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+ <meta content="pg2html (binary v0.17)" name="linkgenerator" />
+ <title>
+ When London Burned, by G. A. Henty
+ </title>
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of When London Burned, by G. A. Henty
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: When London Burned
+
+Author: G. A. Henty
+
+Release Date: April, 2005 [EBook #7831]
+First Posted: May 20, 2003
+Last Updated: April 12, 2019
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHEN LONDON BURNED ***
+
+
+
+
+Etext produced by Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon, S.R. Ellison,
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+HTML file produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ WHEN LONDON BURNED
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By G. A. Henty
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> <b>WHEN LONDON BURNED</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I &mdash; FATHERLESS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II &mdash; A CHANGE FOR THE BETTER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III &mdash; A THIEF SOMEWHERE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV &mdash; CAPTURED </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V &mdash; KIDNAPPED </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI &mdash; A NARROW ESCAPE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII &mdash; SAVED FROM A VILLAIN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII &mdash; THE CAPTAIN'S YARN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX &mdash; THE FIRE IN THE SAVOY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X &mdash; HOW JOHN WILKES FOUGHT THE
+ DUTCH </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI &mdash; PRINCE RUPERT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII &mdash; NEW FRIENDS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII &mdash; THE BATTLE OF LOWESTOFT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV &mdash; HONOURABLE SCARS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV &mdash; THE PLAGUE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI &mdash; FATHER AND SON </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII &mdash; SMITTEN DOWN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII &mdash; A STROKE OF GOOD FORTUNE
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX &mdash; TAKING POSSESSION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX &mdash; THE FIGHT OFF DUNKIRK </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI &mdash; LONDON IN FLAMES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII &mdash; AFTER THE FIRE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We are accustomed to regard the Reign of Charles II. as one of the most
+ inglorious periods of English History; but this was far from being the
+ case. It is true that the extravagance and profligacy of the Court were
+ carried to a point unknown before or since, forming,&mdash;by the
+ indignation they excited among the people at large,&mdash;the main cause
+ of the overthrow of the House of Stuart. But, on the other hand, the
+ nation made extraordinary advances in commerce and wealth, while the
+ valour of our sailors was as conspicuous under the Dukes of York and
+ Albemarle, Prince Rupert and the Earl of Sandwich, as it had been under
+ Blake himself, and their victories resulted in transferring the commercial
+ as well as the naval supremacy of Holland to this country. In spite of the
+ cruel blows inflicted on the well-being of the country, alike by the
+ extravagance of the Court, the badness of the Government, the Great
+ Plague, and the destruction of London by fire, an extraordinary extension
+ of our trade occurred during the reign of Charles II. Such a period,
+ therefore, although its brilliancy was marred by dark shadows, cannot be
+ considered as an inglorious epoch. It was ennobled by the bravery of our
+ sailors, by the fearlessness with which the coalition of France with
+ Holland was faced, and by the spirit of enterprise with which our
+ merchants and traders seized the opportunity, and, in spite of national
+ misfortunes, raised England in the course of a few years to the rank of
+ the greatest commercial power in the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ G. A. HENTY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ WHEN LONDON BURNED
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I &mdash; FATHERLESS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Lad stood looking out of the dormer window in a scantily furnished attic
+ in the high-pitched roof of a house in Holborn, in September 1664. Numbers
+ of persons were traversing the street below, many of them going out
+ through the bars, fifty yards away, into the fields beyond, where some
+ sports were being held that morning, while country people were coming in
+ with their baskets from the villages of Highgate and Hampstead, Tyburn and
+ Bayswater. But the lad noted nothing that was going on; his eyes were
+ filled with tears, and his thoughts were in the little room behind him;
+ for here, coffined in readiness for burial, lay the body of his father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Aubrey Shenstone had not been a good father in any sense of the word.
+ He had not been harsh or cruel, but he had altogether neglected his son.
+ Beyond the virtues of loyalty and courage, he possessed few others. He had
+ fought, as a young man, for Charles, and even among the Cavaliers who rode
+ behind Prince Rupert was noted for reckless bravery. When, on the fatal
+ field of Worcester, the last hopes of the Royalists were crushed, he had
+ effected his escape to France and taken up his abode at Dunkirk. His
+ estates had been forfeited; and after spending the proceeds of his wife's
+ jewels and those he had carried about with him in case fortune went
+ against the cause for which he fought, he sank lower and lower, and had
+ for years lived on the scanty pension allowed by Louis to the King and his
+ adherents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Aubrey had been one of the wild, reckless spirits whose conduct did
+ much towards setting the people of England against the cause of Charles.
+ He gambled and drank, interlarded his conversation with oaths, and
+ despised as well as hated the Puritans against whom he fought. Misfortune
+ did not improve him; he still drank when he had money to do so, gambled
+ for small sums in low taverns with men of his own kind, and quarrelled and
+ fought on the smallest provocation. Had it not been for his son he would
+ have taken service in the army of some foreign Power; but he could not
+ take the child about with him, nor could he leave it behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Aubrey was not altogether without good points. He would divide his
+ last crown with a comrade poorer than himself. In the worst of times he
+ was as cheerful as when money was plentiful, making a joke of his
+ necessities and keeping a brave face to the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wholly neglected by his father, who spent the greater portion of his time
+ abroad, Cyril would have fared badly indeed had it not been for the
+ kindness of Lady Parton, the wife of a Cavalier of very different type to
+ Sir Aubrey. He had been an intimate friend of Lord Falkland, and, like
+ that nobleman, had drawn his sword with the greatest reluctance, and only
+ when he saw that Parliament was bent upon overthrowing the other two
+ estates in the realm and constituting itself the sole authority in
+ England. After the execution of Charles he had retired to France, and did
+ not take part in the later risings, but lived a secluded life with his
+ wife and children. The eldest of these was of the same age as Cyril; and
+ as the latter's mother had been a neighbour of hers before marriage, Lady
+ Parton promised her, on her death-bed, to look after the child, a promise
+ that she faithfully kept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir John Parton had always been adverse to the association of his boy with
+ the son of Sir Aubrey Shenstone; but he had reluctantly yielded to his
+ wife's wishes, and Cyril passed the greater portion of his time at their
+ house, sharing the lessons Harry received from an English clergyman who
+ had been expelled from his living by the fanatics of Parliament. He was a
+ good and pious man, as well as an excellent scholar, and under his
+ teaching, aided by the gentle precepts of Lady Parton, and the strict but
+ kindly rule of her husband, Cyril received a training of a far better kind
+ than he would ever have been likely to obtain had he been brought up in
+ his father's house near Norfolk. Sir Aubrey exclaimed sometimes that the
+ boy was growing up a little Puritan, and had he taken more interest in his
+ welfare would undoubtedly have withdrawn him from the healthy influences
+ that were benefiting him so greatly; but, with the usual acuteness of
+ children, Cyril soon learnt that any allusion to his studies or his life
+ at Sir John Parton's was disagreeable to his father, and therefore seldom
+ spoke of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Aubrey was never, even when under the influence of his potations,
+ unkind to Cyril. The boy bore a strong likeness to his mother, whom his
+ father had, in his rough way, really loved passionately. He seldom spoke
+ even a harsh word to him, and although he occasionally expressed his
+ disapproval of the teaching he was receiving, was at heart not sorry to
+ see the boy growing up so different from himself; and Cyril, in spite of
+ his father's faults, loved him. When Sir Aubrey came back with unsteady
+ step, late at night, and threw himself on his pallet, Cyril would say to
+ himself, "Poor father! How different he would have been had it not been
+ for his misfortunes! He is to be pitied rather than blamed!" And so, as
+ years went on, in spite of the difference between their natures, there had
+ grown up a sort of fellowship between the two; and of an evening
+ sometimes, when his father's purse was so low that he could not indulge in
+ his usual stoup of wine at the tavern, they would sit together while Sir
+ Aubrey talked of his fights and adventures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As to the estates, Cyril," he said one day, "I don't know that Cromwell
+ and his Roundheads have done you much harm. I should have run through
+ them, lad&mdash;I should have diced them away years ago&mdash;and I am not
+ sure but that their forfeiture has been a benefit to you. If the King ever
+ gets his own, you may come to the estates; while, if I had had the
+ handling of them, the usurers would have had such a grip on them that you
+ would never have had a penny of the income."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It doesn't matter, father," the boy replied. "I mean to be a soldier some
+ day, as you have been, and I shall take service with some of the
+ Protestant Princes of Germany; or, if I can't do that, I shall be able to
+ work my way somehow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What can you work at, lad?" his father said, contemptuously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know yet, father; but I shall find some work to do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Aubrey was about to burst into a tirade against work, but he checked
+ himself. If Cyril never came into the estates he would have to earn his
+ living somehow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right, my boy. But do you stick to your idea of earning your living
+ by your sword; it is a gentleman's profession, and I would rather see you
+ eating dry bread as a soldier of fortune than prospering in some vile
+ trading business."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril never argued with his father, and he simply nodded an assent and
+ then asked some question that turned Sir Aubrey's thoughts on other
+ matters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The news that Monk had declared for the King, and that Charles would
+ speedily return to take his place on his father's throne, caused great
+ excitement among the Cavaliers scattered over the Continent; and as soon
+ as the matter was settled, all prepared to return to England, in the full
+ belief that their evil days were over, and that they would speedily be
+ restored to their former estates, with honours and rewards for their many
+ sacrifices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I must leave you behind for a short time, Cyril," his father said to the
+ boy, when he came in one afternoon. "I must be in London before the King
+ arrives there, to join in his welcome home, and for the moment I cannot
+ take you; I shall be busy from morning till night. Of course, in the
+ pressure of things at first it will be impossible for the King to do
+ everything at once, and it may be a few weeks before all these Roundheads
+ can be turned out of the snug nests they have made for themselves, and the
+ rightful owners come to their own again. As I have no friends in London, I
+ should have nowhere to bestow you, until I can take you down with me to
+ Norfolk to present you to our tenants, and you would be grievously in my
+ way; but as soon as things are settled I will write to you or come over
+ myself to fetch you. In the meantime I must think over where I had best
+ place you. It will not matter for so short a time, but I would that you
+ should be as comfortable as possible. Think it over yourself, and let me
+ know if you have any wishes in the matter. Sir John Parton leaves at the
+ end of the week, and ere another fortnight there will be scarce another
+ Englishman left at Dunkirk."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't you think you can take me with you, father?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Impossible," Sir Aubrey said shortly. "Lodgings will be at a great price
+ in London, for the city will be full of people from all parts coming up to
+ welcome the King home. I can bestow myself in a garret anywhere, but I
+ could not leave you there all day. Besides, I shall have to get more
+ fitting clothes, and shall have many expenses. You are at home here, and
+ will not feel it dull for the short time you have to remain behind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril said no more, but went up, with a heavy heart, for his last day's
+ lessons at the Partons'. Young as he was, he was accustomed to think for
+ himself, for it was but little guidance he received from his father; and
+ after his studies were over he laid the case before his master, Mr.
+ Felton, and asked if he could advise him. Mr. Felton was himself in high
+ spirits, and was hoping to be speedily reinstated in his living. He looked
+ grave when Cyril told his story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think it is a pity that your father, Sir Aubrey, does not take you over
+ with him, for it will assuredly take longer to bring all these matters
+ into order than he seems to think. However, that is his affair. I should
+ think he could not do better for you than place you with the people where
+ I lodge. You know them, and they are a worthy couple; the husband is, as
+ you know, a fisherman, and you and Harry Parton have often been out with
+ him in his boat, so it would not be like going among strangers. Continue
+ your studies. I should be sorry to think that you were forgetting all that
+ you have learnt. I will take you this afternoon, if you like, to my
+ friend, the Curé of St. Ursula. Although we differ on religion we are good
+ friends, and should you need advice on any matters he will give it to you,
+ and may be of use in arranging for a passage for you to England, should
+ your father not be able himself to come and fetch you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Aubrey at once assented to the plan when Cyril mentioned it to him,
+ and a week later sailed for England; Cyril moving, with his few
+ belongings, to the house of Jean Baudoin, who was the owner and master of
+ one of the largest fishing-boats in Dunkirk. Sir Aubrey had paid for his
+ board and lodgings for two months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I expect to be over to fetch you long before that, Cyril," he had said,
+ "but it is as well to be on the safe side. Here are four crowns, which
+ will furnish you with ample pocket-money. And I have arranged with your
+ fencing-master for you to have lessons regularly, as before; it will not
+ do for you to neglect so important an accomplishment, for which, as he
+ tells me, you show great aptitude."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two months passed. Cyril had received but one letter from his father.
