulder, 'what are the greatest of human
-virtues?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Courage and contempt of death,' he replied,
-loftily, while shaking the two heron's plumes in
-his scalp lock.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Good,' said Halkett, who had listened to
-all this preamble with irrepressible anxiety and
-impatience; 'here are ten guineas as an earnest
-of future reward, Delaware. You will risk this
-for me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'For <i>you</i>?' said the Indian, scornfully,
-putting the coins, however, in the musk-rat pouch,
-which dangled at his wampum girdle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'For her, then?' said Halket, persuasively.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'For neither,' replied the Delaware, while a
-lurid gleam shone in his sombre eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'How, fellow?' asked Charley, with alarm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'I do so for the reward&mdash;for the fire-water
-and gold that will buy me powder and blankets;
-but neither for the squaw nor the papoose of the
-pale-face.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Risk it for what you will, but only serve
-me; and you, Treherne&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Make your terms with this darned crittur
-of a Redskin, and you can settle with me after,
-sir,' said Treherne, who had been regarding his
-compatriot with a somewhat doubtful expression.
-'Come, Vipre Noir, we must keep the hair on
-our heads, if we can, certainly; so put fresh
-priming into the pan of your rifle, my dark
-serpent, for the dew is falling heavily; if the rebel
-Redskins come on us, it must be our scalps
-agin theirs! I'm your brother&mdash;let us be off to
-the bush ere the sun sets.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Charley Halkett hastily wrote a note to his
-wife, telling her to place implicit confidence in
-the two scouts as true and tried men, who would
-convey her safely to the British outpost in front
-of Fort St. John, where he, all eagerness and
-impatience, awaited her; and on being furnished
-with this, Treherne slung his long rifle across his
-body, stuck a short black pipe in his moustachioed
-mouth, mounted Halkett's horse, and, with the
-swift-footed and agile Indian running by his
-side, crossed the open bit of prairie before the
-log-hut, and rapidly disappeared in the dense and
-virgin forest that lay beyond.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That forest soon grew dark; twilight stole
-along the shores of the silent lake; the last red
-rays of lingering light faded upward from the lone
-mountain tops; one by one the bright stars came
-twinkling out, and the old and clamorous anxiety
-occurred to us all; and each poor fellow, as he
-was left on his post, felt himself a doomed man,
-who might die without seeing his destroyer, or
-who might disappear as others had so mysteriously
-done, without leaving a trace behind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Slowly and wearily our autumn night wore
-on, and with our pistols cocked, Halkett and I
-visited the sentinels almost half-hourly. The
-sky was moonless, and the silence around our
-lonely post was oppressive; to the listening ear
-there came no sounds save those of insect life
-among the long and reedy prairie grass.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All at once, afar in distance from the deep
-recesses of the vast pine forest, there rose the
-shrill war-whoop of the red man!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Like the yell of an unchained fiend, it rung
-upon the still night air; but died away, and all
-became silent&mdash;more silent apparently than before,
-and I felt the hand of Halkett clutch my arm
-like a vice, while hot bead-drops rolled over his
-temples.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I had terrible forebodings, but remained
-silent, and with reiterated advice to my sentinels
-to be 'on the alert,' returned to the picquet-house.
-Poor Charley Halkett's alarm excited all
-my compassion; the boldest, frankest, and jolliest
-fellow in the corps had become a nervous, crushed,
-and miserable wretch!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I thought that lingering night would never
-pass away. It passed, however, as others do;
-the morning came in, bright and sunny, and
-without one of our sentinels being missed or
-molested; and it seemed, certainly, a very singular
-feature in those mysterious deaths, that the only
-night on which no fatality occurred, should be
-that on which we actually had an <i>alerte</i>, and
-when Treherne and the Delaware were away in
-the direction of Missiskoui, and <i>not</i> scouting in
-front of the post!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Morning had come, but there was yet no
-appearance of our messengers or Ella Carleton,
-and old sympathies made me doubly anxious on
-her account.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Halkett, who was pale with sleeplessness and
-intense anxiety, walked with me a little way
-beyond our advanced sentinels, who were now
-shouting to each other their happy congratulations
-that nothing had occurred during the night&mdash;in
-short, that they were <i>all</i> there.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Lake Champlain, in its calm loveliness, shone
-brightly under the morning sun, its surface
-unruffled by the wind, and not a sail or boat was
-visible in all the blue extent of its far stretching
-vista. The gorgeous azalias were still in their
-bloom, so were the snowy blossoms of the sumach,
-and the glorious yellow light fell in flakes
-between the towering pines of the ancient forest,
-while the dewy prairie grass glittered as it
-rippled beneath the pleasant breeze.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The distant landscape and the dim blue hills
-that look down on the winding Hudson seemed
-calm and tranquil, the silence around us
-was intense, the hum of a little waterfall
-alone breaking the stillness of the autumn
-morning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor Charley was like a madman, and it was
-in vain that I suggested to him that Treherne
-and the Delaware might have been compelled to
-make a long detour; that Ella might be ill and
-unable to travel on horseback, that her father
-might have returned, that Montgomery's
-advanced guard might be now far beyond the
-Missiskoui, that our scouts might have lost their
-way in going or in returning, not that I believed
-either possible for a moment, but I was glad to
-say anything that would serve to account for
-their delay, or soothe his gnawing anxiety; so
-in exceeding misery he returned to Fort St. John.
-The moment that morning parade was over he
-hastened to me again, and slowly the terrible day
-passed over, without tidings of Ella Carleton or
-her guides, and as night drew near I had almost
-to use force to prevent Halkett from setting out
-on foot for the old hunting-lodge on the Missiskoui,
-a place he could never have reached alone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Suddenly we were roused, about sunset, by
-a shout from the picquet, and as we looked up,
-the Delaware stood before us&mdash;alone!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"His aspect was fierce but weary; his hunting
-shirt was torn and bore traces of blood. His
-story was brief. They had been attacked by
-Indians in a deep gulley some miles distant, in
-the grey dawn of the morning; Treherne had
-been killed and the lady carried off! The Indian
-showed his wounds, and then claimed his reward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor Halkett, on hearing of this catastrophe,
-fell, as if struck by a ball, and was laid on the
-hard bed of planks whereon the soldiers slept.
-He was in a delirium, yet passive and weak as a
-child.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So the hostile Indians were in our neighbourhood!
-I thought with horror of what the
-poor girl&mdash;on the eve of becoming a mother&mdash;might
-suffer at their merciless hands; and all
-her delicate beauty, her merry laugh, the singular
-combination of elegance and <i>espièglerie</i> in her
-manner, came vividly back to memory, as I had
-seen her last, happy, radiant, and smiling, amid
-the glare and glitter of a garrison ball in the
-city of Montreal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I questioned the Delaware closely; but his
-story was simple and unvarying, so he received
-food, rum, and the reward which Halkett had
-promised.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"An irrepressible anxiety stole over me as night
-deepened, so taking my servant's musket and
-bayonet, I primed, loaded, and fixed a new flint
-with care; and proceeding to the distance of
-fifty yards in front of my line of sentinels, on
-the open space where the prairie grass grew thick
-and rank, I resolved to pass some hours there as
-an advanced sentinel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The sky was dark and cloudy, the stars were
-obscured by vapour, the silence was intense, and
-it smote upon my heart with a sense that was in
-some degree appalling, though I knew that my
-sentinels and the rest of the picquet were all
-within hail. The tall prairie grass waved solemnly
-and noiselessly to and fro; the sombre forest
-beyond, with the myriad cones of its black pines
-stretched far away to the distant mountains, but
-not a sound came from thence, nor from the lone
-shores of the vast lake of Champlain, whose vista
-receded away for miles upon my right. Even if
-the night-herons were wading among its waters
-I could not hear them, and the whistle of the
-cat-bird was silent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Through the dark, I could see where the wild
-sumach, with its white blossoms and scarlet
-berries, waved over the graves of those who had
-perished on this fatal out-post. Their aspect was
-solemnizing in such a dark and silent hour, and
-the familiar faces of the dead men seemed to
-hover before me. But there was something
-mysterious and unaccountable in the total
-disappearance of those whose blood we had only
-traced upon the grass of the prairie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Around where I stood this grass was more
-than a yard in height and thick as ripened corn.
-It was waving steadily to and fro as the breath
-of the night wind agitated it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I had been in that solitary place about two
-hours, and midnight was at hand, when an
-emotion like a thrill&mdash;a tremor, not of fear, but
-of <i>warning</i>&mdash;a 'grue,' as we Scots call it, came
-over me. I felt the approach of some unseen
-thing, and cast a hurried glance around me.
-Something unusual about the appearance of the
-prairie-grass caught my eye.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where, when hitherto I had looked in a
-direct line to the front, the surface, while swaying
-to and fro, seemed a flat and unbroken mass,
-there was now visible a dark line, a hollow furrow,
-as if some animal was crawling slowly and
-stealthily through it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"With every nerve braced, with all the powers
-of vision concentrated, I watched this new
-appearance, and the hollow track seemed to draw
-nearer and nearer <i>to me</i>, slowly, silently, and
-almost imperceptibly, as if a snake or some such
-reptile were crawling towards my post; and, ere
-long, it was not more than fifteen yards distant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I placed a handkerchief over the lock of my
-musket to muffle the click of the lock in cocking,
-then I took a steady aim and fired!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"On this, 'piercing the night's dull ear,' there
-rang a wild, shrill, and savage cry&mdash;a cry like
-that we had heard on the preceding night&mdash;and
-a dark figure, bounding from among the grass,
-came rushing towards me, but I stood, with
-bayonet charged, ready to receive him on its point.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He was an Indian, brandishing a tomahawk;
-but, within a few feet of where I stood, he fell prone
-on his face, wallowing in blood. The report of
-my musket, and his cry, brought all the picquet
-to the front. We dragged him into the log-hut,
-and discovered that I had shot our missing scout,
-the Delaware, Le Vipre Noir, the ball having
-entered his left shoulder, and traversed nearly the
-entire length of his body. He was mortally
-wounded, but the powers of life were strong
-within him. I was greatly concerned by this
-misfortune, which might procure us the enmity
-of his entire tribe; but why was he stealing upon
-our post in the manner he had done?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Before this could be resolved, and while we
-were staunching the welling blood, and doing all
-in our humble power to soothe suffering and
-prolong existence, a pale and bloody figure, who
-had given our sentries the pass-word, staggered
-into the hut, and sunk, half fainting, against the
-guard-bed. He was old Abe Treherne, the scout,
-cut, gashed, and apparently dying.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He was almost as speechless as the Delaware;
-but, on seeing each other, though weak and
-deplorable their condition, the eyes of these men
-glared with rage and hate, and they made such
-incredible efforts to reach each other, knife in
-hand, that the soldiers of my picquet had to hold
-them asunder by force.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Search the hunting-pouch of the darned
-thief&mdash;the accursed red-skin!' said Treherne, in
-a hollow voice. 'May I never hew hickory
-again if I don't have his scalp and his heart
-tew!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I was about to make the search, when
-Charley Halket anticipated me, and shudderingly
-drew forth its cold and clammy contents.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There were four human scalps; three were
-recognised as belonging to our own men, the
-murdered sentinels, and the fourth had attached
-to it the long, black, silky hair of a woman&mdash;the
-soft and ripply tresses of Ella Carleton!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'The red-skin fell on us suddenly in the
-bush, with knife and tomahawk,' said Treherne,
-speaking with difficulty, and at intervals; 'he
-took me unawares from behind, and well nigh
-clove my head&mdash;darned if I don't think the
-tommy's stickin' there yet! I fought hard for
-my precious life&mdash;harder for the poor lady, I
-guess; but I swowned, after a time, and then he
-dragged her into the bush.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Ella&mdash;Ella!' exclaimed Halket, wringing his
-hands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'The last I saw, 'tween the leaves and the
-blood that poured into my eyes, was the glitter
-of his scalping-knife; and the last I heard was
-her death-cry. Shoot the varmint, captain! I
-searched the bush for her till I was weary.
-Shoot the critter dead, soldiers! Ah! he was
-well named Le Vipre Noir, by that son of a
-Delaware dog, his father.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The savage scarcely heard the end of this,
-for Halket, maddened by the contents of the
-hunting-pouch, and brief story of Treherne,
-placed a foot upon the prostrate body of the
-Delaware, then, slowly and deliberately, while his
-teeth were set, his eyes flashing fire, his brows
-knit by rage and grief, and, while an unuttered
-malediction hovered on his lips, he passed his
-sword-blade twice through the heart of the scout.
-The latter, for a moment, writhed upward on the
-steel, like a dying serpent, and then expired.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor Abe Treherne died soon after, for his
-wounds were mortal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So our false Delaware proved, after all, to have
-been in the American interest, and inspired by
-some real or imaginary wrongs, to have been the
-assassin of our sentinels.*
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* Several sentinels of an outpost were thus actually
-assassinated during the American war. A Scottish periodical of
-the time gives a Highland regiment&mdash;the 74th, I think&mdash;the
-credit of furnishing the victims.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"Fort St. John soon after fell into the hands of
-the Yankees under General Montgomery; we
-were all made prisoners of war, and my poor
-friend, Charley Halket, died, and (far from his
-kindred, who lie in the Abbey Kirk of Culross)
-we buried him amid the snow as we were being
-marched, under escort, up the lakes, towards
-Ticonderoga."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Such was the major's story of <i>the advanced picquet</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VI.
-<br /><br />
-COSMO JOINS.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"Ye'll try the world soon, my lad,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And Andrew, dear, believe me,<br />
- Ye'll find mankind an unco squad,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And muckle may they grieve ye.<br />
- For care and trouble set your thought,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even when your end's attained;<br />
- And a' your views may come to nought,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When every nerve is strained."&mdash;BURNS.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-After a careful search through some of the old
-dog-eared Army Lists, which, with Burns' poems,
-Brown's "Self-interpreting Bible," and
-Abercrombie's "Martial Achievements of the Scots
-Nation," formed the chief literary stores in his
-snuggery, the old quartermaster discovered that
-in the 94th, the famous old Scots brigade, there
-was a Captain Richard Warriston. He was the
-only one of that name in the service, and
-doubtless the same officer whom Quentin had
-mentioned in his letter as having so kindly
-befriended him; and by Lord Rohallion's direction,
-Girvan at once addressed a letter to the officer
-commanding the regiment for some information
-regarding the runaway.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In due time an answer came from Colonel
-James Campbell, to state "that no volunteer
-named Quentin Kennedy had attached himself to
-the 94th Regiment," thus the household of the
-old castle were sorely perplexed what to do, and
-had to trust to time or to Quentin himself for
-clearing up the mystery that overhung his actions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In little more than ten days after Cosmo's
-name had appeared in the War Office <i>Gazette</i>,
-Quentin received the unwelcome information that
-the new lieutenant-colonel, his enemy, had arrived
-at head-quarters, and that a parade in full
-marching order was to take place on the morrow,
-when he would formally take over the command
-of the corps from poor Major Middleton.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though daily expected, these tidings fell like a
-knell upon Quentin's heart, and the old sickly
-emotion that came over him, when Warriston
-brought the fatal <i>Gazette</i> to the mess-room,
-returned again in all its force.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I think this Guardsman will prove a thorough
-Tartar," said Captain Askerne, in whose rooms
-Quentin first heard Cosmo's arrival canvassed;
-"and I fear that he won't make himself popular
-among the Borderers."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"From what do you infer that?" said some one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He refused to let the drums beat the 'Point
-of War' this morning."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The devil he did!" said Colville.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That looks ill, damme!" added Monkton.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I do not understand," said Quentin, as if
-looking for information.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is," said Askerne, "a custom as old as the
-days of Queen Anne&mdash;older, perhaps, for aught
-that I know&mdash;for the drums and fifes of a corps
-to assemble before the quarters of every officer
-who is newly appointed to it, and there to honour
-the king's commission by beating the 'Point of
-War.' Though dying out now, and frequently
-'more honoured in the breach than the observance,'
-it is a good old custom, peculiar to many
-of our Scottish regiments. The officer then gives
-to the drummers a few crowns or guineas, as the
-case may be, to drink his health; but the Master
-of Rohallion bluntly and haughtily told the
-drum-major that he 'would have no such d&mdash;d
-nonsense, and to dismiss!'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The deuce! this augurs ill," said Colville,
-with his affected lisp, as he arranged his hair in
-Askerne's little camp mirror.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps his exchequer is in a bad way."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not improbable, Monkton," said Askerne;
-"he was one of the most lavish fellows in the
-household brigade, and he played and betted
-deeply; but there goes the drum for parade; in
-a few minutes we shall see what like our new
-man is."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We shall not afflict the reader with details of
-this most formal parade, during which the
-regiment marched past Cosmo in slow and quick time
-in open column of companies; then followed an
-inspection of the men, their clothing, arms,
-accoutrements, and everything, from the regimental
-colours to the pioneers' hand-saws; but thanks
-to old Middleton's unwearying zeal and pride in
-the Borderers, the somewhat fractious lieutenant-colonel
-discovered nothing to find fault with.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mounted on a fine dark charger, with gold-laced
-saddlecloth and holsters, Cosmo, in his new
-regimentals, looked every inch a handsome and
-stately soldier; and his appearance, together with
-his clear, full, mellow voice, when commanding,
-impressed the corps favourably. Quentin, from
-the rear rank of Askerne's company, surveyed
-him earnestly, anxiously, and with secret
-misgivings; for every feature of his cold, keen, and
-aristocratic face brought back vividly the
-mortifying and unpleasant passages in which they had
-both borne a part at Rohallion, and sadly and
-bitterly he felt that the worst was yet to come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The parade over, the regiment was dismissed,
-but the orderly bugle summoned the officers to
-the front, where they gathered around Cosmo,
-who had dismounted and haughtily tossed his
-reins to an orderly (Allan Grange, the crest-fallen
-and reduced sergeant), his gentleman's
-gentleman&mdash;that town-bred appendage who had excited
-alternately the wrath and contempt of sturdy old
-Jack Andrews, had resigned, having no fancy for
-the chances of war as a camp-follower; so the
-Master had to content himself with such
-unfashionable "helps" as soldiers and batmen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin, lingering irresolutely, and half
-hoping to escape observation, was about to retire
-to his quarters, when Askerne called to him with
-a friendly smile&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Kennedy, come to the front; Middleton is
-about to introduce the officers, and you must not
-be omitted."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Quentin felt that his doom had come,
-and he could feel, too, that as his heart sank, the
-blood left his cheeks. But honest anger and
-just indignation came to the rescue, and gave him
-courage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why should I dread this man&mdash;why shrink
-from one I have never wronged?" he asked of
-himself. "Of what am I afraid? The sooner
-this introduction is over, and that I know on
-what terms we are to be, the better. Perhaps
-he may be desirous of forgetting the past, of
-committing to oblivion all that has occurred, and may
-be the first to hold out a friendly hand. Heaven
-grant it may be so!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But this suggestion of his own generous heart
-was little likely to be realized.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With studied politeness and grace, if not with
-pure cordiality, Cosmo received each officer as he
-was presented according to his rank, until the
-junior ensign, Boyle, was introduced.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah!" said Cosmo, detecting one present
-without epaulettes, "you have a volunteer with
-you, I see."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"One," said Middleton, "whom I wish
-especially to introduce to your notice and
-future care, colonel, as a most promising
-young soldier, who in a few weeks has passed
-through all his drills, and is now fit for any
-duty. Mr. Quentin Kennedy&mdash;Colonel Crawford."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The nervous start given by Cosmo, the changing
-colour of his cheek, the shrinking and dilation
-of his cat-like eyes, as he raised and almost
-nervously let fall his eye-glass, were apparent to
-several; and Quentin saw the whole. Cosmo
-bowed with marked coldness, and turned so
-sharply on his heel, that his spurs rasped on the
-gravel of the barrack-yard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Major Middleton," said he, haughtily, before
-retiring, "tell that young man, Mr.&mdash;what's
-his name&mdash;&mdash;?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mr. Kennedy, sir."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That when speaking to an officer, he should
-bring his musket to the <i>recover</i>."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so ended this&mdash;to Quentin&mdash;most crushing
-interview.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What the devil is up now?" said Monkton
-to Colville; "it is evident that our new bashaw
-doesn't like gentlemen volunteers."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then he is devilishly unjust&mdash;that's all,"
-said Askerne the Grenadier who had begun
-his military life as a volunteer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin could have furnished the clue to all
-this; but to speak of the friendless childhood
-which cast him among the household at Rohallion,
-and, more than all, to speak of Flora
-Warrender, and to make her name the jest of
-the heedless or unfeeling, were thoughts that
-could not be endured. He was, silent, and his
-tongue seemed as if cleaving to the roof of his
-mouth, while wearily and sadly he turned away
-to seek the solitude of his bare and
-scantily-furnished little room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Middleton, who had followed unobserved,
-entered after him, and just when Quentin, to
-relieve his overcharged heart, was on the point
-of giving way to a paroxysm of rage, even to
-tears, the worthy old field officer caught his
-hand kindly, and said with earnestness&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Don't be cast down, my boy, by what has
-occurred to-day. He was cold and haughty to
-every one of us, but it is evidently his way, and
-may wear off after a time. I hope so, for our
-Borderers won't stand it. Take courage, lad&mdash;take
-courage, and don't fret about it; Jack
-Middleton will always be your friend, though a
-hostile commanding officer is a dangerous rock
-ahead."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, major, you are indeed kind and good,"
-said Quentin, as he seated himself at the hard
-wood table, and covered his burning face with
-his trembling hands; "but you know not all I
-have suffered&mdash;all I think, and feel, and fear!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Chut, Kennedy, look up! 'The English
-pluck that storms a breach or heads a charge is
-the very same quality that sustains a man on the
-long dark road of adverse fortune,' says an
-author&mdash;I forget who&mdash;not he of the 'Eighteen
-Manœuvres,' however; so, Quentin; don't, let Scottish
-pluck be behind it. To follow the drum is your
-true road in life, boy, and who but God can tell
-when that road may end?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Major Middleton," said Quentin, bitterly,
-"the colonel's chilling manner, and more than
-you can ever know, have crushed the heart within
-me. I never knew my father&mdash;of my mother I
-have barely a memory," he continued in a broken
-voice&mdash;"a memory, a dream! Fate has made
-me early a victim&mdash;a plaything&mdash;a toy! Advise
-me&mdash;I feel my condition so desolate, so friendless
-again. What future can there be for me, if I
-continue to serve under him; and how can I
-hope for happiness, for justice, or advancement
-under such as he?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Obey and suffer in silence; bear and forbear,
-and you will be sure to triumph in the end.
-'He that tholes overcomes,' says our Scottish
-proverb, and the poor soldier has much to <i>thole</i>
-indeed; but do your duty diligently, and you
-may defy any man&mdash;even the king himself."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin strove to take courage from the good
-major's words, and ultimately did so; but
-Middleton knew not the past of those he spoke of,
-and was ignorant of the secret rivalry and settled
-hatred that existed between them, especially in
-the heart of Cosmo; while Quentin, in his
-ignorance of military matters, knew not that the
-Master, if he chose to exert his powers
-arbitrarily, might dismiss him from the corps at
-once, unquestioned by any authority for doing so;
-and that by the stigma thus attached to his name,
-the chance of any other commanding officer
-accepting him as a volunteer would be utterly
-precluded; and that Cosmo did not do so was,
-perhaps, only by a lingering emotion of justice or
-of shame for what his family, and chiefly Flora
-Warrender and that huge bugbear "the world,"
-would say if the story got abroad.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Better trust to the <i>chances</i> of war," thought
-Cosmo, grimly, as he lay sullenly at length,
-smoking, on a luxurious fauteuil in his ample
-quarters, which were furnished with all the
-comforts and elegance with which a Jew broker
-could surround him; "a brat, a boy, a chick&mdash;a
-d&mdash;ned foundling! With all my conscious superiority
-of rank, birth, and, what are better, strength
-of mind and character, why do I dread this
-Quentin Kennedy? Why and how does he seem
-to be so inextricably woven up with me, my fate
-and fortune&mdash;it may be, with the house of
-Rohallion itself? Last of all, why the devil do I find
-him here?" (This question he almost shouted
-aloud as he kicked away the cushion of the
-fauteuil.) "Why do I dread him? <i>Dread</i>&mdash;I&mdash;shame! what
-delusion is this&mdash;what depression
-is it that his presence&mdash;the very idea of his
-existence&mdash;and contact bring upon me? In all this
-there is some strange fate&mdash;I know not what;
-but I shall trust to the chances of war for a
-riddance, and to the perilous work I shall cut out
-for <i>him</i> in particular."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so he trusted; but with what success we
-shall see ere long.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VII.
-<br /><br />
-THE DEPARTURE.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Our native land&mdash;our native vale&mdash;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A long and last adieu;<br />
- Farewell to bonny Teviotdale,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And Cheviot mountains blue!<br />
- The battle-mound, the border-tower,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That Scotia's annals tell;<br />
- The martyr's grave&mdash;the lover's bower&mdash;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To each, to all&mdash;farewell."&mdash;PRINGLE.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Cosmo studiously and ungenerously omitted the
-slightest mention of Quentin's name or existence
-in the letters which he wrote home to Carrick,
-well knowing that if he did so, the kind old
-general, his father, would at once address the
-authorities at the Horse Guards on the subject of
-the young volunteer's advancement; and he knew,
-that if appointed to any other corps than the
-Borderers, Quentin would be beyond his influence,
-and free from the wiles and perils in which he
-had mentally proposed to involve his future career.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last came the day so long looked forward
-to by all the regiment&mdash;the day of its departure
-for foreign service, as it proved in the Spanish
-Peninsula, the land to which, after several useless
-and bloody expeditions to Holland, Flanders,
-Sweden, and Italy, the thoughts and hopes and
-all the sympathies of Britain turned, with the
-desire of driving out the victorious French, and
-restoring the Bourbon dynasty&mdash;almost an old
-story now, so remote have the struggles before
-Sebastopol and the wars of India made the great
-battles of those days seem to be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The regiment had been under orders, and in
-a state of readiness for weeks; but until, for it
-and for others, the <i>route</i> came in the sabretasche
-of an orderly dragoon who rode spurring in "hot
-haste" to Colchester Barracks, its members
-knew not for what country they were destined.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The drums beat the <i>générale</i>, the signal for
-marching, early in the morning of a soft
-September day, and the four pipers of the regiment
-played loud and high a piobroch, that rang wildly,
-in all its various parts, through the calm air,
-waking every echo of the old barrack square; for
-the piobroch, we may inform the uninitiated, is
-a regular piece of music, containing several
-portions; beginning with an alarm, after which
-follow the muster, the march, the fury of the charge,
-the shrill triumph of victory, and the low sad
-wail for the slain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With our battalion of the Borderers, there
-were to march on this morning another of the
-Gordon Highlanders&mdash;the 92nd&mdash;one of the most
-noble of our national corps, together with a
-strong detachment of the 91th, under Captain
-Warriston, so the enthusiasm of all was at its
-height when, in heavy marching order, with great
-coats rolled on the knapsacks, blankets folded
-behind them, havresacks and wooden canteens
-slung, the companies fell in, and there seemed to
-be a rivalry between the kilted pipers of the
-92nd and the Borderers as to who should excel
-most, or (as Cosmo, who was not inspired by
-overmuch nationality, said to Middleton) who
-should "make the most infernal noise."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Silent and grim, and keeping somewhat
-haughtily aloof from all his officers, Cosmo sat
-on his black horse, gnawing the chin-strap of his
-shako, as if controlling some secret irritation,
-while watching the formation of the corps,
-looking very much the while as if longing to find
-fault with some one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And so we are destined to reinforce the army
-under Sir John Moore?" said Quentin, for lack
-of something more important to remark.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes," said Askerne, as he adjusted the
-cheek-scales of his tall grenadier cap; "Sir
-John is a glorious fellow, and quite the man of
-to-day."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I would rather be the man of <i>to-morrow</i>,"
-said Monkton, with an air that implied a joke,
-though there was something prophetic in the wish.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I knew Moore when he was serving as a
-subaltern with the 82nd in America&mdash;he is a
-brave, good fellow, and a countryman of our
-own, too," said Middleton, whose orderly brought
-forward his horse at that moment; "and now,"
-he added, putting his foot in the stirrup, "a
-long good-bye to the land of roast-beef, and to
-poor old Scotland, too! I wonder who among
-us here will see her heather hills and grassy glens
-again&mdash;God bless them all!" And reverentially
-the fine old man raised his hand to his cap as he
-spoke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A crowd formed by the soldiers' wives and
-children of the regiment, now gathered round
-him, for the old major knew all their names and
-little necessities, and was adored by them all.
-Now he was distributing among them money,
-advice, and letters of recommendation to parish
-ministers and others, and to none was he more
-kind than to the weeping wife of Allan Grange,
-who, by his reduction to the ranks, lost nearly
-every chance of accompanying the troops abroad.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To the screaming of the bagpipes had now
-succeeded the wailing of women, for many soldiers'
-wives and children were to be left behind,
-and to be transferred to their several parishes in
-Scotland; many to remote glens that are desolate
-wildernesses now; and it was touching to see
-these poor creatures, looking so pale and miserable
-in the cold grey light of the early morning, each
-with her wondering little brood clinging to her
-skirts, as she hovered about the company to
-which her husband belonged, his quivering lip
-and glistening eye alone revealing the heart
-that ached beneath the coarse red coat, amid
-the monotony of calling rolls and inspecting
-arms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On one of the waggons which was piled high
-with baggage, huge chests of spare arms,
-iron-bound trunks, camp-beds and folded tents,
-Quentin tossed the little portmanteau which contained
-his entire worldly possessions; then the
-baggage-guard, looking so serviceable and warlike with
-their havresacks and canteens slung crosswise,
-came with bayonets fixed, and the great wains
-rumbled away through the echoing, and as yet
-empty streets of Colchester.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-None of the officers were married men, fortunately
-for themselves perhaps, at such a juncture.
-The colours were brought forth with their
-black oilskin cases on; the advanced guard marched
-off, and just as the sun began to gild the church
-vanes and chimney-tops, and while reiterated
-cheers rang from the thousands of soldiers who
-crowded the barrack windows, and whose turn
-would come anon, the troops moved off, the brass
-bands of other regiments&mdash;the usual courtesy&mdash;playing
-them out, the whole being under the command
-of the senior officer present, Lieutenant-Colonel
-Napier of Blackstone, who afterwards fell
-at the head of the 92nd Highlanders on the field
-of Corunna.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the excitement of the scene, Quentin felt
-all its influences and marched happily on. He
-forgot his affronts, his piques and jealousies, and
-as the young blood coursed lightly through his
-veins, he felt that he could forgive even Cosmo,
-were it only for Lady Winifred's sake, when he
-saw him riding with so stately and soldier-like an
-air between Major Middleton and Buckle the
-adjutant, at the end of the column, where the
-splendid grenadiers with their black bearskin
-caps and braided wings, made a martial show
-such as no company of the line could do in the
-shorn uniform of the present day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All the happy impulses of youth made Quentin's
-spirit buoyant; thus his light heart beat
-responsive to the crash of the drums and cymbals,
-and to every note of the brass band. Thus,
-when on looking to the rear, he saw so many
-hundred bayonets and clear barrels (they were not
-browned in those days) flashing in the sun, with
-the long array of plumed Highlanders that wound
-through the streets after his own regiment, he
-forgot, we say, his grievances, and the cold and
-haughty Master&mdash;we believe he forgot even Flora
-Warrender&mdash;he forgot all but that he was a
-soldier&mdash;one of the old 25th, and bound for the
-seat of war! Ah, there is something glorious in
-these emotions&mdash;this flushing up of the spirit in
-a young and generous breast; but alas! the
-time comes when we look back to the long-past
-days with envy, regret, and, it may be&mdash;wonder!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sorrowful parting, the hurried embraces,
-the last kisses, the sad and lingering glances of
-farewell being exchanged along the line of march
-every moment, by husbands and wives, by parents
-and children, as group after group gradually
-dropped to the rear of the column they could
-but follow with their eyes and hearts, ceased
-after a time to impress him by their very number
-and frequency; thus he soon laughed with the
-gay, and enjoyed all the silly banter of the
-heedless, as the officers began to group by twos and
-threes, after Colchester was left behind, and the
-troops were permitted to "march at ease" along
-the dusty highway between the meadows and
-ploughed fields.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have never seen so jolly a morning as
-this," said Ensign Boyle, as he trudged along
-with the regimental colour crossed on his left
-shoulder; "never since first I saw my own name
-in print!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How in print?" asked Quentin, with simplicity;
-"you do not mean on the title-page of
-a book?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not at all&mdash;nothing so stupid&mdash;I mean in
-the Army List&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where you have never been tired of
-contemplating it since&mdash;eh, Pimple?" asked
-Monkton; "but I hope you have left your flirting
-jacket and best epaulettes with the heavy
-baggage&mdash;you only need your fighting traps now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I say, Pimple," said Colyear, the senior
-ensign, who, of course, had the King's colour,
-"how much of the ready had that flax-spinner's
-daughter, about whom Monkton quizzes you so
-much?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Rumour said twenty thousand pounds."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The devil! You might have done worse&mdash;aw&mdash;eh!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We're all doing worse, damme, marching for
-embarkation on this fine sunny morning," said
-Monkton. "There goes the band again to the old
-air; but, save you, Pimple, few among us leave
-'girls behind us' with twenty thousand pounds."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Adieu to Colchester, its morning drills and
-monotonous guards, and that devilish incessant
-patter of little drum-boys practising their da-da,
-ma-ma, on the drum from sunrise till sunset,"
-said Colville, looking back to where the strong
-old Saxon castle and the brick steeple of St. Peter
-were being shrouded in yellow morning haze
-exhaled by the sun from the river Colne.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bon voyage," cried a gay staff-officer, lifting
-his plumed cocked hat, as he cantered gaily past;
-"good-bye, gentlemen."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Adieu, Conyers," replied Monkton; "can I
-do anything for you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Among the ladies in Lisbon?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The officer made no reply, but rode hurriedly on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That is the fellow who had to quit Wellesley's
-staff for eloping with some hidalgo's wife,
-the night after Vimiera," said Askerne. "Monkton,
-you hit him hard there."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Don't you think old Jack Middleton looks
-dull this morning?" asked some one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The colonel is in a devil of a temper, I
-think," replied Askerne.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps he has left his love behind him,"
-suggested Boyle, raising his stupid white
-eyebrows sentimentally; "don't you think so,
-Kennedy?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Pimple, allow me to rebuke you," said Monkton,
-with an air of mock severity. "An ensign
-may wear a faded rose next his beating heart;
-but in a field-officer, such an insane proceeding is
-not to be thought of."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While this empty talk was in progress, about
-eight miles from Colchester, a troop of the Scots
-Greys approached en route for that place; and, as
-they drew near, the drums and fifes of the Borderers
-struck up a lively national quick step; the Greys
-brandished their swords, and gave a hearty cheer
-on coming abreast of the colours of each
-regiment, and loud were the hurrahs which responded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This little episode, and the thoughtless banter
-which preceded it, had raised Quentin's spirits to
-a high state of effervescence. Fresh hope had
-come with all her ruddiest tints to brighten the
-future and blot out the past, and with all the
-glorious confidence of youth, he was again
-building castles in the air, on this morning march,
-when the sun that shone so joyously on the
-green English landscape, added to the brilliance
-of his thoughts and enhanced his joy and happiness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From his day-dreams, however, he was roughly
-awakened by the harsh voice of the Master of
-Rohallion, who half reined in his horse, and
-turning round with his right hand planted on the
-crupper, said with great sternness:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Captain Askerne, I must remind you that,
-though officers may converse together when the
-men are marching at ease, such a privilege can
-by no means be accorded to a mere volunteer.
-Mr. Kennedy, rejoin your section, and keep your
-place, sir!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Askerne's dark and handsome face coloured
-up to the rim of his bearskin cap, and his eyes
-sparkled with rage at the colonel's petulant
-wantonness; while poor Quentin, who, lost in his
-bright day-dreamings, had certainly, but
-unconsciously, diverged a few paces from the line
-of march to converse with his friends, fell sadly
-back into the ranks, and felt that the dark cloud
-was enveloping him again.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VIII.