+ Although it expressed hopes of his speedy restoration to his estates,
+ Cyril could see, by its tone, that his father was far from satisfied with
+ the progress he had made in the matter. Madame Baudoin was a good and
+ pious woman, and was very kind to the forlorn English boy; but when a
+ fortnight over the two months had passed, Cyril could see that the
+ fisherman was becoming anxious. Regularly, on his return from the fishing,
+ he inquired if letters had arrived, and seemed much put out when he heard
+ that there was no news. One day, when Cyril was in the garden that
+ surrounded the cottage, he heard him say to his wife,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I will say nothing about it until after the next voyage, and then
+ if we don't hear, the boy must do something for his living. I can take him
+ in the boat with me; he can earn his victuals in that way. If he won't do
+ that, I shall wash my hands of him altogether, and he must shift for
+ himself. I believe his father has left him with us for good. We were wrong
+ in taking him only on the recommendation of Mr. Felton. I have been
+ inquiring about his father, and hear little good of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril, as soon as the fisherman had gone, stole up to his little room. He
+ was but twelve years old, and he threw himself down on his bed and cried
+ bitterly. Then a thought struck him; he went to his box, and took out from
+ it a sealed parcel; on it was written, "To my son. This parcel is only to
+ be opened should you find yourself in great need, Your Loving Mother." He
+ remembered how she had placed it in his hands a few hours before her
+ death, and had said to him,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Put this away, Cyril. I charge you let no one see it. Do not speak of it
+ to anyone&mdash;not even to your father. Keep it as a sacred gift, and do
+ not open it unless you are in sore need. It is for you, and you alone. It
+ is the sole thing that I have to leave you; use it with discretion. I fear
+ that hard times will come upon you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril felt that his need could hardly be sorer than it was now, and
+ without hesitation he broke the seals, and opened the packet. He found
+ first a letter directed to himself. It began,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "MY DARLING CYRIL,&mdash;I trust that it will be many years before you
+ open this parcel and read these words. I have left the enclosed as a
+ parting gift to you. I know not how long this exile may last, or whether
+ you will ever be able to return to England. But whether you do or not, it
+ may well be that the time will arrive when you may find yourself in sore
+ need. Your father has been a loving husband to me, and will, I am sure, do
+ what he can for you; but he is not provident in his habits, and may not,
+ after he is left alone, be as careful in his expenditure as I have tried
+ to be. I fear then that the time will come when you will be in need of
+ money, possibly even in want of the necessaries of life. All my other
+ trinkets I have given to him; but the one enclosed, which belonged to my
+ mother, I leave to you. It is worth a good deal of money, and this it is
+ my desire that you shall spend upon yourself. Use it wisely, my son. If,
+ when you open this, you are of age to enter the service of a foreign
+ Prince, as is, I know, the intention of your father, it will provide you
+ with a suitable outfit. If, as is possible, you may lose your father by
+ death or otherwise while you are still young, spend it on your education,
+ which is the best of all heritages. Should your father be alive when you
+ open this, I pray you not to inform him of it. The money, in his hands,
+ would last but a short time, and might, I fear, be wasted. Think not that
+ I am speaking or thinking hardly of him. All men, even the best, have
+ their faults, and his is a carelessness as to money matters, and a certain
+ recklessness concerning them; therefore, I pray you to keep it secret from
+ him, though I do not say that you should not use the money for your common
+ good, if it be needful; only, in that case, I beg you will not inform him
+ as to what money you have in your possession, but use it carefully and
+ prudently for the household wants, and make it last as long as may be. My
+ good friend, Lady Parton, if still near you, will doubtless aid you in
+ disposing of the jewels to the best advantage. God bless you, my son! This
+ is the only secret I ever had from your father, but for your good I have
+ hidden this one thing from him, and I pray that this deceit, which is
+ practised for your advantage, may be forgiven me. YOUR LOVING MOTHER."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was some time before Cyril opened the parcel; it contained a jewel-box
+ in which was a necklace of pearls. After some consideration he took this
+ to the Curé of St. Ursula, and, giving him his mother's letter to read,
+ asked him for his advice as to its disposal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your mother was a thoughtful and pious woman," the good priest said,
+ after he had read the letter, "and has acted wisely in your behalf. The
+ need she foresaw might come, has arisen, and you are surely justified in
+ using her gift. I will dispose of this trinket for you; it is doubtless of
+ considerable value. If it should be that your father speedily sends for
+ you, you ought to lay aside the money for some future necessity. If he
+ does not come for some time, as may well be&mdash;for, from the news that
+ comes from England, it is like to be many months before affairs are
+ settled&mdash;then draw from it only such amounts as are needed for your
+ living and education. Study hard, my son, for so will you best be
+ fulfilling the intentions of your mother. If you like, I will keep the
+ money in my hands, serving it out to you as you need it; and in order that
+ you may keep the matter a secret, I will myself go to Baudoin, and tell
+ him that he need not be disquieted as to the cost of your maintenance, for
+ that I have money in hand with which to discharge your expenses, so long
+ as you may remain with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day the Curé informed Cyril that he had disposed of the necklace
+ for fifty louis. Upon this sum Cyril lived for two years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Things had gone very hardly with Sir Aubrey Shenstone. The King had a
+ difficult course to steer. To have evicted all those who had obtained
+ possession of the forfeited estates of the Cavaliers would have been to
+ excite a deep feeling of resentment among the Nonconformists. In vain Sir
+ Aubrey pressed his claims, in season and out of season. He had no powerful
+ friends to aid him; his conduct had alienated the men who could have
+ assisted him, and, like so many other Cavaliers who had fought and
+ suffered for Charles I., Sir Aubrey Shenstone found himself left
+ altogether in the cold. For a time he was able to keep up a fair
+ appearance, as he obtained loans from Prince Rupert and other Royalists
+ whom he had known in the old days, and who had been more fortunate than
+ himself; but the money so obtained lasted but a short time, and it was not
+ long before he was again in dire straits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had from the first but little hope that his father would recover his
+ estates. He had, shortly before his father left France, heard a
+ conversation between Sir John Parton and a gentleman who was in the inner
+ circle of Charles's advisers. The latter had said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One of the King's great difficulties will be to satisfy the exiles.
+ Undoubtedly, could he consult his own inclinations only, he would on his
+ return at once reinstate all those who have suffered in their estates from
+ their loyalty to his father and himself. But this will be impossible. It
+ was absolutely necessary for him, in his proclamation at Breda, to promise
+ an amnesty for all offences, liberty of conscience and an oblivion as to
+ the past, and he specially says that all questions of grants, sales and
+ purchases of land, and titles, shall be referred to Parliament. The
+ Nonconformists are at present in a majority, and although it seems that
+ all parties are willing to welcome the King back, you may be sure that no
+ Parliament will consent to anything like a general disturbance of the
+ possessors of estates formerly owned by Royalists. In a vast number of
+ cases, the persons to whom such grants were made disposed of them by sale
+ to others, and it would be as hard on them to be ousted as it is upon the
+ original proprietors to be kept out of their possession. Truly it is a
+ most difficult position, and one that will have to be approached with
+ great judgment, the more so since most of those to whom the lands were
+ granted were generals, officers, and soldiers of the Parliament, and Monk
+ would naturally oppose any steps to the detriment of his old comrades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I fear there will be much bitter disappointment among the exiles, and
+ that the King will be charged with ingratitude by those who think that he
+ has only to sign an order for their reinstatement, whereas Charles will
+ have himself a most difficult course to steer, and will have to govern
+ himself most circumspectly, so as to give offence to none of the governing
+ parties. As to his granting estates, or dispossessing their holders, he
+ will have no more power to do so than you or I. Doubtless some of the
+ exiles will be restored to their estates; but I fear that the great bulk
+ are doomed to disappointment. At any rate, for a time no extensive changes
+ can be made, though it may be that in the distance, when the temper of the
+ nation at large is better understood, the King will be able to do
+ something for those who suffered in the cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was all very well for Cromwell, who leant solely on the Army, to
+ dispense with a Parliament, and to govern far more autocratically than
+ James or Charles even dreamt of doing; but the Army that supported
+ Cromwell would certainly not support Charles. It is composed for the most
+ part of stern fanatics, and will be the first to oppose any attempt of the
+ King to override the law. No doubt it will erelong be disbanded; but you
+ will see that Parliament will then recover the authority of which Cromwell
+ deprived it; and Charles is a far wiser man than his father, and will
+ never set himself against the feeling of the country. Certainly, anything
+ like a general reinstatement of the men who have been for the last ten
+ years haunting the taverns of the Continent is out of the question; they
+ would speedily create such a revulsion of public opinion as might bring
+ about another rebellion. Hyde, staunch Royalist as he is, would never
+ suffer the King to make so grievous an error; nor do I think for a moment
+ that Charles, who is shrewd and politic, and above all things a lover of
+ ease and quiet, would think of bringing such a nest of hornets about his
+ ears."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, after his return to England, it became evident that Sir Aubrey had
+ but small chance of reinstatement in his lands, his former friends began
+ to close their purses and to refuse to grant further loans, and he was
+ presently reduced to straits as severe as those he had suffered during his
+ exile. The good spirits that had borne him up so long failed now, and he
+ grew morose and petulant. His loyalty to the King was unshaken; Charles
+ had several times granted him audiences, and had assured him that, did it
+ rest with him, justice should be at once dealt to him, but that he was
+ practically powerless in the matter, and the knight's resentment was
+ concentrated upon Hyde, now Lord Clarendon, and the rest of the King's
+ advisers. He wrote but seldom to Cyril; he had no wish to have the boy
+ with him until he could take him down with him in triumph to Norfolk, and
+ show him to the tenants as his heir. Living from hand to mouth as he did,
+ he worried but little as to how Cyril was getting on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The lad has fallen on his feet somehow," he said, "and he is better where
+ he is than he would be with me. I suppose when he wants money he will
+ write and say so, though where I should get any to send to him I know not.
+ Anyhow, I need not worry about him at present."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril, indeed, had written to him soon after the sale of the necklace,
+ telling him that he need not distress himself about his condition, for
+ that he had obtained sufficient money for his present necessities from the
+ sale of a small trinket his mother had given him before her death, and
+ that when this was spent he should doubtless find some means of earning
+ his living until he could rejoin him. His father never inquired into the
+ matter, though he made a casual reference to it in his next letter, saying
+ that he was glad Cyril had obtained some money, as it would, at the
+ moment, have been inconvenient to him to send any over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril worked assiduously at the school that had been recommended to him by
+ the Curé, and at the end of two years he had still twenty louis left. He
+ had several conversations with his adviser as to the best way of earning
+ his living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not wish to spend any more, Father," he said, "and would fain keep
+ this for some future necessity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Curé agreed with him as to this, and, learning from his master that he
+ was extremely quick at figures and wrote an excellent hand, he obtained a
+ place for him with one of the principal traders of the town. He was to
+ receive no salary for a year, but was to learn book-keeping and accounts.
+ Although but fourteen, the boy was so intelligent and zealous that his
+ employer told the Curé that he found him of real service, and that he was
+ able to entrust some of his books entirely to his charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Six months after entering his service, however, Cyril received a letter
+ from his father, saying that he believed his affairs were on the point of
+ settlement, and therefore wished him to come over in the first ship
+ sailing. He enclosed an order on a house at Dunkirk for fifty francs, to
+ pay his passage. His employer parted with him with regret, and the kind
+ Curé bade him farewell in terms of real affection, for he had come to take
+ a great interest in him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At any rate, Cyril," he said, "your time here has not been wasted, and
+ your mother's gift has been turned to as much advantage as even she can
+ have hoped that it would be. Should your father's hopes be again
+ disappointed, and fresh delays arise, you may, with the practice you have
+ had, be able to earn your living in London. There must be there, as in
+ France, many persons in trade who have had but little education, and you
+ may be able to obtain employment in keeping the books of such people, who
+ are, I believe, more common in England than here. Here are the sixteen
+ louis that still remain; put them aside, Cyril, and use them only for
+ urgent necessity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril, on arriving in London, was heartily welcomed by his father, who
+ had, for the moment, high hopes of recovering his estates. These, however,
+ soon faded, and although Sir Aubrey would not allow it, even to himself,
+ no chance remained of those Royalists, who had, like him, parted with
+ their estates for trifling sums, to be spent in the King's service, ever
+ regaining possession of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not long before Cyril perceived that unless he himself obtained
+ work of some sort they would soon be face to face with actual starvation.
+ He said nothing to his father, but started out one morning on a round of
+ visits among the smaller class of shopkeepers, offering to make up their
+ books and write out their bills and accounts for a small remuneration. As
+ he had a frank and pleasant face, and his foreign bringing up had given
+ him an ease and politeness of manner rare among English lads of the day,
+ it was not long before he obtained several clients. To some of the smaller
+ class of traders he went only for an hour or two, once a week, while
+ others required their bills and accounts to be made out daily. The pay was
+ very small, but it sufficed to keep absolute want from the door. When he
+ told his father of the arrangements he had made, Sir Aubrey at first raged
+ and stormed; but he had come, during the last year or two, to recognise
+ the good sense and strong will of his son, and although he never verbally
+ acquiesced in what he considered a degradation, he offered no actual
+ opposition to a plan that at least enabled them to live, and furnished him
+ occasionally with a few groats with which he could visit a tavern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So things had gone on for more than a year. Cyril was now sixteen, and his
+ punctuality, and the neatness of his work, had been so appreciated by the
+ tradesmen who first employed him, that his time was now fully occupied,
+ and that at rates more remunerative than those he had at first obtained.
+ He kept the state of his resources to himself, and had no difficulty in
+ doing this, as his father never alluded to the subject of his work. Cyril
+ knew that, did he hand over to him all the money he made, it would be
+ wasted in drink or at cards; consequently, he kept the table furnished as
+ modestly as at first, and regularly placed after dinner on the corner of
+ the mantel a few coins, which his father as regularly dropped into his
+ pocket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days before the story opens, Sir Aubrey had, late one evening, been
+ carried upstairs, mortally wounded in a brawl; he only recovered
+ consciousness a few minutes before his death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have been a good lad, Cyril," he said faintly, as he feebly pressed
+ the boy's hand; "far better than I deserve to have had. Don't cry, lad;
+ you will get on better without me, and things are just as well as they
+ are. I hope you will come to your estates some day; you will make a better
+ master than I should ever have done. I hope that in time you will carry
+ out your plan of entering some foreign service; there is no chance here. I
+ don't want you to settle down as a city scrivener. Still, do as you like,
+ lad, and unless your wishes go with mine, think no further of service."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would rather be a soldier, father. I only undertook this work because I
+ could see nothing else."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is right, my boy, that is right. I know you won't forget that you
+ come of a race of gentlemen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He spoke but little after that. A few broken words came from his lips that
+ showed that his thoughts had gone back to old times. "Boot and saddle," he
+ murmured. "That is right. Now we are ready for them. Down with the
+ prick-eared knaves! God and King Charles!" These were the last words he
+ spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had done all that was necessary. He had laid by more than half his
+ earnings for the last eight or nine months. One of his clients, an
+ undertaker, had made all the necessary preparations for the funeral, and
+ in a few hours his father would be borne to his last resting-place. As he
+ stood at the open window he thought sadly over the past, and of his
+ father's wasted life. Had it not been for the war he might have lived and
+ died a country gentleman. It was the war, with its wild excitements, that
+ had ruined him. What was there for him to do in a foreign country, without
+ resource or employment, having no love for reading, but to waste his life
+ as he had done? Had his wife lived it might have been different. Cyril had
+ still a vivid remembrance of his mother, and, though his father had but
+ seldom spoken to him of her, he knew that he had loved her, and that, had
+ she lived, he would never have given way to drink as he had done of late
+ years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To his father's faults he could not be blind; but they stood for nothing
+ now. He had been his only friend, and of late they had been drawn closer
+ to each other in their loneliness; and although scarce a word of
+ endearment had passed between them, he knew that his father had cared for
+ him more than was apparent in his manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few hours later, Sir Aubrey Shenstone was laid to rest in a little
+ graveyard outside the city walls. Cyril was the only mourner; and when it
+ was over, instead of going back to his lonely room, he turned away and
+ wandered far out through the fields towards Hampstead, and then sat
+ himself down to think what he had best do. Another three or four years
+ must pass before he could try to get service abroad. When the time came he
+ should find Sir John Parton, and beg him to procure for him some letter of
+ introduction to the many British gentlemen serving abroad. He had not seen
+ him since he came to England. His father had met him, but had quarrelled
+ with him upon Sir John declining to interest himself actively to push his
+ claims, and had forbidden Cyril to go near those who had been so kind to
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy had felt it greatly at first, but he came, after a time, to see
+ that it was best so. It seemed to him that he had fallen altogether out of
+ their station in life when the hope of his father's recovering his estates
+ vanished, and although he was sure of a kindly reception from Lady Parton,
+ he shrank from going there in his present position. They had done so much
+ for him already, that the thought that his visit might seem to them a sort
+ of petition for further benefits was intolerable to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the present, the question in his mind was whether he should continue
+ at his present work, which at any rate sufficed to keep him, or should
+ seek other employment. He would greatly have preferred some life of
+ action,&mdash;something that would fit him better to bear the fatigues and
+ hardships of war,&mdash;but he saw no prospect of obtaining any such
+ position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should be a fool to throw up what I have," he said to himself at last.
+ "I will stick to it anyhow until some opportunity offers; but the sooner I
+ leave it the better. It was bad enough before; it will be worse now. If I
+ had but a friend or two it would not be so hard; but to have no one to
+ speak to, and no one to think about, when work is done, will be lonely
+ indeed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At any rate, he determined to change his room as soon as possible. It
+ mattered little where he went so that it was a change. He thought over
+ various tradesmen for whom he worked. Some of them might have an attic, he
+ cared not how small, that they might let him have in lieu of paying him
+ for his work. Even if they never spoke to him, it would be better to be in
+ a house where he knew something of those downstairs, than to lodge in one
+ where he was an utter stranger to all. He had gone round to the shops
+ where he worked, on the day after his father's death, to explain that he
+ could not come again until after the funeral, and he resolved that next
+ morning he would ask each in turn whether he could obtain a lodging with
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun was already setting when he rose from the bank on which he had
+ seated himself, and returned to the city. The room did not feel so lonely
+ to him as it would have done had he not been accustomed to spending the
+ evenings alone. He took out his little hoard and counted it. After paying
+ the expenses of the funeral there would still remain sufficient to keep
+ him for three or four months should he fall ill, or, from any cause, lose
+ his work. He had one good suit of clothes that had been bought on his
+ return to England,&mdash;when his father thought that they would assuredly
+ be going down almost immediately to take possession of the old Hall,&mdash;and
+ the rest were all in fair condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day he began his work again; he had two visits to pay of an hour
+ each, and one of two hours, and the spare time between these he filled up
+ by calling at two or three other shops to make up for the arrears of work
+ during the last few days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last place he had to visit was that at which he had the longest task
+ to perform. It was at a ship-chandler's in Tower Street, a large and dingy
+ house, the lower portion being filled with canvas, cordage, barrels of
+ pitch and tar, candles, oil, and matters of all sorts needed by
+ ship-masters, including many cannon of different sizes, piles of balls,
+ anchors, and other heavy work, all of which were stowed away in a yard
+ behind it. The owner of this store was a one-armed man. His father had
+ kept it before him, but he himself, after working there long enough to
+ become a citizen and a member of the Ironmongers' Guild, had quarrelled
+ with his father and had taken to the sea. For twenty years he had voyaged
+ to many lands, principally in ships trading in the Levant, and had passed
+ through a great many adventures, including several fights with the Moorish
+ corsairs. In the last voyage he took, he had had his arm shot off by a
+ ball from a Greek pirate among the Islands. He had long before made up his
+ differences with his father, but had resisted the latter's entreaties that
+ he should give up the sea and settle down at the shop; on his return after
+ this unfortunate voyage he told him that he had come home to stay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall be able to help about the stores after a while," he said, "but I
+ shall never be the man I was on board ship. It will be hard work to take
+ to measuring out canvas and to weighing iron, after a free life on the
+ sea, but I don't so much mind now I have had my share of adventures;
+ though I dare say I should have gone on for a few more years if that
+ rascally ball had not carried away my arm. I don't know but that it is
+ best as it is, for the older I got the harder I should find it to fall
+ into new ways and to settle down here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Anyhow, I am glad you are back, David," his father said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are forty-five, and though I don't say it would not have been better
+ if you had remained here from the first, you have learnt many things you
+ would not have learnt here. You know just the sort of things that masters
+ of ships require, and what canvas and cables and cordage will suit their
+ wants. Besides, customers like to talk with men of their own way of
+ thinking, and sailors more, I think, than other men. You know, too, most
+ of the captains who sail up the Mediterranean, and may be able to bring
+ fresh custom into the shop. Therefore, do not think that you will be of no
+ use to me. As to your wife and child, there is plenty of room for them as
+ well as for you, and it will be better for them here, with you always at
+ hand, than it would be for them to remain over at Rotherhithe and only to
+ see you after the shutters are up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eight years later Captain Dave, as he was always called, became sole owner
+ of the house and business. A year after he did so he was lamenting to a
+ friend the trouble that he had with his accounts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My father always kept that part of the business in his own hands," he
+ said, "and I find it a mighty heavy burden. Beyond checking a bill of
+ lading, or reading the marks on the bales and boxes, I never had occasion
+ to read or write for twenty years, and there has not been much more of it
+ for the last fifteen; and although I was a smart scholar enough in my
+ young days, my fingers are stiff with hauling at ropes and using the
+ marling-spike, and my eyes are not so clear as they used to be, and it is
+ no slight toil and labour to me to make up an account for goods sold. John
+ Wilkes, my head shopman, is a handy fellow; he was my boatswain in the <i>Kate</i>,
+ and I took him on when we found that the man who had been my father's
+ right hand for twenty years had been cheating him all along. We got on
+ well enough as long as I could give all my time in the shop; but he is no
+ good with the pen&mdash;all he can do is to enter receipts and sales.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He has a man under him, who helps him in measuring out the right length
+ of canvas and cables or for weighing a chain or an anchor, and knows
+ enough to put down the figures; but that is all. Then there are the two
+ smiths and the two apprentices; they don't count in the matter. Robert
+ Ashford, the eldest apprentice, could do the work, but I have no fancy for
+ him; he does not look one straight in the face as one who is honest and
+ above board should do. I shall have to keep a clerk, and I know what it
+ will be&mdash;he will be setting me right, and I shall not feel my own
+ master; he will be out of place in my crew altogether. I never liked
+ pursers; most of them are rogues. Still, I suppose it must come to that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have a boy come in to write my bills and to make up my accounts, who
+ would be just the lad for you, Captain Dave. He is the son of a
+ broken-down Cavalier, but he is a steady, honest young fellow, and I fancy
+ his pen keeps his father, who is a roystering blade, and spends most of
+ his time at the taverns. The boy comes to me for an hour, twice a week; he
+ writes as good a hand as any clerk and can reckon as quickly, and I pay
+ him but a groat a week, which was all he asked."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tell him to come to me, then. I should want him every day, if he could
+ manage it, and it would be the very thing for me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sure you would like him," the other said; "he is a good-looking
+ young fellow, and his face speaks for him without any recommendation. I
+ was afraid at first that he would not do for me; I thought there was too
+ much of the gentleman about him. He has good manners, and a gentle sort of
+ way. He has been living in France all his life, and though he has never
+ said anything about his family&mdash;indeed he talks but little, he just
+ comes in and does his work and goes away&mdash;I fancy his father was one
+ of King Charles's men and of good blood."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, that doesn't sound so well," the sailor said, "but anyhow I should
+ like to have a look at him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He comes to me to-morrow at eleven and goes at twelve," the man said,
+ "and I will send him round to you when he has done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had gone round the next morning to the ships' store.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So you are the lad that works for my neighbour Anderson?" Captain Dave
+ said, as he surveyed him closely. "I like your looks, lad, but I doubt
+ whether we shall get on together. I am an old sailor, you know, and I am
+ quick of speech and don't stop to choose my words, so if you are quick to
+ take offence it would be of no use your coming to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't think I am likely to take offence," Cyril said quietly; "and if
+ we don't get on well together, sir, you will only have to tell me that you
+ don't want me any longer; but I trust you will not have often the occasion
+ to use hard words, for at any rate I will do my best to please you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You can't say more, lad. Well, let us have a taste of your quality. Come
+ in here," and he led him into a little room partitioned off from the shop.