-<br /><br />
-ON THE SEA.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "A varied scene the changeful vision showed,<br />
- For where the ocean mingled with the cloud,<br />
- A gallant navy stemmed the billows broad.<br />
- Blent with the silver cross to Scotland dear,<br />
- From mast and stern, St. George's symbol flow'd,<br />
- Mottling the sea their landward barges row'd,<br />
- And flashed the sun on bayonet, brand, and spear,<br />
- And the wild beach returned the seaman's jovial cheer."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Vision of Don Roderick.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The kingdom of Spain was at this time the great
-centre of European political interest. France,
-Prussia, and Russia had scarcely sheathed their
-swords at Tilsit, when the terrible conspiracy of
-Ferdinand, the Prince of the Asturias, against
-his father, Charles IV.&mdash;a plot imputed to Michael
-Godoy, who, from a simple cavalier of the Royal
-Guard, had, by the queen's too partial favour,
-obtained the blasphemous title of the Prince of
-Peace&mdash;afforded the Emperor Napoleon, whose
-creature he was, a pretext for interfering in the
-affairs of the Spanish Bourbons. He decoyed
-the royal family to Bayonne, compelled their
-renunciation of the crown and kingdom of Spain,
-into which he poured at once his vast armies,
-and, after the fashion of the cat in the fable, who
-absorbed the whole matter in dispute by the
-monkeys, he solved the problem by seizing the
-Spanish empire, and gifting it to his brother
-Joseph, formerly King of Naples.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Portugal, at this juncture, deserted by her
-government and by her pitiful king, who fled to
-Rio de Janeiro, in Brazil, fell easily into the
-power of a French army, under Marshal Junot,
-who was thereupon created Duke of Abrantes, a
-town on the Portuguese frontier.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All Europe cried aloud at these lawless
-proceedings, and the Spaniards, so long our enemies,
-with our old allies the Portuguese, were alike
-filled with fury and resentment. The peasantry
-flew to arms, and the provinces became filled by
-bands of guerillas, brave but reckless; so the
-whole peninsula was full of tumult, treason,
-bloodshed, and crime.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"England," says General Napier, "both at
-home and abroad, was, in 1808, scorned as a
-military power, when she possessed (without a
-frontier to swallow up large armies in expensive
-fortresses) at least two hundred thousand of the
-best equipped and best disciplined soldiers in the
-universe, together with an immense recruiting
-establishment through the medium of the militia."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-War, not "Peace at any price," was the
-generous John Bull's motto, and, to aid these
-patriots, a British army proceeded to the
-peninsula in June, 1808, under the command of
-Lieutenant-General Sir Arthur Wellesley. Some
-sharp fighting ensued along the coast, the
-prologue to the long and bloody, but glorious drama,
-that was only to terminate on the plains of
-Waterloo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 21st of August we fought and won the
-battle of Vimiera, and nine days after followed
-the convention of Cintra, by which the French
-troops were compelled to evacuate the ancient
-Lusitania, and were conveyed home in British
-ships; but still the marshals of the empire, with
-vast armies, the heroes of Jena, Austerlitz, and a
-hundred other battles so glorious to France, were
-covering all the provinces of Spain, from the
-steeps of the Pyrenees to the arid plains of Estremadura.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Soldiers, I have need of you," says the
-emperor, in one of his bulletins. "The hideous
-presence of the leopard contaminates the
-peninsula of Spain and Portugal. In terror he must
-fly before you! Let us bear our triumphal eagles
-to the pillars of Hercules, for there also we have
-injuries to avenge! Soldiers, you have surpassed
-the renown of modern armies, but have you yet
-equalled the glory of those Romans, who, in one
-and the same campaign, were victorious upon
-the Rhine and the Euphrates, in Illyria and
-upon the Tagus? A long peace and lasting
-prosperity shall be the reward of your labours."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The standard of freedom was first raised
-among the Asturians, the hardy descendants of
-the ancient Goths, and in Galicia; then Don
-José Palafox, by his valiant defence of the
-crumbling walls of Zaragossa, showed the Spaniards
-what brave men might do when fighting for their
-hearths and homes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In a few days," said Napoleon, boastfully, in
-the October of 1808, "I go to put myself at the
-head of my armies, and, with the aid of God, to
-crown the King of Spain in Madrid, and plant
-my eagles on the towers of Lisbon."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Junta of the Asturias craved the assistance
-of Britain, even while the shattered wrecks
-of Trafalgar lay rotting on the sandy coast of
-Andalusia. Three years had committed those
-days of strife to oblivion, or nearly so, and arms,
-ammunition, clothing, and money were freely
-given to the patriots, while all the Spanish
-prisoners were sent home. Then, Sir John Moore,
-who commanded the British forces in Portugal,
-a small but determined "handful," was ordered
-to advance into Spain against the vast forces of
-the Duke of Dalmatia, which brings us now to
-the exact period of our own humble story, from
-which we have no intention of diverging again
-into the history of Europe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The body of troops among which our hero
-formed a unit, sailed in transports from Spithead,
-and in the Channel, and when Portland lights
-were twinkling out upon the weather-beam, poor
-Quentin endured for the first time the horrors
-of sea-sickness, and lay for hours half-stifled in
-a close dark berth, unheeded and forgotten,
-overpowered by the odour of tar, paint, and bilge,
-and by a thirst which he had not the means of
-quenching, for he was helpless, unable to move
-and longed only for death.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was no spacious, airy, and gigantic
-<i>Himalaya</i>, no magnificent screw-propeller like the
-<i>Urgent</i>, the <i>Perseverance</i>, or any other of
-our noble steam transports that, on this
-occasion received the head-quarters of the "King's
-Own Borderers," but a clumsy, old, and leaky
-tub, bluff-bowed and pinck-built, with her
-top-masts stayed forward, and her bowsprit tilted up
-at an angle of 45 degrees, and having a jack-staff
-rigged thereon. She was a black-painted
-bark of some four hundred tons, with the figures
-"200 T."&mdash;(signifying Transport No. 200)&mdash;of
-giant size appearing on her headrails. Between
-floors or decks hastily constructed for the
-purpose, the poor soldiers were stowed in darkness,
-discomfort, and filth. The officers were little
-better off in the cabin, and hourly their servants
-scrambled, quarrelled, and swore in the cooks'
-galley, about their several masters' rank and
-seniority in the order of boiling kettles and
-arranging frying-pans, whilst the hissing spray swept
-over them every time the old tub staggered under
-her fore course, and shipped a sea instead of
-riding buoyantly over it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the mighty stride taken by civilization of
-late years, when steam and electricity alike
-conduce to the annihilation of time and space, the
-soldiers of the Victorian age know little of what
-their fathers in the service underwent, when old
-George III. was King. In stench, uncleanness,
-and lack of comfort and accommodation, our
-shipping were then unchanged from those which
-landed Orange William's Dutchmen at Torbay, or
-which conveyed our luckless troops in after years
-to the storming of the Havannah or the
-bombardment of Bocca Chica.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After Quentin had recovered his strength (got
-his "sea-legs" as the sailors have it) he
-presented his pale, wan face on deck one morning,
-when the whole fleet, with the convoy, a stately
-74-gun ship, were scattered, with drenched
-canvas, like sea-birds with dripping wings, as they
-scudded before a heavy gale, through the dark
-grey waters of the Bay of Biscay, the waves of
-which were rolling in foam, under a cold and
-cheerless October sky.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On that comfortless voyage to the seat of war,
-many were the secret heart-burnings he felt;
-many were the cutting slights put upon him by
-his cold and hostile commanding officer, who
-went the tyrannical length of even raising doubts
-as to whether he should mess in the cabin or
-among the soldiers; but to Cosmo's ill-concealed
-rage and confusion, the motion was carried
-unanimously and emphatically in the poor lad's
-favour; that the cabin was his place, as a
-candidate for his Majesty's commission.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cosmo gave a smile somewhat singular in
-expression, and unfathomable in meaning, when
-Major Middleton communicated to him the decision
-of the officers; but though victorious in
-this instance, young as he was, the new affront
-sank deep in Quentin's heart, and he felt that
-there was "a shadow on his path" there could
-be no avoiding now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So rapidly had events succeeded each other
-since that evening on which the Master had so
-savagely struck him down in the avenue, that
-Quentin frequently wondered whether his past
-or his present life were a dream. His last
-meeting with Flora Warrender among the old and
-shady sycamores&mdash;Flora so loving, so tender, and
-true!&mdash;his last farewell of old John Girvan (but
-one of whose guineas remained unchanged); that
-horrid episode of the dead gipsy, when he sought
-shelter in the ruined vault of Kilhenzie; the
-drive in the carrier's waggon; his volunteering
-at Ayr; the march to Edinburgh, with the
-voyage to England in the armed smack, and his
-subsequent military life, all appeared but a long
-dream, in which events succeeded each other
-with pantomimic rapidity; and it was difficult to
-believe that only months and not years, must
-have elapsed since the kind and fatherly
-quartermaster closed the gate of Rohallion Castle
-behind him. And now he was sailing far away
-upon the open sea, bound for Spain&mdash;a soldier
-going to meet the victorious veterans of
-Napoleon, in England alike the bugbear of the
-politician and the truant school-boy; and he was in
-the 25th too&mdash;that corps of which, from childhood,
-he had heard so much, and under the orders,
-it might be said truly at the mercy, of his
-personal enemy and bad angel, the cold, proud
-Master of Rohallion!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He found it difficult indeed to realize the
-whole and disentangle fact from fancy&mdash;reality
-from imagination; but that the faces of
-Monkton, Boyle, and the good Captain Warriston,
-when he saw him occasionally, were as links in
-the chain of events, and gave them coherency.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At times, especially after dreams of home
-(for such he could not but consider Rohallion),
-there came keen longings in his heart to
-see Flora once again and hear her voice, which
-often came plainly, sweetly, and distinctly to his
-ear in sleep. Of her, alas! he had not one
-single memento; not a ring, a miniature, a
-ribbon, a glove&mdash;not even a lock of her soft hair&mdash;the
-hair that had swept his face on that delightful
-day when he carried her through the Kelpie's pool
-in the Girvan, and which he had kissed and
-caressed, in many a delicious hour spent with her
-in the yew labyrinth of the old garden, by the
-antique arch that spanned the Lollards' Linn,
-under the venerable sycamores that cast their
-shadows on the haunted gate, or where the honey
-bee hummed on the heather braes that sloped so
-sweetly in the evening sunshine towards the blue
-Firth of Clyde.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From soft day-dreams of those past hours of
-happiness he was roused on the evening of the
-3rd October by the boom of a heavy gun from
-the convoy, and several signals soon fluttered
-amid the smoke that curled upward through her
-lofty rigging. They were to the effect that land
-ivas in sight&mdash;the fleet of transports to close in
-upon the convoy&mdash;the swift sailers to take the
-dull in tow; and now from the grey Atlantic
-rose a greyer streak, which gradually became
-broken and violet-coloured in the sheen of the sun
-that was setting in the western waves, as the hills
-of Portuguese Estremadura came gradually into
-form and tint, on the lee-bow of the transport.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Next morning, when day broke, he found the
-whole fleet at anchor in Maciera Bay, and all
-the hurry and bustle on board of immediate
-preparations to land the troops on the open and
-sandy beach, where, when the tide meets the
-river, a dangerous surf rolls at times, and from
-thence they were, without delay, to march to the
-front.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a glorious day, though in the last
-month of autumn. The ruddy sun of Lusitania
-was shining gaily on the hills and valley of
-Maciera, and on the plain beyond, where already
-the grass was growing green above the graves of
-our soldiers, who fell three months before at the
-battle of Vimiera. But little recked the newcomers
-of that, as the boats of the fleet covered
-all the bay, whose surface was churned into foam
-by hundreds of oars, while clouds of shakos and
-Highland bonnets were waved in the air, and
-swords and bayonets were brandished in the
-sunshine, as with loud hurrahs, that were repeated
-from the ships, and re-echoed by the rocks and
-indentations of the shore, the soldiers of the
-Borderers and the 92nd anticipated a share in
-the laurels that had been won at Rolica and
-Vimiera&mdash;hopes many were destined never to
-realize; for like the thousands who, elsewhere,
-were marching under Moore and others, towards
-Castile and Leon, full of youth and health,
-joy and spirit, many were doomed but to suffer
-and die, unhonoured and unurned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Portugal, as we have stated, having been
-rescued from the grasp of the French by the treaty
-of Cintra, and Sir John Moore having been
-ordered to advance into Spain, notification came
-that a fresh force from Britain, under the orders
-of Sir David Baird, would land at Corunna, to
-co-operate with him. Thus the troops on board
-the little fleet in Maciera Bay were ordered at
-once to cross the Tagus, traverse Portugal, and
-join him on the frontiers&mdash;a march of more than
-one hundred and twenty miles, in a land where
-the art of road-making had died out with the
-Romans.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this time the British forces in the Peninsula
-numbered forty-eight thousand three hundred
-and forty-one, bayonets and sabres.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 15th of the next month the French in
-Spain, commanded by the Emperor in person
-made a grand total of three hundred and
-thirty-five thousand two hundred and twenty-three
-men, with upwards of sixty thousand horses;
-yet, with hearts that knew no fear, our soldiers
-marched to begin that struggle so perilous and
-unequal, but so glorious in the end!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap09"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IX.
-<br /><br />
-PORTALEGRE.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "You ask what's campaigning? As out the truth must,<br />
- 'Tis a round of complaining, vexation, disgust,<br />
- Night marches and day, in pursuit of our foes,<br />
- Up hill or down dale, without prog or dry clothes;<br />
- And to add to our pleasure in every shape,<br />
- The French give us doses of round shot and grape."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Military Panorama</i>, vol. ii.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-On the evening of the 11th October, the armed
-guerillas who hovered on the wooded mountains
-which look down on the rough old winding
-Roman highway that leads from the dilapidated
-citadel of Crato to Portalegre, saw the glitter of
-arms in the yellow sunshine, the flashing of
-polished barrels and bright bayonets, and the
-waving of uncased colours, amid the clouds of
-rolling dust that betoken the march of troops;
-and ere long, the same picturesque gentry, in
-their mantles, sombreros, and sheepskin zamarras,
-might have heard the martial rattle of the British
-drum, and the shrill notes of the fife, together
-with wilder strain of the Scottish bagpipe,
-echoing between the green and fertile ranges of the
-sierra that there forms the northern boundary of
-Alentejo, and the sides of which are clothed in
-many places by groves of olive, laurel and orange
-trees; but from the latter the golden fruit had
-long since been gathered, ere it was quite ripe,
-to save it alike from the marauding soldiery of
-friend and foe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Covered with the dust of a march of twenty
-miles from the rustic village of Gaviao, they
-were our old friends of the 25th, the Highlanders,
-and Warriston's detachment, that were
-now approaching the head-quarters of the
-division to which they were to be attached.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On this route from the Bay of Maciera,
-Quentin had undergone all the misery of a
-soldier's life during the wet season in Portugal,
-where the towns were then in ruins and desolate,
-the country utterly destroyed, and where every one
-who was not in arms seemed to have fled towards
-the coast, for, like the breath of a destroying
-angel, the armies of France had passed over the
-entire length of the land from Algarve to Galicia,
-laying all desolate in that wicked spirit of waste
-which has been so peculiar to the French soldier
-in all ages.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Each day, in lieu of the old Scottish reveille
-welcoming the morning, Quentin had heard the
-sharp note of the warning bugle, or of the drummer
-beating hastily the <i>générale</i>, through the ruined
-streets of Santarem, of Abrantes or elsewhere;
-through the equally silent lines of tents when
-they encamped on the mountains, or the
-miserable bivouac when they halted in some wild
-place where whilom maize or Indian corn grew,
-summoning the drowsy and weary soldiers to their
-ranks for the monotonous march of another day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From the bare boards, the hard-tiled floor, or
-perhaps the cold ground, whereon our volunteer
-had slept with his knapsack for a pillow, he had
-been roused by the voices of the sergeant-major, or
-Buckle the adjutant, shouting in the grey
-morning, "Fall in, 25th&mdash;stand to your arms&mdash;turn
-out the whole!" while the rain that swept in
-sheet-like torrents along the desolate streets, and
-the gale that tore in angry gusts among the
-ruined gables and shattered windows, formed no
-pleasant prelude to a day's march that was to
-be begun without other breakfast, perhaps, than
-a ration biscuit soaked in the half-stale fluid
-that filled his wooden canteen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In camp, the tents were made to hold twelve
-soldiers each; but some of these were always on
-duty. All lay with their feet to the pole and
-their heads to the wall or curtain. Each man's
-pack was his pillow, and each slept, if he could,
-with a blanket half under and half over him.
-The rain always sputtered and filtered through
-in their faces, till the drenched canvas tightened,
-and the water was carried off by a little circular
-trench.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin shared Askerne's tent with his two
-subalterns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the night would pass, till the cry of
-"Rouse!" rang along the lines, and the bugles
-sounded the assembly, when the blankets were
-rolled up and strapped to the knapsacks; the wet
-tents were struck and folded; the pegs and
-mallets replaced in their bags, and the troops
-prepared to march in the grey morning haze,
-weary, wet, stiff and sore, by reposing on the
-damp sod.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin had always fancied a bivouac a species
-of military pic-nic, minus the ladies, pink cream,
-and champagne; but on the first night he lay in
-one, when the baggage guard was lagging in the
-rear and no tents were pitched, as he was drenched
-in a soaking blanket under the cold October
-wind that swept down the rocky sierra, he
-began to have serious doubts whether man was
-really a warm-blooded animal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ugh!" grumbled Monkton on this night,
-"who, with brains in his head-piece, would
-become a soldier?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You remind me," said Askerne, as he shook
-the water for the twentieth time from his bear-skin
-cap, "of a story I have heard of Maitland,
-one of our early colonels who served on the staff
-of the Duke of Marlborough. It was at Blenheim,
-I think, when he was riding along the line
-accompanied by the colonel and another aide-de-camp,
-whose head was suddenly shattered by a cannon
-shot from the Bavarian artillery. Perceiving
-that Maitland looked long and fixedly at the
-fallen man, Marlborough said angrily&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Colonel Maitland, what the devil are you
-wondering at?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Simply, that how a man possessed of so much
-brains as our poor friend, ever became a soldier,'
-replied Maitland, and the phlegmatic victor of
-Blenheim and Ramilies smiled as he rode on."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then the dinner during a halt on the march
-was not tempting, and the cuisine was so decidedly
-bad that even Monkton could not joke about it.
-The slices of beef fried in a camp-kettle lid, or
-broiled on an old ramrod&mdash;beef that had never
-been <i>cold</i> (the miserable ration bullocks after being
-goaded in rear of the troops for miles by muleteers
-and mounted guerillas, being shot, flayed
-and cut up the moment the drum beat to prepare
-for dinner) was always tough as india-rubber;
-while the soup which the soldiers tried
-to make with a few handfuls of rice and the
-bones of the said bullocks, lacked only the snails
-mentioned by Peregrine Pickle, to make it
-resemble the famous black broth of the Spartans.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A little more of this common-place detail, and
-then we have done.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For all Quentin suffered, the novelty of
-treading a new soil and all the varied scenery of
-Portugal could scarcely make amends; yet there
-were times when he could not but view with
-interest and pleasure the old arches and aqueducts,
-the stony skeletons of departed Rome, the ruined
-amphitheatres and temples, especially that of
-Diana which Quintus Sertorius built at Evora,
-while remains of baths and cisterns, columns,
-capitals and cornices of marble and jasper lying
-prostrate among the reeds and weeds in wild
-places, made him think of Dominie Skaill and
-the rapture with which he would have lingered
-over them. Then there were the beautiful
-vineyards, the verdant valleys where the lemon and
-orange trees grew; the steep frowning sierras,
-wild and barren, but majestic; the fertile plain
-overlooked by the thirteen spires of Santarem;
-and the old Roman bridges, spanning rivers that
-rushed in foam down the granite steeps to mingle
-with the Tagus.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Little convents perched in solitudes where the
-French had failed to penetrate, and where now
-the bells rang in welcome to the British; tiny
-wayside chapels and holy wells, presided over by
-local saints; wooden crosses and cairns that
-marked where some paisano or guerilla had been
-shot by the French&mdash;green mounds that marked
-where the French, butchered in their turn, had
-been buried without coffin or shroud, all seemed
-to tell of the new and strange land he traversed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though stout and hardy, poor Quentin's powers
-of endurance were sorely taxed. In his
-knapsack were all the necessaries of a soldier&mdash;to wit,
-one pair of shoes and long gaiters of black cloth,
-shirts, socks, and mitts; a forage cap, brushes,
-black-ball, pipeclay, hair-ribbon, and leather.
-He had to carry a blanket and great-coat, a
-canteen of wood for water, and a canvas havresack
-for provisions was slung over the right shoulder;
-a pouch with sixty rounds of ball cartridge was
-over the left; add to these his musket, bayonet,
-belts, and grenadier cap, and the reader may
-believe that the poor volunteer felt life a burden
-before he saw the hill and spires of Portalegre.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Stiff, sore, and weary, on halting he was unable
-to remove his trappings, or even to take off his
-cap without the assistance of his servant; and he
-usually found himself all over livid marks, as if
-he had been beaten about the back and shoulders
-with a stick. Not the least of his discomforts
-was to march under the hot morning sun after a
-night of rain, with two wet pipeclayed cross-belts
-smoking upon his chest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, if Flora Warrender or Lady Rohallion
-could see me now!" he would think, when, at the
-close of each day's march, he lay breathless and
-powerless on the floor of a billet, or the sod of a
-camp, or whatever it might chance to be!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Use, however, becomes second nature, and
-after a time Quentin learned to carry all his
-harness with ease, or ceased to feel it a burden.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Châteaux en Espagne!" He was a skilful
-builder of such edifices, and had often erected
-one of great comfort and magnificence for
-himself; but he found a difficulty in dreaming of
-them while lying under a drenched blanket, or in
-a tent on the sides of which the rain was rushing
-like Rounceval peas, while he had only a knapsack
-for a pillow, and Brown Bess for a bedfellow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the Highland regiments the gentlemen
-volunteers carried simply a claymore and dirk;
-in other regiments generally a musket only; but
-Cosmo was resolved to <i>grind</i> Quentin to the
-utmost; thus he compelled the poor lad to carry
-all the trappings of the stoutest grenadier.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Rowland Askerne, who loved the lad for his
-unrepining temper, manly spirit, and gentleness,
-and who, like the entire regiment, saw how
-studiously the haughty colonel ignored his existence,
-was unremitting in kindness to him; and Monkton
-never ceased to encourage him in his own
-fashion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, well," he would say, "it's queer work
-just now, of course; but some of these fine days
-you will receive a parchment from the king,
-greeting you as his 'trusty and well-beloved,'
-appointing you ensign to that company, whereof,
-I hope, Richard Monkton, Esquire, is captain;
-so take courage, Kennedy, my boy!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He strove to do so, but felt thankful with all
-his heart for the prospect of a few days' halt, as
-the regiment approached the western gate of
-Portalegre, where a captain's guard of Cazadores
-was under arms as the Borderers marched in with
-bayonets fixed and colours flying, their band
-playing General Leslie's march, "All the Blue
-Bonnets are bound for the Border," since 1689
-their invariable quick step. And now its lively
-measure woke all the echoes of this singularly
-picturesque old Portuguese town, which crowns
-the summit of a hill, where its narrow, dark, and
-tortuous streets, with quaint mansions overhanging
-the roadway, are surrounded by an old wall,
-among the ruins of which may be traced the
-foundations of twelve great towers, and a castle
-where, as the monks tell us, dwelt Lysias the
-son of Bacchus!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The town was crowded by the regiments composing
-the division of Sir John Hope; thus, the
-deserted convents, the two hospitals, and even
-the episcopal palace, had all become temporary
-barracks; and now in the stately chambers
-where the Bishops of Lisbon and the Counts of
-Gaviao, of old the Lords of Portalegre, with their
-white-robed prebends, or their steel-clad titulados,
-held their chapters and courts, and where a
-hundred years before the period of our story,
-Philip, Duke of Avignon, received the submission
-of the ancient city, the rollicking Irishman sung
-"Garryowen" as he pipeclayed his belts or
-polished his musket; the grave and stern Scottish
-sergeant daily and nightly called the roll, and
-John Bull in his shirt sleeves or shell jacket
-might be seen cooking his rations under a splendid
-marble mantelpiece, which bore the bishop's
-mitre and the count's coronet, with the knightly
-<i>paete gules</i> of Christ, and the green <i>fleur de lis</i>
-of St. Avis, while the fuel was supplied by the
-cedar wood of fine old cabinets, or gilded
-furniture that had survived the sojourn of the
-Marshal Duke d'Abrantes and his suite in the
-same place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The grenadiers of the Borderers were all
-billeted in a narrow and antique street, which was
-overshadowed by the vast façade of the cathedral;
-and there, from the open lattices of their room
-(in a house the proprietors of which were either
-dead or had fled) Askerne and Quentin sat
-smoking cigars and enjoying some of the purple
-wine of Oporto, from the cool, vaulted <i>bodega</i> of
-a neighbouring wine-house, and with their feet
-planted on a charcoal <i>brasero</i>, they felt, on the evening
-after their arrival, for the first time, that they
-were somewhat at home and could take their
-ease, with belts off and coats unbuttoned. And
-so they sat and watched, almost in silence, the
-swift-coming shadows of the October evening as
-they deepened in the quaint vista of the old
-Portuguese street, where the costumes were so
-striking and singular; the citizen who seemed to
-have no lawful occupation but smoking, in his
-ragged mantle and broad sombrero; a secular
-priest with his ample paunch and shovel-shaped
-chapeau; a white-robed Carmelite or grey
-Franciscan, flitting, ghostlike, amid the masses of
-red coats who lounged about the doors and
-arcades, most of them smoking, and all chatting
-and laughing, till the stars came out, when the
-bugles would sound tattoo, and when all loiterers
-would have to turn in, save the quarter guards
-and inlying picquet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These were ordered to be of considerable
-strength, as a numerous band of homeless and
-lawless Spanish and Portuguese guerillas, under
-a runaway student of Salamanca, named Baltasar
-de Saldos, hovered among the hills. This band
-was of somewhat dubious loyalty, as the members
-of it, more than once, had scuffles with the
-British foraging parties, and even fired on
-them&mdash;the alliance between this country and Spain
-being so recent, that after the long and vexatious
-wars of the preceding century, the people could
-not understand it.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap10"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER X.
-<br /><br />
-COSMO'S CRAFT.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Small occasions in the path of life,<br />
- Lie thickly sown, while great are rarely scattered.<br />
- * * * * *<br />
- Shame seize me, if I would not rather be<br />
- The man thou art, than court-created chief<br />
- Known only by the dates of his promotion!"<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;JOANNA BAILLIE.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The two first days after Quentin's arrival in
-Portalegre, were varied by the flogging of soldiers
-for marauding, when they were four months in
-arrears of pay. One of these men was flogged
-by tap of drum; a measure by which half a
-minute was allowed to elapse between each stroke,
-greatly enhancing the agony; and this process
-went on during more than four hundred lashes,
-till the bare muscles were seen to quiver under
-the cats, and then he was removed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the second day, the troops that had
-recently arrived from England, together with a
-battalion of Cazadores from Lisbon, were paraded
-outside the walls of the little mountain city for
-the inspection of the lieutenant-general commanding.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Their new uniform and accoutrements contrasted
-strongly with the ragged, patched, and
-war-worn trappings of the corps which had
-served during the preceding campaign, and had
-so rapidly cleared Portugal of the French.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Cazadores were active, bustling, and soldier-like
-little Portuguese light infantry, all clad in
-dark green uniforms of London make, with smart
-shakos, having green plumes. Their ranks were
-ever redolent of garlic and tobacco, to all who
-had the misfortune to march to leeward of them,
-while their snubby round noses, thick lips, and
-dark complexions reminded all who saw them
-of their Moorish descent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Prior to the infusion of British officers among
-them, the Portuguese soldiery were every way
-contemptible. Murphy tells us that in the
-beginning of the war in 1762, "their army was in a
-most wretched state, scarcely amounting to ten
-thousand men, most of whom were peasants,
-without uniform or arms, asking charity, while
-the officers served at the tables of their colonels;"
-and matters were not much improved when Sir
-Arthur Wellesley arrived to uphold the interests
-of the House of Braganza, after which he had few
-better or braver troops than the Lusitanian Legion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The general of division, Sir John Hope of
-Rankeillour, took particular notice of the
-Borderers, having been colonel of the regiment
-about fifteen years before. He had been wounded
-on the Helder, like Cosmo Crawford, and had
-served in the first campaign of Egypt with great
-distinction.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He complimented Cosmo in strong terms upon
-the appearance and discipline of the battalion,
-both of which high qualities the Master had not
-the candour or the generosity to say were due
-to the enthusiasm, exertions, and genuine <i>esprit
-de corps</i> of Major Middleton; and as Sir John
-rode along the line, wearing a glazed cocked-hat,
-an old telescope slung across his well-worn red
-coat, the lace and aiguilette of which were frayed
-by service and blackened by gunpowder, he
-looked a thorough soldier. He was tall, well
-formed, and in the prime of life, being in his
-forty-second year; and Quentin regarded him
-with deep interest, for he was informed by Askerne,
-in a whisper, that "Sir John had joined the
-army as a volunteer in his fifteenth year, prior
-to his first commission as a cornet, in the 10th
-Light Dragoons."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As we are about to enter Spain by the way
-of Badajoz," said the general to Cosmo, after the
-troops had been dismissed to their quarters, "I
-am particularly anxious to open a communication
-with El Estudiente."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is this a town which lies near it?" asked Cosmo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, no. El Estudiente is a man,' replied
-Sir John, laughing, while the staff joined,
-as in duty bound, and Cosmo reddened with
-anger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who, or what is he?" he asked, coldly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A guerilla chief&mdash;Baltasar de Saldos, a
-personage of savage character, and very doubtful
-reputation."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You recommend him badly, general."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But truly, though."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In what way can I assist you in the matter?"
-asked Cosmo, with increasing coldness of manner,
-as he began to fear that the unpleasant duty of
-opening the "communication" in question, was,
-perhaps, to devolve on him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I wish a messenger to convey a despatch
-from me to him&mdash;one of yours&mdash;not an officer,
-whose life would be too valuable; but if you
-have any private, a troublesome fellow, worthless,
-frequently in the defaulters' book&mdash;you
-understand me, colonel?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I think that I do, Sir John," replied Cosmo,
-whose green eyes shrunk as he inserted his glass
-in one, and gazed at the general, keenly; "but is
-the risk of delivering a message so great in
-Portugal, after you have cleared it of the French?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Stragglers, orderlies, and solitary individuals
-are at all times liable to be cut off, we scarcely
-know by whom, the country is so lawless; but
-this fellow, Baltasar, is somewhere among the
-mountains near Herreruela, beyond the Spanish
-frontier; and to say nothing of the wolves that
-infest the wild places hereabouts, there are three
-chances to one against any messenger returning
-alive, even after he has delivered our letter to
-Baltasar."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A lively duty!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Portugal and Spain are not without traitors
-in the French interest ready to assassinate a
-redcoat; others are ready to do it merely to procure
-his clothing and arms, and some of the low
-wayside tabernas are kept by people who would cut
-any man's throat for the chance of finding half
-a vintin in his pocket. Then there are the hazards
-of being hanged as a spy by the French, of
-losing one's way among the wild, depopulated
-Sierras, and dying there of starvation, or being
-devoured by the black wolves, or by those wild
-dogs, of which the Duke of Abrantes strove in
-vain to clear the country."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A pleasant country for a sketching tour!"
-said Cosmo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yet Sir John Moore has distinctly ordered
-me to communicate with these guerillas, to
-strengthen us and cover the flank of our advance
-towards the Guadiana, as it is not impossible
-that the enemy may push forward from Valladolid,
-and cut off our communication with the
-main body of the army, and as scouts and
-sharpshooters, the guerillas are invaluable."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If your messenger did not return, what
-proof would you have that he had ever delivered
-your letter?" asked Cosmo, with one of his
-strange smiles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The presence of Baltasar's armed guerillas
-on our flank as we advance through Spanish
-Estremadura, would be all the reply I wish.
-Colonel Napier, of the Highlanders, has said
-that he would rather go in person than sacrifice
-one of his men; but&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am not so chivalrous," said Cosmo, laughing,
-as he shrugged his shoulders and toyed with
-his gathered reins alternately on each side of his
-charger's silky mane; "I have a fellow whom I
-can very well spare, one who is a nuisance to the
-regiment in general, and to me in particular&mdash;one
-of whom I should like to be handsomely rid: he
-is clever, sharp, and resolute, too," he added, as
-he and the general rode slowly side by side into
-Portalegre.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He is the very kind of man I require; but,"
-said the worthy general, hesitating and colouring,
-"it is not a duty on which I should wish to
-risk a valuable life&mdash;you understand me, Colonel
-Crawford?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, perfectly; when will your letter be
-ready?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Before sunset; but what is the name of the
-bearer, for however numerous his chances of
-failure may be, I must duly accredit him in my
-mission to the guerilla chief&mdash;those Spaniards
-are so suspicious."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cosmo took one of his own calling cards, and
-pencilling on it the name of Quentin Kennedy,
-handed it to the unsuspecting general.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"His rank?" asked the latter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Volunteer," was the curt reply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A volunteer, Colonel Crawford!" exclaimed
-the general; "I spoke of some private soldier,
-whose conduct made him worthless. The bearing
-of a volunteer must be careful&mdash;his honour
-spotless."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Such are not his," said Cosmo, angrily, for
-this cross-questioning fretted his fierce and crafty
-temper; "and I have said that I wish to be
-handsomely rid of him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Very good&mdash;you are the best judge of how
-to handle your command; but if in your place,
-I should send him back to his friends in Britain."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The letter," began Cosmo impatiently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My orderly will bring it to your quarters
-within an hour. Adieu, colonel."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To-night, then, perhaps to-night!" muttered
-Cosmo, half aloud, through his clenched teeth,
-and with a sombre smile, as he saluted the
-general and rode off in search of Buckle, his
-adjutant. "A volunteer must always be the
-first man for duty; I swore to work this fellow
-to an oil, and egad! the game for him is only
-beginning. Good! to think of the simple
-general baiting the very trap into which he is
-to fall. Once handsomely rid of him, I shall
-deceive the old folks at home anew, and pretend
-that the letters in which I mentioned that he
-was serving under me have <i>miscarried</i>."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He cast one of his sinister smiles after Sir
-John Hope, and spurred his horse impatiently
-up one of the streets of Portalegre, towards the
-Bishop's palace, where his quarters were, and
-where the colours of the Borderers were lodged
-under a sergeant's guard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sir John Hope was that distinguished Scottish
-officer, who, after Waterloo, was created Lord
-Niddry for his many brilliant services, and who,
-two years subsequently, succeeded to the old
-Earldom of Hopetoun. Concerning him a very
-singular story is still current in the French
-army.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is to the effect, that the eldest son of
-Marshal Ney challenged the Duke of Wellington
-to a mortal duel, for his alleged share in his
-father's death&mdash;the place of combat to be any
-spot in Europe he chose to select. On
-receiving this cartel, the Duke is said to have
-replied:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My life belongs to my country and must
-not be lightly risked in trifles!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On this, one of his aides-de-camp, the Scottish
-Earl of Hopetoun, whom he had always mentioned
-with honour in his despatches, accepted
-the challenge in his place, and leaving Scotland,
-without bidding adieu to his Countess, Louisa
-Wedderburn, or their eleven children, repaired
-straight to Paris, and met young Ney on the
-Bois de Boulogne, where they fired at once.
-The story adds, that Hopetoun fell pierced by
-a ball in the head, in the very place where he
-had been wounded during the famous sortie
-from Bayonne in February, 1814, and that as
-he fell, young Ney flung his pistol in the air,
-exclaiming&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sacré Dieu! the Prince of Moskwa is revenged!"*
-</p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* Unfortunately for this story (which contains some strange
-grains of truth, and which was told me by the Lieutenant
-of Marshal St. Arnaud's Spain troop in the Crimea) the
-gallant Earl of Hopetoun died in his bed, from natural causes,
-at Paris, on the 27th August, 1823.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap11"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XI.
-<br /><br />
-QUENTIN DEPARTS.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Would ye my death? Can that avail you?<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or life? what life will ye to give?<br />
- For this existence, grief-embittered,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Doth hourly die, yet dying live.<br />
- My sorrows, if ye fain would slay me,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Your blows so fierce, so fast to deal,<br />
- It needs not: one the least, the lightest,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would task endurance strong as steel."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Portuguese of Rodriguez Lobo.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-On the same evening when Quentin received the
-despatch from the adjutant, with instructions to
-start forthwith by the nearest road that led
-towards the frontier, Monkton was preparing to
-give a little supper in his billet, and was
-superintending the cooking thereof in person.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The house he occupied had belonged to some
-titulado of Portugese Estremadura. The ceilings
-were lofty, and the cornices of the heavy and
-florid Palladian style were elaborately gilded,
-and everywhere the green fleur-de-lis of St. Avis
-(an order founded by Alphonso, for defence
-against the Moors, from whom he took
-Santarem and Lisbon) was reproduced among the
-decorations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The floors were of polished oak; the furniture,
-in many instances richly gilded, was all
-of crimson velvet stuffed with down, and the
-cabinets of ebony were covered with carvings,
-some representing the past discoveries, victories,
-and glories, real or imaginary, of the kings of
-Portugal. Many fine paintings bore marks of
-additions received from the French in the shape
-of bayonet stabs and bullet holes, with finishing
-touches in burnt cork, by which Venuses and
-Madonnas were liberally supplied with moustachios
-and so forth; while the frescoes bore such
-lovely delineations of fair-skinned, golden-haired,
-and ripe-lipped goddesses and nymphs, that, as
-Monkton said, "they made one long for pagan
-times again." Over a Venus being attired in
-scanty garments by some completely nude graces,
-was the motto "<i>Si non caste tantum modo caute</i>."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Which means?" asked Askerne, who had been
-trying to make it out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In good Portuguese, 'If you can't be chaste,
-at least be cautious,' an old-fashioned aphorism,"
-said Monkton.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor Portugal!" said Askerne, thoughtfully;
-"she is left now but with mere traditions of her
-past; a country without kings, warriors, poets
-or painters. The land of Camoens, of Rodriguez
-Lobo, of Antonio Ferreria, Bernardez, the captive
-of Alcazalquiver, of Andrade de Cominha,
-cannot now produce one patriotic song!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In one corner of the apartment a dark stain
-on the floor showed where blood had been lately
-shed, and there were the marks of a woman's
-hand upon the wall and oak boards, as if she had
-been dragged from place to place, thus telling of
-some terrible outrage&mdash;an episode of its recent
-occupants, the French.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now, what the devil is the meaning of
-this?" asked Monkton, looking up from his
-culinary operations as Buckle entered; "Kennedy
-can't be the first man for duty."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, he is not," replied Buckle, curtly, for
-having on his sword and gorget, he felt and
-looked official.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then why the&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why select him, you would ask, with the
-addition of some unpleasant adjective?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Because a volunteer is always the first man
-for any duty that is dangerous."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And is this duty so?" asked Quentin, with
-very excusable interest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Undoubtedly&mdash;there is no use concealing the
-fact, as foreknowledge will make you wary; and
-if successful, it will be reported favourably to
-head-quarters, 'that negotiations with the
-formidable guerilla chief&mdash;what's his infernal
-name&mdash;have been honourably concluded, through the
-courage and diplomatic skill of that very
-distinguished volunteer, Mr. Quentin Kennedy, now
-serving with the 25th Foot, whom I recommend
-most warmly to your Royal Highness's most
-earnest and favourable consideration'&mdash;that is the
-sort of thing," added the adjutant, putting aside
-his sword and belt, as the odour of the cooking
-reached his olfactory nerves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You think, Mr. Buckle, that the colonel
-will recommend me thus?" asked Quentin, his
-young heart throbbing with delight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And Sir John Hope, too&mdash;of course; they
-can do nothing else," was the confident reply,
-for the adjutant believed in what he said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hope, pride, and enthusiasm swelled up in
-the poor lad's breast as the adjutant spoke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah," thought he, "I should have offered my
-hand to Cosmo, and shall do so when I return."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Congratulate me, major," he exclaimed,
-hastening to Middleton, who entered at that
-moment; "I have been chosen for an important
-duty already."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So I have heard&mdash;so I have heard," he replied,
-quickly, shaking his head and his pigtail with it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And what do you think of it? Here is the
-despatch, addressed 'Al Senor Don Baltasar de
-Saldos, Herreruela, <i>viâ</i> Valencia de Alcantara.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are particularly to avoid that town,"
-said Buckle, emphatically.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Because a French garrison occupy it&mdash;some
-of General de Ribeaupierre's brigade."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is a little way across the frontier," said
-Quentin; "so, my dear sir, what do you think
-of the duty?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Think&mdash;that the whole affair is a cruelty and
-a shame!" exclaimed the old major, bluntly.