+ "There, you see," and he opened a book, "is the account of the sales and
+ orders yesterday; the ready-money sales have got to be entered in that
+ ledger with the red cover; the sales where no money passed have to be
+ entered to the various customers or ships in the ledger. I have made out a
+ list&mdash;here it is&mdash;of twelve accounts that have to be drawn out
+ from that ledger and sent in to customers. You will find some of them are
+ of somewhat long standing, for I have been putting off that job. Sit you
+ down here. When you have done one or two of them I will have a look at
+ your work, and if that is satisfactory we will have a talk as to what
+ hours you have got disengaged, and what days in the week will suit you
+ best."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was two hours before Captain Dave came in again. Cyril had just
+ finished the work; some of the accounts were long ones, and the writing
+ was so crabbed that it took him some time to decipher it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, how are you getting on, lad?" the Captain asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have this moment finished the last account."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What! Do you mean to say that you have done them all! Why, it would have
+ taken me all my evenings for a week. Now, hand me the books; it is best to
+ do things ship-shape."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He first compared the list of the sales with the entries, and then Cyril
+ handed him the twelve accounts he had drawn up. Captain David did not
+ speak until he had finished looking through them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would not have believed all that work could have been done in two
+ hours," he said, getting up from his chair. "Orderly and well written, and
+ without a blot. The King's secretary could not have done better! Well, now
+ you have seen the list of sales for a day, and I take it that be about the
+ average, so if you come three times a week you will always have two days'
+ sales to enter in the ledger. There are a lot of other books my father
+ used to keep, but I have never had time to bother myself about them, and
+ as I have got on very well so far, I do not see any occasion for you to do
+ so, for my part it seems to me that all these books are only invented by
+ clerks to give themselves something to do to fill up their time. Of
+ course, there won't be accounts to send out every day. Do you think with
+ two hours, three times a week, you could keep things straight?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should certainly think so, sir, but I can hardly say until I try,
+ because it seems to me that there must be a great many items, and I can't
+ say how long it will take entering all the goods received under their
+ proper headings; but if the books are thoroughly made up now, I should
+ think I could keep them all going."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That they are not," Captain David said ruefully; "they are all horribly
+ in arrears. I took charge of them myself three years ago, and though I
+ spend three hours every evening worrying over them, they get further and
+ further in arrears. Look at those files over there," and he pointed to
+ three long wires, on each of which was strung a large bundle of papers; "I
+ am afraid you will have to enter them all up before you can get matters
+ into ship-shape order. The daily sale book is the only one that has been
+ kept up regularly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But these accounts I have made up, sir? Probably in those files there are
+ many other goods supplied to the same people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course there are, lad, though I did not think of it before. Well, we
+ must wait, then, until you can make up the arrears a bit, though I really
+ want to get some money in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, sir, I might write at the bottom of each bill 'Account made up to,'
+ and then put in the date of the latest entry charged."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That would do capitally, lad&mdash;I did not think of that. I see you
+ will be of great use to me. I can buy and sell, for I know the value of
+ the goods I deal in; but as to accounts, they are altogether out of my
+ way. And now, lad, what do you charge?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I charge a groat for two hours' work, sir; but if I came to you three
+ times a week, I would do it for a little less."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, lad, I don't want to beat you down; indeed, I don't think you charge
+ enough. However, let us say, to begin with, three groats a week."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This had been six weeks before Sir Aubrey Shenstone's death; and in the
+ interval Cyril had gradually wiped off all the arrears, and had all the
+ books in order up to date, to the astonishment of his employer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II &mdash; A CHANGE FOR THE BETTER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "I am glad to see you again, lad," Captain David said, when Cyril entered
+ his shop. "I have been thinking of the news you gave me last week, and the
+ mistress and I have been talking it over. Where are you lodging?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have been lodging until now in Holborn," Cyril replied; "but I am going
+ to move."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; that is what we thought you would be doing. It is always better to
+ make a change after a loss. I don't want to interfere in your business,
+ lad, but have you any friends you are thinking of going to?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, sir; I do not know a soul in London save those I work for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is bad, lad&mdash;very bad. I was talking it over with my wife, and
+ I said that maybe you were lonely. I am sure, lad, you are one of the
+ right sort. I don't mean only in your work, for as for that I would back
+ you against any scrivener in London, but I mean about yourself. It don't
+ need half an eye to see that you have not been brought up to this sort of
+ thing, though you have taken to it so kindly, but there is not one in a
+ thousand boys of your age who would have settled down to work and made
+ their way without a friend to help them as you have done; it shows that
+ there is right good stuff in you. There, I am so long getting under weigh
+ that I shall never get into port if I don't steer a straight course. Now,
+ my ideas and my wife's come to this: if you have got no friends you will
+ have to take a lodging somewhere among strangers, and then it would be one
+ of two things&mdash;you would either stop at home and mope by yourself, or
+ you would go out, and maybe get into bad company. If I had not come across
+ you I should have had to employ a clerk, and he would either have lived
+ here with us or I should have had to pay him enough to keep house for
+ himself. Now in fact you are a clerk; for though you are only here for six
+ hours a week&mdash;you do all the work there is to do, and no clerk could
+ do more. Well, we have got an attic upstairs which is not used, and if you
+ like to come here and live with us, my wife and I will make you heartily
+ welcome."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you, indeed," Cyril said warmly. "It is of all things what I should
+ like; but of course I should wish to pay you for my board. I can afford to
+ do so if you will employ me for the same hours as at present."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I would not have that, lad; but if you like we can reckon your board
+ against what I now pay you. We feed John Wilkes and the two apprentices,
+ and one mouth extra will make but little difference. I don't want it to be
+ a matter of obligation, so we will put your board against the work you do
+ for me. I shall consider that we are making a good bargain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is your pleasure to say so, sir, but I cannot tell you what a load
+ your kind offer takes off my mind. The future has seemed very dark to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well. That matter is settled, then. Come upstairs with me and I will
+ present you to my wife and daughter; they have heard me speak of you so
+ often that they will be glad to see you. In the first place, though, I
+ must ask you your name. Since you first signed articles and entered the
+ crew I have never thought of asking you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My name is Cyril, sir&mdash;Cyril Shenstone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His employer nodded and at once led the way upstairs. A motherly looking
+ woman rose from the seat where she was sitting at work, as they entered
+ the living-room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is my Prince of Scriveners, Mary, the lad I have often spoken to you
+ about. His name is Cyril; he has accepted the proposal we talked over last
+ night, and is going to become one of the crew on board our ship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am glad to see you," she said to Cyril, holding out her hand to him. "I
+ have not met you before, but I feel very grateful to you. Till you came,
+ my husband was bothered nearly out of his wits; he used to sit here
+ worrying over his books, and writing from the time the shop closed till
+ the hour for bed, and Nellie and I dared not to say as much as a word. Now
+ we see no more of his books, and he is able to go out for a walk in the
+ fields with us as he used to do before."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is very kind of you to say so, Mistress," Cyril said earnestly; "but
+ it is I, on the contrary, who am deeply grateful to you for the offer
+ Captain Dave has been good enough to make me. You cannot tell the pleasure
+ it has given me, for you cannot understand how lonely and friendless I
+ have been feeling. Believe me, I will strive to give you as little trouble
+ as possible, and to conform myself in all ways to your wishes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment Nellie Dowsett came into the room. She was a pretty girl
+ some eighteen years of age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is Cyril, your father's assistant, Nellie," her mother said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are welcome, Master Cyril. I have been wanting to see you. Father has
+ been praising you up to the skies so often that I have had quite a
+ curiosity to see what you could be like."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your father is altogether too good, Mistress Nellie, and makes far more
+ of my poor ability than it deserves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And is he going to live with us, mother?" Nellie asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, child; he has accepted your father's offer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie clapped her hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is good," she said. "I shall expect you to escort me out sometimes,
+ Cyril. Father always wants me to go down to the wharf to look at the ships
+ or to go into the fields; but I want to go sometimes to see the fashions,
+ and there is no one to take me, for John Wilkes always goes off to smoke a
+ pipe with some sailor or other, and the apprentices are stupid and have
+ nothing to say for themselves; and besides, one can't walk alongside a boy
+ in an apprentice cap."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall be very happy to, Mistress, when my work is done, though I fear
+ that I shall make but a poor escort, for indeed I have had no practice
+ whatever in the esquiring of dames."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sure you will do very well," Nellie said, nodding approvingly. "Is
+ it true that you have been in France? Father said he was told so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; I have lived almost all my life in France."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And do you speak French?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; I speak it as well as English."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It must have been very hard to learn?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at all. It came to me naturally, just as English did."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must not keep him any longer now, Nellie; he has other appointments
+ to keep, and when he has done that, to go and pack up his things and see
+ that they are brought here by a porter. He can answer some more of your
+ questions when he comes here this evening."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril returned to Holborn with a lighter heart than he had felt for a long
+ time. His preparations for the move took him but a short time, and two
+ hours later he was installed in a little attic in the ship-chandler's
+ house. He spent half-an-hour in unpacking his things, and then heard a
+ stentorian shout from below,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Masthead, ahoy! Supper's waiting."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Supposing that this hail was intended for himself, he at once went
+ downstairs. The table was laid. Mistress Dowsett took her seat at the
+ head; her husband sat on one side of her, and Nellie on the other. John
+ Wilkes sat next to his master, and beyond him the elder of the two
+ apprentices. A seat was left between Nellie and the other apprentice for
+ Cyril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now our crew is complete, John," Captain Dave said. "We have been wanting
+ a supercargo badly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay, Captain Dave, there is no doubt we have been short-handed in that
+ respect; but things have been more ship-shape lately."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is so, John. I can make a shift to keep the vessel on her course,
+ but when it comes to writing up the log, and keeping the reckoning, I make
+ but a poor hand at it. It was getting to be as bad as that voyage of the
+ <i>Jane</i> in the Levant, when the supercargo had got himself stabbed at
+ Lemnos."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I mind it, Captain&mdash;I mind it well. And what a trouble there was
+ with the owners when we got back again!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes," the Captain said; "it was worse work than having a brush with
+ a Barbary corsair. I shall never forget that day. When I went to the
+ office to report, the three owners were all in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Well, Captain Dave, back from your voyage?' said the littlest of the
+ three. 'Made a good voyage, I hope?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "First-rate, says I, except that the supercargo got killed at Lemnos by
+ one of them rascally Greeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Dear, dear,' said another of them&mdash;he was a prim, sanctimonious
+ sort&mdash;'Has our brother Jenkins left us?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know about his leaving us, says I, but we left him sure enough in
+ a burying-place there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'And how did you manage without him?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I made as good a shift as I could, I said. I have sold all the cargo, and
+ I have brought back a freight of six tons of Turkey figs, and four hundred
+ boxes of currants. And these two bags hold the difference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Have you brought the books with you, Captain?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never a book, said I. I have had to navigate the ship and to look after
+ the crew, and do the best I could at each port. The books are on board,
+ made out up to the day before the supercargo was killed, three months ago;
+ but I have never had time to make an entry since.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They looked at each other like owls for a minute or two, and then they
+ all began to talk at once. How had I sold the goods? had I charged the
+ prices mentioned in the invoice? what percentage had I put on for profit?
+ and a lot of other things. I waited until they were all out of breath, and
+ then I said I had not bothered about invoices. I knew pretty well the
+ prices such things cost in England. I clapped on so much more for the
+ expenses of the voyage and a fair profit. I could tell them what I had
+ paid for the figs and the currants, and for some bags of Smyrna sponges I
+ had bought, but as to the prices I had charged, it was too much to expect
+ that I could carry them in my head. All I knew was I had paid for the
+ things I had bought, I had paid all the port dues and other charges, I had
+ advanced the men one-fourth of their wages each month, and I had brought
+ them back the balance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such a hubbub you never heard. One would have thought they would have
+ gone raving mad. The sanctimonious partner was the worst of the lot. He
+ threatened me with the Lord Mayor and the Aldermen, and went on till I
+ thought he would have had a fit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Look here, says I, at last, I'll tell you what I will do. You tell me
+ what the cargo cost you altogether, and put on so much for the hire of the
+ ship. I will pay you for them and settle up with the crew, and take the
+ cargo and sell it. That is a fair offer. And I advise you to keep civil
+ tongues in your heads, or I will knock them off and take my chance before
+ the Lord Mayor for assault and battery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With that I took off my coat and laid it on a bench. I reckon they saw
+ that I was in earnest, and they just sat as mum as mice. Then the little
+ man said, in a quieter sort of voice,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'You are too hasty, Captain Dowsett. We know you to be an honest man and
+ a good sailor, and had no suspicion that you would wrong us; but no
+ merchant in the City of London could hear that his business had been
+ conducted in such a way as you have carried it through without for a time
+ losing countenance. Let us talk the matter over reasonably and quietly.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is just what I am wanting, I said; and if there hasn't been reason
+ and quiet it is from no fault of mine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Well, please to put your coat on again, Captain, and let us see how
+ matters stand!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then they took their ink-horns and pens, and, on finding out what I had
+ paid for the figs and other matters, they reckoned them up; then they put
+ down what I said was due to the sailors and the mate and myself; then they
+ got out some books, and for an hour they were busy reckoning up figures;
+ then they opened the bags and counted up the gold we had brought home.
+ Well, when they had done, you would hardly have known them for the same
+ men. First of all, they went through all their calculations again to be
+ sure they had made no mistake about them; then they laid down their pens,
+ and the sanctimonious man mopped the perspiration from his face, and the
+ others smiled at each other. Then the biggest of the three, who had
+ scarcely spoken before, said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Well, Captain Dowsett, I must own that my partners were a little hasty.