-"I've been looking at the map, and see that the
-place is some miles beyond the frontier&mdash;in the
-enemy's country, in fact."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Come, major, don't discourage him," said
-Buckle; "he must go now, and there is an end of it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I wish there was. Does he go in uniform?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; it is safer."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In mufti he might be taken for a spy."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Uniform did not protect my poor friend André
-of the 26th, when taken on a similar mission."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Come, come, I'll bet you a pony apiece that
-Kennedy comes off with flying colours," said
-Monkton. "Some more butter, Askerne&mdash;where's
-the pepper-box?&mdash;Quentin is a devilish
-sharp fellow, and always keeps his weather eye
-open, as the sailors say."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What is the distance between this and
-Herreruela?" asked Askerne, who had hitherto
-remained silent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"About thirty British miles, as a crow flies."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And he is to proceed on foot?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But he can do so at leisure&mdash;there is no
-word of breaking up our cantonments here yet."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But in this country miles seem to vary very
-much, Mr. Buckle," said Quentin; "when am I
-supposed to be back?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Back?" repeated Buckle, rather puzzled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Excuse my asking," said the lad, modestly; "but
-I am so ignorant of the country, and so forth."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True, Kennedy. Well, supposing that you
-see this Baltasar de Saldos&mdash;fine melodramatic
-name, isn't it?&mdash;he is doubtless a fellow in a
-steeple-crowned hat and seven-league boots, all
-stuck over pistols and daggers&mdash;supposing you
-sec him at once, there is nothing to prevent you
-being back in six days, at latest."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So we are about to make a night of it, the
-first jolly one we have had since landing at the
-mouth of the Maciera, and, damme, here is poor
-Quentin going to leave us!" said Monkton, who
-in his shirt sleeves was devilling a huge dish of
-kidneys over a brasero, for the orthodox fuel of
-which (charcoal) he had substituted the shutter
-of a window, torn down and broken to pieces.
-"One glass more of Oporto for the gravy,
-another dash of pepper, and the banquet is
-complete. You must have supper with us to-night,
-ere you go, Quentin."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The same readily found fuel was roasting
-on the marble slab of the richly carved fireplace,
-a goodly row of sputtering castanos, which
-were superintended by Rowland Askerne.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where is Pimple to-night?" he asked,
-looking up.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"With Colville, on the quarter guard," said
-Monkton; "and, rosaries and wrinkles! where
-do you think they are stationed?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By your exclamation, opposite a convent,
-probably."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Exactly&mdash;el Convento de Santa Engracia;
-but it hasn't a window to the street, so they
-might as well have the wall of China to
-contemplate."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A borrachio skin of Herrera del Duque (the
-famous wine of the Badajoz district), of which
-Monkton had somehow become possessed, lay
-on the beautiful marqueterie table, like a bloated
-bagpipe, while tin canteens, silver-rimmed
-drinking-horns, tea-cups, everything but crystal vessels,
-were ranged round to imbibe the contents from.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The plates and other appurtenances of the
-table were of the same varied description, and
-were furnished by the guests themselves, as the
-French had carried off or destroyed nearly
-everything in the house. A canteen of brandy and a
-loaf of fine white bread completed the repast, to
-which all brought good humour and appetites
-that were quite startling, better than any they
-could ever procure for the dainties of the
-mess-table at Colchester.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Servants were entirely dispensed with; thus
-the conversation was free and unrestrained, like
-the jests and laughter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I can scarcely assure myself that you are
-actually going to-night," said the major to
-Quentin; "the whole arrangement is a black,
-burning shame; an older man, one of more
-experience, one who has been longer in the country
-and had served the campaign in Portugal, should
-have been sent on this duty."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But the greater is my chance of honour!"
-said Quentin, cheerfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And peril too. Your health&mdash;and success,
-boy! This wine is excellent, Monkton&mdash;but the
-service is going to the devil! we have never been
-the men we were since the abolition of hair-powder
-and pigtails, brigadier wigs and Nivernois
-hats! Think of a garrison court-martial
-according four hundred and odd lashes to a poor
-devil yesterday, for borrowing a loaf of bread
-like this, when we are all so far in arrears of
-pay; and yet, I remember when we ate Jack
-Andrews' baby in America, men were tucked up
-to the next tree for just as little."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Jack Andrews' baby," said Quentin, looking
-up from his devilled kidneys at the familiar name.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is an old regimental story," said the
-major, laughing, as he filled his horn with wine
-from the gushing borrachio; "it happened when
-we were in garrison at Fort St. John on the
-Richelieu River (a place I have often told you
-about); provisions were scarce, for the Yankees
-had intercepted all our supplies, so that at times
-we were literally starving, while to conciliate
-the colonists, strict orders were issued against
-plundering. It was as much as your life was
-worth if the provost marshal caught you stealing
-anything, even a kiss from a girl in Vermont
-or New York, so such a thing as levanting with
-a sucking-pig or a turkey-poult, was not to be
-thought of even in our wildest dreams: moreover
-they would not have <i>sold</i> a chicken for thrice
-its weight in gold, to a red-coat!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Some weeks passed over thus; we were
-getting very lanky and lean, and though our lovely
-countenances were ruddied by the American
-frost, we were always hungry, always thirsty, and
-longed in our day-dreams for a cooper of the
-old mess port, or a devilled drumstick; but these
-were only to be had at the head-quarters of the
-Borderers and Cameronians, then far away in
-the Jerseys, in pursuit of the rebels, under Lord
-Stirling; and we often shivered with hunger as
-well as with cold under the ice-covered roofs of
-our wooden barracks at night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Lord Rohallion of ours, had a servant named
-Jack Andrews, a knowing old file, from his own
-place in Carrick, who contrived to make off with
-a sheep. How or where Jack did it, the Lord
-only knows, and we never enquired; but the
-owner, a Pennsylvanian quaker, made an outcry
-about it, and the Provost's guard were speedily
-on poor Jack's track with the gallows rope.
-A stab with a bayonet in the throat soon silenced
-the sheep, and Jack brought it under his greatcoat
-to our quarters, and while the provost, with
-Simon Pure, was overhauling the soldiers'
-barrack, we tucked up the spoil in a cradle, with
-a blanket over it and a muslin cap round its
-head. We set a piper's wife to rock it, while
-Jack pretended to make caudle at the fire, and
-in this occupation they were found, when the
-provost came in, intent on death, and
-Broadbrim on retribution.
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Hush-a-by, baby, on the tree-top,<br />
- When the wind blows the cradle will rock,"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-sung the piper's wife, patting the sheep tenderly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Hush,' said Jack to the intruders; 'don't
-stir for the life that is in you!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Why&mdash;what is the matter with the baby?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'It's either measles or small-pox; we don't
-know which,' said Jack.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Yea verily&mdash;aye&mdash;ho, hum,' snivelled the
-Quaker.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'All right,' said the provost, as he withdrew
-with his guard to search elsewhere. The sheep
-was soon cut up, divided, and a sumptuous
-supper Major André, Rohallion and a select few
-of us had that night, and ere morning all traces
-of it had disappeared, save the skin, which, to
-the rage of the provost, was found concealed,
-no one knew by whom, between the sheets of
-his bed. Long after the fort was taken by the
-Yankees, and none had a fear of coming to the
-drumhead, the whole story came out, and many
-a laugh we had at the provost marshal and
-Jack Andrews' baby."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The names mentioned thus incidentally by the
-good major recalled so much of home and of
-old associations to Quentin, that his warm heart
-swelled with kind and affectionate memories;
-and now, when on the eve of departing from
-friends that he loved so well, and who had a
-regard so great for him&mdash;departing on a lonely
-and decidedly perilous duty&mdash;he was on the point
-of telling them the story of his earlier life, so
-that, if aught occurred to him, his military
-companions might write to Rohallion; but thoughts
-of the haughty Master chilled him, and he
-repressed the suddenly-conceived idea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now the time came when he was compelled
-to depart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had three days' cooked provisions in his
-havresack, and he had still money enough
-remaining for his wants in a land where he had
-to journey almost by stealth, and where the
-French had left so little either to buy or to sell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He took with him his great-coat and forage-cap;
-in lieu of his heavy musket, Askerne gave
-him a sword, and Middleton a pair of pistols;
-and the former accompanied him nearly two
-miles on the road from Portalegre.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You dare danger fearlessly, Quentin," said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I dare it as those who are friendless and
-alone do! The knowledge that I have few,
-perhaps none, who would really regret me, renders
-life of little value."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Come, Kennedy, egad! this bitterness is
-ungrateful," said Askerne, in a tone of reproach.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True, my friend, forgive me! I believe that
-you, at least, with Middleton and Warriston&mdash;he's
-on duty, remember me to him&mdash;Monkton,
-and a few <i>others</i> that are far, far away, have,
-indeed, a sincere regard for me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, then, how many more, or what more
-would you have? The world is not so bad
-after all," said Askerne, laughing, as he shook
-his hand warmly and bade him adieu, after giving
-him much good advice concerning prudence and
-care of consorting with strangers on the way;
-for Askerne and his brother officers saw, or
-suspected that the colonel's selection of the lad
-was the result of bad feeling; while Quentin
-deemed it but a part of his hard and venturesome
-lot as a gentleman volunteer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Often he turned to wave a farewell to
-Askerne, whose erect and soldier-like figure was
-lessening in the distance, as he walked back to
-Portalegre. At last, a turn of the road, where
-it wound suddenly between some olive groves,
-hid him entirely; and, for the first time, an
-emotion of utter loneliness came over Quentin's
-heart as he hastened towards the darkening hills.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap12"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XII.
-<br /><br />
-ANXIOUS FRIENDS.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Oh, Leolyn, be obstinately just;<br />
- Indulge no passion and deceive no trust.<br />
- Let never man be bold enough to say,<br />
- Thus, and no farther, shall my passion stray;<br />
- The first crime past compels us into more,<br />
- And guilt grows <i>fate</i>, which was but <i>choice</i> before."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;AARON HILL.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The third day and the fourth passed away at
-Portalegre; on the fifth and sixth, Major Middleton
-and others, who felt a friendly interest in
-Quentin Kennedy, began to surmise, when they
-met on the morning or evening parade, or in
-each other's billets, or so forth, that it was time
-now he had reported his return, and the good or
-bad success of his journey, to the colonel and
-general commanding the division.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Other days passed; it was whispered about
-from staff-office officials that ere long the
-division would leave Portalegre, as the whole
-army was about to advance against the enemy;
-and then Captain Askerne, Monkton, Buckle, the
-adjutant, and others, became doubly anxious
-about the lad, and were interested as much as
-men could be under their circumstances, when
-human life is deemed of so little value as it is
-when on active service and before an enemy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As for Warriston of the 94th, not being
-under the immediate command of Colonel Crawford,
-he openly and bitterly inveighed against
-"the iniquity of having sacrificed a mere youth
-in such a manner," and threatened "to bring
-the matter prominently before Sir John Moore,"
-who commanded the forces in Portugal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He has, perhaps, gone over to the enemy&mdash;a
-despatch is sometimes well paid for," said
-Cosmo, in his sneering manner, when some of
-these remarks reached him on parade, one
-morning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Impossible, my dear sir&mdash;impossible!" said
-Middleton, testily, while spurring and reining in
-his horse; "I know the lad as if he were my
-own son, and feel assured that he is the soul of
-honour; that he was all ardour for the service,
-and that he would die rather than disgrace himself."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Indeed&mdash;ah-aw&mdash;you think so?" drawled
-Cosmo, with his glass in his sinister eye, as he
-surveyed the major with a glance of somewhat
-mingled cast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I do, colonel," was the emphatic rejoinder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He has disappeared at all events&mdash;a dubious
-phrase. If the fellow has not levanted to the
-Duke of Dalmatia with General Hope's despatch,
-may his heart not have failed him? may he not
-have shown the white feather? Better men than
-he, among the Belem Rangers, have done so
-ere now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The imaginary corps referred to contained
-one of the most offensive imputations to the ears
-of Peninsula men; thus Captain Askerne exclaimed&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cowardice, Colonel Crawford&mdash;would you
-infer cowardice?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I infer nothing, gentlemen, but that better
-men than he have shown the white feather."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not in <i>the Line</i>, that I am aware of," was
-the somewhat pointed remark of Middleton;
-and Cosmo, who had lately come from the
-Guards, crimsoned with suppressed passion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A volunteer is a soldier of fortune, and none
-such can ever be a coward," said Askerne, stoutly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of course not&mdash;the idea is absurd," added
-Middleton, looking round the group of officers,
-who glanced their approval.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are warm, Major Middleton," said
-Cosmo, sternly, while his eyes gleamed with
-their most dangerous expression; "somewhat
-unnecessarily warm on this trivial subject, I
-think."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am at least honest, colonel, as he must
-be who defends the absent or the dead."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We have had enough of this&mdash;to your
-companies&mdash;fall in, gentlemen!" said the colonel,
-sternly and impatiently, as he spurred his horse,
-unsheathed his sword, and the formula of the
-parade began, after which he revenged himself
-by drilling the corps, under a drizzling rain, for
-nearly two hours, forcing Askerne's grenadiers
-to skirmish in a swamp, and making old Major
-Middleton put the battalion twice through the
-eighteen manoeuvres.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About this time a patrol of Portuguese
-cavalry found near the high road that led through
-a desert towards the Spanish frontier, the
-remains of a man, almost reduced to a skeleton,
-picked, gnawed, and torn asunder, to all
-appearance recently, by those devouring wolves and
-wild dogs which infest the mountains of the
-district.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Terrible surmises of Quentin's fate were now
-whispered among the Borderers; the officer in
-command of the patrol was closely questioned
-by Middleton, Warriston, and others; but he
-constantly stated that the victim had probably
-been stripped by robbers before being devoured,
-as nothing had been found near the remains
-that might lead to their identification, or in any
-way connect them with the missing Quentin
-Kennedy. Thus, in default of other proof, as
-time wore on, the members of the regiment made
-up their minds to consider the poor bones as
-his, and concluded that he had perished
-miserably in the wilderness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To do Cosmo Crawford justice, there were
-times when he was not without secret emotions
-of shame, and even of compunction, for the part
-he had acted to Quentin. His own conscience,
-the small still voice that would speak, could not
-acquit him; but those gleams of the better
-spirit came only briefly and at intervals, and
-such unwelcome thoughts were always eventually
-stifled by the constitutional malignity of his
-nature, and he would mutter to himself&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Pshaw! he is well away; what the devil
-was he to me, or I to him?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was while the troops were lingering at
-Portalegre and elsewhere along the Spanish frontier,
-that Lord Castlereagh's despatch, containing
-the first organized plan of the future
-campaign, arrived in Lisbon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the northern provinces of Spain, thirty-five
-thousand horse and foot were to be
-employed; ten thousand of these were to be
-embarked from British ports, and the rest to be
-drafted from our army of occupation in Portugal;
-and these were supposed to be equal to cope
-with the vast hosts pouring through the many
-passes of the Pyrenees from France and Germany,
-and those which already blackened all the plains
-of Castile and Arragon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have elsewhere mentioned the vast strength
-of the French army, whose head-quarters were at
-Vittoria.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The brave but ill-fated Sir John Moore was
-ordered to take the field without delay with the
-troops that were under his own command. Some
-fortress or city (unnamed) in Galicia, or on the
-borders of the kingdom of Leon, was to be the
-place for concentrating the whole allied armies
-of Britain, Spain, and Portugal; and his specific
-plan of operations was <i>afterwards</i> to be concerted
-with the stupid, jealous, and uncompromising
-local juntas, and the obstinate and impracticable
-Spanish generals.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These orders were perilous, loose, and vague;
-they promised nothing, but only that war at any
-hazard was to be waged in Old Castile and on
-the banks of the Ebro.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now for a time let us change the scene
-to a not less tuneful or classic locality&mdash;the
-rocky hills and heather braes of Carrick's western
-shore.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap13"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIII.
-<br /><br />
-THE PARAGRAPH.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "My kindred are dead, my love is fled;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Courage, my heart, thou canst love no more;<br />
- Pale is my cheek, my body is weak;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Courage, my heart, 'twill soon be o'er.<br />
- Dim are my eyes with tears of sorrow,<br />
- They ache for a night without a morrow!"<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;M.N.S.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-It was towards the end of the month&mdash;the last
-days of October, now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The acorns were falling from the moss-grown
-oaks, the hollies and hedge-rows were gay with
-scarlet berries and haws, the grey sea-gulls were
-often seen mingling with the black gleds and
-hoodie-crows far afield inshore. The redwing,
-the fieldfare, and the woodcock had come again
-to their old haunts on the braes of Rohallion, in
-the oakwood shaw, in the hawthorn birks that
-overhang the Girvan, and the deep carse land
-where the rushes grew and the water flowed of old.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The autumn winds, as they swept through the
-hollow glen, shook down the last brown leaves of
-the old sycamores, and the spoils of the past
-summer lay in rustling heaps about the haunted
-gate and the guns of La Bonne Citoyenne on the
-battery before the castle-keep. From the tall
-square chimneys of the old feudal stronghold on
-the storm-beaten bluff, the gudeman of Elsie
-Irvine and other fishermen from the coves, saw
-the smoke of the rousing fires ascending into the
-grey autumn sky, and the evening lights glittering
-early in the great towers, a land-mark now
-to them as it had been to their forefathers long
-ages ago, when the Scot and the Saxon found work
-nearer home for their swords than fighting for
-conquered Spain or ravaged Portugal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"People now-a-days, with the help of the
-penny-post and the telegraph, and the endless
-means of communication and of coming and
-going, are certainly able to <i>care for</i> a greater
-number of persons than they could have done a
-hundred years ago," says a recent writer in the
-"Cornhill;" but he might have said thirty years
-ago, so far as the people of Scotland are concerned.
-Thus, secluded by her own retiring habits and
-personal circumstances, as well as by those
-incident to the time, content to reside in her narrow
-circle, and chiefly among her husband's household
-and dependents, Lady Rohallion's heart yearned
-with all a mother's love for her lost protégé, the
-more, perhaps, that the cold and repulsive manner
-of her only son Cosmo had cast her warm and
-affectionate heart somewhat back, as it were,
-upon herself; though the memory of much if not
-all his shortcomings in the way of filial reverence
-and regard were now by her forgotten, or merged
-in the idea of his absence at the seat of war.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin's memory she cherished chiefly in
-silence; for, still fostering her hopes or views
-with regard to Cosmo and the wilful little heiress
-of Ardgour, she spoke of the lost one but
-reservedly, and at long intervals, to the latter;
-though, sooth to say, young Fernie of Fernwoodlee,
-a neighbouring proprietor, had become
-so frequent a visitor at the castle, that, so far as
-good looks, assiduity, and unwearying industry
-as an admirer might go, he bade fair&mdash;gossips
-said&mdash;to supplant both Quentin and the Master
-of Rohallion, for a lover lost, and another
-commencing a campaign, were just as satisfactory as
-no lover at all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was about this time that the post-bag
-brought by John Legate, the running-footman,
-from Maybole, was opened before Lord Rohallion
-by his faithful old henchman Jack Andrews, and
-emptied on the breakfast-table.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One small missive, bearing Fernwoodlee's
-crest&mdash;a fern leaf all proper&mdash;he handed to Flora,
-who coloured slightly and said it referred to a
-proposed ride as far as the ruins of Kilhenzie,
-to see the Eglinton hounds throw off, as the
-keeper had promised to find a leash of foxes in
-the cover there.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"These fox-hunting fools are beginning their
-work betimes&mdash;why, this is only October," said
-his lordship, drily; "they would be better
-employed riding in the light dragoons against the
-enemies of Europe."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pushing the rest of the letters across the table
-to Lady Rohallion, as if for perusal at her leisure,
-he opened the latest newspaper, and betook
-himself, with true military instinct, to the gazette
-and matters pertaining to the war against France
-and the Corsican, by land and sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Erelong, it was with an exclamation of
-astonishment that shook the powder from his
-venerable pigtail, that made Lady Rohallion
-permit the urn to overrun her teacup, Flora to
-start nervously, Mr. Spillsby to drop the
-egg-stand with its contents, and Jack Andrews to
-spring mechanically to "attention" on his lame
-leg, that his lordship, raising his voice to an
-unusually high pitch, read the following paragraph:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"On the 6th October, the final despatch of
-the premier reached the general commanding at
-Lisbon, and by this time the whole army will
-have been in motion across the Spanish frontier,
-to chastise the barbarian hordes of the Corsican
-tyrant, under whose sway the people of France
-and Spain alike are groaning. We rejoice to say
-that before marching from Portalegre,
-Lieutenant-General Sir John Hope of Rankeillour most
-successfully opened a communication with the
-famous guerilla, El Estudiente, a matter fully
-and finally arranged by the skill and courage of
-Mr. Quentin Kennedy, a young volunteer, then
-serving with H.M. 25th Regiment, or 'King's
-Own Borderers.'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Quentin!" exclaimed Flora, rushing behind
-Lord Rohallion's chair, her cheeks flushing red,
-as she peeped over his shoulder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Quentin Kennedy!" said Lady Rohallion, in
-a breathless voice, as she grew pale and trembled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The boy is found&mdash;found at last! There,
-read the paragraph for yourselves," said his
-lordship, flourishing the paper over his head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Lady Rohallion made many ineffectual
-efforts to do as he bid her; but her eyes were full
-of tears, and her spectacles were quite obscured.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Spillsby&mdash;Andrews, send for John Girvan:
-zounds! the 25th, too&mdash;the blessed old number!&mdash;here's
-news for him! The lost is found again!
-You'll write him, Winny&mdash;and Flora, too&mdash;gad,
-we'll all write!" continued the old Lord, in
-a very incoherent way. "The cunning rogue, to
-keep us in suspense so long, and to be wearing
-the buttons of the old Borderers all the time.
-It must be he: there can't be two Quentin
-Kennedies; oh, no&mdash;of course it must be he!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There is something strange in this," said
-Lady Rohallion, finding relief in tears; "how
-many letters, Flora, have we had from Cosmo
-since he left us?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Five."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Five letters!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"One from Colchester; others from Santarem
-and Abrantes; and two from Portalegre."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Exactly," said Lord Rohallion, on whose
-benign brow a cloud gathered; "five letters, and
-in none of them has one word escaped him
-concerning the poor lad who joined the corps before
-him&mdash;the dear old 25th, of my earliest memories.
-It is not generous, Winny; I don't envy Quentin
-his commanding officer; it shows a bad animus,
-and I am sorry our boy should behave so."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Winifred was silent, for she felt the
-truth of what her husband said; and Flora, full
-of her own joyous thoughts, was silent too.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Read over the paragraph again, Flora, darling;
-egad, I must cut it out, and send it over
-to Earl Hugh, at Eglinton;" and while Flora
-read, Rohallion walked to and fro, rubbing his
-hands with intense satisfaction and delight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But, good heavens, my lord," she suddenly
-exclaimed, while the colour left her face, "what
-is this that follows? there is here another
-paragraph, about&mdash;about&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"About what?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Poor Quentin," she added, faintly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Read it!" said Rohallion, impetuously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'We regret to have to add, it is feared that
-after accomplishing this valuable public service
-with the guerilla, our enterprising young soldier
-has fallen a sacrifice to his zeal, or the lawless
-state of the country, as&mdash;as he has not been
-heard of since.'" .....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Flora's sweet voice died away almost in a
-tremulous whisper as she read this blighting
-paragraph, which Lord Rohallion, after hastily
-snatching the paper from her, read again and
-again, with his brows deeply knit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It did not fall upon him with the crushing
-effect it had upon the two ladies, who sat silently
-weeping, for the words of the paragraph were,
-to them, terribly suggestive and vague; and now
-the old quartermaster, who had been noisily
-summoned by his veteran comrade the valet, arrived
-to join the conclave; and truly, had a thirteen-inch
-bombshell, shot from a mortar of similar
-diameter, exploded among the breakfast equipage,
-worthy John Girvan could not have seemed more
-astonished and bewildered than he did by the
-whole affair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lord Rohallion and he, as old soldiers,
-endeavoured to explain the matter away, and to
-speak from past experience of many instances
-of men reported as "missing" who always turned
-up again; newspaper paragraphs in general they
-treated with great contempt, and expressed their
-certain conviction that "by this time," no doubt,
-he had rejoined the corps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, so certain were they of this that Lord
-Rohallion desired the quartermaster to write at
-once; Flora, with charming frankness, offered to
-enclose a tiny note, and the old general wrote at
-once by the next mail to the Horse Guards,
-urging "the immediate promotion of his young
-friend to the first ensigncy at the disposal of His
-Royal Highness the Field Marshal
-Commanding-in-Chief&mdash;in the 25th Foot, if practicable."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This done, the male part of the household,
-though full of the affair, and their innumerable
-yarns of the corps, which it had called to memory,
-felt more composed on the subject. The quartermaster
-furbished up his old red coat, and remained
-to dinner: Flora's engagement to ride with young
-Fernwoodlee and the meet at Kilhenzie, were
-committed to oblivion, and were utterly forgotten,
-as she sat alone, full of thought, on the old
-mossgrown garden-seat, with the autumn leaves
-whirling round her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Through the branches of the stripped trees on
-which the rooks were cawing, the sunlight fell
-aslant upon the copper gnomon of the ancient sun
-and moon dial, which occupied the centre of the
-quaint Scoto-French garden, and round the
-pedestal of which Quentin, to please her, during the
-last spring, had trained a creeping plant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The plant was still there, but its tendrils and
-trailers were dead, withered, and yellow, and
-sadly Flora felt in her heart that she was lonely,
-and that Rohallion was now a <i>broken home</i>&mdash;broken,
-indeed, as if Death himself had been
-there!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Winifred was also alone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The noonday sun was streaming as of old into
-the yellow damask drawing-room, and the sea-coal
-fire crackled on the hearth between the delft-lined
-jambs cheerily and brightly. Before it,
-on the thick cosy rug, a sleek tom-cat sat
-winking and purring, and the favourite terrier of
-Quentin, coiled up round as a ball, was there
-too, but fast asleep beside the many-spotted
-Dalmatian dog, which always followed the
-old-fashioned family carriage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The antique ormolu clock, that ticked so loudly
-on the mantelpiece on the night when Quentin
-was rescued from the wreck, and his father's
-corpse was cast on the surf-beaten sand, and when
-he, a wailing child, was brought by Elsie Irvine
-to Rohallion, was ticking there still, quietly,
-regularly, and monotonously, and Lady Winifred
-looked at its quaint dial wistfully, as she might
-have done in the face of an old and familiar
-friend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now Quentin and her beloved and only son
-were both far, far away; both were to encounter
-the perils of war, and she might never see them
-more! How much and how many things had
-happened, she thought, and still the old clock
-ticked there monotonously, even as it had done
-when, on an evening now many, many years
-ago, she came a blooming bride to the old castle
-by the sea; and so it might continue to tick, long
-after she, and her comely and affectionate old
-Lord, lay side by side among the Crawfords of
-past centuries in the Rohallion aisle of the
-venerable kirk whose tower she could see
-terminating the woody vista of yonder lonely glen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The paragraph of the morning had called up
-a multitude of sad thoughts that had long been
-buried, and she felt melancholy, almost miserable,
-and opening her escritoire, she looked long and
-earnestly on the relics of Quentin's father&mdash;his
-commission in the French service, the letter
-in the poor man's pocket-book, and the ring that
-was taken from his finger, bearing the name of
-Josephine&mdash;the boy's mother, doubtless.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The dominie, to whom the quartermaster lost
-no time in hastening with the intelligence, like
-the old Lord, was stout in his belief that Quentin
-would, as he phrased it, "cast up again."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Disappeared," he repeated two or three
-times; "the bairn no since heard o'; the thing's
-no possible! He will, he shall return again, be
-assured, to receive his reward, for he is worthy
-of a crown of gold&mdash;worthy of it, yea, as ever
-were Manlius Torquatus or Valerius Corvus, ilk
-ane o' wham, as we are told in Livy, slew a Gaul
-in single combat."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This classic reward did not seem very probable,
-when a few weeks after, a long official letter
-was brought to Rohallion, and added greatly to
-the anxiety and perplexity of the inmates thereof.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this missive the military secretary, by
-direction of H.R.H. the Duke of York,
-"presented his compliments to Major-General Lord
-Rohallion, K.C.B., and regretted to acquaint him
-that it was impossible to entertain his request
-with regard to Mr. Quentin Kennedy, a volunteer
-with the 25th Foot, as matters had transpired
-which might render his clearance before a general
-court-martial necessary."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap14"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIV.
-<br /><br />
-THE WAYSIDE CROSS AND WELL.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "If in this exile dark and drear,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To which my fate has doomed me now,<br />
- I should unnoticed die&mdash;what tear,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What tear of sympathy will flow?<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For I have sought an exile's woe,<br />
- And fashioned my own misery;<br />
- Who then will pity me?"<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Cancionero de Amberes</i>, 1557.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-As Quentin walked on in solitude after Rowland
-Askerne left him, he could not help musing, as
-he frequently did, on the changes a short time
-had wrought in him and in his ideas. It would
-seem that from a mere day-dreaming schoolboy,
-whose most onerous purposes were to fill his
-basket with trout from the Girvan, the Doon, or
-the Lollards' Linn; to supply the cook with an
-occasional brace of ptarmigan from the oakwood
-shaw, or of blackcock from the Mains of Kilhenzie;
-from trying a pad for Flora, or culling
-the flowers which he knew she loved most, he
-had risen to be a man and a soldier, valued by
-his comrades, all officers of bravery and position,
-trusted by his superiors, and charged with a great
-and confidential duty&mdash;a portion of the vast game
-of war and politics now played by Britain for
-the deliverance of Spain; and yet, withal, he
-longed for a companion, and to hear the voice of
-a friend, for a sense of intense loneliness
-gradually stole over him as the twilight deepened,
-and the purple shadows grew more sombre on
-the hills of Portuguese Estremadura.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To Quentin it seemed that his bodily strength
-and bulk had increased, for drill and marching
-had developed every muscle to the fullest extent;
-thus he was stronger, more active and hardy
-than before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He felt too, that the time had come when
-youth was no longer a libel against him; the
-time for doing something worthy of being
-mentioned in a despatch of the commander-in-chief,
-in the government gazette, in general
-orders&mdash;something gallant, manly, and dashing;
-and that he would turn the occasion to its best
-account, and achieve something glorious, "or,"
-as romances and melo-dramas have it, "perish
-in the attempt."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If I acquit myself well in this, my first
-duty, it shall in itself prove a revenge upon
-Cosmo!" thought he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so he trod manfully and hopefully on,
-dreaming of the future, knowing but little of
-the path he was at present to pursue, and less
-of the perils and pit-falls that were around it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the evening deepened into night with
-great rapidity, for there is very little twilight
-in those regions&mdash;the mighty shadows of the
-sierra fell eastward in a sombre mass across the
-valley through which lay the road&mdash;a mere
-bridle path&mdash;towards the Spanish frontier, while
-the ranges of peaks that faced the west were
-still glowing in ruddy saffron or pale purple
-against the blue dome of the star-studded sky.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About twelve miles from Portalegre, the road
-pursued by Quentin enters a narrow gorge or
-immense chasm or cleft which rends the mountains
-from their summit to their base. Down
-the steep wall of rock on one side, a spring
-trickles for some hundred feet, and at the foot,
-near the road-way, it is received into the quaintly
-carved basin of an ancient stone fountain, behind
-which stands a memorial cross.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A niche in the shaft of the latter contains
-a little wayside altar. An image of the Madonna
-was rudely and gaudily painted in the recess,
-and before it a copper lamp was always kept
-burning. This shrine, once reputed to be of
-great sanctity, had been mutilated and its lamp
-destroyed by the French; but it had been
-replaced by another, which was always supplied
-with wick and oil by the passing muleteers,
-contrabandists, guerillas, and others.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The rays of this lamp were burning feebly
-in the vast rocky solitude, forming a strange
-and picturesque feature in the deep dark dell,
-the silence of which was broken only by the
-plash of the slender thread of liquid that filtered
-or trickled down the granite face of the
-dissevered mountain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This cross and well had been built by
-Alphonso I., in the year that he achieved his
-greatest victory over the united arms of five
-Moorish sovereigns. It had been deemed holy
-even in those days, for there he had halted and
-prayed when on the march with his mail-clad
-knights to the capture of Santarem; and an
-inscription, frequently renewed, invited the passer
-to say a prayer for the repose of his soul, and
-the souls of all the good and true Portuguese who
-drew their swords against the Moslem.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A long ray of light shed by the rising moon,
-shone down the cleft at the bottom of which the
-road lay, casting the shadows of the well and
-votive cross far along the narrow gorge. The
-thick foliage of some gigantic Portuguese laurels,
-which grew in the interstices of the rocks,
-glittered like bronze gemmed with silver sheen,
-and offered a resting place for the night; so
-Quentin, as he felt weary, crept under the
-branches, which formed a pleasant shelter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The turf below was soft and dry, and to him,
-who had slept so often on the bare earth during
-his march to the frontier, it seemed a
-comfortable couch enough. The shaft of King
-Alphonso's cross on one side and the wall of
-rock on the other protected him from prowling
-wolves in the front and rear; the stems of the
-giant laurels formed barrier on a third side, and
-the fourth, which was open, he might defend
-with his weapons if attacked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He took a draught from his canteen, which was
-filled with rum and water, and placing it under
-his head for a pillow, with his sword and loaded
-pistols ready by his side, he addressed himself
-to sleep.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The air was filled with a strange but delicious
-perfume, which came from those little aromatic
-shrubs that grow wild everywhere throughout
-Spain and Portugal. The intense stillness of
-the place, the only sounds there being the trickle
-of the far-falling water and the croakings of
-some bull-frogs among the long grass, made
-him wakeful for a time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He felt neither alarm nor anxiety, but utterly
-lonely, and he said over a prayer that in infancy
-he had often repeated at Lady Rohallion's knee;
-then something holy and placid stole over his
-heart; sleep at last closed his eyes and he
-slumbered peacefully besides the old stone cross
-of our Lady of Battles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So passed the first night of his absence from
-head-quarters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When Quentin awoke next morning after a
-long and sound slumber, the result of youth,
-high health, and the toil of the past day, though
-he had acquired all a soldier's facility for sleeping
-in strange places and strange beds, or without
-other couch than the bare sod, he was at first
-somewhat confused and puzzled on perceiving
-the bower of leaves above him, and a minute
-elapsed before he could remember where he was,
-and how he came to be roosting under those
-huge Portuguese laurels.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then the despatch rushed upon his memory;
-he searched his breast pocket, and found the
-important document was safe; his weapons were
-all right, and he was about to creep forth, when he
-suddenly perceived the figure of a man near the
-well, and, remembering the reiterated advices of
-Askerne and others, he paused to observe him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His first idea was that the stranger must be
-a robber, for, to a Briton, Portuguese and
-Spaniards too have usually that unpleasant
-character in their aspect. Their sallow visages,
-deep dark eyes, densely black beards and moustaches,
-with their slouching sombrero, and large,
-many-folded cloak of dark brown stuff, together
-with a certain fixed scrutiny of expression when
-observing strangers, give them all the bravo look
-and bearing of the "sensation" ruffian or mysterious
-bandit of a minor melo-drama; thus, says a
-recent writer, "in consequence of the difficulty
-of outliving what has been learnt in the nursery,
-many of our countrymen have, with the best
-intentions, set down the bulk of the population of
-the Peninsula as one gang of robbers."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Spaniard in question, for such he seemed
-to be, was a young man of powerful and athletic
-form; his face was sallow and colourless, and
-his hair and eyes were black. He was closely
-shaven, save a heavy moustache, which had a
-very ferocious twist across each cheek towards
-the tip of the ear. His features were very
-handsome, and his whole appearance was
-eminently striking.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had a huge cloak&mdash;what Spaniard has not,
-generally to cover his rags rather than his
-finery&mdash;but this he had flung aside, and Quentin could
-perceive that he had a well-worn zamarra of
-sheepskin over a gaily embroidered shirt, a pair
-of crimson pantaloons, which seemed to have
-belonged to a hussar, and they ended in strong
-leather <i>abarcas</i>, which were laced with thongs
-from the ankle to the knee. He had a dagger
-and pair of pistols in his flowing yellow sash,
-and close by him lay one of those long,
-old-fashioned travelling staffs, shod with iron and
-loaded with lead, called by the Portuguese a
-<i>cajado</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus, upon the whole, considering the difference
-of their stature and bodily strength, Quentin
-prudently thought that the stranger was not
-a personage to be intruded upon without due
-consideration.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Reverently removing his black sombrero,
-which was rather battered and rusty, and had a
-gilt image of our Lady del Pilar on the gay
-broad scarlet band thereof, the Spaniard
-approached the wayside shrine, and kneeling before
-it, crossed himself three times with great
-devotion, while muttering a short prayer. Then
-seating himself on the grassy sward behind the
-well, he pulled a little book from the pocket of
-his zamarra, and began to peruse it very leisurely
-while smoking a cigarito and making his frugal
-breakfast on a few dry raisins and a crust of
-hard bread, which he dipped from time to time
-in the cool water of the gurgling fountain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This cannot be a bad kind of fellow,"
-thought Quentin, who felt somewhat ashamed of
-lurking from one man; so he half-cocked his
-pistols, placed them in his girdle, and crept forth
-from behind the stone cross, saying:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Buenos dias</i>, senor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Senor, good morrow," replied the Spaniard,
-with a hand on his dagger, while he surveyed
-Quentin with a quietly grim, but unmoved
-countenance, without rising from his recumbent
-posture; "are there any more of you under these
-bushes?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No&mdash;I am alone."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Por mi vida</i>, but you chose a strange hiding-place!"
-said the other, with a glance of distrust.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A strange sleeping-place, you should say
-rather, senor&mdash;yet not a bad one," said Quentin,
-laughing, and willing to conciliate the stranger,
-who closed his book after quietly turning down
-a leaf to mark his place; "I crept in over night,
-and have slept there until now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Signs of a good digestion or a clear conscience."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of both, I hope, thank Heaven."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am indifferently provided with either; yet
-I can breakfast on this poor crust, and be
-thankful to God and our Blessed Lady for it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I can give you something better, Senor
-Portuguese," said Quentin, unbuttoning his
-havresack.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Muchos gracias</i>," replied the other; "but
-remember, senor, that I am a Castilian, and in
-Spain we have a belief that a bad Spaniard
-makes a tolerably good Portuguese."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I beg pardon, senor, but your dress&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My dress!" interrupted the other, with a
-sardonic grin; "<i>oh, por el vida del Satanos</i>, the
-less you say about that the better. I was not
-wont to sport such a costume when rendering
-Virgil into Castilian, and Las Comedias de Calderon
-into Latin, in the Arzobispo College at old
-Salamanca."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A student?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps&mdash;it was as might be," replied the
-other, with sudden reserve; "and you are&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What you see me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin gave a portion of his ration-beef
-and biscuit to the Spaniard, who took them
-with many thanks, and with an air that showed
-he was a man of breeding far above what his
-present paisano costume seemed to indicate. His
-hands were strong, white, and muscular, yet
-seemed never to have been used to work, and a
-valuable diamond sparkled in a ring on one of
-his fingers. In the course of conversation,
-Quentin could gather that he was remarkably
-well informed of the strength, number, position,
-and divisions of the British Army, together with
-the probable movements towards Castile, thus he
-felt the necessity of acting with the greatest
-reserve, and getting rid of him as soon as possible;
-for the most subtle, wily, and dangerous Spaniards
-were those in the French interest, which, at first,
-he feared his new friend to be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By my life, Senor Inglese," said the Spaniard,
-laughing, "with all this victual in your wallet,
-'tis a miracle of our Lady's Cross that the wolves
-did not come snuffing about you in the
-night."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are a traveller?" observed Quentin,
-after a pause, during which they had been
-observing each other furtively.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I hinted that I had been a student among
-Salamanquinos," replied the Spaniard, coldly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you are now&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What the Fiend and the French have made
-me!" said he, with a lurid gleam in his fine dark
-eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And that is&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My secret, senor," said the other, bluntly,
-adding "<i>muchos gracias</i>," as Quentin smilingly
-proffered his canteen, the contents of which he
-declined to taste. "The well of our Blessed
-Lady will suffice for me," he said, and proceeded
-to twist up another cigarito. "You are very
-curious about me, senor; but pray what are you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What my uniform declares me," said Quentin,
-showing the scarlet uniform, which his grey
-coat had concealed; "a British soldier."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bueno! Your hand. And whither go you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"On duty."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where&mdash;to whom?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That is <i>my secret</i>," retorted Quentin, laughing.
-But a dark expression began to gather in
-the Spaniard's face, and he looked searchingly at
-the young volunteer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Are you going to the front?" he asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, senor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Strange!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How so?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The British troops have not yet begun to
-cross the frontier into Spain. They are still in
-quarters."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are not going to the French head-quarters?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Still monosyllables!" said the Spaniard,
-impetuously. "I must be plain, I find. You
-are a deserter!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have said that I am going on duty,"
-replied Quentin, haughtily. "You need question
-me no further. I am not bound to satisfy the
-curiosity of every wayfarer I may meet."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Morte de Dios!</i>" swore the Spaniard, with a
-scowl in his deep eye, and a hand on his stiletto.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I, too, have arms to repress insolence," said
-Quentin, grasping his sword.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On this the Spaniard laughed, and said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Come&mdash;don't let us quarrel. You are a brave
-boy, and your little breakfast came to me most
-opportunely. Let us enjoy the present without
-thinking of the future. <i>Demonio!</i> Neither of us
-may be what we seem. We more often look like
-spits than swords in this world!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Senor, excuse me; but I don't understand
-your proverb."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It means simply, that all men are not what
-they seem. To you I appear a <i>gitano</i>, a
-<i>mendigo</i>&mdash;it may be, a <i>ladrone</i>; you appear to me a
-deserter; so our circumstances may change&mdash;you
-prove the spit, and I the sword."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Spit again!" said Quentin, angrily, as he
-conceived there was some sarcasm concealed in
-the word.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is a fable. Listen while I read to you
-what, I suppose, you never heard before."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, opening his book, which proved to be the
-little pocket edition of the quaint old literary
-fables of Don Tomaso de Yriarte, he rapidly read
-over the story of the "Spit and Espada."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Once upon a time there was a rapier of
-Toledo; a better was never seen in the Alcazar,
-or tempered in the waters of the Tagus. After
-having been in many battles, and belonging to
-many brave cavaliers, by one of the vicissitudes
-of fortune which lay the greatest low, it came at
-length to lie forgotten in the corner of a scurvy
-posada.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There, desirous in vain to breathe a vein
-and flash once more in battle, it lay long
-unnoticed and covered with rust, till, by command
-of her master, a greasy kitchen-wench stuck it
-through a large capon, and thus forced that
-which had been a rapier of high renown, arming
-the hands of the noble and valiant, to degenerate
-into a mere spit!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"About this time, it likewise chanced that a
-clownish paisano, by the sport of fortune became
-a hidalgo at court, and as he must needs have a
-sword, he repaired to the booth of an espadero,
-who no sooner saw the kind of customer he had
-to deal with, than he knew that anything having
-a hilt and scabbard would do, and so desired him
-to call next day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Against the time of his coming he furbished
-up an old spit that lay in his kitchen, and sold
-it to our courtier as Tisona, the very same blade
-with which the Cid Rodrigo of Bivar made the
-Arabian Khalifs skip at Cordova, and the Moorish
-dogs at Jaen. Hence we see that the innkeeper
-was a very great fool, and the espadero a very
-great rogue."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And what am I to understand by all this?"
-asked Quentin, who with some impatience had
-permitted the Spaniard to read thus far.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Simply, senor, that though by the vicissitudes
-of fortune, I seem a spit at present, I may
-prove in the end to be a good Toledo blade; for
-we should never judge solely by appearances;"
-and pointing to a hole in his sheepskin zamarra,
-he laughed and added, "Farewell&mdash;I go towards
-the mountains."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And I towards Spain: I have but two
-wishes&mdash;to reach Herreruela, and to avoid the
-French in Valencia."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Truly, they are well and wisely avoided,"
-said the Spaniard through his clenched teeth,
-while his face became distorted and convulsed by
-concentrated hate and passion. "Save myself
-and another, my whole family have perished
-under their hands. Not even our aged mother
-was spared, for she died like my helpless old
-father by their bayonets, on the night that
-Junot entered Salamanca; and well would it
-have been if some of the young had suffered the
-same fate <i>first</i>. I had three sisters, senor&mdash;three
-lovelier girls, or three more loving, good, and
-gentle, God's blessed sun never shone on. Two
-suffered such wrongs on that night of horrors at
-Salamanca, that they could not or would not
-survive them; the youngest, Isidora, happily
-escaped by being in the convent of Santa Engracia,
-at Portalegre."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Impressed by the undoubted earnestness of
-the Spaniard, Quentin said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am bound to the frontier, bearer of a
-secret despatch."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To whom?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Honour ties my tongue for the present, senor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Enough, then; continue to pursue this road
-for some miles, you will find a branch to the
-left where it runs parallel with the river Figuero,
-and leads to Castello de Vide. Proceed straight
-on and you will come to Marvao; six miles
-further on is Valencia de Alcantara, garrisoned
-by the French; cross the river Sever, and a
-league or so further brings you to Herreruela.
-Ere long I, too, shall be there, so we may meet
-again; but remember that the whole country
-swarms with the accursed French, and that
-your red coat will ensure your captivity or
-death."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shall be wary."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Be so, or, Santos! I would not give a <i>claco</i>
-for your life! Do you see yonder hill?" asked
-the Spaniard, pointing to a lofty peak&mdash;the
-highest of the mountain range.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;a vapour hovers near it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am going there to see what news the eagles
-have for the loyal Portuguese."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The eagles!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Exactly&mdash;but I forget that you are a stranger
-and don't understand me," replied the other,
-laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Adios, senor," said Quentin, preparing to start.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Adios, senor soldado&mdash;adios, vaya!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Spaniard pocketed his book of fables,
-threw his mantle over his left shoulder, grasped
-his cajado, and waving his hat, proceeded to
-ascend with great activity a steep zigzag path
-up the mountain side, while Quentin Kennedy
-pursued his solitary way, which opened into a
-level district covered with green orange, lemon,
-and olive groves; and though the warnings of his
-late acquaintance did not fail to impress him
-with anxiety, he felt hopeful that he would
-achieve in safety and with honour the duty
-assigned him&mdash;escaping the perils that might be
-set him, and the deadly snare into which Cosmo
-hoped he might fall.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap15"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XV.
-<br /><br />
-THE MULETEERS.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Riper occasions will thy valour claim,<br />
- Danger comes on; Typhœus-like it comes,<br />
- Whose fabled stature every hour increased."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;AQUILEIA&mdash;<i>Old Tragedy.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-While Quentin travelled onward, thinking over
-his recent meeting at the well, and puzzling
-himself about the enigma that was probably
-concealed by the words of the stranger concerning
-the eagles having news for Portugal, he was
-roused from his reverie by the jangling of bells,
-and ere long a string of mules, all sleek, well-fed,
-of dapple-colour, and in size larger than any he
-had ever seen, appeared in view, descending with
-sure and steady steps a narrow rocky path
-between the olive and orange groves that covered
-the steep mountain side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He paused for a moment to permit the string
-or line, which consisted of twelve mules, to pass
-along the road in front; but the three muleteers
-in charge, all hardy and sturdy fellows in gaudily
-braided and embroidered jackets of purple or
-olive green cloth, smart sombreros, and gay
-scarfs, accoutred with ivory-hafted knives and
-brass-butted pistols, hailed him immediately,
-asked whither he was going, and courteously,
-with cries of "Viva los Inglesos! viva el Rey!"
-offered him a draught of wine from the leathern
-bota that hung at the neck of Madrina, and in a trice
-he found himself accompanying them on their way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perceiving that he belonged to the British
-army, they were very inquisitive to know what
-he was doing there alone; but Quentin had heard
-that some of those muleteers could make their
-way from the heart of Castile (then swarming
-with French troops) to the cantonments of the
-British army, along the Portuguese frontier,
-evading all infantry outposts and cavalry patrols
-by their superior knowledge of the country and
-its secret paths. He had heard also that they
-frequently acted as spies and traitors on both
-sides: thus he deemed extreme reserve necessary,
-and, with a prudence beyond his years and
-experience, parried their inquiries, and turned the
-conversation to general subjects, chiefly the
-various merits of their mules, which were laden
-with Indian corn, Oporto wine, pulse, flour, and
-tobacco; and he failed not, in particular, to extol
-the beauty of Madrina, a stately old mare, nearly
-sixteen hands in height, which had round her neck
-and on her gaudy red and yellow worsted head-gear
-a row of larger bells than the rest of the train.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The clear sound of those bells being known to
-them all, they followed her with wonderful
-instinct, docility, and affection.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So far as he could gather from the conversation,
-these muleteers were of Old Castile, the
-principal arriero being Ramon Campillo from
-Miranda del Ebro; he was a short, thick-set
-fellow, with a pleasant and sun-burned face, and
-a beard and head of hair so black and dense that
-made Quentin think the process of sheep-shearing
-might, in his instance, have been resorted to with
-ease and comfort. This shaggy mop he had
-gathered into a red silk hair-net, over which he
-wore his hat of coarse brown velvet, adorned by
-a band and bob of scarlet plush.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These three men carolled and sung as they
-proceeded along, cracking their whips, indulging
-in scraps of old warlike ballads, of love-songs
-and seguidillas, pausing now and then to mutter
-an Ave on passing a cross or a cairn that had some
-dark story of bloodshed and crime. And many a
-boast they made of their sunny Castile which France
-should never, NEVER conquer! and many a story
-they told of the Cid Rodrigo, of our Lady of
-Zaragosa, the Holy Virgin del Pilar, of miracles
-and robbers, all pell-mell; but their chief themes
-were the recent exploits of their guerilla chiefs,
-then rising into power; of Don Julian Sanchez
-with the hare lip, and his glorious Castilian
-lancers; of El Pastor, the shepherd; El Medico,
-the doctor; El Manco, the cripple; of Don Juan
-Martin, the Empecinado, who, when his whole
-family had been murdered by the French, after
-the ladies of his house had endured horrors worse
-than death, in the first outburst of his grief,
-smeared himself with pitch, and vowed never to
-sheath his sword while a Frenchman remained
-alive in Spain; and who, when the French nailed
-a number of patriots to the oaks of the Guadarama,
-nailed up thrice that number of French
-soldiers in their place, to fill the forest with their
-dying groans. With enthusiasm they extolled
-all those wild spirits whom the war of invasion
-and independence had brought forth, calling it a
-<i>Guerra de moros contra estos infideles!</i>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But their local hero of heroes seemed to be
-Don Baltasar de Saldos, whom they described as
-partly a Cid and partly a devil in his hatred of
-France and Frenchmen. The mention of his
-name proved of deep interest to Quentin, and
-finding him a ready and wondering listener, many
-were the stories they told of him and of his band,
-which was composed of Spanish deserters, run-away
-students, ruined nobles, unfrocked friars,
-and all manner of wild fellows who loved him
-with ardour and obeyed him with devotion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was the flower of Castilian guerilla chiefs!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have seen and heard enough of French
-atrocity in our peregrinations throughout the
-kingdoms of Andalusia, Castile, Leon, and
-Arragon, to make me imbibe somewhat of the same
-spirit of vengeance that inspires Baltasar de
-Saldos&mdash;aye, senor, to the full!" said Ramon,
-in his energy, spitting away the end of his
-cigarito, and crushing it under his heel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In your line one must see much of life,"
-said Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Much&mdash;maladita! I should think so. I was
-present in Madrid on the 23rd of last April, when
-one hundred and twenty defenceless citizens were
-slaughtered in cold blood by the troops of
-Murat&mdash;shot down by platoons, and for what?
-For el Santos de los Santos! only because the
-epaulettes of his aide-de-camp, the gay Colonel
-de la Grange, were splashed with mud by some
-rash students at the gate of Alcala."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A slight cause, surely."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But that night, hombre, we had a terrible
-retribution," said the second muleteer, through
-his clenched teeth, as he gave a fierce twist to the
-scarlet silk handkerchief which encircled his head,
-and the fringed ends of which came from under
-his sombrero and floated over his shoulders.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Retribution, Ignacio Noain, I think we had,
-amigo mio!" replied Ramon, with a bitter laugh;
-"for it was on that night Baltasar threw off his
-student's gown and betook him to knife and
-musket, and rushed through the streets, shouting
-'Guerra al cuchillo, Salamanquinos!' and 'Viva
-el Rey de Espana!' before the head-quarters of
-Marshal Murat; and sure vengeance he took, for
-ere morning the gutters of the Prado were gorged
-with the blood of more than seven hundred
-Frenchmen, who fell by the muskets and daggers
-of the loyal Castilians."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then," said the third muleteer, with a
-smiling face and in an encomiastic tone, "it was
-Baltasar who slew Don Miguel de Saavedra."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To the devil with him!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The traitorous governor of Valencia," added
-the other two.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And it was he," said Ramon, "who with his
-namesake, the Padre Baltasar Calvo, for twelve
-days and nights followed the fugitive French and
-Valencian traitors, the tools and followers of
-Godoy, through the streets, knife in hand, slaying
-them in cellars, vaults, and bodegas, till the last
-who was false to Spain had breathed out his
-dog's life, and his heart, reeking on a bayonet,
-was thrown on the altar of St. Isidor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The fiery energy of the speakers, the expression
-of their dark flashing eyes, their picturesque
-costumes, and the modulation of the grand old
-language in which they spoke, made those fierce
-and barbarous recitals doubly striking to Quentin
-Kennedy, who heard them with something bordering
-on astonishment, for the English press
-had no "own correspondents" then, to let the
-people at home know what was enacted abroad.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then, senor," said Ignacio Noam, "it was
-Baltasar de Saldos who suggested the singular
-death to which the Spanish regiment of Navarre
-put the timid Italian, Filangheri."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And this mode of death?" asked Quentin,
-whom, sooth to say, the grim energy and
-suddenly developed ferocity of the hitherto jolly
-muleteers somewhat scared.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shall tell you," said Ramon, "for I saw it.
-You must know, senor soldado, that this Italian
-was Governor of Corunna and a loyal cavalier to
-the King; but, terrified or hopeless by the
-overwhelming power of Bonaparte, he showed some
-signs of wavering, and refused to issue a
-proclamation of war against the French."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Might it not have been wisdom to temporize
-for a time?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Santos! this is no time for trifling; so
-Baltasar rushed among the soldiers of our
-regiment of Navarre, and incited them to seize the
-governor at Villa Franca-del-Vierzo, a town on the
-road which leads from Corunna to Madrid, where
-they dragged him, almost naked, from the
-Marquis's palace.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Muera al Filangheri!" shouted Baltasar to the
-soldiers; 'unfix your bayonets, plant the ground
-with them, and toss the traitor in a blanket!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"With shouts of acclamation at a suggestion
-so novel, they hastened to do as he suggested.
-The ground was soon planted thickly with three
-hundred bayonets, their sockets fixed in the
-earth, their sharp points upward. The
-breathless governor, pale and imploring mercy, was
-tossed thrice into the air from a blanket, as dogs
-are tossed on Shrove Tuesday. After the third
-toss, the blanket was withdrawn, and the hapless
-Filangheri fell crash on the bayonets. He was
-impaled in every part of his body at once; after
-this, leaving him miserably to die, the soldiers
-dispersed to join Baltasar's band of guerillas in
-the mountains of Herreruela; but this destruction
-of a king's officer caused Sir John Moore to
-deem him false to Ferdinand VII."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How horrible is all this!" exclaimed Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Desperate times and men, require desperate
-hearts and stern measures," said the muleteer
-Ramon, as he slung his long musket&mdash;which no
-doubt had a goodly charge of slugs in its barrel&mdash;and
-took a guitar which hung at the collar of one
-of his mules. "But we must not scare you, senor
-Inglese, as we shall surely do, if we talk longer
-thus; so now for something more cheerful:" and
-he began at once to sing, with a very mellow voice,
-a little romance, in which his companions joined
-with much laughter, and which began thus,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Tiempo es el Caballero,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The world will all divine;<br />
- Now my girdle is too narrow,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They'll see my shame&mdash;and thine!<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Tiempo es el Caballero&mdash;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When the maids my garments bring,<br />
- I see them wink and nod their heads,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I hear them tittering."*<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-* Poetry of Spain.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"We have come from Arronches and are
-going to Castello Branco, in Lower Beira, along
-the Portuguese frontier," said Ramon, "and
-yonder is the puebla at which we are to halt," he
-added, pointing to a few ruined walls that
-bordered the highway.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What walled town is that on the hill, with
-an old castle?" asked Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"About two leagues beyond?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That is Castello de Vide, famous for its
-cloth factory."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Castello de Vide&mdash;good Heavens, senores
-arrieros, your pleasant society has lured me out
-of my proper way."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am sorry to hear it," said Ramon, drily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I should have gone to the right."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Madre de Dios!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To the right?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Towards the French lines?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such were the exclamations of the muleteers
-as their frowns deepened.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I should have gone somewhat in that direction,
-at all events," said Quentin, reddening with
-the annoyance and confusion natural to an
-honourable person when viewed with mistrust.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Senor Inglese, in what capacity, or for what
-purpose are you travelling on foot alone, and
-in this suspicious fashion, towards the outposts
-of General de Ribeaupierre, the commander in
-Valencia?" asked the muleteer Ramon, sternly,
-as he drew himself up, and proceeded very
-deliberately to examine the flint and priming of his
-long musket.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By what right do you ask?" demanded
-Quentin, whose heart beat tumultuously at the
-prospect of being butchered far from help or
-justice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Take your hand from your pistol&mdash;dare you
-question us, senor&mdash;one to three?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, I do&mdash;by what right do you molest me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The right of loyal and true Castilians,"
-replied the three muleteers, with one voice, as the
-other two, who had not yet spoken, unslung
-their bell-mouthed trabucos or blunderbusses,
-and all their faces assumed that very formidable
-scowl, which appears nowhere so grimly as in
-the dark and sallow visages of those sons of old
-Iberia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now ensued a brief, but somewhat unpleasant
-and exciting pause; and finding that matters
-had come to this dangerous pass with him,
-Quentin, on reflection, drew forth his sealed
-missive, and showing the address to Ramon, said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am the bearer of this despatch from
-Lieutenant-General Sir John Hope, to Don Baltasar
-de Saldos, the guerilla chief, and if you are loyal
-Spaniards, as you say, you will put up those
-weapons, and direct me by the nearest and safest
-route to the hills near Herreruela."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, par todos Santos, but this alters the
-case entirely!" said Ramon, as they relinquished
-their weapons, wreathed their grim fronts with
-sudden smiles, and cordially shook hands with
-him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why did you not tell us all this at first?"
-asked the muleteer Ignacio Noain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, even Madrina, I suppose, does not
-like to be sharply taken by the bridle," said
-Quentin, smiling, and feeling considerably
-relieved in his mind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No more does she, the old beauty, she would
-lash out at her own madre. You have somewhat
-overshot the way, senor, for a mile or two along
-the Figuero; however, you shall not leave us yet
-awhile. Dine with us at the old puebla&mdash;the
-French have not left many stones of it together.
-Ay de mi! it was a jovial place once; many a
-bolero and fandango I have danced with the girls
-here, and where are they all now? We have
-only bacallao (dried ling) and biscuits, with a
-mouthful of good wine&mdash;real vino de Alicant&mdash;to
-offer you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thanks, senores, but evening is almost at hand."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It will be nightfall when you reach the base
-of yonder mountain," said Ramon, pointing to a
-lofty hill, whose granite brows were all
-empurpled by the sunshine; "there Gil Llano, a poor
-vinedresser, lives&mdash;a Portuguese, who for my
-sake, if not for your own, will gladly give you
-shelter; be sure, however, to show him this."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With these words, Ramon disengaged from
-one of the four dozen of brass bell buttons, with
-which his jacket was adorned, one of the many
-consecrated copper medals that hung thereat,
-and placed it in Quentin's hand, just as they
-entered the ill-fated puebla (village), which was
-totally roofless and ruined. Fragments of
-charred furniture, broken crocks, cans, and plates
-strewed the now untrodden street, where the
-grass was springing. The broad-leaved vines
-grew wild about the crumbling walls and open
-windows; and a rude cross here and there marked
-the hastily made graves of the slaughtered villagers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There, as elsewhere, the wings of the Imperial
-Eagle, like those of a destroying angel, had
-spread desolation and death!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"When," asked the poor Portuguese, in one
-of their manifestoes after the horrors of Coimbra,
-"did the laws of man authorize the outrage
-of women, the slaughter of aged and other
-defenceless inhabitants of places which made no
-resistance; the assassination of men who were
-accounted rich, only because they could not
-furnish that quantity of treasure of which it was
-said they were possessed!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Halting by the old village well, the muleteers
-attended first to the wants of Madrina and her
-sleek companions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Arre, arre</i>, old woman," said Ramon, "thou
-shalt have a deep cool draught at last; <i>arre, arre</i>!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This is an old Moorish term (literally gee-up),
-whence the muleteers are familiarly termed
-arrieros. They then shared with Quentin their
-dried fish and hard biscuits, with a few olives
-and luscious oranges, that had become golden
-among the groves that cast their shadows on the
-Ebro; and they frequently patted him on the
-shoulder, and expressed regret for their
-suspicions, and the mischief these might have
-led to.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The group around this lonely well, which
-bubbled through a grotesque stone face, under
-an old Roman arch, and the scene around, were
-wonderfully striking and picturesque.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the immediate foreground were the swarthy
-Castilian muleteers in their gaudy dress, and
-their gaily trapped mules, all resting on the
-bright green sward; close by was the ruined
-puebla; northward rose Castello de Vide in the
-distance on its verdant hill, the round towers
-of its ancient fortress and ruined walls, that had
-more than once withstood the tide of Moorish
-and Castilian chivalry; to the east and south
-rose the great sierras that form the boundary
-between Spain and Portugal, all crimsoned with
-the light of the gorgeous sun that was setting
-in gold and saffron behind the cork tree groves
-that clothe the hills of St. Mames.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The frugal repast was barely over when the
-tinkle of a clear and silvery bell that rung in
-some solitary hermitage, concealed afar off among
-the chestnut woods in some hollow of the mountains,
-came at intervals on the evening wind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Vespers," said Ramon Campillo, taking off
-his sombrero; "amigos mios, to prayers."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then, with a simple devotion that impressed
-him deeply, Quentin Kennedy saw those sturdy
-and jovial, but rather reckless fellows, who, but a
-few minutes before, were (we are compelled to
-admit it) quite disposed to knock him on the
-head, kneel down and pray very earnestly for
-a minute or so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A few minutes more saw them on their way
-to Castello de Vide, and him progressing
-towards the mountains. They waved their hats
-to him repeatedly, and then as the twilight
-deepened, the breeze of the valley as it swept over
-the odorous orange groves brought pleasantly
-to his ear the jingle of the mule-bells, and the
-tinkle of Ramon's guitar dying away in the
-distance, with a verse of the song the three
-arrieros sung&mdash;an old Valencian evening hymn.
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Thou who all our sins didst bear,<br />
- All our sorrows suffering there,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>O Agnus Dei!</i><br />
- Lead us where thy promise led<br />
- That poor dying thief who said,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Memento mei!"</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap16"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVI.
-<br /><br />
-GIL LLANO.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Still, however fate may thwart me,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Unconvinced, unchanged I live;<br />
- From those dreams I cannot part me,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That such dear delusions give;<br />
- Hoping yet in countless years,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One bright day unstained with tears."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;RODRIGUEZ LOBO.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The outrages of the French invaders in Spain
-and Portugal were doubtless of the worst
-description; but those reprisals which the patriots
-were not slow in making were equal in atrocity.
-The stories he had heard of these shook Quentin's
-confidence in his own safety, and in his powers
-mental and physical; they caused him to regard
-with something of suspicion, repugnance, and
-mistrust the dwellers in the land, and to wish
-himself well out of it, or at least safe once more
-under the colours of the Old Borderers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He remembered the intense bitterness, the
-momentary but clamorous anxiety caused by his late
-episode, and how keenly the foretasted agony of
-death entered his soul, when the three muleteers
-threatened him with their weapons, and when
-there seemed every prospect of his falling by
-their hand in that mountain solitude, and being
-left there dead to the wolves; his fate and story
-alike unknown to all who might feel the slightest
-interest therein. He remembered all this, we say,
-and he had no desire to endure such an agony again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He felt his isolation, his helplessness in many
-respects, and longed anxiously for the end of
-his task, and for the society of his comrades
-and friends, of Askerne, Middleton, and others
-by whom he was esteemed and trusted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This very anxiety made him quicken his pace,
-and thus about an hour after parting from the
-muleteers at the puebla, he saw a light twinkling
-on the roadway at the base of the dark green
-mountain; then, after passing under some
-half-ruined trellis where the vines were carefully
-trained and made a leafy tunnel, he reached the
-dwelling of Gil Llano (pronounced Yano) the
-vine-dresser, a wayside cottage, with a few
-smaller adjuncts where the galinas roosted and
-the porkers snorted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He knocked at the door, which was slowly
-opened after some delay, and after he had been
-reconnoitred by a pair of keen black eyes through
-an eyelet hole; then the proprietor, a swarthy
-and stout little Portuguese, black bearded and
-snub-nosed, appeared with a bare knife clenched
-between his teeth and a cocked musket in his
-hands, to demand who was there.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Quien es?</i>" he asked, angrily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Gente de paez</i>," replied Quentin, in a
-conciliating tone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Pho!</i> indeed&mdash;your dress doesn't say you
-are a man of peace."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am a British soldier travelling on duty,"
-said Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How can I assist you, senor?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The muleteer, Ramon Campillo, of Miranda
-del Ebro, who is now on his way to Castello
-Branco, informed me that you are a loyal
-Portuguese&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"None more loyal!" responded the other,
-slapping the butt of his musket.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I was to show you this medal, and, if not
-intruding, remain with you for the night."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ramon is my good friend," said the Portuguese,
-carefully looking at the brass medal,
-which bore the image of St. Elizabeth, "and this
-was my gift to him. You are welcome, senor,
-to such poor accommodation as the French have
-left me to offer."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Portuguese conducted Quentin into his
-cottage, the interior of which, by its squalor and
-poverty, showed that poor Gil Llano's circumstances
-had not been improved by the influences
-of the war.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A candle, in a clay-holder, flickered on the
-bare table, an iron brasero, full of charcoal and
-dry leaves, smouldered on the hearth; above the
-mantelpiece were a little stucco Madonna and
-some gaudy little Lisbon prints of holy personages,
-such as St. Anthony of Portugal, with his
-beloved pig; St. Elizabeth the queen, who died
-at Estremoz in 1336; St. Ignatius Loyola, and
-others in scarlet and blue drapery, with golden
-halos, all pasted on the whitewashed wall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The cottage appeared to consist of three or
-four small apartments, all roofed with large red
-tiles, through the holes in which Quentin could
-see the stars shining, and suggesting an idea of
-umbrellas in case of rain. The rafters were
-thickly hung with bunches of dried raisins, by the
-sale of which to the passing muleteers and
-contrabandistas, Gil and his family subsisted. But
-even this humble place bore traces of the retreating
-French. One of the little windows had been
-dashed to pieces by a musket-butt, and most of
-the woodwork had gone for fuel when Junot's
-voltigeurs bivouacked among the vine trellis,
-half of which they tore down and destroyed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Gil Llano, whose whole attire consisted
-of a zamarra, a pair of red cotton breeches, a
-yellow sash, and the net which confined his hair,
-made Quentin Kennedy heartily welcome, and
-spoke with enthusiasm and gratitude of the
-British, who had swept Portugal of the French;
-and he exulted about the recent battle of Vimiera,
-which he had witnessed from the Torres Vedras,
-where, he frankly admitted, he had hovered
-among the cork-trees, and, with his musket, had
-"potted" successfully some of Ribeaupierre's
-dragoons as they fell back in disorder before the
-furious advance of General Anstruther's column.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin soon felt himself at home, and shared
-with Llano's family the supper of ham and eggs,
-cooked in a crock between the brasero and one of
-the stones of Antas, which are supposed, when
-once heated, to continue so for two days. He
-might have excused the flavour of garlic, but
-found an Abrantes melon sliced with sugar, and
-a flask of Oporto wine, very acceptable.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The half-clad mother and her meagre,
-dark-skinned brood, with their large black eyes, he
-could perceive regarded him as a heretic and
-soldier, doubtfully, even fearfully, and askance&mdash;an
-English heretic being always associated, in the
-minds of Peninsula people, with priestly
-denunciations and the <i>autos de fé</i> of the Holy Office in
-its palmy days. However, after a time, as he
-manifested no desire to eat any of the children,
-but bestowed upon them all he could afford&mdash;a
-handful of half-vintins, part of the poor
-quartermaster's parting gift&mdash;confidence became
-established, and little bare-legged Pedrillo crept close
-to his knee; Babieta peeped slily at him from
-behind her mother's skirts, and, when he hung
-Ramon's brass medal round the tawny neck of
-Gil, the nursling, the goodwoman Llano's heart
-opened to him at once.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perceiving that Quentin was so young, she
-asked, while her dark eyes filled with a tender
-expression, if his mother sorrowed for him, and
-if she had many other sons, that she could spare
-him; adding that, after all she had seen of war,
-she would rather die than permit either of her
-boys to become soldiers, even to fight for Portugal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ere long Portugal shall have stronger hands
-than we could furnish to fight for her," said Gil,
-confidently. "No miracle the blessed saints of
-heaven have ever worked has been half so
-wonderful as these marvellous and prophetic eggs
-that have been found by Don Julian Sanchez, by
-El Pastor, the Alcalde of Portalegre and others,
-in the nests among the mountains. True it is,
-senor," he continued, on perceiving Quentin's
-glance of inquiry and surprise, "that eggs have
-been found laid in the mountains by the birds of
-the air&mdash;eggs bearing inscriptions which foretell
-that as Portugal has been deserted at her utmost
-need by the House of Braganza, our brave old
-king, Don Sebastian, of pious and glorious
-memory, will come to protect and rule over us
-again."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Don Sebastian," said Quentin, who had
-heard this farrago of words with some wonder;
-"how long is it ago since he was king?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Gil reckoned on his brown fingers, and then
-said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"About two hundred and thirty years."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How&mdash;what?" exclaimed Quentin, thinking
-that he had not heard aright.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Exactly, senor; he was taken&mdash;some say
-killed&mdash;in battle by the Moorish dogs at the
-battle of Alcazal-quiver, on the coast of Fez, in
-1578; but his restoration to us is certain
-now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And <i>eggs</i>, do you say, have prophesied this?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By the soul of St. Anthony of Lisbon, yes!
-The miraculous legends written on their shells
-told us so. I saw one with my own eyes as it
-lay on the altar of the Estrella convent, where
-it had been brought by the Marquis d'Almeida,
-who found it on the mountain of Cintra."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you read the legend?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, senor&mdash;I cannot read; moreover, it was
-written in old Latin."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By whom, Senor Gil?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"God and St. Anthony only know," replied
-Gil, crossing himself after dipping his fingers in
-a little clay font of <i>agua-bendita</i> that hung beside
-the mantelpiece.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now Quentin remembered the words of the
-stranger whom he had met by the wayside
-cross, and whom he had last seen toiling up the
-mountain with the aid of his staff, as he alleged,
-in search of eagles' nests. He had some trouble
-to preserve his gravity, and probably nothing
-enabled him to do so but his wonder at the
-perfect simplicity and the good faith of this
-Portuguese peasant in the return of Lusitania's
-long-lost hero.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On inquiring further, he learned, for the first
-time, that there still existed in Portugal the sect
-called of old "Sebastianists," fondly cherishing a
-belief that their crusader king (who fell in battle
-against Muley Moloc) was detained in an
-enchanted island, where he was supernaturally
-preserved; and that they also cherished a belief that
-he would reappear with all his paladins to
-deliver Lusitania when at her utmost need!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Portugal's utmost need had come and gone;
-Roleia and Vimiera had been fought and won by
-Sir Arthur Wellesley; but still the Sebastianists
-believed in the ultimate return and intervention
-of their favourite hero, and eggs marked by the
-more cunning with some chemical agency, bearing
-legends foretelling the event, were opportunely
-found and exhibited: a puerile trick, which
-Marshal Junot, General de Ribeaupierre, and
-others soon contrived to turn against the
-inventors; for <i>other</i> eggs bearing mottoes of very
-different import were frequently found in the
-same places.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A belief similar to that of the Sebastianists
-long lingered among the Scots relative to their
-beloved James IV., who fell at Flodden; among
-the Germans, regarding Frederick Barbarossa,
-who filled all Asia with the terror of his name,
-and died on the banks of the Cydnus; among
-the Britons concerning their fabulous Arthur of
-the Round Table; and among the ancient Irish
-concerning some now unknown warrior named
-Dharra Dheeling. But it was left for the poor
-Portuguese to be among the last to console
-themselves under defeat and disaster with such
-delusive hopes; and thus in the year of Vimiera,
-"many people," says General Napier, "and
-those not of the most uneducated classes, were
-often observed upon the highest points of the
-hills, casting earnest looks towards the ocean,
-in the hopes of descrying the enchanted island
-in which their long-lost hero was detained."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap17"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVII.