+ The result of our calculations is that the voyage has been a satisfactory
+ one, I may almost say very satisfactory, and that you must have disposed
+ of the goods to much advantage. It has been a new and somewhat
+ extraordinary way of doing business, but I am bound to say that the result
+ has exceeded our expectations, and we trust that you will command the <i>Jane</i>
+ for many more voyages.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not for me, says I. You can hand me over the wages due to me, and you
+ will find the <i>Jane</i> moored in the stream just above the Tower. You
+ will find her in order and shipshape; but never again do I set my foot on
+ board her or on any other vessel belonging to men who have doubted my
+ honesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nor did I. I had a pretty good name among traders, and ten days later I
+ started for the Levant again in command of a far smarter vessel than the
+ <i>Jane</i> had ever been."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And we all went with you, Captain," John Wilkes said, "every man jack of
+ us. And on her very next voyage the <i>Jane</i> was captured by the
+ Algerines, and I reckon there are some of the poor fellows working as
+ slaves there now; for though Blake did blow the place pretty nigh out of
+ water a few years afterwards, it is certain that the Christian slaves
+ handed over to him were not half those the Moors had in their hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It would seem, Captain Dowsett, from your story, that you can manage very
+ well without a supercargo?" Cyril said quietly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, lad; but you see that was a ready-money business. I handed over the
+ goods and took the cash; there was no accounts to be kept. It was all
+ clear and above board. But it is a different thing in this ship
+ altogether, when, instead of paying down on the nail for what they get,
+ you have got to keep an account of everything and send in all their items
+ jotted down in order. Why, Nellie, your tongue seems quieter than usual."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have not given me a chance, father. You have been talking ever since
+ we sat down to table."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Supper was now over. The two apprentices at once retired. Cyril would have
+ done the same, but Mistress Dowsett said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sit you still, Cyril. The Captain says that you are to be considered as
+ one of the officers of the ship, and we shall be always glad to have you
+ here, though of course you can always go up to your own room, or go out,
+ when you feel inclined."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have to go out three times a week to work," Cyril said; "but all the
+ other evenings I shall be glad indeed to sit here, Mistress Dowsett. You
+ cannot tell what a pleasure it is to me to be in an English home like
+ this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not long before John Wilkes went out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is off to smoke his pipe," the Captain said. "I never light mine till
+ he goes. I can't persuade him to take his with me; he insists it would not
+ be manners to smoke in the cabin."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is quite right, father," Nellie said. "It is bad enough having you
+ smoke here. When mother's friends or mine come in they are well-nigh
+ choked; they are not accustomed to it as we are, for a respectable London
+ citizen does not think of taking tobacco."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am a London citizen, Nellie, but I don't set up any special claim to
+ respectability. I am a sea-captain, though that rascally Greek cannon-ball
+ and other circumstances have made a trader of me, sorely against my will;
+ and if I could not have my pipe and my glass of grog here I would go and
+ sit with John Wilkes in the tavern at the corner of the street, and I
+ suppose that would not be even as respectable as smoking here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nellie doesn't mean, David, that she wants you to give up smoking; only
+ she thinks that John is quite right to go out to take his pipe. And I must
+ say I think so too. You know that when you have sea-captains of your
+ acquaintance here, you always send the maid off to bed and smoke in the
+ kitchen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay, my dear, I don't want to turn your room into a fo'castle. There
+ is reason in all things. I suppose you don't smoke, Master Cyril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, Captain Dave, I have never so much as thought of such a thing. In
+ France it is the fashion to take snuff, but the habit seemed to me a
+ useless one, and I don't think that I should ever have taken to it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wonder," Captain Dave said, after they had talked for some time, "that
+ after living in sight of the sea for so long your thoughts never turned
+ that way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot say that I have never thought of it," Cyril said. "I have
+ thought that I should greatly like to take foreign voyages, but I should
+ not have cared to go as a ship's boy, and to live with men so ignorant
+ that they could not even write their own names. My thoughts have turned
+ rather to the Army; and when I get older I think of entering some foreign
+ service, either that of Sweden or of one of the Protestant German princes.
+ I could obtain introductions through which I might enter as a cadet, or
+ gentleman volunteer. I have learnt German, and though I cannot speak it as
+ I can French or English, I know enough to make my way in it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can you use your sword, Cyril?" Nellie Dowsett asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have had very good teaching," Cyril replied, "and hope to be able to
+ hold my own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then you are not satisfied with this mode of life?" Mistress Dowsett
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am satisfied with it, Mistress, inasmuch as I can earn money sufficient
+ to keep me. But rather than settle down for life as a city scrivener, I
+ would go down to the river and ship on board the first vessel that would
+ take me, no matter where she sailed for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think you are wrong," Mistress Dowsett said gravely. "My husband tells
+ me how clever you are at figures, and you might some day get a good post
+ in the house of one of our great merchants."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Maybe it would be so," Cyril said; "but such a life would ill suit me. I
+ have truly a great desire to earn money: but it must be in some way to
+ suit my taste."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And why do you want to earn a great deal of money, Cyril?" Nellie
+ laughed, while her mother shook her head disapprovingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish to have enough to buy my father's estate back again," he said,
+ "and though I know well enough that it is not likely I shall ever do it, I
+ shall fight none the worse that I have such a hope in my mind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bravo, lad!" Captain Dave said. "I knew not that there was an estate in
+ the case, though I did hear that you were the son of a Royalist. It is a
+ worthy ambition, boy, though if it is a large one 'tis scarce like that
+ you will get enough to buy it back again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is not a very large one," Cyril said. "'Tis down in Norfolk, but it
+ was a grand old house&mdash;at least, so I have heard my father say,
+ though I have but little remembrance of it, as I was but three years old
+ when I left it. My father, who was Sir Aubrey Shenstone, had hoped to
+ recover it; but he was one of the many who sold their estates for far less
+ than their value in order to raise money in the King's service, and, as
+ you are aware, none of those who did so have been reinstated, but only
+ those who, having had their land taken from them by Parliament, recovered
+ them because their owners had no title-deeds to show, save the grant of
+ Parliament that was of no effect in the Courts. Thus the most loyal men&mdash;those
+ who sold their estates to aid the King&mdash;have lost all, while those
+ that did not so dispossess themselves in his service are now replaced on
+ their land."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It seems very unfair," Nellie said indignantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is unfair to them, assuredly, Mistress Nellie. And yet it would be
+ unfair to the men who bought, though often they gave but a tenth of their
+ value, to be turned out again unless they received their money back. It is
+ not easy to see where that money could come from, for assuredly the King's
+ privy purse would not suffice to pay all the money, and equally certain is
+ it that Parliament would not vote a great sum for that purpose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a hard case, lad&mdash;a hard case," Captain Dave said, as he
+ puffed the smoke from his pipe. "Now I know how you stand, I blame, you in
+ no way that you long more for a life of adventure than to settle down as a
+ city scrivener. I don't think even my wife, much as she thinks of the
+ city, could say otherwise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It alters the case much," Mistress Dowsett said. "I did not know that
+ Cyril was the son of a Knight, though it was easy enough to see that his
+ manners accord not with his present position. Still there are fortunes
+ made in the city, and no honest work is dishonouring even to a gentleman's
+ son."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at all, Mistress," Cyril said warmly. "'Tis assuredly not on that
+ account that I would fain seek more stirring employment; but it was always
+ my father's wish and intention that, should there be no chance of his ever
+ regaining the estate, I should enter foreign service, and I have always
+ looked forward to that career."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I will wager that you will do credit to it, lad," Captain Dave
+ said. "You have proved that you are ready to turn your hand to any work
+ that may come to you. You have shown a manly spirit, my boy, and I honour
+ you for it; and by St. Anthony I believe that some day, unless a
+ musket-ball or a pike-thrust brings you up with a round turn, you will
+ live to get your own back again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril remained talking for another two hours, and then betook himself to
+ bed. After he had gone, Mistress Dowsett said, after a pause,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you not think, David, that, seeing that Cyril is the son of a Knight,
+ it would be more becoming to give him the room downstairs instead of the
+ attic where he is now lodged?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old sailor laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is woman-kind all over," he said. "It was good enough for him
+ before, and now forsooth, because the lad mentioned, and assuredly in no
+ boasting way, that his father had been a Knight, he is to be treated
+ differently. He would not thank you himself for making the change, dame.
+ In the first place, it would make him uncomfortable, and he might make an
+ excuse to leave us altogether; and in the second, you may be sure that he
+ has been used to no better quarters than those he has got. The Royalists
+ in France were put to sore shifts to live, and I fancy that he has fared
+ no better since he came home. His father would never have consented to his
+ going out to earn money by keeping the accounts of little city traders
+ like myself had it not been that he was driven to it by want. No, no,
+ wife; let the boy go on as he is, and make no difference in any way. I
+ liked him before, and I like him all the better now, for putting his
+ gentlemanship in his pocket and setting manfully to work instead of
+ hanging on the skirts of some Royalist who has fared better than his
+ father did. He is grateful as it is&mdash;that is easy to see&mdash;for
+ our taking him in here. We did that partly because he proved a good worker
+ and has taken a lot of care off my shoulders, partly because he was
+ fatherless and alone. I would not have him think that we are ready to do
+ more because he is a Knight's son. Let the boy be, and suffer him to steer
+ his ship his own course. If, when the time comes, we can further his
+ objects in any way we will do it with right good will. What do you think
+ of him, Nellie?" he asked, changing the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is a proper young fellow, father, and I shall be well content to go
+ abroad escorted by him instead of having your apprentice, Robert Ashford,
+ in attendance on me. He has not a word to say for himself, and truly I
+ like him not in anyway."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is not a bad apprentice, Nellie, and John Wilkes has but seldom cause
+ to find fault with him, though I own that I have no great liking myself
+ for him; he never seems to look one well in the face, which, I take it, is
+ always a bad sign. I know no harm of him; but when his apprenticeship is
+ out, which it will be in another year, I shall let him go his own way, for
+ I should not care to have him on the premises."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Methinks you are very unjust, David. The lad is quiet and regular in his
+ ways; he goes twice every Sunday to the Church of St. Alphage, and always
+ tells me the texts of the sermons."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain grunted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Maybe so, wife; but it is easy to get hold of the text of a sermon
+ without having heard it. I have my doubts whether he goes as regularly to
+ St. Alphage's as he says he does. Why could he not go with us to St.
+ Bennet's?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He says he likes the administrations of Mr. Catlin better, David. And, in
+ truth, our parson is not one of the stirring kind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So much the better," Captain Dave said bluntly. "I like not these men
+ that thump the pulpit and make as if they were about to jump out head
+ foremost. However, I don't suppose there is much harm in the lad, and it
+ may be that his failure to look one in the face is not so much his fault
+ as that of nature, which endowed him with a villainous squint. Well, let
+ us turn in; it is past nine o'clock, and high time to be a-bed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril seemed to himself to have entered upon a new life when he stepped
+ across the threshold of David Dowsett's store. All his cares and anxieties
+ had dropped from him. For the past two years he had lived the life of an
+ automaton, starting early to his work, returning in the middle of the day
+ to his dinner,&mdash;to which as often as not he sat down alone,&mdash;and
+ spending his evenings in utter loneliness in the bare garret, where he was
+ generally in bed long before his father returned. He blamed himself
+ sometimes during the first fortnight of his stay here for the feeling of
+ light-heartedness that at times came over him. He had loved his father in
+ spite of his faults, and should, he told himself, have felt deeply
+ depressed at his loss; but nature was too strong for him. The pleasant
+ evenings with Captain Dave and his family were to him delightful; he was
+ like a traveller who, after a cold and cheerless journey, comes in to the
+ warmth of a fire, and feels a glow of comfort as the blood circulates
+ briskly through his veins. Sometimes, when he had no other engagements, he
+ went out with Nellie Dowsett, whose lively chatter was new and very
+ amusing to him. Sometimes they went up into Cheapside, and into St.
+ Paul's, but more often sallied out of the city at Aldgate, and walked into
+ the fields. On these occasions he carried a stout cane that had been his
+ father's, for Nellie tried in vain to persuade him to gird on a sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are a gentleman, Cyril," she would argue, "and have a right to carry
+ one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am for the present a sober citizen, Mistress Nellie, and do not wish to
+ assume to be of any other condition. Those one sees with swords are either
+ gentlemen of the Court, or common bullies, or maybe highwaymen. After
+ nightfall it is different; for then many citizens carry their swords,
+ which indeed are necessary to protect them from the ruffians who, in spite
+ of the city watch, oftentimes attack quiet passers-by; and if at any time
+ I escort you to the house of one of your friends, I shall be ready to take
+ my sword with me. But in the daytime there is no occasion for a weapon,
+ and, moreover, I am full young to carry one, and this stout cane would,
+ were it necessary, do me good service, for I learned in France the
+ exercise that they call the <i>bâton</i>, which differs little from our
+ English singlestick."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Cyril was received almost as a member of the family by Captain Dave
+ and his wife, and found himself on excellent terms with John Wilkes, he
+ saw that he was viewed with dislike by the two apprentices. He was
+ scarcely surprised at this. Before his coming, Robert Ashford had been in
+ the habit of escorting his young mistress when she went out, and had no
+ doubt liked these expeditions, as a change from the measuring out of ropes
+ and weighing of iron in the store. Then, again, the apprentices did not
+ join in the conversation at table unless a remark was specially addressed
+ to them; and as Captain Dave was by no means fond of his elder apprentice,
+ it was but seldom that he spoke to him. Robert Ashford was between
+ eighteen and nineteen. He was no taller than Cyril, but it would have been
+ difficult to judge his age by his face, which had a wizened look; and, as
+ Nellie said one day, in his absence, he might pass very well for sixty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was easy enough for Cyril to see that Robert Ashford heartily disliked
+ him; the covert scowls that he threw across the table at meal-time, and
+ the way in which he turned his head and feigned to be too busy to notice
+ him as he passed through the shop, were sufficient indications of
+ ill-will. The younger apprentice, Tom Frost, was but a boy of fifteen; he
+ gave Cyril the idea of being a timid lad. He did not appear to share his
+ comrade's hostility to him, but once or twice, when Cyril came out from
+ the office after making up the accounts of the day, he fancied that the
+ boy glanced at him with an expression of anxiety, if not of terror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If it were not," Cyril said to himself, "that Tom is clearly too nervous
+ and timid to venture upon an act of dishonesty, I should say that he had
+ been pilfering something; but I feel sure that he would not attempt such a
+ thing as that, though I am by no means certain that Robert Ashford, with
+ his foxy face and cross eyes, would not steal his master's goods or any
+ one else's did he get the chance. Unless he were caught in the act, he
+ could do it with impunity, for everything here is carried on in such a
+ free-and-easy fashion that any amount of goods might be carried off
+ without their being missed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After thinking the matter over, he said, one afternoon when his employer
+ came in while he was occupied at the accounts,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have not seen anything of a stock-book, Captain Dave. Everything else
+ is now straight, and balanced up to to-day. Here is the book of goods
+ sold, the book of goods received, and the ledger with the accounts; but
+ there is no stock-book such as I find in almost all the other places where
+ I work."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do I want with a stock-book?" Captain Dave asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You cannot know how you stand without it," Cyril replied. "You know how
+ much you have paid, and how much you have received during the year; but
+ unless you have a stock-book you do not know whether the difference
+ between the receipts and expenditure represents profit, for the stock may
+ have so fallen in value during the year that you may really have made a
+ loss while seeming to make a profit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How can that be?" Captain Dave asked. "I get a fair profit on every
+ article."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There ought to be a profit, of course," Cyril said; "but sometimes it is
+ found not to be so. Moreover, if there is a stock-book you can tell at any
+ time, without the trouble of opening bins and weighing metal, how much
+ stock you have of each article you sell, and can order your goods
+ accordingly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How would you do that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is very simple, Captain Dave," Cyril said. "After taking stock of the
+ whole of the goods, I should have a ledger in which each article would
+ have a page or more to itself, and every day I should enter from John
+ Wilkes's sales-book a list of the goods that have gone out, each under its
+ own heading. Thus, at any moment, if you were to ask how much chain you
+ had got in stock I could tell you within a fathom. When did you take stock
+ last?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should say it was about fifteen months since. It was only yesterday
+ John Wilkes was saying we had better have a thorough overhauling."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quite time, too, I should think, Captain Dave. I suppose you have got the
+ account of your last stock-taking, with the date of it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes, I have got that;" and the Captain unlocked his desk and took out
+ an account-book. "It has been lying there ever since. It took a wonderful
+ lot of trouble to do, and I had a clerk and two men in for a fortnight,
+ for of course John and the boys were attending to their usual duties. I
+ have often wondered since why I should have had all that trouble over a
+ matter that has never been of the slightest use to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I hope you will take it again, sir; it is a trouble, no doubt, but
+ you will find it a great advantage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you sure you think it needful, Cyril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Most needful, Captain Dave. You will see the advantage of it afterwards."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, if you think so, I suppose it must be done," the Captain said, with
+ a sigh; "but it will be giving you a lot of trouble to keep this new book
+ of yours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is nothing, sir. Now that I have got all the back work up it will be
+ a simple matter to keep the daily work straight. I shall find ample time
+ to do it without any need of lengthening my hours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril now set to work in earnest, and telling Mrs. Dowsett he had some
+ books that he wanted to make up in his room before going to bed, he asked
+ her to allow him to keep his light burning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Dowsett consented, but shook her head and said he would assuredly
+ injure his health if he worked by candle light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortunately, John Wilkes had just opened a fresh sales-book, and Cyril
+ told him that he wished to refer to some particulars in the back books. He
+ first opened the ledger by inscribing under their different heads the
+ amount of each description of goods kept in stock at the last
+ stock-taking, and then entered under their respective heads all the sales
+ that had been made, while on an opposite page he entered the amount
+ purchased. It took him a month's hard work, and he finished it on the very
+ day that the new stock-taking concluded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III &mdash; A THIEF SOMEWHERE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Two days after the conclusion of the stock-taking, Cyril said, after
+ breakfast was over,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Would it trouble you, Captain Dave, to give me an hour up here before you
+ go downstairs to the counting-house. I am free for two hours now, and
+ there is a matter upon which I should like to speak to you privately."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly, lad," the old sailor said, somewhat surprised. "We shall be
+ quiet enough here, as soon as the table is cleared. My dame and Nellie
+ will be helping the maid do up the cabins, and will then be sallying out
+ marketing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the maid had cleared the table, Cyril went up to his room and
+ returned with a large ledger and several smaller books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have, for the last month, Captain Dave, been making up this stock-book
+ for my own satisfaction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bless me, lad, why have you taken all that trouble? This accounts, then,
+ for your writing so long at night, for which my dame has been quarrelling
+ with you!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was interesting work," Cyril said quietly. "Now, you see, sir," he
+ went on, opening the big ledger, "here are the separate accounts under
+ each head. These pages, you see, are for heavy cables for hawsers; of
+ these, at the date of the last stock-taking, there were, according to the
+ book you handed to me, five hundred fathoms in stock. These are the
+ amounts you have purchased since. Now, upon the other side are all the
+ sales of this cable entered in the sales-book. Adding them together, and
+ deducting them from the other side, you will see there should remain in
+ stock four hundred and fifty fathoms. According to the new stock-taking
+ there are four hundred and thirty-eight. That is, I take it, as near as
+ you could expect to get, for, in the measuring out of so many thousand
+ fathoms of cable during the fifteen months between the two stock-takings,
+ there may well have been a loss of the twelve fathoms in giving good
+ measurement."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is so," Captain Dave said. "I always say to John Wilkes, 'Give good
+ measurement, John&mdash;better a little over than a little under.' Nothing
+ can be clearer or more satisfactory."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril closed the book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sorry to say, Captain Dave, all the items are not so satisfactory,
+ and that I greatly fear that you have been robbed to a considerable
+ amount."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Robbed, lad!" the Captain said, starting up from his chair. "Who should
+ rob me? Not John Wilkes, I can be sworn! Not the two apprentices for a
+ surety, for they never go out during the day, and John keeps a sharp
+ look-out upon them, and the entrance to the shop is always locked and
+ barred after work is over, so that none can enter without getting the key,
+ which, as you know, John always brings up and hands to me as soon as he
+ has fastened the door! You are mistaken, lad, and although I know that
+ your intentions are good, you should be careful how you make a charge that
+ might bring ruin to innocent men. Carelessness there may be; but robbery!
+ No; assuredly not."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have not brought the charge without warrant, Captain Dave," Cyril said
+ gravely, "and if you will bear with me for a few minutes, I think you will
+ see that there is at least something that wants looking into."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, it is only fair after the trouble you have taken, lad, that I
+ should hear what you have to say; but it will need strong evidence indeed
+ to make me believe that there has been foul play."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, sir," Cyril said, opening the ledger again, "in the first place, I
+ would point out that in all the heavy articles, such as could not
+ conveniently be carried away, the tally of the stock-takers corresponds
+ closely with the figures in this book. In best bower anchors the figures
+ are absolutely the same and, as you have seen, in heavy cables they
+ closely correspond. In the large ship's compasses, the ship's boilers, and
+ ship's galleys, the numbers tally exactly. So it is with all the heavy
+ articles; the main blocks are correct, and all other heavy gear. This
+ shows that John Wilkes's book is carefully kept, and it would be strange
+ indeed if heavy goods had all been properly entered, and light ones
+ omitted; but yet when we turn to small articles, we find that there is a
+ great discrepancy between the figures. Here is the account, for instance,
+ of the half-inch rope. According to my ledger, there should be eighteen
+ hundred fathoms in stock, whereas the stock-takers found but three hundred
+ and eighty. In two-inch rope there is a deficiency of two hundred and
+ thirty fathoms, in one-inch rope of six hundred and twenty. These sizes,
+ as you know, are always in requisition, and a thief would find ready
+ purchasers for a coil of any of them. But, as might be expected, it is in
+ copper that the deficiency is most serious. Of fourteen-inch bolts,
+ eighty-two are short, of twelve-inch bolts a hundred and thirty, of
+ eight-inch three hundred and nine; and so on throughout almost all the
+ copper stores. According to your expenditure and receipt-book, Captain
+ Dave, you have made, in the last fifteen months, twelve hundred and thirty
+ pounds; but according to this book your stock is less in value, by two
+ thousand and thirty-four pounds, than it should have been. You are,
+ therefore, a poorer man than you were at the beginning of this fifteen
+ months' trading, by eight hundred and four pounds."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Dave sat down in his chair, breathing hard. He took out his
+ handkerchief and wiped the drops of perspiration from his forehead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you sure of this, boy?" he said hoarsely. "Are you sure that you have
+ made no mistake in your figures?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quite sure," Cyril said firmly. "In all cases in which I have found
+ deficiencies I have gone through the books three times and compared the
+ figures, and I am sure that if you put the books into the hands of any
+ city accountant, he will bear out my figures."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time Captain Dave sat silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hast any idea," he said at last, "how this has come about?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have none," Cyril replied. "That John Wilkes is not concerned in it I
+ am as sure as you are; and, thinking the matter over, I see not how the
+ apprentices could have carried off so many articles, some heavy and some
+ bulky, when they left the shop in the evening, without John Wilkes
+ noticing them. So sure am I, that my advice would be that you should take
+ John Wilkes into your confidence, and tell him how matters stand. My only
+ objection to that is that he is a hasty man, and that I fear he would not
+ be able to keep his countenance, so that the apprentices would remark that
+ something was wrong. I am far from saying that they have any hand in it;
+ it would be a grievous wrong to them to have suspicions when there is no
+ shadow of evidence against them; but at any rate, if this matter is to be
+ stopped and the thieves detected, it is most important that they should
+ have, if they are guilty, no suspicion that they are in any way being
+ watched, or that these deficiencies have been discovered. If they have had
+ a hand in the matter they most assuredly had accomplices, for such goods
+ could not be disposed of by an apprentice to any dealer without his being
+ sure that they must have been stolen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are right there, lad&mdash;quite right. Did John Wilkes know that I
+ had been robbed in this way he would get into a fury, and no words could
+ restrain him from falling upon the apprentices and beating them till he
+ got some of the truth out of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They may be quite innocent," Cyril said. "It may be that the thieves have
+ discovered some mode of entry into the store either by opening the
+ shutters at the back, or by loosening a board, or even by delving up under
+ the ground. It is surely easier to believe this than that the boys can
+ have contrived to carry off so large a quantity of goods under John
+ Wilkes's eye."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is so, lad. I have never liked Robert Ashford, but God forbid that I
+ should suspect him of such crime only because his forehead is as wrinkled
+ as an ape's, and Providence has set his eyes crossways in his head. You
+ cannot always judge a ship by her upper works; she may be ugly to the eye
+ and yet have a clear run under water. Still, you can't help going by what
+ you see. I agree with you that if we tell John Wilkes about this, those
+ boys will know five minutes afterwards that the ship is on fire; but if we
+ don't tell him, how are we to get to the bottom of what is going on?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is a difficult question, but a few days will not make much
+ difference, when we know that it has been going on for over a year, and
+ may, for aught we know, have been going on much longer. The first thing,
+ Captain Dave, is to send these books to an accountant, for him to go
+ through them and check my figures."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no need for that, lad. I know how careful you are, and you
+ cannot have gone so far wrong as all this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, sir, I am sure that there is no mistake; but, for your own sake as
+ well as mine, it were well that you should have the signature of an
+ accountant to the correctness of the books. If you have to lay the matter
+ before the magistrates, they would not take my testimony as to your
+ losses, and might even say that you were rash in acting upon the word of a
+ boy like myself, and you might then be obliged to have the accounts made
+ up anew, which would cost you more, and cause much delay in the process;
+ whereas, if you put in your books and say that their correctness is
+ vouched for by an accountant, no question would arise on it; nor would
+ there be any delay now, for while the books are being gone into, we can be
+ trying to get to the bottom of the matter here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay, it shall be done, Master Cyril, as you say. But for the life of
+ me I don't see how we are to get at the bottom of the ship to find out
+ where she is leaking!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It seems to me that the first thing, Captain Dave, is to see to the
+ warehouse. As we agreed that the apprentices cannot have carried out all
+ these goods under John Wilkes's eye, and cannot have come down night after
+ night through the house, the warehouse must have been entered from
+ without. As I never go in there, it would be best that you should see to
+ this matter yourself. There are the fastenings of the shutters in the
+ first place, then the boardings all round. As for me, I will look round
+ outside. The window of my room looks into the street, but if you will take
+ me to one of the rooms at the back we can look at the surroundings of the
+ yard, and may gather some idea whether the goods can have been passed over
+ into any of the houses abutting on it, or, as is more likely, into the