-<br /><br />
-DANGER IN THE PATH.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Beloved of glory, Spain! hail, holy ground!<br />
- All hail! thou chosen scene of deeds renown'd,<br />
- By warriors wrought in each progressive age,<br />
- Who struggled to repel th' oppressor's rage.<br />
- Tell thou the world how on thy favoured coast,<br />
- Our Wellesley fought, and Gaul her sceptre lost."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Roncevalles&mdash;a Poem.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Proceeding eastward next morning, Quentin
-was guided by Gil Llano for some miles towards
-the Spanish frontier. To avoid all chance of
-being seen by cavalry or foraging parties, the
-officers commanding which were sometimes
-really ignorant rather than oblivious of the
-actual line of demarcation between Spain and
-Portugal, the worthy vinedresser conducted him
-by unfrequented but steep and devious mountain
-paths, which left far on their right flank the little
-town and fortress of Marvao, that lies in the
-Comarca of Portalegre, and as they were now
-within six miles of Valencia de Alcantara, which
-was the head-quarters of Ribeaupierre's cavalry
-brigade, the utmost circumspection was necessary.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The morning was one of singular loveliness;
-the white mists were rolling up the green
-mountain sides from the greener valleys below, and
-there was a peculiar freshness and fragrance in
-the atmosphere which made Quentin feel buoyant
-and happy, for a time at least; the sun was
-high in heaven, the dew was glittering on every
-herb and tree, and the mountain scenery looked
-bright and glorious.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The blood of our soldiers who fell at Roleia
-and Vimiera had not been shed in vain for
-Portugal. Already signs of peace were visible
-in her valleys and towns, and all was in repose
-along her frontier. Thus Quentin could hear
-the lowing of oxen and the bleating of sheep
-come pleasantly on the morning wind that passed
-over the green sierra, bearing with it the odour
-of the orange groves in the valley and of the
-flowering arbutus that bordered the way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a hollow of the hills, Llano showed Quentin
-a lake, on the borders of which some of the
-miraculous eggs had been found by Baltasar de
-Saldos in a cypress grove; and he alleged that
-its waters had the power of swallowing or
-sucking into the bowels of the earth whatever
-was thrown therein, consequently not a
-leaf, or reed, or lotus were to be seen floating
-there.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But its power, senor, is a mere joke when
-compared with that of the lake of Cedima, which
-lies about eight leagues from Coimbra, and which
-instantly swallows up the largest logs and trees,
-if cast therein."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is there a whirlpool in the centre?" asked
-Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Saints and angels only know what is in the
-centre; but in my father's days&mdash;he was a
-farmer, senor, in the Quinta das Lagrimas&mdash;there
-came a Danish cavalier who refused to
-credit the story, and offered, mockingly, to cross
-the lake on horseback, in presence of the
-Juiz-de-fora, the Reformator of the University, the
-Alcalde of the city, and all the great lords of
-Coimbra.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"After hearing the bishop (who is always
-Conde de Arganuil) say mass in the church of
-Santa Cruz, and after partaking of the Holy
-Communion before the altar there, he mounted
-his horse, and, in presence of a vast multitude,
-proceeded to the lake of Cedima. Then when
-he saw its black and ominous water that lay
-without a ripple in the sunshine, his heart
-somewhat failed him, and lest the story of the lake
-might be true, and lest his life might indeed
-be lost, on perceiving a great stake, or the trunk
-of an old chestnut tree near the edge, he tied
-a thick rope to it, securing the other end to his
-right leg. Another rope of similar strength he
-tied to the neck of his horse, a fine Spanish
-gennet, and giving him the spur, he uttered a
-shout and plunged headlong into the water.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A little way the horse swam snorting, and
-then began to sink; ere long his ears alone
-were visible! Then they too disappeared; the
-water bubbled above his nostrils as his head
-went down; then the dark water flowed over
-the rider's shoulders&mdash;then over his head, and
-while a cry of dismay rose from the terrified
-people, the steed and the stranger vanished
-together and were seen no more."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So the ropes proved of no service?" said
-Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The one that was about the neck of the
-horse was snapped right through the centre;
-but at the end of the other was found the right
-leg of the unfortunate Dane, torn off by the
-thigh, doubtless as the downward current whirled
-him into the vortex; and so from that day a
-belief in the waters of Cedima has been stronger
-than ever in Portugal."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"After the marvellous eggs and the enchanted
-island, I can easily think so," said Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When worthy Gil Llano (who expressed a hope
-to see him again if he returned that way) had
-left him, with the information that from the top
-of the next hill he would see Spain and the
-spires of Valencia de Alcantara, Quentin
-proceeded all the more rapidly that he was now
-alone, and his steps kept pace with the busy
-current of his thoughts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His whole ideas of the duty on which he
-had been sent were somewhat vague. He had
-but three instructions given him: first, to avoid
-Valencia (which the reader must not confound
-with the capital of the kingdom of the same
-name); second, to reach Hereruela how he best
-could; third, to deliver his despatch; and for the
-execution of this he had been sent from Portalegre
-unsupplied either with money or credentials
-to any Alcalde, Juiz-de-fora, or other civil or
-military authority, in case of any difficulty arising.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were times&mdash;and this was one&mdash;when
-Quentin felt as if he were again at Rohallion&mdash;at
-his home, for such he felt it to be&mdash;relating
-all these adventures to those who were now
-there; to the kind and soldier-like old Lord; to
-the courteous and gentle Lady Winifred; to the
-old quartermaster, with his kind red face and
-yellow wig, while Mr. Spillsby the butler and
-Jack Andrews loitered near to listen; to the
-dominie, with his rusty blacks, his square
-shoe-buckles, and his musty memories of the classics;
-and more than all, to Flora Warrender!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And then, with these thoughts, there seemed
-to come to his ears the pleasant rustle of the
-aged sycamores as the west wind shook their
-branches, the cawing of the black rooks on the
-old grey keep, the rush of the Lollards' Linn
-pouring under its arch and over its ledge
-of rock; and to his fancy's eye the sierras
-of Portugal gave place to the brown hills of
-Carrick, the distant Craigs of Kyle, and "the
-bonnie blooming heather," or the waves of the
-Clyde as they boiled in foam over the Partan
-Craig and climbed the dark headland of Rohallion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the past returned and the present fled!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Amid those cherished scenes he had long since
-left his happy boyhood. Now he felt himself,
-as we have said, every inch a soldier and a man,
-inspired by a sense of duty, of trust, and not a little
-by the love of adventure natural to youth. The
-inborn ambition which the solid weight of his
-knapsack and accoutrements, and all his
-sufferings when on the march from Maciera Bay, had
-somewhat chilled; the high spirit that Cosmo's
-hatred and cutting coldness had striven to crush,
-both sprung up anew in his buoyant heart, and
-he felt it glowing with hope, energy, and
-enthusiasm; and now, when he had reached the
-summit of the mountain over which the road
-passed, and on issuing from a narrow rocky
-defile, saw a vast extent of open country beyond,
-a glorious and fertile landscape, all vibrating
-apparently in the rays of the cloudless sun, he
-waved his cap and almost cried "hurrah!" for
-he knew that he looked down on&mdash;&mdash;Spain!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Before him, as on a map, he saw the vast
-extent of Spanish Estremadura stretching into
-distance far away, all steeped in a lovely golden
-glow, the almost universal verdure of the
-landscape relieved here and there by the water of
-the Salor and other minor tributaries of the
-Tagus, winding like blue silk threads through
-velvet of emerald green, dotted by thickets of
-chestnut, orange, and cork trees; and there, too,
-were the strong embattled towers and the spires
-of Valencia de Alcantara, with the tricolour on
-its greatest bastion; and in the distance, half
-hid in saffron haze, through which they loomed
-in purple tint, the ramparts of Albuquerque, on
-its steep hill, the heritage of the Condes de
-Ledesma. Between these cities lay a little
-puebla, which he knew must be San Vincente,
-near, but not through which, lay his path
-to the hills that overlooked the plain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thoughts of the poetry, of the beauty, and
-romance of Spain came thronging on his
-memory, and we must confess they formed an odd
-chaos of cloaked cavaliers with guitars and
-rapiers; dark eyed donnas in balconies, fluttering
-fans and veils; lurking rivals, with mask and
-dagger; mountain robbers in high-crowned hats,
-with their legs swathed in red bandages, after
-the orthodox fashion of all melodramatic banditti.
-These, together with the solid splendour and
-wonderful stories of the Alhambra, the wars of
-the high-spirited Moors of Granada, ending so
-sadly in <i>el suspiro del Moro</i>, when the warriors
-of Ferdinand and Isabella rent the banner of the
-Prophet from the weak hand of Boabdil el Chico,
-not unnaturally made up his stock ideas of the
-sunny land he looked upon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But it was the land of the Cid Campeador&mdash;he
-at whose name the eyes of even the most
-unlettered Spaniard will lighten&mdash;for he was the
-veritable and redoubtable Wallace of Castile
-against the enemies of Christianity and the
-Christian's God. Such memories as these rushed
-on Quentin's mind as he looked down on
-Estremadura; nor could he forget, though last not
-least, that it was the native land of him "who
-laughed Spain's chivalry away"&mdash;the illustrious
-Cervantes, the one-handed soldier of Lepanto.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A distant but unmistakeable sound of musketry
-reverberating among the mountain peaks
-on his left, roused him somewhat unpleasantly
-from his dream, bringing him all at once from the
-romance of the past to the reality of present
-Spanish life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Several shots he heard distinctly pealing
-through the air; others followed, and after an
-interval, two dropping shots, but at a greater
-distance, as if they proceeded from some flying
-skirmishers. Then all became still, and he heard
-only the voices of the birds as they wheeled aloft
-in the sunshine or twittered among the arbutus
-leaves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The road, a narrow and rugged path now as
-it descended, passed through a dark grove of
-wild pines; on issuing from which, Quentin's
-nerves received somewhat of a shock on seeing a
-French light dragoon, in pale green uniform,
-lying on his back quite dead, with the foam of
-past agony on his lips, and the blood of a recent
-wound still oozing from his left temple, through
-which a musket shot had passed. Crushed,
-apparently by a horse's hoof, his light brass
-helmet lay beside him. A few yards off lay
-another <i>Chasseur à cheval</i>, and further off still
-lay a third, who seemed to have been dragged
-some distance by his horse ere his foot had been
-disengaged from the stirrup, for a bloody and
-dusty track was visible from where Quentin stood
-to where the Chasseur lay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin paused, for his heart beat wildly, and
-instinctively he looked to the flints and pans of
-his pistols, his hands trembling as he did so&mdash;with
-an excitement justifiable in one so young&mdash;but
-<i>not</i> with fear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These three unfortunates were the first
-Frenchmen&mdash;the first slain&mdash;and, in fact (save
-the dead gipsy in the vault of Kilhenzie) they
-were the <i>first</i> dead men he had looked upon;
-thus he glanced timidly, and while his heart
-swelled with pity, from one to the other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There they were, three smart and handsome
-young men, clad in showy light cavalry uniforms,
-each perhaps a mother's pride and father's
-hope, left dead and abandoned to the ravens, in
-that wild place, with their white faces and glazed
-eyes staring stonily at the glorious noonday sun,
-while the little birds came hopping and twittering
-about them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin's gentle soul was stirred within him;
-he was new to this butcherly work, and war
-seemed wicked indeed! Those three rigid
-figures&mdash;those three pale faces with fallen jaws, and
-those bloody wounds, made a scaring and terrible
-impression upon him; but as he continued
-hastily to descend the hill, and left them behind,
-he foresaw not the callous heart and time that
-use and wont would bring.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap18"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-<br /><br />
-THE CHASSEUR À CHEVAL.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "The soldier little quiet finds,<br />
- But is exposed to stormy winds,<br />
- And weather."&mdash;L'ESTRANGE.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-After proceeding a little way, the sound of
-voices, as if engaged in fierce altercation, made
-him pause and look round warily, pistol in hand.
-He drew behind a gigantic Portuguese cypress
-that overshadowed the way, and on reconnoitring,
-discovered two men engaged in a fierce and
-deadly struggle. They were a French cavalry
-officer and a Spanish guerilla.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Frenchman was almost in rags, for his
-silver epaulettes and green uniform, covered with
-elaborate braiding, had been torn in his conflict
-with the Spaniard, for, as they grappled, they
-rolled over each other down a gravelly bank into
-the dry bed of a mountain stream, where they
-only paused to draw breath before renewing the
-contest, in which the guerilla was apparently
-getting the mastery. He had a broadbladed
-dagger in his sash; but, as the Frenchman held his
-wrists with a death-clutch, he was unable to use it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, sacré Dieu!" cried the officer, on whose
-breast the knees of the guerilla were pressed
-without mercy; "I will yield on the promise of
-quarter&mdash;even from you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dog of a Frenchman! May thy foot be
-heavy on my neck if I spare thee!" was the
-hoarse and fierce response of the Spaniard, in
-whom Quentin, with considerable interest,
-recognised his friend of the wayside cross, whom he
-last saw going bird-nesting up the mountains in
-search of the miraculous eggs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Espanole," said the Frenchman, in tones of
-rage and entreaty mingled, "would you kill a
-defenceless and unarmed man?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why not, if he is French? Who slew my
-aged father? Who slew my mother&mdash;my
-sisters&mdash;all&mdash;all? Who deluged our home with blood,
-and desolated it with fire?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not I&mdash;not I&mdash;spare me," exclaimed the
-Frenchman, as he felt his strength failing him
-fast; "my mother, Spaniard&mdash;hound!&mdash;ah, ma
-mère&mdash;ma mère&mdash;mon Dieu!" he added, with a
-hopeless groan; and these two French words
-stirred some deep, keen chord, some long-forgotten
-memory in the heart of Quentin, who
-felt his temples throbbing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Maledita! the strife of our forefathers is but
-renewed," continued the Spaniard, in his noble
-and forcible Castilian, through his clenched
-teeth, while his eyes flashed fire, and his
-moustaches seemed to bristle; "it is a war to the
-knife against dogs and infidels, for what are
-Frenchmen but dogs and infidels, even as the
-Moors were of old?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again, without avail, the hapless Chasseur
-pleaded for his life; but the more powerful
-conqueror heard him to an end, and then laughed
-exultingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am guiltless of all, of everything but
-doing my duty," he urged.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Duty!" repeated the other; "shall I tell
-you of our pillaged altars and desecrated churches,
-of ruined cities and desolated villages; shall I
-tell you of our slaughtered brethren, our outraged
-wives, sisters, and ladies of the holy orders,
-some of whom have been bound to gun-carriages,
-stripped, and exposed in the common streets and
-plazas? Par Dios! these things are enough to
-call down Heaven's thunder on the head of your
-accursed Corsican!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, morbleu!" gasped the Frenchman,
-"what a devil of a savage it is! Peste! I
-assure you, monsieur, I have never touched even
-the tip of a woman's hand since I had the
-misfortune to cross the Pyrenees. Tudieu! the
-Emperor finds us other work and other things to
-think of."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By a violent wrench the Spaniard now got his
-right hand free, and in an instant, like a gleam
-of light, his long knife glittered as he upheld it
-at arm's length above the poor young Frenchman,
-whose pale face and dark eyes assumed a
-most despairing aspect.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin could no longer look on unmoved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hold&mdash;hold!" he exclaimed, and sprang
-towards them threateningly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oho, amigo mio," said the Spaniard, looking
-round with a saturnine smile; "'tis my friend
-of the laurel bushes&mdash;the spit that looked like a
-sword."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hold, I say, Spaniard&mdash;would you murder
-him in cold blood?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Demonio, yes; and you, too, if you would
-protect a soldier of the false Corsican. Begone,
-and leave us, or it may be worse for you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shall not."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Maladita!" said the Spaniard, grinding his
-teeth, and clutching the throat of the fallen man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Release him, I say," demanded Quentin,
-resolutely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Vaya usted con cien mill demonios," (Begone,
-with a hundred thousand devils), said the
-Spaniard, absolutely, gnashing his strong white
-teeth, which glistened beneath his black moustache.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, sauvez moi, mon camarade," implored
-the poor Frenchman.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thus, then, die&mdash;die en el santo nombre de Dios!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With this impious shout, the furious guerilla,
-or whatever he was, raised the dagger which he
-had lowered for a moment; but ere it could
-descend; Quentin, with lightning speed, snatched
-up the heavy cajado which lay at his feet, and,
-loth to use a more deadly weapon against a
-Spaniard, struck the guerilla a blow on the head
-and rolled him over. A heavy malediction
-escaped him, and then he lay motionless and still,
-completely stunned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Breathless with his recent struggle and its
-terrors, the French officer lost no time in
-springing to his feet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A thousand thanks to you, monsieur! But
-for you&mdash;there&mdash;there had been a vacancy in my
-troop to-night. But here&mdash;come this way; we
-have not a moment to lose, for the hills are full
-of these guerillas. Peste! they are as thick as
-bees hereabout; and believe me, the men of
-Baltasar de Saldos are not to be trifled with."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the Frenchman spoke, he seized Quentin
-by the sleeve, and half led, half dragged him
-through the grove of pines; after which, they
-ran down hill for more than a mile, till they
-reached the main-road that led directly to
-Valencia the lesser, when Quentin paused, and began
-to reflect that he was going very oddly about the
-deliverance of Sir John Hope's despatch, a
-document that probably announced the day on which
-the entire army would break up from its
-cantonments and advance into Spain!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap19"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIX.
-<br /><br />
-EUGENE DE RIBEAUPIERRE.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"Ford. Well, he's not here I seek for.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Page. No, nor nowhere else but in your brain.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ford. Help me to search my house this one time: if I<br />
- find not what I seek, show me no colour for my extremity,<br />
- let me for ever be your table sport; let them say of me, 'As<br />
- jealous as Ford, that searched hollow walnuts for his wife's<br />
- leman.'"&mdash;<i>Merry Wives of Windsor.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin Kennedy was only master of a certain
-amount of the Spanish language, which he had
-rapidly acquired through the medium of his
-friend the dominie's sonorous Scottish latinity;
-but fortunately the young Frenchman, who
-seemed to be highly accomplished, spoke English
-with remarkable fluency.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His uniform, we have said, was in rags; his
-epaulettes had gone in the recent struggle, the
-straps of lace for retaining them on the shoulders
-alone remained. A hole in the breast of his
-light green jacket showed where the gold cross
-of the Legion had been rent away by some
-guerilla's hand, and the state of his scarlet
-pantaloons made one see the advantage of wearing
-a kilt for pugnacious casualties, as they were
-now reduced to mere shreds.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was a slender young man, in appearance
-only a year or two older than Quentin, though
-really many years his senior in experience of the
-world and of life generally. His hair, which he
-wore in profusion, was dark brown and silky,
-and his hands, on one of which sparkled a
-splendid ring, were white and almost ladylike.
-An incipient moustache shaded his short upper
-lip; his features were very regular, and he was
-so decidedly good-looking, that Quentin could
-not help thinking that if he had a sister like
-him, she must be charming!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They quitted the highway and entered a dense
-thicket by the wayside, where breathless, hot,
-and weary, they cast themselves on the cool
-deep grass that grew under the leafy shade, and
-the last of the contents of Quentin's canteen,
-divided between them, proved very acceptable to
-both.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I perceive that you are a French officer,"
-said Quentin; "may I ask whom I have had
-the honour of succouring?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Certainly, mon camarade; I am a sous-lieutenant
-of my father's regiment, the 24th
-Chasseurs à Cheval&mdash;my name is Eugene de
-Ribeaupierre."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Any relation of the general who commands
-in Valencia?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A very near one," said he, laughing; "I
-am his son, and monsieur's very obedient servant.
-Come! let us rest ourselves and talk a little.
-The tap on the head you gave that Spaniard was
-most critical and serviceable to me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True&mdash;it only came just in time!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I hope it may have despatched him outright."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I trust not, now that the end was accomplished."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now that we have breathing time, you will
-perhaps excuse my little curiosity, and say how
-you came to be here, within two or three miles
-of our sentinels?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The country is quite open," said Quentin,
-evasively, with a smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Your troops, we have heard, are closing up
-from Lisbon and elsewhere; but have not as yet
-been rash enough to enter Spain, the territories
-of King Joseph."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Rash, monsieur?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Peste! I suppose your generals have not
-forgotten the sharp lessons we taught them at
-Roleia and Vimiera?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin laughed to hear the pleasant tone in
-which the Frenchman spoke of two very
-important defeats of the Emperor's troops as
-"lessons" to the British, but he said plainly enough,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am here because I was sent on duty."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To whom, monsieur?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin hesitated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay, out with it, man&mdash;trust me, on my
-honour&mdash;I may well pledge it to one who has
-saved me from a barbarous death within this
-hour, and earned my warmest gratitude."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, then, I go to Don Baltasar de Saldos."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Diable! the man's a guerilla chief, and we
-have just had a severe brush with his people.
-My patrol, consisting of a sergeant, a corporal,
-and twelve chasseurs, were riding leisurely along
-the road from San Vincente towards the summit
-of yonder mountain, when, from a grove of cork
-and cypress trees, there flashed out some twenty
-muskets. It was an ambush; the leading section
-of them fell dead; the rest broke through,
-sabre à la main, and fled, pursued by the
-guerillas, who sprang after them with the yells
-of fiends and the activity of squirrels, leaping
-from bank to rock, and from rock to tree, firing
-and reloading so long as we were in range.
-Struck by a ball in the counter, my horse reared
-wildly up, and threw me; for some minutes I
-was insensible, and on recovering, found myself
-in the paws of yonder Spanish bear, who was
-thrice my bulk and strength. You know the
-rest. I thought it was all up with me. As
-Francis said at Pavia, 'tout est perdu, sauf
-l'honneur!' Baltasar's head-quarters are in a
-mountain puebla near Herreruela, where he
-successfully defies my father's cavalry. Am I
-right in supposing that you have been sent to
-invite his co-operation in some projected movement?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My orders were simply to deliver to him a
-despatch and rejoin my regiment."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is a dangerous and desperate errand, my
-friend," said the young Frenchman, while regarding
-Quentin with some interest; "I mean desperate
-to be undertaken by one alone. It looks
-almost like a sacrifice of you!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A sacrifice?" repeated Quentin, as his
-thoughts naturally wandered to Cosmo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Parbleu, yes&mdash;to the exigencies of the service."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Some of my friends were not slow in saying
-as much," replied Quentin; "but then I&mdash;I am
-only a volunteer, and as such, must take any
-hazardous duty, I have been told."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, here we must lurk till nightfall&mdash;you
-to avoid our patrols, which are usually withdrawn
-for a few hours after the evening gun fires, when
-the inlying picquet gets under arms; I to avoid
-those pestilent guerillas. The shade here is cool,
-and if we had a bottle of wine, a sliced melon,
-and a little ice, our pleasure would be complete."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you think I must conceal myself here?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Undoubtedly, mon ami; our people are
-scouring all the highways, and would be sure to
-cut you off. Then there is that devilish
-Spaniard&mdash;ah, the brigand!&mdash;he will not be in haste to
-forget the knock you gave him on the head, and
-should he or his comrades fall in with you, I
-would not give you a sou for your safety!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Strange, is it not, that the first man I have
-struck on Spanish ground should be a Spaniard?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"These dons have unpleasant memories for
-such little attentions, and here the secret shot or
-stab usually settles everything; but before we
-separate, I shall have the honour of showing you
-the direct path to the head-quarters of De Saldos,
-after which, you must look to your pistols and
-put your trust in Providence. I shall keep your
-secret, and if there is any other way in which I
-can serve you, command me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I thank you; but I hope that to-night, or
-to-morrow morning at latest, will see my face
-turned towards Portugal, for I long to rejoin my
-corps."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The fugitives of my party will spread a
-calamitous report concerning me in Valencia,
-and my father, the poor old general, will suppose
-that I am lying shot on the mountains, instead
-of holding this pleasant <i>tête-à-tête</i> with one of
-the sacré Anglais over the comfortable contents
-of his canteen," said Ribeaupierre, laughing.
-"What a droll world it is!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And your mother&mdash;I think I heard you
-mention your mother. She&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Happily will know nothing about it, as
-she is with Joseph's court. She is a gentle
-and loving creature, with a heart all tenderness.
-Ah, the seat of war, would never do for her,
-and, ma foi! it doesn't suit me either. It
-was not willingly I became a soldier, be assured;
-and yet, now that I am fairly in for it, and have
-won my epaulettes and cross, I should not like to
-find myself a mere citizen again. Peste! I shall
-not in a hurry forget the night on which, by a great
-malheur, a great mistake, I was forced to become
-a soldier."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mistake&mdash;how?" asked Quentin, smiling at
-the young Frenchman's gestures and energy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mon camarade, a man says more when under
-the influences of eau-de-vie, or champagne, than he
-ever does under those of vin-ordinaire, cold water,
-or a bowl of gruel; and, as your remarkably
-potent rum-and-water has put me in that
-condition when a man reveals his loves and hates,
-and, more foolish still, sometimes his private
-history, I don't care if I tell you how I became a
-soldier.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My father," began the garrulous chasseur,
-"is an officer of the old days of the monarchy,
-and held his first commission, like the Emperor
-himself, from Louis XVI., the Most Christian
-King, and they were brother subalterns in the
-regiment of La Fere. To the friendship that
-grew up between them there, the old gentleman
-owes his brigade and the Grand Cross of the
-Legion, quite as much as to his own bravery in
-Germany, Italy, and Flanders. My mother (or
-she at least whom I have been taught to call
-my mother, for she is his second wife,) was a
-widow of rank, who lost her whole possessions in
-the stormy days of the Revolution. She was
-without children, and when my father was
-assisting the Little Corporal to play the devil at
-Toulon, Arcola, Lodi, Marengo, and elsewhere,
-she most affectionately took charge of me, and of
-my education in Paris.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As we were not rich, it was proposed to make
-a doctor of me, and so I was duly matriculated
-at the Ecole de Médecine, and commenced my
-studies there, not with much enthusiasm or
-industry either; but in the vague hope,
-nevertheless, that I might some day cut a figure and
-have my portrait hung among the full lengths of
-Ambrose Paré, Maréchal, La Peyronnie, and
-others in the school.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I look back with no small repugnance to the
-daily tasks I performed there, and to the horrors of
-the dissecting-room, after boyish curiosity grew
-satiated. My brain became addled by lectures
-on the maxillary sinus, on diseases of the
-stomach, of the pylorus, the hepatic and abdominal
-viscera; elephantiasis, aortic aneurism, the
-lacteal and glandular system, and Heaven alone
-knows all what more, till I imagined that I had
-alternately in my own person every ailment
-peculiar to man. We had plenty of subjects, for
-daily the guillotine was slicing away in the Place
-de la Grève, and I have seen the loveliest women
-and the noblest men in France laid on those
-tables to be stripped and dissected by the knife of
-the demonstrator.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I was soon voted the worst if not the most
-stupid student that ever put his foot within the
-college walls. The professors were in despair.
-They could make nothing of me; and to muddle
-my poor brain more, about this time I must
-needs fall in love. Ah! I perceive that you now
-become interested. I was not much over
-seventeen, and my first love&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"First?" said Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Oui&mdash;ma foi!</i> I have had a dozen&mdash;was Madame
-Lisette Thiebault, a friend of my mother."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A widow, of course?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not at all. She was unfortunately the wife
-of one of our doctors in the Rue de l'Ecole de
-Medecine;" replied the <i>étourdi</i> young Frenchman.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Married!" said poor Quentin, somewhat aghast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Peste!</i> of course she was; but we don't care
-for such little obstacles in Paris. Well, Lisette,
-for so I must name her, was nearly ten years my
-senior, and so had what she called a motherly
-interest in me. She was a very handsome woman,
-somewhat inclined to <i>embonpoint</i>, with a clear
-pale complexion and laughing eyes, exactly the
-colour of her hair, which was a rich deep brown.
-She was always gay, laughing and smiling, except
-when her husband, the doctor, was present, and
-one could no more make fun with him, than with
-old Bébé."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who, or what was he?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The mummy of the King of Poland's dwarf&mdash;<i>Ouf!</i> what
-a horror it is!&mdash;which we have in
-the School of the Faculty at Paris. Lisette was
-very fond of me, and, being a little addicted to
-literature&mdash;she was fond of poetry, too&mdash;so we
-read much together.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ere long, monsieur, the doctor began to
-think all this very improper, so he rudely and
-abruptly put a stop to our studies; he locked
-Ovid up, and me out. <i>Tudieu!</i> here was an
-outrage! I thought of inviting him to breathe
-the morning air on the Bois de Boulogne; but a
-duel between a first-year's student and an old
-doctor was not to be thought of. Madame had a
-tender heart, so she pitied me. She considered
-her husband's conduct cruel, ungrateful,
-outrageous, barbarous; so, as it was necessary that
-my classical studies should not be neglected, we
-arranged a little code of signals. Thus, Lisette,
-by simply keeping a drawing-room window open
-or shut, or a muslin curtain festooned or closely
-drawn, could inform me when Bluebeard was at
-home or abroad; whether the breach was
-practicable or not; and thus we circumvented our
-tyrant for a time, and I returned with ardour to
-the study of classical poetry; but as for
-the dissecting-room, diable! it saw no more of me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of the doctor I had always a wholesome
-dread, as he was a <i>Septembriseur</i>."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What is that?" asked Quentin, perceiving a
-dark expression shade the face of Ribeaupierre.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Tis a name we have in Paris for those who
-were concerned as aiders or abettors of the
-horrible September massacres&mdash;he would have
-thought no more of slily putting a bullet into
-me, than of killing a wasp; thus, you see, I
-pursued the acquisition of knowledge under
-difficulties.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now came out the edict issued about eight
-years ago, for raising two hundred thousand men
-for the army and marine, and every young man
-in France had to inscribe his name for the
-conscription. I omitted&mdash;we shall call it
-delayed&mdash;to inscribe mine; but my learned friend, M. le
-Docteur Thiebault, unknown to me, performed
-that little service in my behalf. He was
-extremely loth that the Republic&mdash;it was the
-glorious indivisible Republic of liberty, equality,
-fraternity, and tyranny then&mdash;should be deprived
-of my valuable aid by land or sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"About the time when he usually returned
-from visiting his patients, I had bidden adieu to
-madame, for our studies were over, and in the
-dusk of the evening was on my way home when
-surprised by a patrol of the police under a
-commissaire, at the corner of the Rue Ecole de
-Médecine. To avoid them I shrunk into a porch,
-but they invited me rather authoritatively to
-come forth, and on my doing so, a sergeant
-passed his lantern scrutinizingly across my face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'A young man,' said the commissaire, who
-was new in the quartier; 'who are you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'I am not obliged to say,' said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Ah&mdash;we shall see that; what are you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'A student of the Faculty of Médecine.
-Vive la République! War to the cottage&mdash;peace
-to the castle!' I replied, waving my hat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Is your name inscribed for the levy,
-blunderer? You quote oddly for a student!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Of course my name is inscribed,' said I,
-boldly, though I little knew that it was so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Show me your card which certifies this.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Mon Dieu!' I exclaimed, as a brilliant
-thought occurred to me; 'do not speak so loud,
-monsieur.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Diable; may we not raise our voices in the
-streets of Paris?' he asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Not if you knew the mischief an alarm
-would do me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Tête Dieu! 'tis an odd fellow, this!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Monsieur, pity me!' said I, in a voice full
-of entreaty. 'I throw myself upon your generosity&mdash;I
-perceive that I melt your heart. I have
-not my card; it is with my wife&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Morbleu! you are very young to have a
-wife, my friend, with a chin like an apple,' said
-the grim old sergeant, as he passed his lantern
-across my face again; 'I hope she is fully
-grown; but to the point, my fine fellow, or we
-shall have to march you to the Conciergerie, and
-they have an unpleasant mode of pressing
-questions there.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Where is this wife of yours, my little
-friend?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'In her house, M. le Commissaire, where
-you see that light above the lamp with the scarlet
-bottle. Ah, the perfidious! There she awaits
-a lover for whom I am watching.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I acted my part to the life, though jealousy
-is not a peculiarity of French husbands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'And this lover?' said the commissaire,
-becoming suddenly interested, perhaps from some
-fellow-feeling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'He is a young brother student of mine.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'His name?' said the commissaire,
-producing a note-book.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Eugene de Ribeaupierre.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'We know him,' said the other, 'for the
-greatest young rascal in all Paris. He destroyed
-a tree of liberty in the Palais Royal, and painted
-the nose of Equality red in the Jardin des
-Plantes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'The same, monsieur,' said I, in a whining
-voice; 'he will come here disguised in a grey
-wig and spectacles to delude you, M. le
-Commissaire, and me too, unhappy that I am. Ah,
-mon Dieu, there he is! there he is! Seize him,
-in the name of morality and justice, of the
-République Démocratique et Sociale!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The patrol instantly laid violent hands on
-the person of Doctor Thiebault, who, to do him
-justice, made a violent resistance, and broke the
-sergeant's lantern, to the tune of twenty francs,
-before he was borne off to the Conciergerie,
-where he passed three days and nights in a horrid
-vault among thieves and malefactors, before he
-was brought up for examination, when it was
-discovered that it was not a young student, but
-an old professor of the healing art, standing
-high in the estimation of all Paris, who had
-been maltreated and carried off by the watch.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So the whole story came out, and on the
-fourth day I found myself off <i>en route</i> to join my
-father's corps of Chasseurs à Cheval, then
-serving against the Austrians. My good mother
-shed abundance of tears at my departure; the
-Abbé Lebrun gave me abundance of good advice
-and a handful of louis d'or, which I considered
-of more value, and in a month after I found
-myself face to face with the white coats in the
-forest of Frisenheim, on the left bank of the
-Rhine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As a parting gift my dear friend Lisette had
-given me a holy medal to save me from bullets
-and so forth; but, diable! it nearly cost me my
-life, for one of the first balls fired near
-Oggersheim beat it into my ribs; the ball came out,
-but the blessed medal stuck fast, and all the skill
-of our three doctors was required to extract it,
-so after three months I found myself again in
-my beloved Paris on sick leave."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap20"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XX.
-<br /><br />
-THE GALIOTE OF ST. CLOUD.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intro">
-"To be generous, guiltless, and of free disposition, is to
-take those things for bird-bolts that you deem cannon-bullets.
-There is no slander in an allowed fool, though he do nothing
-but rail; nor no railing in a known discreet man, though he
-do nothing but reprove."&mdash;<i>Twelfth Night.</i>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"So," resumed Ribeaupierre, "this was the way
-in which I became one of the 24th Chasseurs à
-Cheval, in the service of the Republic one and
-indivisible, as it boasted to be, as well as
-democratic and social; and how I now find myself a
-sous-lieutenant, under the Emperor, whom God
-long preserve!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And Lisette?&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bah! in my absence I found that she had
-taken to study poetry with M. Grobbin, a
-grenadier of the Consular Guard, the same who was
-the cause of the First Consul issuing his remarkable
-order of the day, concerning that Parisian
-weakness for destroying oneself, in the passion
-named love. Did you never hear of it?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ma foi! You English know nothing that
-is acted out of your foggy little island."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And this order&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Stated that as the Grenadier Grobbin had
-destroyed himself in despair, for his dismissal by
-Madame de Thiebault, the First Consul directed
-that it should be inserted in the order of the day
-for the Consular Guard, 'that a soldier ought to
-know how to subdue sorrow and the agitation of
-the passions; that there is as much courage in
-enduring with firmness the pains of the heart as
-remaining steady under the grape-shot of a
-battery; and to abandon oneself to grief without
-resistance, to kill oneself in order to escape from
-it, is to fly from the field of battle before one is
-conquered!' The order was signed by Bonaparte,
-as First Consul, and countersigned by Jean
-Baptiste Bessières."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Have you ever seen the Emperor?" asked Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Once, mon ami&mdash;only once."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In the field?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No; but nearer than I ever wish to see him
-again, under the same circumstances at least.
-Shall I tell you how it was?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If you please."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, monsieur, it happened in this way.
-I had just been appointed a sous-lieutenant in
-the 24th Chasseurs à Cheval; we had returned
-from service in Italy, and were quartered at
-St. Cloud, where we were soon tired of the gardens,
-cafés, waterworks, and so forth. A few of us
-had been on leave in Paris for some days, where
-our spare cash and prize money were soon spent
-among the theatres, operas, feasting, and other
-means of emptying one's purse, so we were returning
-cheaply to barracks by the galiote, which then
-used to traverse the great bend of the Seine
-every morning, leaving the Pont Royal about
-ten o'clock for St. Cloud; the voyage usually
-lasted about two hours, and cost us only sixteen
-sous each.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"On this occasion, as the morning was very
-wet, the canvas covering was drawn close, and as
-we had the galiote all to ourselves&mdash;save one
-person, a stranger&mdash;we were very merry, very
-noisy, and very much at home indeed, proceeding
-to smoke without the ceremony of asking this
-person's permission, for which, indeed, we cared
-very little, as he appeared to be a plain little
-citizen some five feet high, about thirty-six years
-of age, and possessing a very sombre cast of face,
-over which he wore a rather shabby hat drawn
-well down, a grey greatcoat with a queer
-cape, and long boots; and he appeared to be
-completely immersed in the columns of his
-newspaper.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We were conversing with great freedom
-concerning the consulate, which was just on the
-point of expanding into an empire, and our senior
-lieutenant, Jules de Marbœuf (now our
-lieutenant-colonel) was named by us 'Monseigneur le
-Maréchal Duc de Marbœuf, and master of the
-horse to Pepin le Bref.' Then we ridiculed
-unmercifully the proposal of the Tribune Citizen
-Curée, that the First Consul should be proclaimed
-Emperor, and in this quality continue the
-government of the French <i>Republic</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Peste! what a paradox it is!' exclaimed
-Jules, emitting a mighty puff of smoke, as he
-lounged at length upon the cushioned seat of the
-galiote.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'And the Imperial dignity is to be declared
-hereditary in his family,' I added, impudently,
-reclosing one of the openings in the awning,
-which the quiet stranger had opened, as our
-smoking evidently annoyed him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'In three days <i>the pear will be ripe</i>; France
-will become an appanage of Corsica, and I shall
-obtain my diploma as peer and marshal of France,'
-exclaimed Jules with loud voice; 'and you,
-Eugene&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Oh, I shall be Minister of War to the Little
-Corporal.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Bravo!' said the others, clapping their
-hands; 'we shall all pick up something among
-the ruins of this vulgar and tiresome Republic.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'M. le Citoyen,' said Jules, with affected
-courtesy, 'I perceive the smoke annoys
-you&mdash;you don't like it&mdash;eh?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'No, monsieur,' replied the other briefly and
-sternly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Then M. le Citoyen had better land, for
-before we reach St. Cloud, he will be smoked
-like a Westphalian ham.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Take care, Jules,' said I, 'the citizen may
-be a fire-eater&mdash;some devil of a fellow who spends
-half his days in a shooting gallery.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'<i>Parbleu</i>, he doesn't look much like a
-fire-eater; but perhaps monsieur is an editor&mdash;an
-author?' suggested Jules, with another long puff.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Exactly,' said I; 'he is an author.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Of what?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'The famous <i>Voyage à Saint Cloud par mer,
-et retour par terre</i>, taking notes for a new
-edition.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This sally produced a roar of laughter, on
-which the citizen suddenly folded his paper and
-prepared to rise, as we were now close to St. Cloud.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Don't forget to record, M. l'Editeur, that
-last week I pulled a charming young girl out of
-the river close by.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Trust you didn't pull her hair up by the
-roots, Jules,' said one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Or rumple her dress?' said another.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Fie!' I exclaimed; 'but you will give us
-each a copy, M. l'Editeur?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'On receiving your cards, messieurs,' replied
-the other with a grim smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Here is mine&mdash;and mine&mdash;and mine,' said
-we, thrusting them upon him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'And here is mine' said he, presenting to
-Jules an embossed card, on which was engraved
-'Napoleon Bonaparte, First Consul.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We remained as if paralysed, unable either
-to speak or move; but the justly incensed First
-Consul, after quitting the galiote, which was now
-moored alongside the quay, said to a gentleman
-whose uniform proclaimed him a general officer,
-and who seemed to be waiting there,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Bessières, take the swords of these gentlemen,
-who are to be placed under close arrest,
-and send the colonel of the 24th Chasseurs to
-me instantly.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"His massive features were pale as marble;
-his keen dark eyes shot forth a lurid glare; his
-lips were compressed with concealed fury, and
-we all trembled before the terrible glance of this
-little man in long boots. Ah, mon Dieu! what a
-moment it was! How foolish, how triste, how
-crestfallen we all looked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Your name, monsieur?' said he suddenly to me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Eugene de Ribeaupierre,' said I, with a
-profound salute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Any relation to the officer who bears that
-name, and who was captain-lieutenant in the
-Regiment de La Fere?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'I am his only son, monseigneur.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'That reply has saved you and your
-companions from degradation and imprisonment;
-but still you must be taught, messieurs, that to
-protect, and not to insult the citizen, is the first
-duty of a soldier. To your quarters, messieurs, and
-report yourselves under arrest until further orders!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The authoritative wave of his hand was
-enough, and we slunk away with terrible
-forebodings of the future. A severe reprimand was
-administered through Bessières; but whether it
-was that our political opinions had been uttered
-too freely, or that the First Consul had no wish
-to see the 24th figure in the forthcoming pageant
-of his coronation as Emperor, I know not, but
-on the day following our precious voyage to
-St. Cloud, we got the route for Genoa, so that was
-my first and last meeting with our glorious
-Emperor, whose name I have made a <i>cri de guerre</i>
-in many a battle and skirmish, and for whom
-I am ready to die!" he added, with genuine
-enthusiasm. "Sunset! there goes the gun in
-Valencia," he exclaimed, as the boom of a cannon
-pealed through the still air. "The evening is
-advancing, monsieur, and we must part, unless
-you will accompany me to Valencia."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Impossible!" said Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I will gage my word of honour for your
-safety there and safe-conduct to the mountains,"
-said he, as they issued cautiously from the thicket
-upon the highway.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I thank you, but I am most anxious to complete
-my task."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Tres bien</i>&mdash;so be it; then we part at yonder
-cypress-tree. Hola! what have we here&mdash;a dead
-horse&mdash;the charger of one of my men?"
-exclaimed Ribeaupierre, as they came suddenly
-upon a cavalry-horse lying dead, with all his
-housings and trappings on, by the wayside. "It
-is the horse of Corporal Raoul, one of the three
-men who fell in the ambuscade&mdash;several bullets
-have struck the poor nag, and it has galloped
-here only to bleed to death. Raoul was a devil
-of a fellow for plunder; I know that he always
-carried something else than pistols in his
-holsters&mdash;let us see."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Unbuttoning the flaps of the holsters, Ribeaupierre
-drew forth a pistol from each, and these,
-as they were loaded, he retained; but at the
-bottom of one holster-pipe he found a canvas bag.
-"Parbleu, look here! Raoul, poor devil,
-thought no doubt to spend these among the girls
-in Paris. Plunder, every sou of it," he added,
-tumbling among the grass a heap of gold
-moidores, which are Portuguese coins, each worth
-twenty-seven shillings sterling. "This is Raoul's
-share of the sacking of Coimbra, which the
-Portuguese permitted themselves to make such a
-hideous bawling about. It was the plunder of
-the living, so you may as well have a share of it
-<i>now</i> that it is the spoil of the dead."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who&mdash;I?" said Quentin, hesitating.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Take it&mdash;<i>ma foi!</i>"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Can I do so?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I should think so; what&mdash;would you leave
-it here to fall into Spanish hands, or be buried
-with a dead horse?" said Ribeaupierre, as he
-rapidly divided the money, which amounted to
-one hundred and sixty pieces in all. "'Tis eighty
-moidores each; a sum like that is not to be
-found often by the wayside."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He almost thrust his share into Quentin's
-pocket, and a few minutes after, they bade each
-other warmly adieu, with little expectation of
-ever meeting again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ribeaupierre pursued his way towards Valencia
-de Alcantara, while, following his direction,
-Quentin proceeded towards the hills near
-Herreruela, the rocky peaks of which were yet
-gleaming in crimson light, though the sun had set.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He seemed still to hear the pleasant voice, and
-to see the dark and expressive face of his recent
-companion as he trod lightly on, clinking his
-moidores, happy that he was now master of a
-sum amounting to more than a hundred pounds
-sterling, which would enable him to repay his
-dear old friend the quartermaster, and would
-amply supply his own wants while on service, for
-some time at least.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a remarkable stroke of good fortune, and
-he reflected that but for his meeting with
-Ribeaupierre, he might have passed without examining
-the dead troop-horse that lay by the wayside;
-he reflected further, that but for the turn taken
-happily by the episodes of the day, he might
-have fallen into the hands of a French patrol,
-and been now, with his despatch, in safe keeping
-within the walls of Valencia.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap21"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXI.
-<br /><br />
-THE GUERILLA HEAD-QUARTERS.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "I made a mountain brook my guide,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Through a wild Spanish glen,<br />
- And wandered, on its grassy side,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Far from the homes of men.<br />
- It lured me with a singing tone,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And many a sunny glance,<br />
- To a green spot of beauty lone,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A haunt for old romance."&mdash;MRS. HEMANS.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Save in the west, where the hues of crimson and
-gold predominated, the sunset sky was all of
-a pale violet. Though the mountain peaks were
-rough and barren, and the plains of Estremadura,
-long abandoned and for ages uncultivated, were
-waste and wild in general, the road by which
-Quentin proceeded towards Herreruela lay through
-rich scenery and land that was fertile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The tall Indian corn had been reaped, but its
-thick brown stubble remained. In some places
-it had too evidently been destroyed by fire to
-keep it from the French, or by them to harass
-and distress the Spaniards. The olive and the
-vine grew wild by the wayside; the orange tree
-and the leafy lime, the fig, and the prickly
-pear were frequently mingled in the same place
-with the variegated holly, while the myrtle and
-the lavender flower loaded the air with sweet
-perfume.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Darkness came rapidly on; the reddened summits
-of the sierra grew sombre, the western
-flush of light died away, and ere long Quentin
-found himself traversing a steep and gloomy road,
-that led right into the heart of the mountains.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A sound that came on the night wind made
-him pause and listen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the great bell of Valencia de Alcantara&mdash;the
-same that had rung so joyously when the
-Christian cavaliers of Salamanca defended the
-wild gorge through which the Tagus rolls at
-Al-Kantarah (<i>the bridge</i> of the Moors)&mdash;and it was
-now tolling the hour of ten.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ribeaupierre was now with his friends and
-comrades, doubtless recounting his adventures
-and his escape, by the aid of a British soldier.
-A knowledge of this caused Quentin some
-anxiety, lest among the listeners, there might be
-some who had neither the gratitude nor the
-chivalry of the young chasseur, and who might
-take means to cut off his return to Portugal, for
-he was now fully aware of the risk he ran on
-the Spanish side, and began to see something of
-the snare into which he had fallen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the last stroke of the bell died away on
-the wind, a sense of intense loneliness came over
-Quentin's heart; the sound seemed to come from
-a vast distance, and the narrow road he was
-traversing penetrated into the mountains, which
-seemed to become darker and steeper on each
-side of it; but there is something intoxicating
-in the idea of peril to a gallant soul. It kindles
-a glorious enthusiasm at times, and thus he
-marched manfully on till a voice in Spanish,
-loud, sonorous, and ringing, demanded in a
-military manner&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Quien esta ahi?</i>" (Who comes there?)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Gente de paez</i>," replied Quentin, while the
-rattle of a musket and the click of the lock as
-it was cocked came to his ear, and he saw the
-dark outline of a human figure appear suddenly
-in the centre of the path.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Estere ahi</i> (Stay there), and say from whence
-you come," said the challenger again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin naturally paused before replying, as
-he know not by whom he was confronted, and
-could only make out a tall figure wearing a
-slouched sombrero, by the pale light of the stars.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Presto&mdash;quick!" continued the stranger,
-slapping the butt of his musket; "from whence
-come you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The British cantonments," replied Quentin,
-conceiving the truth to be the wisest answer to
-a Spaniard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Bueno!</i> why didn't you say so at once?"
-exclaimed the other; "but what seek you here?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am bearer of a despatch for Don Baltasar
-dc Saldos. Am I right in supposing you are one
-of his people?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Si, senor; this is his head-quarters."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By this time Quentin had come close to the
-questioner, who still kept his bayonet at the
-charge, and who seemed to be a Spanish peasant,
-accoutred with crossbelts and cartridge-box. He
-was posted on the summit of a hastily-constructed
-earthwork, which was formed across the road in
-a kind of gorge through which it passed; and
-there, too, were in position three brass
-field-pieces, French apparently, loaded no doubt with
-grape or canister to sweep the steep and narrow
-approach.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Beside them lounged a guard of some forty
-men or so, muffled in their cloaks, smoking
-or sleeping, but all of whom sprang to their feet
-and to their weapons as Quentin approached.
-He had now taken off his grey coat to display
-his scarlet uniform, and, when one of the guard
-held up a lantern to take a survey of him, loud
-vivas and mutterings of satisfaction and welcome
-greeted him on all sides.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Senors, where shall I find Don Baltasar?" he
-inquired.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"At his quarters in the puebla, senor. Lazarillo,
-conduct the senor to De Soldas," said one
-who seemed to exercise some authority over the
-rest: "but I fear you will find him busy at
-present. At what time are those French prisoners
-to be despatched?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Midnight, Senor Conde," replied he whom he
-had named Lazarillo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It wants but half an hour to that," said
-the guerilla officer, who was no other than the
-Conde de Maciera, as he looked at his watch;
-and it was with emotions of intense pleasure and
-satisfaction that Quentin found himself proceeding
-towards the mountain village which formed
-the head-quarters of the formidable guerilla chief,
-and thus acting, as he hoped, the last scene in the
-task assigned him; but he knew little of the
-people among whom he was thrown, for in
-character they are unlike all the rest of Europe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nature and the natives," says a traveller,
-"have long combined to isolate still more their
-peninsula, which is already moated round by the
-unsocial sea. The Inquisition all but reduced the
-Spanish man to the condition of a monk in a
-wall-enclosed convent, by standing sentinel and
-keeping watch and ward against the foreigner
-and his perilous novelties. Spain, thus unvisited
-and unvisiting, became arranged for <i>Spaniards
-only</i>, and has scarcely required conveniences
-which are more suited to the curious wants of
-other Europeans and strangers, who here are
-neither liked, wished for, or even thought
-of&mdash;natives who never travel except on compulsion, and
-never for amusement&mdash;why, indeed, should they?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Late though the hour, the guerillas, a loose
-and, of course, disorderly force at all times,
-seemed all astir in their quarters. By the clear
-starlight Quentin could see that the street
-consisted of humble cottages bordering the way, with
-red-tiled roofs, over nearly every one of which a
-huge old knotty vine was straggling. At one
-end rose a strong old archway, "old," Lazarillo
-said, "as the days of King Bomba," and there,
-when the puebla had been a place of greater
-pretension, a gate had closed the thoroughfare by
-night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now there was no barrier save a bank of
-earth and rubbish, hastily thrown up, and a
-couple of field-pieces mounted thereon seemed to
-hint the rigour with which intruders would be
-prosecuted; in short, it prevented any sudden
-surprise in that direction. There were
-lights&mdash;pine-torches or candles&mdash;burning in all the
-houses, and, as he passed the windows, Quentin
-could perceive the dark-bearded faces, the striking
-figures, and varied costumes of the guerillas.
-Various groups of them thronged the little
-street, and a company of them were parading,
-under arms, before the largest house in the
-puebla.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That is the posada, senor," said Quentin's
-guide. "There Don Baltasar resides; but we
-have come too late to speak with him, at least
-until his work is done."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"His work," repeated Quentin, inquiringly;
-"what is about to be done?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Por Dios!</i> you shall soon see," he replied
-with a grin, as a number of men bearing blazing
-pine torches issued from the large house, which
-the guide styled the posada, and, by the united
-light of these, Quentin was enabled to behold a
-strange, a wild, and very awful scene.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As a drum only half braced was hoarsely
-beaten, the guerillas came swarming out of the
-wayside cottages in hundreds, and a singularly
-savage but picturesque set of fellows they were.
-All were strong and hardy Castilians; many were
-exceedingly handsome both in face and form, and
-there was scarcely one among them that might
-not have served as a model for a sculptor or a
-study for an artist.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Their Spanish peasant costumes, in some
-instances were sombre and tattered, in others new
-and gay; the jackets, olive or claret colour, being
-gaudily embroidered, and worn over the scarlet
-or yellow sashes which girt the short, loose
-trousers. Many were bare-legged and bare-footed,
-and many wore long leather abarcas. Not a few
-wore fanciful uniforms of all colours, among
-which Quentin recognised the brown coats of the
-Spanish line, and a few scarlet, which had no
-doubt been stripped from the dead at Roleia and
-Vimiera, as they seemed to have belonged to the
-29th regiment, and the Argyllshire Highlanders.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Most of them wore the native sombreros;
-many had their coal-black locks gathered in a
-net of scarlet twine, or bound by a large yellow
-handkerchief, the fringed end of which floated
-on the left shoulder, while others sported
-regimental shakos and staff cocked-hats. All were
-armed with long Spanish guns, sabres, pistols,
-and daggers, and all nearly were cross-belted
-with cartridge-box and bayonet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In one or two instances the closely-shaven
-chin and the tonsure, but ill-concealed by the
-half-grown hair, indicated the unfrocked friar,
-who had taken up arms inspired by patriotism or
-revenge against the destroyers of convents, or
-it might be to have a turn once more in the
-world, while the state of Spain loosed all ties,
-divine as well as human.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Half hidden in the shadow of the starlight
-night, and half thrown forward into the strong
-red glare of the upheld pine torches that
-streamed in the wind, the figures of those in the
-foreground and those flitting about in the rear&mdash;the
-varied colours of their costumes, their black
-beards and glittering eyes, their flashing weapons,
-together with the rude mountain village, with its
-old and time-worn archway, made altogether a
-strangely wild and picturesque scene.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But its darker and more terrible features are
-yet to be described.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap22"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXII.
-<br /><br />
-A REPRISAL.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Proud of the favours mighty Jove has shown,<br />
- On certain dangers we too rashly run;<br />
- If 'tis His will our haughty foes to tame,<br />
- Oh, may this instant end the Grecian name!<br />
- Here far from Argos let their heroes fall,<br />
- And one great day destroy and bury all!"<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Iliad</i> xiii.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin's nerves received something like an
-electric shock when, on proceeding a little
-further forward, he saw a line consisting of sixteen
-poor French prisoners, partly bound by ropes,
-standing in front of the rudely-formed rampart
-which closed up the archway, and in front of
-them were four large pits, whose appalling shape
-and aspect left no doubt that they were to be
-the premature graves of the unfortunate men
-who now stood in health and strength beside them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Those sixteen persons were of various ranks,
-as four at least seemed by their silver epaulettes
-to be officers, and medals and crosses glittered
-on the breasts of several. Their uniform was
-dark blue, lapelled with red, and all the privates
-wore large shoulder-knots of scarlet worsted.
-They were all French infantry men, taken in
-some recent skirmish. Bareheaded, they stood
-a sad-looking line, and in their pale but
-war-bronzed faces, on which the flickering glare of
-the torches fell with weird and wavering gleams,
-there seemed to be no ray of hope for mercy or
-reprieve at the hands of their captors, who were
-about to sacrifice them in the horrid spirit of
-reprisal which then existed between the Spanish
-guerillas and the French invaders.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good heavens!" said Quentin, in an agitated
-whisper; "are these men about to be shot?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Si, senor&mdash;every one of them!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"For what reason?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Being on the wrong side of the Pyrenees,"
-replied the Spaniard, with a cruel grin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Shot&mdash;and without mercy?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Precisely so, senor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By whose order?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"One who does not like his orders questioned&mdash;Don
-Baltasar de Saldos."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is he capable of such an act?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Capable! Santiago! The French have made
-his heart as hard as if it had been dipped in the
-well of Estremoz (beyond the mountains), which
-turns everything to flinty rock."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As if to enhance the torture of their
-anticipated doom, the Spaniards went slowly and
-deliberately about the selection of a firing party,
-which consisted of no less than sixty men, who
-loaded in a very irregular manner, and, as their
-steel ramrods flashed in the torch-light and went
-home with a dull thud on the ball cartridges,
-a thrill seemed to pass through the prisoners.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One, a grim-visaged and grey-moustached old
-captain of grenadiers, folded his arms, shrugged
-his shoulders, and smiled in scorn and defiance.
-Doubtless, since the fall of the Bastile and the
-days of the barricades, he had seen human lives
-lavished with a recklessness that hardened him;
-but there was another officer who covered his
-face with his handkerchief and wept; not in
-cowardice, for his gallant breast was covered
-with the medals of many an honourable field;
-but perhaps his heart at that moment was far
-away with his wife and little ones in some sunny
-vale of Languedoc, or by the banks of the silvery
-Garonne.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some had their teeth clenched, and their eyes
-wearing a wild glare of hate, of fear, and defiance
-mingled; some there were who seemed scarcely
-conscious of the awful doom prepared for them,
-and some glanced wistfully and fearfully at the
-newly-dug pits which were to receive them when
-all was over.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some were occupied by external objects, and
-the eyes of one followed earnestly the course of
-a falling star of great beauty and brilliance,
-which vanished behind the hills of Albuquerque.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A guerilla, clad in somewhat tattered black
-velvet, now took off his sombrero, and in doing
-so, displayed, by a pretty plain tonsure, that
-he was an unfrocked or degraded priest; but
-now inspired by something of his former holy
-office, he held up a small crucifix, and
-exclaimed&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Frenchmen, if any man among you is a true
-son of the Church, I pray God and the Blessed
-Madonna to receive him, and have mercy on his
-soul!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That is the Padre Trevino, our second in
-command," whispered Lazarillo; "and he is the
-best shot among us."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As Trevino spoke, the sixteen prisoners and all
-the onlookers, crossed themselves very devoutly.
-Some of the doomed closed their eyes, and by
-their muttering, seemed to be praying very
-earnestly. Intensity of emotion seemed to render
-them all more or less athirst, as they were seen
-to moisten their pale lips with their tongues.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The stern grey-haired captain on the right
-alone seemed unmoved; he had neither a prayer
-to give to Heaven or to earth, and thus stood
-gazing stonily and grimly at his destroyers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"On your knees, senors! on your knees!"
-said Trevino.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Never to Spaniards!" replied the old captain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Are they really in earnest, M. le Capitaine?"
-asked the prisoner next him, a mere youth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Earnest&mdash;ma foi! I should think so, Louis."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, mon Dieu&mdash;to be shot thus&mdash;it is
-terrible!" he exclaimed, in a piercing voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"On your knees, Frenchmen," repeated the
-militant friar, "not to us, but to God!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To the blessed God, then," said the old
-captain; "kneel, comrades; 'tis the last word of
-command you will ever hear from me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They all knelt, and now the firing party came
-forward three paces&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&mdash;&mdash;"a death-determined band,<br />
- Hell in their face and horror in their hand."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-And forming line about twenty paces from the
-prisoners, shouldered arms. Then Quentin felt
-his excited heart beating painfully in his breast,
-and he held his breath as if suffocating. From
-the shoulder the muskets were cast to the
-"ready," and then followed the terrible clicking
-of the sixty locks, a sound that made the youngest
-victim, who had been named Louis, a fair-haired
-lad (some poor conscript, torn from his mother's
-arms, perhaps), to shudder very perceptibly and
-close his eyes; and now came the three fatal
-and final words of command from the unfrocked
-friar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Camaradas, preparen las armas!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Apunten!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-("Vive la France! Vive l'Empereur!" cried
-the old captain, defiantly.)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"FUEGO!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The straggling volley of musketry broke like
-a thunder peal upon the silence of the night, and
-echoed with a hundred reverberations among the
-mountains, till it was heard, perhaps, by the
-sentinels in Valencia. Red blood spirted from the
-wounds of the victims, some of whom leaped
-wildly up and fell heavily on the ground. The
-grey smoke rolled over them in the torch-light,
-and when it was lifted upward like a vapoury
-curtain by the midnight wind, Quentin could see
-the sixteen hapless Frenchmen all lying upon the
-earth. Six were screaming in agony, imploring
-the Spaniards to end it&mdash;to finish the vile work
-they had begun&mdash;writhing in blood and beating
-the ground with their heels; but then there were
-ten, who, alas! lay still enough, with red currents
-streaming from the wounds in their yet quivering
-corpses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Half killed and gasping painfully, the old
-French captain struggled into a sitting posture,
-but fell back again, as another volley poured in
-at ten paces ended the butchery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a few minutes more they were stripped,
-even to their boots, and flung quite nude and
-scarcely cold into the pits at the foot of the
-breastwork, four being cast into each.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the pocket of the poor officer who had
-wept there was found a lady's miniature, and three
-locks of fair hair that had evidently belonged to
-little children. The loose earth was heaped over
-the dead, the torches were extinguished, and,
-like a dissolving view or some horrible
-phantasmagoria, the whole affair passed away and was
-over.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the horror excited by the scene and all its
-details, Quentin forgot his mission, his despatch,
-almost his own identity; a sickness and giddiness
-came over him, till he was roused by the
-voice of Lazarillo, his guide, who said in the
-most matter-of-fact way&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Follow me, senor&mdash;perhaps Don Baltasar can
-receive you now."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The house to which he was conducted was the
-most important in the place, and had been for
-ages its chief posada or caravanserie, where the
-muleteers passing between Oporto, Lisbon, and
-the southern and eastern provinces of Spain, had
-been wont to halt and refresh. It was said to
-have been for a time the residence of the
-Scoto-Spaniard Don Iago Stuart, who, with the <i>Sabrina</i>
-and <i>Ceres</i>, two Spanish frigates, fought Lord
-Nelson for three hours in the Mediterranean, in
-1796, with the loss of one hundred and sixty men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The under story was appropriated to the
-stabling of horses, mules, and burros, and from
-thence a rickety wooden stair led to the upper
-floor, the walls of which were cleanly whitewashed,
-the floors covered, not with carpets, which in
-Spain would soon become intolerable with insects,
-but with thin matting made of the esparto grass
-or wild rush.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Military arms and household utensils were
-hung upon the walls or placed on the wooden
-shelves; the stiff-backed chairs and sofas were
-already occupied by some of the before-mentioned
-picturesque and motley actors in the late scene,
-and a large branch candlestick, that whilom
-had evidently figured on the altar of some
-stately church, with its cluster of sputtering
-candles, gave light to the long apartment, and
-enabled Quentin to examine it, and to see seated
-at the upper end, a man in a kind of uniform,
-writing, occasionally consulting an old and
-coarsely engraved map of Alentejo, and referring
-from time to time to the Padre Trevino and
-others, who leaned on their muskets, and who,
-lounging and laughing, smoked their cigaritos
-about his chair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This personage wore a black velvet jacket
-fancifully embroidered with silver; a pair of
-British Light Infantry wings, also of silver,
-probably stripped from some poor 29th man who
-fell at Roleia, were on his shoulders. He wore
-a gorgeous Spanish sash, with a buff cavalry
-waist-belt and heavy Toledo sabre in a steel
-scabbard. His sombrero, adorned by a gold
-band and large scarlet plume, was stuck very
-much on one side of his head, as if he were
-somewhat of a dandy; but underneath it was
-tied a handkerchief, deeply saturated with the
-blood of a recent wound.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Senor Don Baltasar," said Lazarillo very
-respectfully, "a messenger from the British
-cantonments on the frontier."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He of the silver wings and Toledo sabre
-looked up, and Quentin was thunderstruck on
-finding himself face to face with the stranger
-of the wayside well, the same personage from
-whom he had rescued Eugene de Ribeaupierre,
-and whom he had stunned like an ox by a blow
-of the cajado!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap23"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-<br /><br />
-DON BALTASAR DE SALDOS.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "We must not fail, we must not fail,<br />
- However fraud or force assail;<br />
- By honour, pride, or policy,<br />
- By Heaven itself! we must be free.<br />
- We spurned the thought, our prison burst,<br />
- And dared the despot to the worst;<br />
- Renewed the strife of centuries,<br />
- And flung our banner to the breeze."&mdash;DAVIS.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-A start of extreme astonishment deepening into
-a black scowl, which anon changed to something
-of a scornful smile in the Spaniard's sallow
-visage, was Quentin Kennedy's first greeting from
-the Guerilla Chief, who then bowed haughtily,
-and said with an unpleasant emphasis&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oho, senor; so you are the messenger!
-Santos&mdash;why didn't you tell me your errand
-on the day we met by the cross of King
-Alphonso? You would thus have saved yourself
-a devil of a journey and me this knock
-on the head."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It would have been unwise to reveal my
-mission to the first stranger I met; I deplore
-the result of our second interview, senor; but
-I would not stand by and see an unarmed man
-killed without interfering."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A Frenchman!" said Baltasar with intense
-scorn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Maledito," said the Padre Trevino, a man
-with a pair of quiet and deeply set, but the
-most treacherous looking dark eyes that ever
-glanced out of a human head,. "Maledito!" he
-repeated, while playing with the knife in his
-sash, "so this is the fellow who wounded you
-and rescued the French officer?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, Padre; but that is my affair, not yours,"
-said Baltasar, haughtily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And your precious Frenchman&mdash;you conducted
-him no doubt to Valencia?" said the
-Padre, anxious apparently to make mischief.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I left him very near it&mdash;indeed, he was my
-guide part of the way here," replied Quentin
-with composure.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Very accommodating of him, certainly," said
-Baltasar, in whose face the scowl returned; it
-was evident, apart from his indignation at
-Quentin, that he had found some of the wrong
-eggs, the legends on which foretold the early
-abandonment of the entire Peninsula by the
-British, for his mind was full of ill-concealed
-anger and apprehension. "You see now, senor,"
-he resumed with a malevolent grimace, "you
-see now that the spit has become a sword, and
-the sword only a spit. Por vida del demonio! but
-Don Tomaso Yriarte was right after all, for
-we must never take men or things for what
-they may appear."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While Quentin was pondering what reply to
-make to this strange speech, a drop of blood
-fell from the wound in Baltasar's head, and made
-a large scarlet spot on the open map of Alentejo.
-On seeing this the eyes of the Spaniard flashed
-fire, his nostrils seemed to dilate, and, striking
-the table with the haft of his dagger, he exclaimed&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But that the fact of shooting the bearer
-of a British despatch&mdash;a messenger of Don Juan
-Hope, as Lazarillo says you are&mdash;might
-compromise me with the Junta of Castile as well
-as with your general, and thus injure the budding
-Spanish cause, by the Holy Face of Jaen! I
-would send you to keep company with those
-sixteen dogs whom Trevino shot to-night!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Senor, I was innocent of intending evil
-against <i>you</i>," urged poor Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And this despatch which you bring, if it be
-as my soul forebodes, a notification that I am
-only to cover the retreat of the British when
-falling back upon Lisbon and the sea, <i>then</i> say
-over any prayer your heretic mother may have
-taught you, for you, Inglese, shall not see the sun
-of to-morrow rise. I never forgive an insult&mdash;a
-word or a blow!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though Quentin had been told at Portalegre
-somewhat of the contents of the despatch, he
-knew so little of the great game of war and
-politics about to be played in Spain that his
-mind misgave him, and he trembled in his heart
-lest the treasured paper which he now handed
-to this ferocious Spaniard, might indeed prove
-his death-warrant, and seal his doom! He
-thought of his pistols, and cast a glance around
-him&mdash;escape was hopeless, and a cruel smile
-wreathed the thin wicked lips of the Padre
-Trevino.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Baltasar tore open the long official sheet of
-paper, and when his piercing eyes had run rapidly
-over the contents, to Quentin's great relief of
-mind, a smile that was almost pleasant spread
-over his sallow visage, like sunshine on a lake.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hombres," he exclaimed to those around
-him, "listen! There are none here but true
-Castilians, so all may share my joy. On the
-second day of the ensuing November, the first
-division of the British army which is to rescue
-Spain will enter Castile by the Badajoz road, led
-by Sir John Hope, whose advance we are to
-cover by a collateral movement along the mountains
-by the hill ef Albuera. Long live Ferdinand
-the Seventh!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Viva el Rey de Espana!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Viva el nombre de Jesus!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such were the kind of shouts that were raised
-by a hundred voices, while sundry faces, ere while
-darkened by hostile and suspicious scowls, were
-now wreathed with broad smiles, and many a
-battered sombrero and greasy bandanna were
-flourished aloft, while to the triumphant vivas
-the musket-butts clattered an accompaniment on
-the esparto-covered floor; and many a somewhat
-dingy hand shook Quentin's with energy, while,
-in token of friendship and alliance, wine,
-cigaritos, and tobacco pouches were proffered
-him on all sides.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the hubbub was somewhat over, Quentin
-(with some anxiety for his departure, as the
-atmosphere of the guerilla head-quarters seemed
-a dangerous one) said to the chief&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Don Baltasar, my orders were and my most
-earnest wishes are to join my regiment at Portalegre,
-so I should wish to set out by daybreak
-to-morrow."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But the army will soon be advancing&mdash;why
-not remain with us till it comes up?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Impossible!" said Quentin, whose heart sank
-at the suggestion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps you think that you have seen enough
-of us; but in a war of independence, the
-invaded must not be too tender-hearted."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay, senor; but if it would please you to
-give me to-night your reply to the general
-commanding our division, it would favour me
-greatly."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This simple question seemed to raise some
-undefinable suspicion, or recall something
-unpleasant to the Spaniard's mind, for, knitting his
-thick black brows over his deeply-set and lynx-like
-eyes, he regarded Quentin with a steady
-scrutiny, and said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are not an officer, it would seem?
-(How often had this remark stung poor Quentin.) You
-have no sash, gorget, or epaulettes?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, senor," replied Quentin, with a sigh;
-"I have not the good fortune."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What are you then&mdash;a simple soldado?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Senor," replied Quentin, with growing irritation,
-for, in truth, he was very weary of his
-long day's journey, and its exciting episodes;
-"the letter you have just read, I believe, tells
-you what you require to know."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Santos! you are a bold fellow to bear yourself
-thus to <i>me</i>."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am a British soldier on military duty,"
-replied Quentin, loftily, as he saw that hardihood
-was the only quality appreciated by his new
-acquaintances.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What is this? You are styled, <i>voluntario
-del Regimiento Viente y Cinco&mdash;Fronteros del
-Rey</i>&mdash;is that it?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A volunteer of the King's Own Borderers&mdash;yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"An English corps, of course, by your uniform?"
-remarked Baltasar, while twisting up a
-cigarito.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, senor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Maledito</i>&mdash;what then?" he asked, pausing,
-as he lit it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Escotos."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Demonio</i>! I saw them at Vimiera, and
-thought all the Escotos were bare-legged, and
-wore Biscayner's bonnets with great plumes.
-But you shall have the answer you wish this
-instant. I am not a man for delay."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A guide also, senor, will be necessary, so
-that I may avoid the French patrols."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You made your way here without one," said
-the Spaniard, with one of his keen and
-suspicious glances; "moreover, I suppose you are
-not without at least one French friend in
-Valencia; but a guide you shall have, if we can spare
-one," he added, dipping a pen in an ink-horn,
-and, drawing before him a sheet of paper, he
-wrote hastily the following brief despatch, for
-El Estudiente, as he was sometimes named, had
-been well educated by his father, a professor at
-the University of Salamanca.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"SENOR GENERAL,&mdash;I have had the high honour
-of receiving your despatch announcing the day of
-your march into Castile, and, with the help of
-God, Madonna, and the saints, I shall be in
-motion at the same time towards the hill of
-Albuera, with my guerilla force, now two thousand
-strong, with five 12-pounders, to cover your
-flank, if necessary, from the cavalry of Ribeaupierre,
-who occupy all the district in and about
-Valencia. With the most profound esteem, I
-have the honour to be, illustrious Senor and
-General, &amp;c. &amp;c.&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"BALTASAR DE SALDOS Y SALAMANCA."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-While addressing this letter, which he handed
-to Quentin, he turned to the Padre Trevino, who
-had stood all the while leaning on his long
-musket, and said, with a sombre expression on
-his dark face:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Padre, now that I have a moment to spare,
-I shall be glad to learn how your plan for ridding
-us of General de Ribeaupierre has failed, and
-what has become of your remarkably luxuriant
-beard and whiskers, which were ample enough to
-have frightened Murillo himself? You are now
-shaven as bare&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As when I threw my gown and sandals over
-the Dominican gate at Salamanca," interrupted
-the ex-friar, with a grin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Exactly so."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, Baltasar, <i>amigo mio</i>, when I entered
-Valencia this morning, I had, as you know, a
-goodly natural crop of black beard and whiskers,
-with a wig that for length of matted locks
-rivalled those of Lazarillo here. Over these I
-had a high-crowned sombrero, with a tricoloured
-cockade, emblematical of my zealous loyalty to
-Joseph, the Corsican. Clad in an old brown
-mantle, I assumed the character of a poor, meek
-man, the bearer of a petition to the French
-general, De Ribeaupierre, whom I meant to stab
-to the heart as he read it&mdash;aye, <i>por Dios!</i> though
-surrounded by all his staff and quarter-guard, for
-I was well mounted, and they never would have
-overtaken or stopped me, save by closing the city
-gate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I reached the head-quarters just as the whole
-staff were turning out, for tidings had come that
-the guerillas of that devil of a fellow Baltasar the
-Salamanquino, had cut off a cavalry patrol, and
-shot the general's only son, a lieutenant of
-chasseurs. The excitement was great in the garrison,
-where there was such mounting and spurring,
-drumming and so forth, that I was almost
-unheeded, while noisily importuning the
-staff-officers that I had a petition for the general.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Here, Spaniard, give it to me,' said one
-who was covered with orders, pausing, as with
-his foot in the stirrup, he was just about to mount
-his horse.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I measured him with a glance&mdash;I looked
-stealthily all round me to see that the streets
-were clear for a start, as he opened my petition
-and read it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I drew closer; the red cloud I have seemed
-to see on <i>former occasions</i>, came before my eyes;
-my heart beat wildly, my hand, hot and feverish,
-was on my knife. Another moment it was buried
-in his heart, and I was spurring along the street
-towards the southern gate, which I reached only
-to find it shut!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A thousand devils!" said Baltasar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Por Baccho!</i>" muttered the listeners, with
-their eyes dilated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dismounting, I quitted my horse, rushed
-down an alley, where I saw the door of a
-bodega open, and plunged down into it unseen,
-scrambled over the borrachio skins into a
-dark corner and crept behind a heap of them.