+ lane that runs up by its side."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain led the way into one of the rooms at the back of the house,
+ and opening the casement, he and Cyril leaned out. The store occupied
+ fully half the yard, the rest being occupied by anchors, piles of iron,
+ ballast, etc. There were two or three score of guns of various sizes piled
+ on each other. A large store of cannon-ball was ranged in a great pyramid
+ close by. A wall some ten feet high separated the yard from the lane Cyril
+ had spoken of. On the left, adjoining the warehouse, was the yard of the
+ next shop, which belonged to a wool-stapler. Behind were the backs of a
+ number of small houses crowded in between Tower Street and Leadenhall
+ Street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I suppose you do not know who lives in those houses, Captain Dave?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, indeed. The land is not like the sea. Afloat, when one sees a sail,
+ one wonders what is her nationality, and whither she is bound, and still
+ more whether she is an honest trader or a rascally pirate; but here on
+ land, one scarcely gives a thought as to who may dwell in the houses
+ round."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will walk round presently," Cyril said, "and gather, as far as I can,
+ who they are that live there; but, as I have said, I fancy it is over that
+ wall and into the alley that your goods have departed. The apprentices'
+ room is this side of the house, is it not?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; John Wilkes sleeps in the room next to yours, and the door opposite
+ to his is that of the lads' room."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do the windows of any of the rooms look into that lane?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; it is a blank wall on that side."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is the clock striking nine," Cyril said, starting. "It is time for
+ me to be off. Then you will take the books to-day, Captain Dave?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will carry them off at once, and when I return will look narrowly into
+ the fastenings of the two windows and door from the warehouse into the
+ yard; and will take care to do so when the boys are engaged in the front
+ shop."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When his work was done, Cyril went round to the houses behind the yard,
+ and he found that they stood in a small court, with three or four trees
+ growing in the centre, and were evidently inhabited by respectable
+ citizens. Over the door of one was painted, "Joshua Heddings, Attorney";
+ next to him was Gilbert Gushing, who dealt in jewels, silks, and other
+ precious commodities from the East; next to him was a doctor, and beyond a
+ dealer in spices. This was enough to assure him that it was not through
+ such houses as these that the goods had been carried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had not been back at the mid-day meal, for his work that day lay up
+ by Holborn Bar, where he had two customers whom he attended with but half
+ an hour's interval between the visits, and on the days on which he went
+ there he was accustomed to get something to eat at a tavern hard by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Supper was an unusually quiet meal. Captain Dave now and then asked John
+ Wilkes a question as to the business matters of the day, but evidently
+ spoke with an effort. Nellie rattled on as usual; but the burden of
+ keeping up the conversation lay entirely on her shoulders and those of
+ Cyril. After the apprentices had left, and John Wilkes had started for his
+ usual resort, the Captain lit his pipe. Nellie signed to Cyril to come and
+ seat himself by her in the window that projected out over the street, and
+ enabled the occupants of the seats at either side to have a view up and
+ down it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What have you been doing to father, Cyril?" she asked, in low tones; "he
+ has been quite unlike himself all day. Generally when he is out of temper
+ he rates everyone heartily, as if we were a mutinous crew, but to-day he
+ has gone about scarcely speaking; he hasn't said a cross word to any of
+ us, but several times when I spoke to him I got no answer, and it is easy
+ to see that he is terribly put out about something. He was in his usual
+ spirits at breakfast; then, you know, he was talking with you for an hour,
+ and it does not take much guessing to see that it must have been something
+ that passed between you that has put him out. Now what was it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't see why you should say that, Mistress Nellie. It is true we did
+ have a talk together, and he examined some fresh books I have been making
+ out and said that he was mightily pleased with my work. I went away at
+ nine o'clock, and something may have occurred to upset him between that
+ and dinner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All which means that you don't mean to tell me anything about it, Master
+ Cyril. Well, then, you may consider yourself in my black books
+ altogether," she said petulantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sorry that you should say so," he said. "If it were true that
+ anything that I had said to him had ruffled him, it would be for him to
+ tell you, and not for me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Methinks I have treated Robert Ashford scurvily, and I shall take him for
+ my escort to see His Majesty attend service at St. Paul's to-morrow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril smiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think it would be fair to give him a turn, Mistress, and I am glad to
+ see that you have such a kind thought."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie rose indignantly, and taking her work sat down by the side of her
+ mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a fine evening," Cyril said to Captain Dave, "and I think I shall
+ take a walk round. I shall return in an hour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain understood, by a glance Cyril gave him, that he was going out
+ for some purpose connected with the matter they had in hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay, lad," he said. "It is not good for you to be sitting moping at
+ home every evening. I have often wondered before that you did not take a
+ walk on deck before you turned in. I always used to do so myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't think there is any moping in it, Captain Dave," Cyril said, with
+ a laugh. "If you knew how pleasant the evenings have been to me after the
+ life I lived before, you would not say so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril's only object in going out, however, was to avoid the necessity of
+ having to talk with Dame Dowsett and Nellie. His thoughts were running on
+ nothing but the robbery, and he had found it very difficult to talk in his
+ usual manner, and to answer Nellie's sprightly sallies. It was dark
+ already. A few oil lamps gave a feeble light here and there. At present he
+ had formed no plan whatever of detecting the thieves; he was as much
+ puzzled as the Captain himself as to how the goods could have been
+ removed. It would be necessary, of course, to watch the apprentices, but
+ he did not think that anything was likely to come out of this. It was the
+ warehouse itself that must be watched, in order to discover how the
+ thieves made an entry. His own idea was that they got over the wall by
+ means of a rope, and in some way managed to effect an entry into the
+ warehouse. The apprentices could hardly aid them unless they came down
+ through the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If they had managed to get a duplicate key of the door leading from the
+ bottom of the stairs to the shop, they could, of course, unbar the
+ windows, and pass things out&mdash;that part of the business would be
+ easy; but he could not believe that they would venture frequently to pass
+ down through the house. It was an old one, and the stairs creaked. He
+ himself was a light sleeper; he had got into the way of waking at the
+ slightest sound, from the long watches he had had for his father's return,
+ and felt sure that he should have heard them open their door and steal
+ along the passage past his room, however quietly they might do it. He
+ walked up the Exchange, then along Cheapside as far as St. Paul's, and
+ back. Quiet as it was in Thames Street there was no lack of animation
+ elsewhere. Apprentices were generally allowed to go out for an hour after
+ supper, the regulation being that they returned to their homes by eight
+ o'clock. Numbers of these were about. A good many citizens were on their
+ way home after supping with friends. The city watch, with lanterns,
+ patrolled the streets, and not infrequently interfered in quarrels which
+ broke out among the apprentices. Cyril felt more solitary among the knots
+ of laughing, noisy lads than in the quiet streets, and was glad to be home
+ again. Captain Dave himself came down to open the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have just sent the women to bed," he said. "The two boys came in five
+ minutes ago. I thought you would not be long."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did not go out for anything particular," Cyril said; "but Mistress
+ Nellie insisted that there was something wrong with you, and that I must
+ know what it was about, so, feeling indeed indisposed to talk, I thought
+ it best to go out for a short time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes. Women always want to know, lad. I have been long enough at sea,
+ you may be sure, to know that when anything is wrong, it is the best thing
+ to keep it from the passengers as long as you can."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You took the books away this morning, Captain Dave?" Cyril asked as they
+ sat down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, lad, I took them to Master Skinner, who bears as good a reputation as
+ any accountant in the city, and he promised to take them in hand without
+ loss of time; but I have been able to do nothing here. John, or one or
+ other of the boys, was always in the warehouse, and I have had no
+ opportunity of examining the door and shutters closely. When the house is
+ sound asleep we will take a lantern and go down to look at them. I have
+ been thinking that we must let John Wilkes into this matter; it is too
+ much to bear on my mind by myself. He is my first mate, you see, and in
+ time of danger, the first mate, if he is worth anything, is the man the
+ captain relies on for help."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By all means tell him, then," Cyril said. "I can keep books, but I have
+ no experience in matters like this, and shall be very glad to have his
+ opinion and advice."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There he is&mdash;half-past eight. He is as punctual as clockwork."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril ran down and let John in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Captain wants to speak to you," he said, "before you go up to bed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John, after carefully bolting the door, followed him upstairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have got some bad news for you, John. There, light your pipe again, and
+ sit down. My good dame has gone off to bed, and we have got the cabin to
+ ourselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John touched an imaginary hat and obeyed orders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The ship has sprung a bad leak, John. This lad here has found it out, and
+ it is well he did, for unless he had done so we should have had her
+ foundering under our feet without so much as suspecting anything was going
+ wrong."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sailor took his newly-lighted pipe from between his lips and stared at
+ the Captain in astonishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, it is hard to believe, mate, but, by the Lord Harry, it is as I say.
+ There is a pirate about somewhere, and the books show that, since the
+ stock-taking fifteen months ago, he has eased the craft of her goods to
+ the tune of two thousand pounds and odd."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John Wilkes flung his pipe on to the table with such force that it
+ shivered into fragments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dash my timbers!" he exclaimed. "Who is the man? You only give me the
+ orders, sir, and I am ready to range alongside and board him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is what we have got to find out, John. That the goods have gone is
+ certain, but how they can have gone beats us altogether."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you mean to say, Captain, that they have stolen them out of the place
+ under my eyes and me know nothing about it? It can't be, sir. There must
+ be some mistake. I know naught about figures, save enough to put down the
+ things I sell, but I don't believe as a thing has gone out of the shop
+ unbeknown to me. That yarn won't do for me, sir," and he looked angrily at
+ Cyril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is true enough, John, for all that. The books have been balanced up.
+ We knew what was in stock fifteen months ago, and we knew from your
+ sale-book what has passed out of the shop, and from your entry-book what
+ has come in. We know now what there is remaining. We find that in bulky
+ goods, such as cables and anchors and ships' boilers and suchlike, the
+ accounts tally exactly, but in the small rope, and above all in the
+ copper, there is a big shrinkage. I will read you the figures of some of
+ them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John's face grew longer and longer as he heard the totals read.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I'm jiggered!" he said, when the list was concluded. "I could have
+ sworn that the cargo was right according to the manifest. Well, Captain,
+ all I can say is, if that 'ere list be correct, the best thing you can do
+ is to send me adrift as a blind fool. I have kept my tallies as correct as
+ I could, and I thought I had marked down every package that has left the
+ ship, and here they must have been passing out pretty nigh in cart-loads
+ under my very eyes, and I knew nothing about it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't blame you, John, more than I blame myself. I am generally about
+ on deck, and had no more idea that the cargo was being meddled with than
+ you had. I have been wrong in letting matters go on so long without taking
+ stock of them and seeing that it was all right; but I never saw the need
+ for it. This is what comes of taking to a trade you know nothing about; we
+ have just been like two children, thinking that it was all plain and above
+ board, and that we had nothing to do but to sell our goods and to fill up
+ again when the hold got empty. Well, it is of no use talking over that
+ part of the business. What we have got to do is to find out this leak and
+ stop it. We are pretty well agreed, Cyril and me, that the things don't go
+ out of the shop by daylight. The question is, how do they go out at
+ night?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I always lock up the hatches according to orders, Captain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I have no doubt you do, John; but maybe the fastenings have been
+ tampered with. The only way in which we see it can have been managed is
+ that someone has been in the habit of getting over the wall between the
+ yard and the lane, and then getting into the warehouse somehow. It must
+ have been done very often, for if the things had been taken in
+ considerable quantities you would have noticed that the stock was short
+ directly the next order came in. Now I propose we light these two lanterns
+ I have got here, and that we go down and have a look round the hold."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lighting the candles, they went downstairs. The Captain took out the key
+ and turned the lock. It grated loudly as he did so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is a noisy lock," Cyril said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It wants oiling," John replied. "I have been thinking of doing it for the
+ last month, but it has always slipped out of my mind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At any rate," Cyril said, "it is certain that thieves could not have got
+ into the shop this way, for the noise would have been heard all over the
+ house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door between the shop and the warehouse was next unlocked. The
+ fastenings of the shutters and doors were first examined; there was no
+ sign of their having been tampered with. Each bolt and hasp was tried, and
+ the screws examined. Then they went round trying every one of the stout
+ planks that formed the side; all were firm and in good condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It beats me altogether," the Captain said, when they had finished their
+ examination. "The things cannot walk out of themselves; they have got to
+ be carried. But how the fellows who carry them get in is more than I can
+ say. There is nowhere else to look, is there, John?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not that I can see, Captain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They went to the door into the shop, and were about to close it, when
+ Cyril said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Some of the things that are gone are generally kept in here, Captain&mdash;the
+ rope up to two inch, for example, and a good deal of canvas, and most of
+ the smaller copper fittings; so that, whoever the thief is, he must have
+ been in the habit of coming in here as well as into the warehouse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is so, lad. Perhaps they entered from this side."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will you hold the lantern here, John?" Cyril said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sailor held the lantern to the lock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are no scratches nor signs of tools having been used here," Cyril
+ said, examining both the lock and the door-post. "Whether the thief came
+ into the warehouse first, or not, he must have had a key."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thieves generally carry a lot of keys with them, Cyril; and if one does
+ not quite fit they can file it until it does."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shutters of the shop window and its fastenings, and those of the door,
+ were as secure as those of the warehouse, and, completely puzzled, the
+ party went upstairs again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There must be some way of getting in and out, although we can't find it,"
+ Captain Dave said. "Things can't have gone off by themselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It may be, Captain," John Wilkes said, "that some of the planks may be
+ loose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But we tried them all, John."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, they seem firm enough, but it may be that one of them is wedged in,
+ and that when the wedges are taken out it could be pulled off."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think you would have noticed it, John. If there was anything of that
+ sort it must be outside. However, we will take a good look round the yard
+ to-morrow. The warehouse is strongly built, and I don't believe that any
+ plank could be taken off and put back again, time after time, without
+ making a noise that would be heard in the house. What do you think,
+ Cyril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I agree with you, Captain Dave. How the thieves make an entry I can't
+ imagine, but I don't believe that it is through the wall of the warehouse.