-There I lay panting and breathless, dreading the
-proprietor (but he had been hanged that morning
-as a spy), and also the French, armed parties
-of whom passed and repassed, swearing and
-threatening; and from what they said, I learned
-that I had not killed the general&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Not</i> killed him? what the devil, Padre!&mdash;I
-thought you always struck home!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So I do, and so I <i>did</i>, but the knife had
-reached only the heart of his military secretary."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, then, 'tis one more Frenchman gone
-the downward road, the way we hope to send
-them all. And you&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I lay for some time in the cool wine vault,
-among the cobwebs and dirty borrachio
-skins. One of them&mdash;for the temptation was too
-great&mdash;I pierced with my yet bloody knife,
-and a long, long draught of the vino de
-Alicante, cold, dry, mellow, delicious,
-golden-coloured&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ha, ha, ha! Bravo Padre Trevino!" chorussed
-all the laughing listeners, as they clattered away
-with their musket-butts in applause of his
-atrocious narrative.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thou wert revived, no doubt?" said Baltasar,
-impatiently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Amiga mio</i>, I should think so; it brightened
-my intellects; it gave me new ideas&mdash;I drew
-inspiration from that beloved borrachio skin. I
-cast away my ample wig, drew from my wallet
-shaving apparatus, and in a trice I was shaven
-to the eyes, as you see me. Abandoning my
-cloak, I concealed my dagger in my left sleeve,
-took a wine skin under my arm, and walking
-deliberately to the officer in command of the
-guard at the south gate, offered the wine for sale
-at half its value, seeming to all appearance a very
-quiet citizen, anxious in these hard times to do
-a little business, even with the enemy. He
-took the skin from me, bid me go to the devil
-for payment; the sentinel opened the wicket,
-and I was thrust out of Valencia&mdash;the very thing
-I wanted. I said nothing about my poor wife
-or starving little ones, lest their hearts might
-relent, but turned my face to the mountains, and
-I am here."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This savage story met, we have said, with
-great applause, and Quentin, after the scene he
-had witnessed in the street of the puebla, felt no
-surprise that it did so; but his horror of the
-Padre was great, and he felt his repugnance for
-the guerillas increase every moment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Policy and necessity forced him to dissemble;
-yet, in that mountain village there seemed such
-an atmosphere of blood, dishonourable warfare,
-and patriotism gone mad, that he longed
-intensely to be out of it, and once again in the
-more congenial and civilized society he had left.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Supper, senor," said Don Baltasar, rising
-from the table and gathering up his papers;
-"let us rest now, for you must be weary, and in
-truth so am I; and then to bed, for the hour is
-late, and we have both work to do upon the
-morrow. Trevino, who has the quarter-guard?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"El Conde de Maciera, senor," replied the Padre.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good&mdash;not a bat will stir between this and
-Valencia without his hearing of it. This way,
-then," added Baltasar, ushering them into an
-inner apartment, where a very different face from
-any Quentin had yet seen in the Peninsula shed
-a light upon the scene.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap24"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-<br /><br />
-DONNA ISIDORA.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "She sung of love&mdash;while o'er her lyre<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The rosy rays of evening fell,<br />
- As if to feed with their soft fire<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The soul within that trembling shell.<br />
- The same rich light hung o'er her cheek,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And played around those lips that sung,<br />
- And spoke as flowers would sing and speak,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If love could lend their leaves a tongue."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;MOORE.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Unpleasant though his new acquaintances were
-in many ways, Quentin felt a certain sense of
-lofty satisfaction that he was a successful though
-humble actor in the great European drama. His
-mission was achieved! The junction with the
-first division would doubtless be effected by the
-guerillas, and as he thought of the castle of
-Rohallion and those who were there, of gentle
-Flora Warrender and his boyish love, he began
-to hope&mdash;indeed to believe&mdash;that he was actually
-destined for great things after all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In such a mind as Quentin's there was much
-of chivalry, nobility, and enthusiasm that mingled
-with his deep love for a pure and beautiful
-young girl like Flora.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In some respects, the companionship, aspect,
-equipment, and bearing of those half-lawless, but
-wholly patriotic soldiers, seemed a realization of
-those day-dreams or imaginary adventures his
-romance reading had led him to weave and
-fashion; but the awful episode of the night,
-though fully illustrative of the Spanish character,
-and of the mode in which the patriots were
-disposed to carry on the war, was a feature in
-guerilla life never to be forgotten!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My sister, the Senora Donna Isidora," said
-Baltasar, assuming much of the courtly bearing
-of a true Spanish gentleman, while introducing
-Quentin to a very handsome girl; "Donna
-Ximena, the mother of our comrade Trevino,"
-he added, with a deeper reverence, on presenting
-him to a woman, so old, little, dark, and hideous,
-that, after bowing, he hastened to look again at
-the younger lady.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The senor will kiss your hand, Isidora," said
-Don Baltasar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin did so, just touching with his lip a
-very lovely little hand, but, happily for him, the
-leathern paw of the venerable Trevino was not
-presented. Then the party, which consisted of
-Baltasar, Trevino, two other Spaniards, whose
-names are of no consequence, the two ladies,
-and their youthful guest, seated themselves at
-table.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The mother of the ungodly Trevino was a deaf
-old crone who seldom spoke, but always crossed
-herself with great devotion when Quentin looked
-her way, having a proper horror of all heretics,
-whom she believed to be the children of the
-devil, and all to be more or less possessed of the
-evil eye.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Beauty belongs to no particular country, and
-is to be found, more or less, everywhere, yet most
-travellers now begin to admit that Spanish beauty
-is somewhat of a delusion or a dream, which
-poets and novelists think it proper or necessary
-to indulge in and rave about; and some of the
-aforesaid travellers begin to assert that, beyond
-a pair of dark eyes and a set of regular teeth,
-it cannot be honestly said that the women of
-Spain have much to boast of.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Be that as it may, Isidora de Saldos was a
-singularly lovely girl, in somewhere about her
-eighteenth year, a very ripe age in the sunny
-land of Castile. Her eyes indeed were marvellous,
-they were so soft and dark, and alternately
-so sparkling, languishing, and expressive of
-earnestness, all the more striking from the pale
-complexion of her little face. In their deep
-setting and with their long thick upper and
-lower lashes, those seductive eyes seemed to be
-black, while, in reality, they were of the darkest
-grey. Her dark brown hair was long, rich in
-colour, and unrivalled in softness. It was of
-that texture which, unhappily, never lasts long,
-and which often, ere five-and-twenty comes, has
-lost alike its length and profusion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her Spanish dress became her blooming years,
-her figure (which was rather petite), and the
-piquant character of her beauty. It consisted of
-a scarlet velvet corset, and short but ample
-skirts of alternate black and scarlet flounces, all
-very full; slippers of Cordovan leather, with high
-heels, and scarlet stockings, clocked almost to
-the knee, over the tightest of ankles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A white muslin handkerchief, prettily disposed
-over her bosom, a high comb at the back of her
-head, round which her magnificent dark hair was
-gathered and fastened by a long gold pin, that
-looked unpleasantly like a poniard (indeed, it
-could be used as such), with silver bracelets on
-her slender wrists, long pendants that glittered
-at her tiny ears, a large medal bearing the
-image of the Madonna hung round her neck,
-and a black lace mantilla, depending from
-the comb and flowing over all, completed her
-attire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The medal was of pure gold, and bore the
-inscription, "<i>O Marie, concue sans péché, priez pour
-nous qui avons recours à vous</i>," and was, as she
-afterwards informed Quentin, the gift of the
-Padre Trevino, who found it on the body of a
-Frenchman whom he had shot near Albuquerque.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Did you ever taste a real Spanish olla,
-senor?" asked Baltasar, as the covers were
-removed, and the odour of a steaming and savoury
-dish pervaded the apartment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin declared that he had not.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then thou shalt taste it to-night. My
-sister is a famous cook," said Baltasar; "an
-olla she excels in&mdash;it was the favourite dish of
-our old father, the professor at Salamanca, and
-is the most noble dish in the world!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If Spanish, it must be," said Quentin, flatteringly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True," said Baltasar, gravely, while giving
-each of his enormous moustaches an upward
-twist; "we consider everything Spanish supremely
-good."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We are rather a proud people, you see,
-senor," said Donna Isidora, laughing; "and so far
-is pride carried, that to touch royalty is to die."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Manuel Godoy touched royalty pretty often,"
-said Trevino, with a grim smile, "and we never
-heard that Her Majesty of Spain resented it
-particularly."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Did you ever hear of the escape of the sister
-of Philip III., senor?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I regret to say, Don Baltasar, that I never
-heard of Philip himself," replied Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"About two hundred years ago our royal
-family were residing at Aranjuez," said Baltasar,
-while filling his own and Quentin's glass with
-wine; "it is a country palace twenty miles south
-of Madrid, and is remarkable for its size and
-beauty. One night it caught fire; the court
-and all the attendants took to flight, leaving the
-youngest sister of Don Philip to perish. She
-was seen at one of the windows wringing her
-hands and imploring the saints to succour her,
-but a young arquebusier of the royal guard
-proved of more avail. He bravely dashed through
-the flames, raised her in his arms, and bore her
-forth in safety. But Spanish etiquette was
-shocked that the hand of a subject&mdash;of a man
-especially&mdash;had touched royalty; nay, worse,
-that he should have entered her bed-chamber, so
-the soldier was cast into a dungeon, chained to
-a heavy bar, and condemned to <i>die</i>! But the
-princess graciously pardoned him, and he was
-sent away to fight the Flemings under the Duke
-of Alva. His name was De Saldos, and from
-him we are descended."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Spanish etiquette made Donna Isidora rather
-silent and reserved; she somewhat uselessly
-addressed the old crone Donna Ximena from
-time to time, and that worthy matron only
-responded by mutterings, shaking her palsied head,
-or signing the cross beneath the table. At other
-times Isidora made an occasional remark to
-Trevino, by whom she was evidently greatly
-admired, for his keen stealthy eyes were seldom
-off her face, and a malevolent gleam shot from
-them whenever, in dispensing the courtesies of
-the table, she addressed Quentin Kennedy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The past day's skirmish among the mountains,
-the capture and slaughter of the sixteen French
-prisoners, had appetized Baltasar and his three
-companions; and though Spanish cookery is
-seldom very excellent, Quentin was quite hungry
-enough to enjoy the olla podrida of beef, chicken,
-and bacon, boiled with sliced gourd, carrots,
-beans, red sausages, and heaven knows what
-more, well peppered and spiced.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A few strings of rusks, a dish of raisins, with
-plenty of good Valdepenas in jolly flasks, closed
-the repast, after which the invariable cigars were
-resorted to, prior to repose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the whitewashed room, though scantily
-furnished, was close and warm, and as fighting
-was over for the night, Baltasar and his
-comrades unbuttoned their jackets, and each
-disencumbered himself of a <i>peto</i> or wadded stuffing,
-which was supposed to turn a bullet, all the
-better that there was pasted thereon a coloured
-print of some local saint.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The conversation ran chiefly on the new war
-about to be waged by the allies in Spain, the
-various routes likely to be taken by the several
-divisions, the probable points of concentration,
-and so forth. These were chiefly discussed by
-Baltasar and his three companions, all of whom
-had already seen much service against the
-French. The extreme youth of Quentin, and
-his total ignorance of the country, made them
-somewhat ignore his presence, notwithstanding
-the important despatch he had brought, the scarlet
-coat he wore, and that he was the herald of that
-great strife that was not to cease, even at the
-Hill of Toulouse!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He sedulously avoided addressing or coming
-in contact in any way with the Padre Trevino, of
-whom he naturally had a proper horror, as an
-apostate priest who, exceeding his duty as a
-guerilla, became an assassin, and so coolly
-avowed his deadly design upon the father of
-Ribeaupierre.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The youth, the fair complexion, the gentleness
-of voice and eye the donna saw in Quentin,
-together with certain unmistakeable signs of
-good breeding, when contrasted with the dark,
-fierce aspect and brusque bearing of those about
-her now, failed not to interest her deeply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The solitary mission on which he had come;
-the distance from his own country, of the exact
-situation of which, in her strange Spanish
-notions of geography (though passably educated
-for a Castilian), she had not the slightest idea,
-for in those points her countrymen are not much
-improved since Vasco de Lobiera wrote of the
-fair Olinda taking ship in Norway, and sailing
-to the King of England's "Island of Windsor;"
-the knowledge that Quentin was come to fight,
-it might be to <i>die</i>, for her beloved Spain, all
-served to present him in a most favourable light
-to her very lovely eyes, which rested on him so
-frequently that the sharp-sighted Trevino more
-than once bit his ugly nether lip with suppressed
-irritation, while Quentin felt his pulses quicken
-with pleasure, for the dark little beauty, in her
-picturesque national costume, was a delightful
-object to gaze upon; thus, a longer residence
-than he intended in that mountain puebla might
-perhaps have led we are not prepared to say to
-what species of mischief.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the wine circulated, and the conversation
-still turned on the war, Quentin ventured the
-remark&mdash;a perilous one amid such gentry&mdash;that
-he thought the scene he had recently witnessed
-was not favourable to the good success of the
-Spanish cause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Every brow loured as he said this, and the
-gentle donna looked uneasy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Madre divina! you don't know what you
-talk about, senor," said Baltasar, gravely; "had
-you seen your countrymen, as I have mine, shot
-down in poor defenceless groups of thirty or
-forty at a time, on the open Prado of Madrid,
-you would think less harshly of us."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And, senor," urged Isidora, in her soft and
-musical tones, "the poor people of the city were
-forced to illuminate their houses in honour of
-the sacrifice. Was not such cruelty horrible?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Horrible indeed, senora," replied Quentin,
-feeling that it really was so, though sooth to
-say he would have agreed with anything she
-might have advanced, for there was no
-withstanding those earnest eyes and that seductive
-voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Light as noonday were the streets on that
-awful night," said Baltasar, as the fierce gleam
-came into his eyes and the pallor of passion
-passed over each of his sallow cheeks; "ten
-thousand lamps and candles shed their glare
-upon the heaps of slain, where women were
-searching for their husbands, children for parents
-and parents for children, while the cannon
-thundered from the Retiro, and the volleying
-musketry rang in many a street and square.
-What says the Junta of Seville in its address
-to the people of Madrid? 'We, all Spain,
-exclaim&mdash;the Spanish blood shed in Madrid cries
-aloud for revenge! Comfort yourselves, we are
-your brethren: we will fight like you until the
-last of us perish in defence of our king and
-country!' Senor, the massacres of the 2nd of
-May were a sight to shudder at&mdash;to treasure in
-the heart and to remember!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And by our holy Lady of Battles and of
-Covadonga, we are not likely to forget!" swore
-Trevino, striking the table with the hilt of his
-knife.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The spirits of the Cid Rodrigo, of Pelayo
-the Asturian, and all the loyal and brave men
-of old, are among us again," said Baltasar, with
-enthusiasm, "and we shall crush the slaves of the
-Corsican to whom Manuel Godoy betrayed us!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Godoy," said a guerilla who had scarcely
-yet spoken, but who seemed inspired by the same
-ferocious spirit; "oh that I may yet some day
-despatch him as Pinto Ribiero slew that similar
-traitor, Vasconcella the false Portuguese."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Always blood!" thought Quentin, beginning
-to fear that from indulging in bluster and
-rodomontade, they might fall on him, were it for
-nothing more but to keep their hands in practice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I perceive you look frequently at my guitar,"
-said Donna Isidora, on seeing that Quentin
-evidently disliked the ferocious tone adopted by her
-brother and his companions; "do you sing, senor?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, senora."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Or play?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The guitar is scarcely known in my country;
-but if you would favour us&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"With pleasure, senor," said she, with a
-charming smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bueno, Dora," said her brother, taking from
-its peg the guitar and handing it to her; on
-which she threw its broad scarlet riband over
-her shoulder, ran her white and slender fingers
-through the strings, and then a lovely Spanish
-picture, that Phillips might have doted on, was
-complete.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What shall it be, Baltasar?" she asked;
-adding with a swift glance at Quentin's scarlet
-coat, "'<i>Mia Madre no caro soldados aqui</i>'&mdash;eh?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay, Dora, that would scarcely be courteous
-to our guest, who is a soldier."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What then, mi hermano?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Give us one of Lope de Vega's songs. There
-is that ballad which compliments the English
-king who came to seek a wife in Spain."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then with great sweetness she sang Lope's
-verses, which begin&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Carlos Stuardo soy,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Qui siendo amor mi guia,<br />
- Al cielo de Espana voy,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Por ver mi estrella Maria."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-While she sang, Quentin thought of the old
-Jacobite enthusiasm of Lady Winifred and
-Lord Rohallion, and how they would have
-admired alike the song and the singer; and while
-his eyes were fixed on her soft pale face and
-thick downcast eyelashes, he neither heard the
-accompaniment Baltasar beat with a pair of
-castanets, or by the Padre Trevino with the haft
-of a remarkably ugly knife, which seemed alike
-his favourite weapon and plaything.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a few minutes after this they had all
-separated for the night, and Quentin, without
-undressing, as he proposed to start early on the
-following morning, stretched on a hard pallet
-and muffled in his great coat, with his sabre and
-pistols under his head, soon sank into slumber,
-the sound, deep slumber induced by intense
-fatigue; and from this not even the horrors of
-the recent massacre, the louring visage of the
-suspicious Trevino, the voice, the eyes, of the
-lovely young donna, or any other memory,
-could disturb him.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap25"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXV.
-<br /><br />
-THE JOURNEY.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Meanwhile the gathering clouds obscure the skies,<br />
- From pole to pole the forky lightning flies,<br />
- The rattling thunders roll, and Juno pours<br />
- A wintry deluge down and sounding showers;<br />
- The company dispersed to coverts ride,<br />
- And seek the homely cots or mountain side."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Æneis iv.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-From this long and dreamless sleep Quentin
-Kennedy started and awoke next morning, but
-not betimes, as the sun's altitude, when shining
-on the whitewashed walls of the posada,
-informed him. He sprang up and proceeded to
-make a hasty toilet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Breakfast, a guide, and then to be gone!"
-thought he, joyfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On issuing from his scantily-furnished chamber
-into the large room of the posada, or rather
-what was once the posada, he found a number
-of the guerillas busy making up ball-cartridges.
-Heaps of loose powder lay on the oak table, and
-the nonchalant makers were smoking their cigars
-over it as coolly as if it were only brickdust or
-oatmeal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The guitar that hung by its broad scarlet
-riband from a peg on the wall, brought to memory
-all the episodes of last night, and Quentin
-sighed when reflecting that a girl so lovely as
-its owner should be lost among such society, for
-to him, those patriot volunteers of his Majesty
-Ferdinand VII. had very much the air and aspect
-of banditti.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He looked forth from the open windows into
-the street of the puebla; the morning was a
-lovely one. The unclouded sun shone joyously
-on the bright green mountain sides, while a
-pleasant breeze shook the autumnal foliage of
-the woods, and tossed the large and now yellow
-leaves of the ancient vines that covered all the
-walls of the old posada, growing in at each door
-and opening; but Quentin could not repress a
-shudder when he saw the four large graves at
-the foot of the archway, for the faces and forms
-of the poor victims came before his eye in fancy
-with painful distinctness&mdash;the rigid figure of the
-grey-haired captain, the other officer who wept
-for his wife and children, the conscript whom
-they named Louis&mdash;the manly and unflinching
-courage of all!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Baltasar de Saldos twisted up his enormous
-whiskerando-like moustaches, and smiled grimly
-as only a taciturn Spaniard can smile, when he
-perceived this, as he conceived it to be, childish
-emotion of his guest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The ladies await us, senor," said Baltasar;
-and Quentin, on turning, found the dark and
-deeply-lashed eyes of Isidora bent on his, as
-she smilingly presented her plump little hand to
-be kissed, and then the same party who had met
-last night again seated themselves at table, and
-a slight breakfast of thick chocolate, eggs, and
-white bread, was rapidly discussed. As soon as
-it was over, the brilliant young donna and the
-withered old one withdrew, bidding Quentin
-farewell, and adding that as he was to depart so
-soon, they should see him no more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin, with a heart full of pleasure, belted
-on his sabre and assumed his forage cap; he also
-drew the charges of his pistols and loaded them
-anew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And now, Don Baltasar, with a thousand
-thanks for your kindness, I shall take my
-departure," said he. "But how about a guide to
-avoid the main road, and escape the enemy's
-patrols?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"As we are so soon to leave this, and commence
-active and desperate operations, the end
-or extent of which none of us can foresee, the
-Padre Trevino, who is the very model and mirror
-of sons, has decided on sending that excellent
-lady his mother (a slight smile spread over the
-Spaniard's sombre visage as he spoke) across the
-frontier for safety. She goes to the convent of
-Engracia, at Portalegre; and, as she knows the
-whole country hereabouts as if it were her own
-inheritance, she shall be your guide."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She&mdash;Donna Trevino?" exclaimed Quentin,
-who was by no means enchanted by the offer of
-such an encumbrance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Si, senor. You will be sure to take great
-care of her."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But&mdash;but, Don Baltasar, that old dame!
-(devil he had nearly said)&mdash;why not send one
-of your band?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I cannot spare a single man. Spain will
-need them all. The senora is very deaf and old,
-you need scarcely ever address her, and, as she is
-taciturn, she will not incommode you. Besides
-our Spanish mistrust of strangers, she has&mdash;excuse
-me, senor&mdash;a horror of all who are beyond
-the pale of the Church."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But, senor," urged poor Quentin, "to travel
-for two or three days with a deaf old lady!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What are you speaking of, senor? We are
-only a little more than thirty miles from
-Portalegre as a bird flies. You lost your way, and
-rambled sadly in coming here; but I shall mount
-her on a mule, and you on a horse, and you may
-easily be there, even though proceeding by the
-most steep and devious route, before the sun sets."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To-night!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Exactly. There is, as you are aware, a vast
-difference in travelling on horseback with a guide,
-and a-foot, in a strange country, without one."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I thank you, senor," said Quentin, considerably
-relieved, "and shall commit myself to
-the guidance of the old lady, though I fear that
-she views me with no favourable eye."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Here come your cattle."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A noble horse, by Jove!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have filled your canteen with aguardiente."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thanks, senor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I know that you Inglesos can neither march
-nor fight, as we Spaniards do, on mere cold water,
-with the whiff of a cigar."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were now at the door of the posada,
-where a group of dark, idle, slouching, and
-somewhat villanous-looking guerillas were
-loitering, to witness the departure.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, if these fellows only knew that my
-pockets were so well lined with moidores!"
-thought Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lazarillo held the horse (which had evidently
-been a French cavalry charger) and the mule by
-their bridles. The former had a fine switch tail,
-which was now tied or doubled up in the Spanish
-fashion, as he had to perform a journey. The
-latter was a tall, sleek, and handsome animal,
-whose figure indicated great speed and strength.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The saddles were Moorish (the fashion still in
-Spain), made with high peak and croup behind;
-the stirrup-irons were triangular boxes, and the
-bridles, bridoons, and cruppers, with their brass
-bosses, scarlet fringes, tassels, and trumpery
-ornaments, closely resembled the harness of the
-circus.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the pommel of the horse's saddle, hung a
-leather bottle of wine, and behind was a handsome
-alforja, or travelling bag, ornamented with an
-infinity of tassels, and containing bread, sausages,
-a boiled fowl, and other edibles to be consumed
-on the journey. Nothing was forgotten, and
-as Quentin mounted his horse, the old lady was
-led forth by Trevino, who, with Baltasar's
-assistance, lifted her into the mule's saddle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The venerable donna was muffled up in a
-large loose garment of striped stuff, purple and
-white; it covered her from head to foot, and but
-for her thick veil, which entirely concealed her
-withered visage, she might have passed for an
-old Bedouin in a burnous.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Senor, this lady is one in whom I am so
-deeply interested," said Trevino, with the keen,
-fierce, and impressive glance peculiar to him, and
-with a hand, by force of habit, perhaps, on his
-knife; "I say, one in whom I am so deeply
-interested, that I trust to your care and honour in
-seeing her, without hindrance or delay, safe to
-Portalegre."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shall see her safe to the gate of the Engracia
-convent," said Quentin; "and how about
-returning the cattle, Don Baltasar?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Leave them there, too&mdash;my free gift to the
-convent. And now, adios," said he, with a low
-bow; "doubtless we shall meet again when the
-army is in motion."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I hope not," muttered Quentin. "Adios,
-senores."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A few minutes more and they had left the
-puebla, with its lawless garrison, its cannon, and
-earthen bastions, on which the scarlet and
-yellow ensign of Castile and Leon was waving,
-far behind them, and were riding at a rapid trot
-down the green mountain path which Quentin
-had travelled alone last night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Soon he saw the place where the road branched
-off to Valencia, and where he had parted from
-Ribeaupierre; and, ere long, he passed the dead
-horse, already torn and disembowelled by the
-wolves or the wandering dogs which infested all
-the wild parts of Estremadura.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How changed were the scene, the circumstances,
-and the companionship since he had last been in
-the saddle, cantering along the road to Maybole,
-escorting Flora Warrender!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Leaving this path, and striking off to the left,
-Donna Ximena, to whose guidance he silently
-and implicitly committed himself, and who rode
-a little way in front, managing her mule with
-ease, and, considering her years, with undoubted
-grace, conducted him up a steep and narrow
-track that led into the wildest part of the
-mountains, where the summits of slaty granite were
-already beginning to be powdered by frost and
-snow in the early hours of morning, and where
-the valleys, which the industry of the Moors
-made gardens that teemed with fertility and
-beauty, are now desert wastes, abounding only
-in rank pasturage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Their cattle soon became blown, and, as the
-pleasant breeze that fanned the foliage in the
-forenoon, had already died away, and been
-succeeded by an oppressive and sultry closeness,
-they proceeded slowly, and now Quentin thought
-he might venture to converse a little with his
-silent companion, for the monotony of travelling
-thus became tiresome in the extreme.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Donna Ximena," said he, as their nags
-walked slowly up the mountain path. "Donna
-Ximena!" he repeated, in a louder key, before
-she said, without turning her head&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, senor?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It surprises me much that Don Baltasar
-permits a girl so lovely as his sister to reside
-among those dangerous guerillas."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To this remark the haughty old lady made no
-response, so, raising his voice, he added&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He may now be without a home to leave
-her in; but, certainly, Isidora is, without
-exception, the most beautiful and winning girl I ever
-saw&mdash;in her own style, at least," he concluded,
-as he thought of Flora Warrender.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had to shout this remark at the
-utmost pitch of his voice before the old
-lady replied, with a gloved hand at her right
-ear,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, senor&mdash;she put a large and beautiful
-sausage into the alforja."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bother the old frump!" said Quentin; then
-shouting louder still, he added, "Your head,
-senora, is so muffled in that mantle and veil,
-that it is quite impossible you can hear me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Were you speaking, senor?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The devil! I should think so&mdash;yes!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Speak louder."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I cannot possibly speak louder, senora; but
-I was remarking the danger that might accrue to
-a girl of such wonderful beauty as Donna Isidora
-among the companions of her brother."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is Valdepenas, senor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>What</i> is Valdepenas?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The wine in the bota&mdash;taste it if you wish&mdash;I
-filled it for you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin relinquished in despair any further
-attempt to make himself heard or understood,
-and for some miles they proceeded, as before,
-in total silence, while the gathering of the clouds
-betokened a storm, and Quentin was certain
-he heard thunder at a distance; but a few
-minutes after, the sound proved to be that of
-a brass drum reverberating between the
-mountain slopes! As these drums were then used
-by the French alone, he instinctively reined up,
-and his silent guide, to whom he did not deem
-it worth while to communicate his alarm, did
-so too.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah&mdash;you heard that, my venerable friend,"
-said he aloud.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sound now became continuous and steady,
-and his horse, an old trooper we have said,
-snorted and pricked up his ears intelligently.
-It was the regular but monotonous beating of
-a single drummer, who was timing the quickstep
-for the troops in the old fashion still retained
-by the French, when on the line of march, as
-it proves an excellent method, in lieu of other
-music, for getting soldiers rapidly on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Desirous of reconnoitring, Quentin somewhat
-unceremoniously pushed his horse past the
-mule of his fair, but exceedingly tiresome
-companion, and dismounting, led it forward by the
-bridle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The path, rugged and narrow, here went right
-over the steep crest of a hill between some
-volcanic rocks that were covered with dark-green
-clumps of the Portuguese laurel and wild
-olive tree; and from thence it dipped abruptly
-down into a little green valley where stood a
-farm house in ruins.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There by the wayside was a human skull,
-white and bleached, stuck upon the summit of
-a pole, the grim memorial of some act of
-retributive justice for murder and robbery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Proceeding slowly and listening intently as he
-went, for the sound of the drum was coming
-every moment nearer, Quentin peeped over the
-eminence and found himself almost face to face
-with the first section of the advanced guard of
-a French regiment of infantry; they were
-scarcely a hundred yards distant, and were
-toiling up the steep ascent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In heavy marching order, with their blankets
-and blue great-coats rolled, they were clad in
-long white tunics of coarse linen, with large red
-epaulettes, high bearskin caps, each with a
-scarlet plume on the left side; the legs of their
-scarlet trousers were rolled up above the ankles;
-all had their muskets slung, and they were
-chatting, laughing, smoking, and marching,
-some with their hands in their pockets,
-and others arm-in-arm, in that slouching
-and free manner peculiar to all troops when
-"marching at ease," but more especially to the
-French.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On seeing the alarming sight, Quentin leaped
-on his horse, and cried&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Away, Donna Ximena for your life&mdash;here
-are a body of the enemy&mdash;we shall be either
-shot or taken prisoners!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And very ungallantly caring little whether his
-venerable friend, the mother of the worthy
-Trevino, fell into the hands of the French, provided
-that he escaped them, Quentin goaded the sides
-of his horse with his Spanish stirrup-irons, and
-lashed its flanks with a switch which he had torn
-from an olive tree.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It sprung off with a wild bound; the lady's
-mule also struck out, and away they went
-headlong down the mountain side together at a
-break-neck pace, followed by shouts from the
-French, the first section of whom were now on
-the crest of the eminence, and who unslung
-their muskets and opened a fire upon them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Every shot rung with a hundred reverberations
-between the mountain peaks; Quentin,
-however, never looked back, but rode recklessly
-and breathlessly on, thinking as the old lady
-scoured after him on her mule, and as he lashed
-his horse without mercy, that he somewhat
-resembled Tam o' Shanter pursued by Cuttie Sark.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was no contingency of war of which
-he had a greater horror than that of becoming a
-prisoner. If taken by the enemy, years might
-pass on and still find him in their hands, and
-when released or exchanged, he would be little
-better than a private soldier&mdash;not so good, in
-fact. His time for promotion would be irrevocably
-past, and all the stories he had heard of
-the sufferings to which the French Republican
-and Imperial officers subjected our troops when
-prisoners in the impregnable citadel of Bitche,
-the fortress of Verdun, and elsewhere, crowded
-on his mind, with a consciousness of the beggared
-and hopeless life to which the event might
-ultimately consign him, even if he survived the
-captivity, which, in his restless and irritable
-horror of all restraint, he very much doubted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Fortunately for him the long-barrelled muskets
-of the French infantry were very dissimilar to
-Enfield rifles in the precision of their fire; thus,
-he and his companion were soon beyond all
-range, and an opaque vapour, alternating between
-purple and brown in its tint, that descended on
-the mountains, while a storm of blinding rain
-and bellowing wind broke forth, put an end to
-all chance of pursuit; but they rode on fully ten
-miles without knowing in what direction, when
-the fury of the storm compelled them to take
-refuge in a thicket.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dismounting, Quentin was too breathless and
-blown to attempt to outbellow the wind in
-making excuses to old Donna Ximena; he simply
-lifted that good lady off her mule, and conducted
-her under the stately chestnut trees, which gave
-them shelter. He then unslung the bota and
-the alforja from his crusader-like demipique, and
-was proceeding to secure the bridles of their nags
-to a branch, when there burst a shriek from his
-companion, with the exclamation&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Madre divina! O Madre de Dios!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At that instant there shot forth a terrific glare
-which seemed to envelop them, and to fill the
-whole thicket with dazzling light, showing every
-knot and twisted branch, and every gnarled stem.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then there was a tremendous crash, as a thunderbolt
-ground a giant chestnut to pieces, literally
-splitting its solid trunk from top to bottom;
-next rang the roar of the thunder peal as it rolled
-away over the vapour-hidden mountain peaks,
-leaving the dense and murky air full of
-sulphurous heat and odour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Stunned by the torrent of sound, and half
-blinded by the lurid glare, more than a minute
-elapsed before Quentin discovered that, startled
-alike by the flash and the thunder-clap, the
-horse and mule had torn their bridles from his
-hands and galloped madly away, he knew not
-whither.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even the faintest sound of their hoofs could
-no longer be heard amid the ceaseless hiss of the
-descending rain, every drop of which was nearly
-the size of a walnut; so now, there were he and
-old Donna Ximena (who crept closer to him than
-he cared for) left a-foot he knew not where, in
-that gloomy thicket, evening coming on and
-night to follow, a storm raging, and the French
-in motion in the neighbourhood!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Here's a devil of a mess!" sighed poor Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap26"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-<br /><br />
-A SURPRISE.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Preciosa. Is this a dream? O, if it be a dream,<br />
- Let me sleep on, and do not wake me yet!<br />
- Repeat thy story! say I'm not deceived!<br />
- Say that I do not dream! I am awake;<br />
- This is the gipsy camp; and this Victorian."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>The Spanish Student.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-To address or to consult his old and deaf
-companion would have been worse than useless, so
-Quentin angrily sat down to reflect, and,
-unfortunately, in sitting down, did so on a prickly
-pear. Now, there are more pleasant sensations
-in the world than to sit upon such an esculent,
-or a Scots thistle (when one is inclined to ponder
-and to "chew the cud of sweet and bitter fancy"),
-with their bristling stamens, especially if one
-wears the stockingweb regimental pantaloons
-then worn; so Quentin sprang up, and issuing
-from the thicket, perceived with great satisfaction,
-that though the rain was then falling, the
-clouds were rising and the wind abating; in fact
-that the storm, which had most probably
-concealed their flight from the French, was
-gradually passing away; but whether or not, one fact
-was evident&mdash;that the donna and he must pass
-the night in the thicket.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was fortunate that he had rendered the
-flight of their cattle of less consequence, by
-previously securing the bota of wine and the bag of
-provisions, and also that he had ridden with his
-pistols at his girdle, and not in holsters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the light increased a little when the clouds
-dispersed, he perceived a ruined arch, the use
-or origin of which it would be difficult to
-determine. It seemed to be a portion of a small
-aqueduct or vault, Roman, Gothic, or Moorish
-perhaps&mdash;anything but Spanish. It stood amid
-the great old trees of the chestnut grove, and was
-half hidden by the luxuriant grass, the gorgeous
-wild flowers, and odoriferous creepers. It was
-about six feet in height, but several more in
-depth, and heaps of fallen masonry, covered with
-moss and lavender-flowers, enclosed it on one side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin examined the ruin, and finding it
-strewed with dry and withered leaves, blown
-thither by the wind, he led in his trembling
-companion, who seated herself near him, and with
-muttered thanks drank a mouthful of wine from
-the bota, while he drew forth the contents of the
-alforja, to wit, a huge loaf of fine white bread,
-a boiled fowl, and a red sausage, that, of course,
-smelt villanously of garlic. It was in vain,
-however, that he pressed Donna Ximena to partake
-of the guerillas' good cheer. The old lady
-had evidently no objection to a comforting drop
-of the generous Valdepenas, but when he offered
-her food she only buried her head in her veil
-and rocked herself to-and-fro, as if overcome by
-weariness or alarm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Placing his mouth near her ear, Quentin
-endeavoured, by roaring as if he were in a gale
-of wind at sea, to discover if she knew whereabouts
-they were&mdash;whether near Valencia de
-Alcantara or Albuquerque; whether near Marvao
-or San Vincente; whether on the Spanish or
-Portuguese side of the frontier; but she only
-shook her head, and made signs of the cross, as
-the twilight deepened.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin thought that Don Baltasar had certainly
-selected his guide, as the Dean of St. Patrick
-counselled all housemaids should be, for
-their years and lack of personal charms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By Jove&mdash;the plot thickens!" said he, as he
-tugged away at a drumstick of the boiled galina
-and consoled himself with a hearty pull at the
-bota, while his companion laid her old muffled
-head on a heap of leaves, and appeared to fall
-sound asleep; at least Quentin never cared to
-enquire whether she was so or not.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were moments when he seriously considered
-whether he was not justified in marching
-off quietly without beat of drum, and leaving
-this venerable bore to shift for herself, while he
-made the best of his way to Portalegre, as he
-had left it, a-foot; but there seemed to be
-something so ungallant and ungenerous in leaving
-an elderly female (not that the fact of her being
-the maternal parent of Padre Trevino enhanced
-her value) alone, in such a place and at night
-too, that he resolved to wait till morning dawned,
-and then he would see what a night might bring
-forth; and this resolution he formed all the
-more readily that the rain was still pouring in
-a ceaseless torrent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hour after hour passed in silence, no sound
-coming to his ear save the monotonous patter of
-the rain falling on the brown autumnal leaves;
-to Quentin it proved alike a weary and dreary
-time, until the shower began to abate, and for
-the first time in his life he heard a nightingale
-pouring its plaintive and varying notes upon
-the air.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin placed their provender and his pistols
-in a dry place, gathered a heap of leaves for a
-pillow, and coiling himself up at the other end
-of the ruin, <i>i.e.</i>, as far away as possible from
-old Donna Ximena, he followed her example and
-courted sleep.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With the first blink of the day he started
-from his nest of leaves. Grey dawn was stealing
-between the great rough stems of the chestnut
-wood. The rain and the wind were over; the
-vapours of the night had dispersed, and no trace
-remained of the past storm save the scathed and
-thunder-riven tree, the ruins of which were
-scattered around its root.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The green slopes of the distant hills were
-visible, dotted by the drenched merino sheep,
-thousands of which are annually driven into
-Estremadura, to fatten on the rich wild grass of
-its pastures. In the distance, and darkly defined
-against the increasing pink and violet tints of
-the sky, were two windmills, quaint and old, like
-those which the Knight of La Mancha assailed;
-their wheels were broken, and the fans hung
-motionless and in tatters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A herd of wild swine rushed through the
-grove, snorting and grunting in their headlong
-career, but the Donna Trevino still slept soundly,
-if Quentin might judge by her breathing, which
-was low and regular. After stepping forth to
-reconnoitre, and finding the whole vicinity of the
-thicket silent, and no appearance of either friend
-or foe on the roads in any direction, he deemed
-this the wisest and safest time to set forth, and
-returned to wake his companion, whom he really
-began to wish&mdash;we shall not say where, or with
-whom&mdash;but safe at least with her son, the Padre
-Trevino.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On approaching he perceived that the loose
-and ample garment of alternate white and purple
-stripes in which she was enveloped, was partly
-deranged, and the thick black lace veil which
-covered her head was open in front, for now one
-half of it floated over her right shoulder. Then,
-on drawing nearer, how great was his astonishment
-to behold in the sleeper, not the wrinkled
-and withered visage of the deaf old woman, whom
-all yesterday and all last night he supposed to be
-his bore and companion, whom he had left to
-shift for herself when the French appeared, and
-from whom he had crept as far away as possible
-in the singular den they tenanted&mdash;not the faded
-visage, we say, of Donna Ximena, but the pale
-and delicately cut features, the wondrously long
-black eyelashes, and the lovely little face of
-Donna Isidora!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The red pouting lips were parted, and the
-pearly teeth below were visible, imparting to her
-expression a charming air of child-like innocence
-and repose. Ungloved now, one white and
-slender hand, grasping her gathered veil, was
-pressed upon her bosom; her left cheek reposed
-upon her outstretched arm, and the partial
-disarrangement of her picturesque costume, as she
-had turned in her sleep, left visible rather more
-than her short Spanish skirts usually revealed of
-two remarkably pretty ankles, cased in their tight
-scarlet stockings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The hardships to which her brother's recent
-guerilla life had subjected her, evidently enabled
-the adventurous girl to "rough it," as soldiers
-say; thus she still slept soundly, while Quentin,
-half kneeling down, surveyed with wonder,
-perplexity, and pleasure, the beauties thus suddenly
-revealed by the open veil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Touching her hand, he awoke her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She started up with an exclamation of alarm,
-and her hand seemed instinctively to feel for the
-bodkin which confined her hair. Aware that
-she was discovered now, she assumed a sitting
-posture, threw back her thick veil, and a singular
-expression, half angry and half droll, came into
-her dark eyes, as she said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You have been looking at me as I slept!
-Was it proper to penetrate my disguise, senor?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Pardon me, senora; I did not, indeed; I
-came but to wake you, and found your veil open;
-could I refrain from looking&mdash;from admiring?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you have discovered me&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To be young and beautiful&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"When you thought me old and hideous&mdash;is
-it not so?" she asked, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I confess it, and with pleasure, senora. This
-is very enchanting&mdash;but what romance is it&mdash;what
-absurd comedy is this you are acting?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Absurd?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Pardon me again; but though it is a game
-or drama that charms me very much, it is not
-without peril.'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To whom?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To both&mdash;perhaps most of all to you, senora."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She replied only by a haughty smile, so Quentin
-continued&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now we shall make our way together
-delightfully to Portalegre, and there can be no
-more deafness; or can it be that you and Donna
-Ximena changed places here in the night? Oh,
-tell me what does all this mean?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shall tell you, senor," said the now blushing
-girl; "it means simply that my brother was
-most anxious that I, and not Donna Ximena,
-should reach the St. Engracia convent, as a
-place of permanent safety till these wars and
-tumults are over. He also wished to supply you
-with a guide to Portalegre, where, but for the
-loss of our horses, we should have been last
-night. Thus my brother&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Deemed that as old Donna Ximena you
-would be safer with me than in your own character?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Exactly," she replied, laughing; "we
-thought there would be little chance of your
-attentions annoying her."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do you imagine that when the French appeared
-I would have turned my horse's head and
-left you without thought or ceremony, as I left
-her&mdash;she whom I considered an old, deaf bore
-and encumbrance? You have acted well your
-part, senora. How you made me roar and
-shout, as if I was commanding a whole brigade!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And now, senor, that you know I am not
-Donna Ximena, will you respect me the less?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"On the contrary, I shall respect you a great
-deal more," said Quentin with enthusiasm, as
-he took her hand in his; but she withdrew it
-as if to adjust her veil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then, am I to understand that in your
-country, youth is more honourable than age?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nay, it is not, but youth is more pleasing,
-certainly."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You have been most kind to me, senor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Kind, senora?" Quentin thought she was
-quizzing him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; I cannot forget how, even as old
-Ximena, you lifted me from my mule, conveyed
-me in here, made a couch and pillow for me, and
-so forth. <i>Beso usted la mano, caballero</i> (I kiss
-your hand, sir)," she added, taking his hand in
-hers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Donna Isidora, I cannot permit you to
-do this&mdash;unless&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do you not know the customs of Castile?
-Well, unless what?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You permit me to kiss yours."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How simple! there, senor," she added,
-presenting a very lovely little hand, which he
-pressed to his lips.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Your cheek now&mdash;ah, you will permit me?"
-urged Quentin, becoming a little bewildered by
-the whole situation, and by the clear dark eyes
-that looked so softly into his.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do so, senor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin was promptly pressing forward, when
-the point of a very unpleasant looking little
-stiletto met his cheek!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Senora," he exclaimed, "what do you mean?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That I shall stab you to the heart if you
-molest me&mdash;that is all!" said she, as a gleam
-came into her dark eyes that vividly reminded
-Quentin of Baltasar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So, so, senora," said Quentin, with an air
-of pique, "you are certainly able to take care of
-yourself."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I live in times when it is necessary I should
-be so," was the dry retort.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin surveyed her with growing interest,
-for her beauty was very remarkable in its
-delicacy and darkness. She had a short crimson
-upper lip, that seemed to quiver with every
-passing thought, for she was an impressionable,
-enthusiastic, and high-spirited girl. After a pause,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now that you have done admiring me, I
-suppose," said she, "you will kindly say what
-we are to do?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We cannot remain here among the leaves,
-like a couple of gitanos, or two rooks in search
-of a nest."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We shall continue our journey to Portalegre,
-with your permission, senora; and now that you
-have recovered your hearing, and that I am not
-obliged to bellow like a madman, you will
-perhaps, if in your power, tell me where we are?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Donna Isidora laughed and presented her
-hand; Quentin assisted her to rise, and on
-issuing from the ruined arch, she looked about
-her for some time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By those two windmills," said she, "I know
-that we are not far from Salorino."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A town, senora?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; it lies at the base of yonder lofty
-mountain, on the left bank of the river Salor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is it large?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A considerable place for manufactures. This
-purple and white striped woollen stuff is made
-there; but the town must be avoided, as it is
-occupied by a troop of Polish Lancers."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then did we ride the wrong way in the rain
-last night?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; we are still fully thirty miles from
-Portalegre."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Thirty miles yet, senora!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, and Valencia de Alcantara, where the
-French Light Cavalry are, lies exactly midway,
-on the main road, between us and it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin's heart sunk at this information.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are certain of all this, senora?" said he,
-laying his hand lightly on her arm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Quite, senor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We cannot&mdash;you, at least, cannot&mdash;proceed
-thirty miles on foot; so what in heaven's name
-shall we do?" said Quentin in great perplexity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Conde de Maciera, who serves in my
-brother's band of guerillas as captain of a
-hundred lancers, has a villa at the foot of yonder
-hill near the Salor; I remember that the wildest
-bull we ever had in the arena at Salamanca
-came from thence. The place is scarcely two
-miles distant from this, and could we but reach it,
-doubtless some of his domestics might assist us."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The idea is excellent; let us set out at once!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Be advised by me, senor, and take some
-breakfast first," said the Spanish girl, laughing;
-"it is a custom we guerillas have, always to eat
-when provisions can be had, lest we halt where
-there are none."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin at once assented, and opening the
-alforja produced the fowl and other edibles, on
-which they made a slight repast before setting
-forth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Seating herself within the ruined arch, her
-head reclined upon her left hand, Isidora
-displayed to perfection a lovely rounded arm, and
-a pair of taper ankles and little feet, towards
-which Quentin's eyes wandered from time to
-time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You look at me very earnestly, senora," said
-he, while his cheek reddened and his heart
-fluttered on finding the dark searching eyes of the
-young donna fixed on him more than once.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There is, I can see, a sad expression in your
-eyes, senor."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do you think so?" asked Quentin, smiling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But how, or why do you suppose so?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I don't know; I perceive that you are a
-mere boy (muchacho), and yet&mdash;and yet&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What, senora?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ave Maria purissima! I can't say&mdash;there
-is something that speaks to me of thought,
-reflection, care beyond your years."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It may well be so, dear senora; I have never
-known a relative in the world; I have been an
-orphan from infancy, and&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And now," said she, presenting him with
-her hand, "you are a soldier who comes to fight
-for Spain!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And for <i>you</i>, too, senora," he added, as he
-touched her fingers with his lips, and with a
-devotion that somewhat surprised himself. "But
-are you afraid of me, as old Donna Ximena was?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No&mdash;why do you think I am?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You sign the cross so often."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Because, senor&mdash;excuse me, but the morning
-air is excessively chilly here, and I yawn
-frequently."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you do so?&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"For fear Satanas should dart down my
-throat unseen and unfelt. It is a
-belief&mdash;superstition you may deem it&mdash;that we have in
-Castile; though you, perhaps, who have,
-unfortunately, been educated among heretics, may
-know neither the dread nor the holy sign. I
-know that it is not used in your country,
-senor&mdash;because I can read."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I should think so," said Quentin, amused
-by her simplicity; "is not every lady educated?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No&mdash;not in Spain."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Lest, if handsome, they should write to
-their lovers."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And yet, senora, they had the rashness to
-teach you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do you mean that I am handsome, or that
-I must have lovers?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I mean both&mdash;that being the first of necessity
-leads to your possessing the last."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My poor father, the good old professor, who
-was so barbarously slain by the French, was
-careful to teach me many things, though our
-female literary accomplishments are usually
-confined to our prayers and rehearsing legends
-of the saints, songs of the Cid Rodrigo, or
-by Lope de la Vega. In England I believe
-you have women who could lead the Junta or
-shine in the Cortes itself; but what matters their
-education, when it only serves to confirm their
-heresies? And now, senor, place the bota in
-the alforja, and sling that over your shoulder;
-let us go, and I shall be your guide to Villa
-de Maciera."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap27"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-<br /><br />
-THE VILLA DE MACIERA.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "Innocence makes him careless now.<br />
- * * * *<br />
- Youth hath its whimsies, nor are we<br />
- To examine all their paths too strictly:<br />
- We went awry ourselves when we were young."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Old Tragedy.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Donna Isidora had now divested herself of the
-large and loose woollen weed in which she had
-travelled yesterday, and threw it gracefully over
-her arm. In her short but amply flounced skirt
-she tripped&mdash;as we are writing of a Spanish girl
-we should have it glided&mdash;along by the side of
-Quentin, who moderated his pace to suit hers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The rain of last night had completely laid the
-dust; the morning air was cool and delightful,
-and save a Franciscan friar of Medellin, travelling
-like themselves on foot, with a canvas wallet slung
-on his back and a long knotted staff in his hand,
-they met no one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The heavy clouds were banking up from the
-westward, but the sky was beautiful overhead,
-and, refreshed by the torrents of last night, every
-herb, flower, and leaf wore their brightest hues.
-The Salor, a river which flows from the mountains
-southward of Caceres, in Estremadura, and
-joins the Tagus near Rosmaninhal, in the province
-of Beira, and the bed of which frequently becomes
-quite dry in summer, now came in sight, swollen
-by the recent rains, and flowing red and muddy
-between groves of olive trees, which were still in
-full leaf, as in those regions the olive harvest
-usually occurs about the month of December.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the surface of the rushing river the large
-flowers of the white and purple lotus floated, or
-sunk to rise again, bobbing in the eddies; and
-some brightly feathered birds, though summer was
-long since past, twittered about, filling the air with
-melody and song.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the western clouds, we have said, came
-gathering fast and heavily, and in sombre masses
-that alternated between purple and inky grey,
-while the wind rose in hot or cold puffs that
-gradually grew to gusts; and these, with other
-indications that rough weather was again at hand,
-made the two pedestrians hasten on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ere they crossed the old Roman bridge that
-spans the Salor, by arches that must whilom have
-echoed to the marching legions of Quintus
-Sertorius, the sound of distant thunder was heard
-among the mountains, and then the clouds
-gathered so fast, that ere long every vestige of
-blue was completely hidden in the sky.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If rain comes, what a situation for you,
-Donna Isidora!" said Quentin, turning to his
-companion, to whose usually colourless cheek,
-the early morning air and the exercise of walking
-had imparted a lovely flush; in fact she seemed
-radiantly beautiful!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, fear not for me, senor, though to have
-one's only dress wetted, is rather unpleasant,"
-she replied; "besides, the villa of the Conde is
-close at hand."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At that moment one or two large drops of
-warm rain plashed on the road they traversed,
-causing them to quicken their steps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Striking off from the main highway, Isidora
-led Quentin between two gate pillars, each of
-which was surmounted by a marble lion, seated
-on its haunches, with its fore paws resting on a
-shield. This gave access to an avenue, where
-two rows of giant beeches, now brown and yellow,
-mingled with ilex (whose leaves seem red as
-blood when viewed in the sunshine), cast their
-shadows on two lesser rows of dense and dark-leaved
-Portuguese laurels, myrtle and wild gentian;
-but in this silent and untrodden avenue, the
-rank grass and weeds were already sprouting.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This is the villa," said Donna Isidora, as
-they came suddenly in sight of a chateau of
-very imposing aspect; "but Madre Maria! what
-is this? It seems quite deserted!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A double flight of white marble steps led
-from a green lawn to a noble terrace, the balustrades
-of which were elaborately carved, and had
-at regular intervals square pedestals bearing each
-an enormous porphyry vase filled with flowers
-that diffused a delicious aroma. From the
-architecture of the villa, a large square mansion with
-wings, which rose from the plateau of this stately
-terrace, and by its Palladian style, many of the
-pediments, cornices, capitals, and especially the
-statues that adorned it, seemed to have been taken
-from the various Roman ruins in the vicinity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Around this terrace was a row of orange trees,
-the fruit of which had never been gathered, as it
-lay in heaps under each, just as it had fallen
-from the branches when dead ripe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The plashing water of a beautiful bronze
-fountain, where four Tritons shot each a jet of pure
-crystal from a trumpet-shaped conch into a
-yellow marble basin, alone broke the silence and
-stillness of the place. Torn from its elaborate
-hinges, the front door lay flat on the tesselated
-marble floor of the vestibule, having evidently
-been beaten in by the simple application of a
-large stone which still lay above it; and the
-tendrils of the gorgeous acacias that covered the
-front wall of the villa, had already begun to find
-their way in at the open door, and to creep
-through the shattered windows.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The French have been here!" said Isidora,
-with a dark expression in her eyes; "De
-Ribeaupierre's dragoons have done this."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The villa is quite deserted, senora," said
-Quentin, as they stood in irresolution and perplexity on
-the terrace. "How far are we from Salorino?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Six miles at least."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin hallooed loudly two or three times,
-but the echoes of the tenantless abode alone
-responded, and the deathlike stillness there made
-Isidora shrink close to his side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I was not prepared for this," she said, while
-her eyes filled with tears; "yet what else can we
-expect while a Frenchman remains alive on this
-side of the Pyrenees?" she added, bitterly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There seems to be no living thing here,
-senora; not even a household dog."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What shall we do, senor?" she asked,
-earnestly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Whatever we do ultimately, senora, we
-must take shelter now, for here comes the storm
-again, and with vengeance, too!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So intent had they been in observing the
-indications of desertion and decay about this noble
-villa, that they had failed to see how fast the
-storm had gathered round them. A gust of
-wind tore past the edifice, strewing the terrace
-with withered acacia flowers and orange leaves,
-and then the rain descended in torrents, driving
-the travellers for shelter into the open vestibule.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In blinding sheets it rushed along the earth,
-from which it seemed to rise again like smoke or
-mist, then the thunder hurtled across the darkening
-sky, and the yellow lightning played like
-wild-fire about the bare granite scalps of the
-distant sierras, throwing forward every peak in
-strong outline from the dusky masses of cloud,
-amid which they "were an instant seen, and
-instant lost."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Madre de Dios!</i> there seems a fatality in all
-this!" exclaimed Isidora, as the overstrained and
-half Moorish ideas of etiquette and female
-propriety which prevail in Spain and Portugal
-occurred to her; then, looking at Quentin, while
-a blush suffused her cheek, she added, "to be
-wandering in this manner is a most awkward
-situation, especially for me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin made some well-bred reply, he knew
-not what; but with all its awkwardness he felt
-that "the situation had its charm," as he took her
-hand and suggested that they should investigate
-the premises and see whether the villa was really
-so deserted as it appeared.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From the splendid vestibule, the lofty walls
-and rich cornices of which were covered with
-armorial bearings of the past Condes de Maciera,
-many of their escutcheons being collared by the
-orders of Santiago de Compostella, Santiago de
-Montesa, the Dove of Castile, and the Golden
-Fleece, with the crossed batons that showed how
-many had of old commanded the Monteros de
-Espinosa, or Ancient Archers of the Spanish
-Royal Guard, Quentin and Donna Isidora
-ascended a marble stair to a large corridor, off
-which several suites of apartments opened, and
-through these they proceeded, every moment
-fearful of coming suddenly upon some sight of
-horror, as the French were seldom slow in using
-their bayonets against any household that
-received them unwillingly, and the battered state
-of the entrance door showed that the villa had
-been entered forcibly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The great corridor, like many of the rooms,
-was hung with portraits of grisly saints and
-meek-eyed Madonnas, and of many a lank-visaged
-and long-bearded hidalgo, with breast-plate,
-high ruff, and bowl-hilted toledo, looking
-with calm pride, or it might be defiance, from the
-flapping canvas, which had been slashed in mere
-wantonness by the sabres of the French dragoons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Save that a number of chairs were overthrown,
-that several lockfast places had been broken
-open, and that many empty bottles strewed the
-floors, the furniture appeared to have been left
-untouched. The gilt clocks on the marble
-mantel-pieces ticked no more, and the spiders had
-spun their webs over the hour-hands and dials,
-thus showing that the villa must have been
-deserted by the family and servants of the count
-for some weeks. The damask sofas and ottomans
-were covered with dust, and many books
-lay strewn about on the dry and now musty
-esparto grass that covered some of the floors,
-which were nearly all of highly polished oak.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quentin picked up a lady's white kid glove,
-and a black fan covered with silver spangles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"These have belonged to the mother of the
-Conde, who resided here; where can the poor
-lady have fled&mdash;what may have become of her?"
-said Isidora as they wandered on, her voice and
-Quentin's sounding strange and hollow in the
-emptiness of the great villa.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All the bed-chambers were untouched, save
-in some instances where a mirror or cheval glass
-was starred or smashed by a pistol-shot; and
-so, ere long, the visitors in their search found
-themselves in the chapel, a little gothic oratory
-of very florid architecture, which had evidently
-formed a portion of a much older edifice than
-the present villa; for there, on a pedestal tomb,
-having a row of carved weepers round it, and little
-niches and sockets for twelve votive lamps, lay
-side by side the effigies of two knights in
-chain-armour, with their cross-hilted swords and
-military girdles on, and their hands folded in prayer.
-Quentin drew near them with interest, for he
-remembered the quaint effigy of Sir Ranulph
-Crawford, Keeper of the Palace of Carrick, in
-the old kirk of Rohallion, and while Isidora
-knelt for a moment before the little altar, he
-read on a brass plate this inscription:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Aqui yazen el noble y valiente Conde, Don
-Fernando de Estremera, y su hijo, Don Antonio,
-Condes de Maciera y Estremera; fueron muertos
-en una batalla con los Infieles, en tiempo del
-Rey Don Alfonso de Castile, Leon, y Galicia.
-Requiescant in pace."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"More than seven hundred years ago," thought
-Quentin. "Sir Ranulph's tomb is a thing of
-yesterday compared with this."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He surveyed with emotions of pleasure and
-interest this little oratory, the sanctuary of
-which, with its half Moorish and arabesque-like
-carvings was a miracle of art and a mass of gilding.
-It must have been erected almost immediately
-after the expulsion of the Arabs from that part of
-Castile, and so those Counts of Maciera had lived
-and died before the days of the Cid himself,
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "The venging scourge of Moors and traitors,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The mighty thunderbolt of war!<br />
- Mirror bright of chivalry,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ruy, my Cid Campeador!"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-for he had been born when Canute the Dane
-swayed his sceptre over England, and when
-Malcolm of Scotland&mdash;Rex Victoriosissimus&mdash;was
-nailing the hides of the Norsemen on the doors
-of his parish churches. It was a remote period
-to look back to, and yet, in some of her national
-features, particularly in a proneness to bloodshed,
-Spain was pretty much the same as when the
-Cid shook his lance before the walls of Zamora.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Light, many hued, crimson, blue, and green,
-streamed, with flakes of dusky yellow, through
-the chapel's deep-arched windows, shedding a
-warm glow on its carved pillars, ribbed arches,
-and lettered stones that marked the graves of the
-dead below, where the Condes de Maciera, "el
-noble&mdash;el magno," were mingling with the dust;
-but now their dwelling-place was desolate, and
-the heir of all their titles, a half-desperate outlaw
-and soldier, was serving as a guerilla in the band
-of Baltasar the Salamanquino.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Various stools and hassocks were still disposed
-near the oak rail of the sanctuary, as if to mark
-where several of the fugitive household had knelt
-but recently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The chapel suddenly grew very dark, but was
-lightened as quickly by a terrific flash without.
-Against this glare of light the mullions and
-tracery of the windows were darkly but distinctly
-defined, and, as it passed away, a peal of thunder that
-seemed directly over their heads, shook the place.
-Crossing herself, Donna Isidora sprang close
-to Quentin's side, and taking her by the hand,
-he led her back to a more cheerful part of the
-voiceless mansion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The weather was completely broken now, and
-to Quentin it seemed that unless there was some
-change, of which there was no probability, as the
-year was closing, the army were likely to have a fine
-time of it, after breaking up from their snug
-cantonments in Portugal to open a campaign in Spain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was not the slightest appearance of the
-rain abating, so feeling the necessity for making
-themselves as comfortable as circumstances would
-permit, Quentin set about closing all the doors
-and windows, and selecting a room that had
-evidently been the boudoir of the Condesa, as
-its walls were covered by white silk starred with
-gold; there, too, were pale-blue damask hangings,
-starred with silver, a piano and guitar, with
-piles of music, illuminated books, sketches,
-statuettes, and ornaments, all indicative of a
-graceful taste and refined mind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These were all untouched, so there Quentin
-installed his companion, whose eye was the first
-to detect a gilt cage, at the bottom of which a
-former friend and favourite, a little singing bird,
-lay dead and covered with dust.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She seated herself near the window to watch
-the black clouds whirling in masses around the
-peaks of the great mountain ranges that lay
-between her and her temporary home in Portugal,
-and on the rain plashing frothily on the marble
-terrace, gorging the gurgoyles of the parapet
-and the basin of the bronze fountain, which had
-long since overflowed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile Quentin bustled about; to have
-the run of such a house was not without interest.
-He soon procured a brasero, which he filled
-with charcoal, and lighted by flashing some
-powder in the pan of a pistol; and for warmth,
-he made Isidora place her dainty little feet upon
-it. Canisters of biscuits and of fruit of various
-kinds, several flasks of Valdepenas and Champagne,
-a ham, and several other matters which
-he found in overhauling the cook's department
-and butler's pantry, with all the appurtenances
-of the table, he appropriated with a campaigner's
-readiness, and insisted upon his fair companion
-partaking of a repast with him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The storm&mdash;the rain, at least, as we shall have
-to show&mdash;continued much longer than they
-anticipated. But if it lasted for a fortnight,
-there seemed to be still provisions enough in the
-old villa to prevent them from being starved out
-even in that time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For a period both were now perplexed and
-thoughtful.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Donna Isidora was considering how all this
-unlooked-for deviation and delay were to be
-explained to her brother, who, as a Spaniard, was
-naturally suspicious, and of whom she stood in
-considerable awe. The latter emotion made her
-conceive that the most peaceful and prudent
-course would be, to say nothing whatever about
-the casual discovery of her disguise, or her
-wanderings on the way before reaching Portalegre;
-but then, how was she to account for the
-absence of the horse and mule, but for the loss of
-which, after their flight from the French, she
-and Quentin would have been last night safe and
-separated at the place of their destination!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then when remembering the haughty temper
-of Cosmo, and the cold and hostile manner in
-which he was treated by him, Quentin felt some
-alarm lest his honour might be impugned by the
-protracted delay in rejoining the Borderers;
-while his own experience, and the hints he had
-received from Major Middleton, made him now
-resolve, however great his reluctance would be
-in leaving that fine old soldier and Askerne,
-Monkton, and other 25th men, to volunteer into
-some other regiment&mdash;perhaps in the 94th, if his
-friend Captain Warriston could scheme it for him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The moidores which Ribeaupierre had so
-generously shared with him, made a transfer of this
-kind appear the more easy in a monetary point
-of view; and luckily the army had not yet begun
-to move, so his courage was still unimpeachable.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Reflection showed that Cosmo would render
-his life intolerable, and make promotion an
-impossibility.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I shall seek out another colonel, if he can
-be found in the service. I can only fail in the
-attempt, and be no worse than I am," said
-Quentin, unintentionally aloud, so that the dark
-eyes of the Spanish girl rested inquiringly on him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He now seated himself in the same window
-opposite Isidora, who having her own thoughts,
-was silent. Evening was drawing near&mdash;the short
-evening of a dark November day, and the ceaseless
-rain still plashed heavily down, while the
-wind howled drearily around the solitary villa.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap28"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-<br /><br />
-OUR LADY DEL PILAR.
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intropoem">
- "The foe retires&mdash;she heads the sallying host,<br />
- Who can appease like her a lover's ghost?<br />
- Who can so well appease a lover's fall?<br />
- What maid retrieve when man's flushed hope is lost?<br />
- Who hang so fiercely on the flying Gaul,<br />
- Foiled by a woman's hand before a battered wall."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;BYRON.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-"What a singular adventure this is," thought
-Quentin; "and what a perplexing position for
-us both! It is very romantic, certainly. A
-deserted house, a lovely girl, and all that. 'Tis
-very like some incidents I have read of, and
-some I have imagined; but, by Jove! I wish I
-could see my way handsomely out of it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The last desire resulted from the unpleasant
-recollection of the Padre Trevino's face and
-intonation of voice, when he spoke so impressively
-of the <i>interest he</i> felt in the lady committed to
-his care, and the sternly expressed anxiety that
-she should reach Portalegre "without hindrance
-or <i>delay</i>."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Was the fellow only acting a part, or could it
-be that the ugly ogre actually had some tender
-fancy for Isidora? Whether he had or not, an
-unfrocked friar, especially of his peculiar character,
-had not much chance of success with the sister
-or support from the brother, so Quentin
-dismissed the idea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How charming she looks!" he thought,
-stealing a glance at the long lashes of the now
-pensive eyes, the soft features half shaded by the
-black lace veil, and the graceful contour of her
-bust and shoulders, in her low-cut scarlet velvet
-corset. "How delightful, if, instead of being
-lost in this barbarous place, she were at
-Rohallion or Ardgour; what a lovely friend and
-companion for Flora!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Quentin! Alas, this was but the
-sophistry of the heart, and was, perhaps, its first
-impulse towards the donna herself, and might
-end by her image supplanting Flora's there.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Such desecration, that her hand should even
-be touched by such a wretch as Trevino!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had muttered his last thought aloud, so
-Donna Isidora looked up and said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You mentioned the Padre Trevino?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Did I?&mdash;surely not?" replied Quentin, as
-the colour rushed into his face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;what of him, senor?" she asked, fixing
-her soft, dark eyes on him inquiringly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I must have been dreaming."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Scarcely," said she, smiling, "while the thunder
-makes such a noise; you were thinking aloud."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Perhaps."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of what? I insist on knowing."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I cannot help reflecting, senora, that such
-actions as those in which Trevino seems to exult,
-must damage the Spanish cause in the eyes of
-Europe and of humanity, and thus&mdash;excuse me&mdash;&mdash;but
-I begin to lose faith in your countrymen,
-even before we test alliance with them fully."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And what say you of the recent siege of
-Zaragossa?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, Don José Palafox is a brave man, certainly;
-and brave too, is Augustina, the Maid
-of Zaragossa, who led the cannoneers in the
-defence of the Portillo against Lefebre."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She had lost her lover in the siege, so apart
-from inspiration, her courage was no marvel."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And you, senora&mdash;if you lost a lover?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have lost several; but if I lost one whom
-I loved, you mean?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes&mdash;and who loved you well and truly?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I would face ten thousand cannon to avenge
-him!&mdash;Augustina did nothing that I would not
-dare and do!" replied Isidora, as her eyes
-sparkled, and she pressed her clenched hand into
-the soft cheek that rested on it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A beautiful little spitfire!" thought Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But, senor, you must be aware that neither
-Palafox the Arragonese nor the girl Augustina
-could have achieved all they did, save for the
-aid of our Lady del Pilar?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What lady is she?" asked Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Madre divina, listen to him! It grieves me
-sadly, amigo mio, to think&mdash;to think&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What?" asked Quentin, as she paused.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That you are a heretic, innocently, through
-no fault of your own, and yet born to perdition."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are not very complimentary, yet I
-pardon you, my dear senora," replied Quentin,
-laughing as he kissed her hand&mdash;which we fear
-he did rather frequently now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Shall I try to teach you, and lead your heart
-as I would wish it?" she asked, with a gentle smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If you please, senora."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I mean, to instil a proper spirit of adoration
-in it?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If it is adoration of yourself, senora, I fear
-my heart is learning that fast enough already,"
-replied Quentin, with such a caballero air that
-the donna laughed and coloured, but accepted
-the answer as a mere compliment; "then tell
-me," he added, "about this Lady del Pilar, who
-aided Don José Palafox."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She is the guardian saint of the city of
-Zaragossa, and save but for her assistance, he had
-never withstood the arms of France so long; for
-it was faith in her, and her only, that inspired
-Palafox to make a resistance so terrible!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But tell me about her, Donna Isidora."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You must learn, senor, that after the
-resurrection of our blessed Lord, when the twelve
-apostles separated and went to preach the gospel
-in different parts of the world, St. George set out
-for England, St. Anthony for Italy, and the others
-went elsewhere; but Santiago the elder set out
-for Spain, a land which, say our annals, the
-Saviour commended to his peculiar care.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Before departing from Judea, he went to the
-humble dwelling of the blessed Virgin&mdash;the same
-little hut that is now at Loretto&mdash;to kiss her
-hand, on his knees to obtain her permission to
-set forth, and her blessing on his labours. After
-bestowing it, she adjured him to build a church
-unto her honour in that city of Spain where he
-should make the most important, or the greatest
-number of converts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So the saint set sail in a Roman galley, but
-was driven through the Pillars of Hercules into
-the Atlantic ocean, and after enduring great
-perils along the shores of Lusitania, he landed in
-the kingdom of Galicia. Proceeding through
-the land, he went barefooted, preaching the
-gospel, teaching and baptizing, but with little
-success, until he came to a fair city of Arragon,
-on the banks of the Ebro and the Guerva, in the
-midst of a vast and lovely plain. Surrounded
-by fertile fields of corn, and by groves of orange
-and lime trees, its stately towers were visible
-from afar, glittering white as snow in the
-sunshine; but in its marble temples false gods and
-goddesses were worshipped by the people.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Enchanted by the sight of a city so fair, the
-saint rested on his staff and asked of a wayfarer
-how it was named; and he was told that it was
-Cæsarea Augusta; so entering, he began to
-preach in the public thoroughfares, and ere long
-made eight disciples, who gave all they possessed
-to the poor, and followed him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Full of joy with his success he retired, one
-evening, to a little grove on the banks of the
-Ebro, with his eight new friends, and there,
-after long and holy converse, they fell asleep
-under the orange trees; but between the night
-and morning they were awakened by hearing a
-choir, possessed of a harmony that was divine,
-singing 'Ave Maria gratia plena, Dominus
-tecum;' yet they saw not from whence the sound
-proceeded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Louder swelled this mysterious harmony,
-and louder still, until they seemed to be in the
-midst of it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Listening in wonder and awe they fell on
-their knees, and lo, senor! a marvellous silver
-light, brighter than that of day, filled all the
-orange grove, and amid a choir of angels, whose
-golden hair floated over their shoulders, whose
-wings and robes were white as the new fallen snow,
-and whose faces bloomed with the purity and
-radiance of heaven, there, on the summit of a white
-marble pillar, stood the blessed Madonna, with
-her fair brow crowned by thirteen stars, and her
-robe all of a dazzling brightness. With a divine
-smile on her face, she listened to the choir, who
-went through the whole of her matin service.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"When it was ended, when the voices of the
-angels were hushed, their eyes cast down, and
-their hands meekly folded on their bosoms,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Santiago,' said she, 'here on this spot raise
-them the church of which I told thee, and build
-it round this pillar, which I have brought hither
-by the hands of angels; here shall it abide until
-the end of the world, and all the powers of hell
-shall not prevail against it!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The saint and his eight disciples, who were
-all on their knees in reverence and awe, bowed
-low at this command; when they looked up, the
-Virgin had disappeared with all her shining choir,
-and nothing remained but the miraculous pillar of
-polished marble, standing cold, white, and solitary,
-amid the moonlight, by the bank of the Ebro.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So around that column he built the famous
-church of Our Lady del Pilar, which has been
-the scene of a thousand miracles; about it, ere
-long, grew the vast Christian city now named
-Zaragossa, which, as my father the professor always
-assured me, is but a corruption of the original
-name, Cæsarea-Augusta.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Santiago rests from his holy labours in
-Compostella, where he was martyred by the barbarous
-Galicians, and where his bones were discovered
-in after years by a miraculous star that burned
-over his grave. When danger threatens Spain,
-the clashing of arms and of armour is heard
-within his tomb, for he is her tutelary guardian,
-and so greatly do we venerate him, that of the
-canons of his cathedral seven, at least, must be
-cardinal priests: and there, at Compostella, he
-appeared in a vision to the king, Don Ramiro,
-before his famous battle with the Moors, and
-promised him victory for withholding the annual
-tribute of a hundred Christian girls.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Time passed over Zaragossa, and even the
-infidel Moors respected the holy pillar, for it was
-found uninjured when the city was re-captured
-from them by Don Alphonso of Arragon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And so last year, when the French had pushed
-their batteries along the right bank of the Guerva,
-and had beaten down the rampart; and when, at
-their head, General Ribeaupierre had cut a passage
-through the ranks of Palafox into the wide and
-stately Coso: when Lefebre assailed the Portillo,
-and was repulsed with the loss of two thousand
-men, but returned with renewed fury, when a
-carnage ensued that must have ended in the fall
-of Zaragossa and the capture of Don José, <i>then</i>
-it was, senor, that the young girl Augustina,
-inspired by vengeance for her lover's fall, appeared
-among the soldiers, calling on Our Lady del Pilar
-to aid her chosen city.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then springing over dead and dying, she
-snatched a lighted match from her dead lover's
-hand and discharged a twenty-six pounder loaded
-with grapeshot full at the advancing foe, and
-animated the citizens to continue that awful
-struggle by which Zaragossa was saved, though
-the flower of Arragon perished. Foot to foot
-and breast to breast they fought, contesting every
-street and house, from floor to floor, till the
-French retired. Augustina received a noble
-pension, and now wears on her sleeve a shield
-of honour with the city's name."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the time this story was ended, darkness had
-almost set in; the rain was still rushing down in
-a ceaseless flood, and the vivid lightning, with
-its green and ghastly glare, lit up from time to
-time the gloomy chambers of the silent villa.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Remembering that he had seen a lamp in one
-of the rooms, Quentin was about to go in search
-of it, when the sound of a heavy door closing
-with a bang that echoed through all the mansion,
-made him pause, and as he was Scotsman enough
-to have certain undefined but superstitious
-notions, he turned to his companion, who on
-hearing this unexpected noise, had started from her
-seat with her eyes dilated and her lips parted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You heard that, senora?" said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is the private door of the chapel&mdash;the
-door through which we passed," she replied.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What has caused it to open and shut?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The wind, probably."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It can be nothing else, senora, though in
-truth I was thinking of those two effigies that
-for seven hundred years have stood, with their
-stony eyes uplifted and their mailed hands clasped
-in prayer."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What of them?" she asked, with surprise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What if they got off their pedestals and took
-a promenade through the villa on this stormy
-night?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ah, senor, don't talk of such things!" said
-Donna Isidora, as she shrunk close to him and
-laid her hand on his arm.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-END OF VOL. II.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
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