+ I am convinced that the robberies must have been very frequent. Had a
+ large amount been taken at a time, John Wilkes would have been sure to
+ notice it. Then, again, the thieves would not come so often, and each time
+ for a comparatively small amount of booty, unless it could be managed
+ without any serious risk or trouble. However, now that we do know that
+ they come, we shall have, I should think, very little difficulty in
+ finding out how it is done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You may warrant we will keep a sharp look-out," John Wilkes said
+ savagely. "If the Captain will give me the use of a room at the back of
+ the house, you may be sure I shan't close an eye till I have got to the
+ bottom of the matter. I am responsible for the cargo below, and if I had
+ kept as sharp an eye on the stores as I ought to have done, this would not
+ have happened. Only let me catch them trying to board, and I will give
+ them such a reception that I warrant me they will sheer off with a bullet
+ or two in them. I have got that pair of boarding pistols, and a cutlass,
+ hung up over my bed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must not do that, John," the Captain said. "It isn't a matter of
+ beating off the pirates by pouring a broadside into them. Maybe you might
+ cripple them, more likely they would make off, and we want to capture
+ them. Therefore, I say, let us watch, and find out how they do it. When we
+ once know that, we can lay our plans for capturing them the next time they
+ come. I will take watch and watch with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, if it goes on long, Captain, I won't say no to that; but for
+ to-night anyhow I will sit up alone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well, let it be so, John. But mind, whatever you see, you keep as
+ still as a mouse. Just steal to my room in your stockinged feet directly
+ you see anything moving. Open the door and say, 'Strange sail in sight!'
+ and I will be over at your window in no time. And now, Cyril, you and I
+ may as well turn in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night passed quietly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You saw nothing, I suppose, John?" the Captain said next morning, after
+ the apprentices had gone down from breakfast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not a thing, Captain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now we will go and have a look in the yard. Will you come, Cyril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should like to come," Cyril replied, "but, as I have never been out
+ there before, had you not better make some pretext for me to do so. You
+ might say, in the hearing of the apprentices, 'We may as well take the
+ measurements for that new shed we were talking about, and see how much
+ boarding it will require.' Then you can call to me out from the office to
+ come and help you to measure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then you still think the apprentices are in it?" John Wilkes asked
+ sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't say I think so, John. I have nothing against them. I don't
+ believe they could come down at night without being heard; I feel sure
+ they could not get into the shop without that stiff bolt making a noise.
+ Still, as it is possible they may be concerned in the matter, I think
+ that, now we have it in good train for getting to the bottom of it, it
+ would be well to keep the matter altogether to ourselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quite right," Captain Dave said approvingly. "When you suspect treachery,
+ don't let a soul think that you have got such a matter in your mind, until
+ you are in a position to take the traitor by the collar and put a pistol
+ to his ear. That idea of yours is a very good one; I will say something
+ about the shed to John this morning, and then when you go down to the
+ counting-house after dinner I will call to you to come out to the yard
+ with us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After dinner, Captain Dave went with Cyril into the counting-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We had an order in this morning for a set of ship's anchors, and John and
+ I have been in the yard looking them out; we looked over the place pretty
+ sharply, as you may be sure, but as far as we could see the place is as
+ solid as when it was built, fifty years ago, by my father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain went out into the store, and ten minutes afterwards re-entered
+ the shop and shouted,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come out here, Cyril, and lend a hand. We are going to take those
+ measurements. Bring out your ink-horn, and a bit of paper to put them down
+ as we take them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The yard was some sixty feet long by twenty-five broad, exclusive of the
+ space occupied by the warehouse. This, as Cyril had observed from the
+ window above, did not extend as far as the back wall; but on walking round
+ there with the two men, he found that the distance was greater than he had
+ expected, and that there was a space of some twenty feet clear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is where we are thinking of putting the shed," the Captain said in a
+ loud voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I see that you have a crane and door into the loft over the warehouse
+ there," Cyril said, looking up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We never use that now. When my father first began business, he used to
+ buy up old junk and such-like stores, and store them up there, but it
+ didn't pay for the trouble; and, besides, as you see, he wanted every foot
+ of the yard room, and of course at that time they had to leave a space
+ clear for the carts to come up from the gate round here, so it was given
+ up, and the loft is empty now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril looked up at the crane. It was swung round so as to lie flat against
+ the wooden shutters. The rope was still through the block, and passed into
+ the loft through a hole cut at the junction of the shutters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They now measured the space between the warehouse and the wall, the
+ Captain repeating the figures, still in a loud voice; then they discussed
+ the height of the walls, and after some argument between the Captain and
+ John Wilkes agreed that this should be the same as the rest of the
+ building. Still talking on the subject, they returned through the
+ warehouse, Cyril on the way taking a look at the massive gate that opened
+ into the lane. In addition to a heavy bar it had a strong hasp, fastened
+ by a great padlock. The apprentices were busy at work coiling up some rope
+ when they passed by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When we have knocked a door through the end there, John," Captain Dave
+ said, "it will give you a deal more room, and you will be able to get rid
+ of all these cables and heavy dunnage, and to have matters more ship-shape
+ here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While they had been taking the measurements, all three had carefully
+ examined the wall of the warehouse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is nothing wrong there, Cyril," his employer said, as, leaving John
+ Wilkes in the warehouse, they went through the shop into the little
+ office.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly nothing that I could see, Captain Dave. I did not before know
+ the loft had any opening to the outside. Of course I have seen the ladder
+ going up from the warehouse to that trap-door; but as it was closed I
+ thought no more of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't suppose anyone has been up there for years, lad. What, are you
+ thinking that someone might get in through those shutters? Why, they are
+ twenty feet from the ground, so that you would want a long ladder, and
+ when you got up there you would find that you could not open the shutters.
+ I said nobody had been up there, but I did go up myself to have a look
+ round when I first settled down here, and there is a big bar with a
+ padlock."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril thought no more about it, and after supper it was arranged that he
+ and Captain Dave should keep watch by turns at the window of the room that
+ had been now given to John Wilkes, and that the latter should have a night
+ in his berth, as the Captain expressed it. John Wilkes had made some
+ opposition, saying that he would be quite willing to take his watch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will just obey orders, John," the Captain said. "You have had
+ thirty-six hours off the reel on duty, and you have got to be at work all
+ day to-morrow again. You shall take the middle watch to-morrow night if
+ you like, but one can see with half an eye that you are not fit to be on
+ the lookout to-night. I doubt if any of us could see as far as the length
+ of the bowsprit. It is pretty nearly pitch dark; there is not a star to be
+ seen, and it looked to me, when I turned out before supper, as if we were
+ going to have a storm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV &mdash; CAPTURED
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was settled that Cyril was to take the first watch, and that the
+ Captain should relieve him at one o'clock. At nine, the family went to
+ bed. A quarter of an hour later, Cyril stole noiselessly from his attic
+ down to John Wilkes's room. The door had been left ajar, and the candle
+ was still burning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I put a chair by the window," the sailor said, from his bed, "and left
+ the light, for you might run foul of something or other in the dark,
+ though I have left a pretty clear gangway for you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril blew out the candle, and seated himself at the window. For a time he
+ could see nothing, and told himself that the whole contents of the
+ warehouse might be carried off without his being any the wiser.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall certainly see nothing," he said to himself; "but, at least, I may
+ hear something."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he turned the fastening of the casement and opened it about
+ half an inch. As his eyes became accustomed to the darkness, he was able
+ to make out the line of the roof of the warehouse, which was some three or
+ four feet below the level of his eyes, and some twenty feet away on his
+ left. The time passed slowly. He kept himself awake by thinking over the
+ old days in France, the lessons he had learnt with his friend, Harry
+ Parton, and the teaching of the old clergyman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He heard the bell of St. Paul's strike ten and eleven. The last stroke had
+ scarcely ceased to vibrate when he rose to his feet suddenly. He heard, on
+ his left, a scraping noise. A moment later it ceased, and then was renewed
+ again. It lasted but a few seconds; then he heard an irregular, shuffling
+ noise, that seemed to him upon the roof of the warehouse. Pressing his
+ face to the casement, he suddenly became aware that the straight line of
+ the ridge was broken by something moving along it, and a moment later he
+ made out a second object, just behind the first. Moving with the greatest
+ care, he made his way out of the room, half closed the door behind him,
+ crossed the passage, and pushed at a door opposite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Captain Dave," he said, in a low voice, "get up at once, and please don't
+ make a noise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay, lad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a movement from the bed, and a moment later the Captain stood
+ beside him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is it, lad?" he whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are two figures moving along on the ridge of the roof of the
+ warehouse. I think it is the apprentices. I heard a slight noise, as if
+ they were letting themselves down from their window by a rope. It is just
+ over that roof, you know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a rustling sound as the Captain slipped his doublet on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is so. The young scoundrels! What can they be doing on the roof?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They went to the window behind. Just as they reached it there was a vivid
+ flash of lightning. It sufficed to show them a figure lying at full length
+ at the farther end of the roof; then all was dark again, and a second or
+ two later came a sharp, crashing roar of thunder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We had better stand well back from the window," Cyril whispered. "Another
+ flash might show us to anyone looking this way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What does it mean, lad? What on earth is that boy doing there? I could
+ not see which it was."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think it is Ashford," Cyril said. "The figure in front seemed the
+ smaller of the two."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But where on earth can Tom have got to?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should fancy, sir, that Robert has lowered him so that he can get his
+ feet on the crane and swing it outwards; then he might sit down on it and
+ swing himself by the rope into the loft if the doors are not fastened
+ inside. Robert, being taller, would have no difficulty in lowering himself&mdash;There!"
+ he broke off, as another flash of lightning lit up the sky. "He has gone,
+ now; there is no one on the roof."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John Wilkes was by this time standing beside them, having started up at
+ the first flash of lightning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you go up, John, into their room," the Captain said. "I think there
+ can be no doubt that these fellows on the roof are Ashford and Frost, but
+ it is as well to be able to swear to it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The foreman returned in a minute or two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The room is empty, Captain; the window is open, and there is a rope
+ hanging down from it. Shall I cast it adrift?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly not, John. We do not mean to take them tonight, and they must
+ be allowed to go back to their beds without a suspicion that they have
+ been watched. I hope and trust that it is not so bad as it looks, and that
+ the boys have only broken out from devilry. You know, boys will do things
+ of that sort just because it is forbidden."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There must be more than that," John Wilkes said. "If it had been just
+ after they went to their rooms, it might be that they went to some tavern
+ or other low resort, but the town is all asleep now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They again went close to the window, pushed the casement a little more
+ open, and stood listening there. In two or three minutes there was a very
+ slight sound heard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are unbolting the door into the yard," John Wilkes whispered. "I
+ would give a month's pay to be behind them with a rope's end."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Half a minute later there was a sudden gleam of light below, and they
+ could see the door open. The light disappeared again, but they heard
+ footsteps; then they saw the light thrown on the fastening to the outer
+ gate, and could make out that two figures below were applying a key to the
+ padlock. This was taken off and laid down; then the heavy wooden bar was
+ lifted, and also laid on the ground. The gate opened as if pushed from the
+ other side. The two figures went out; the sound of a low murmur of
+ conversation could be heard; then they returned, the gate was closed and
+ fastened again, they entered the warehouse, the light disappeared, and the
+ door was closed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's how the things went, John."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay, sir," the foreman growled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As they were undoing the gate, the light fell on a coil of rope they had
+ set down there, and a bag which I guess had copper of some kind in it.
+ They have done us cleverly, the young villains! There was not noise enough
+ to wake a cat. They must have had every bolt and hinge well oiled."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We had better close the casement now, sir, for as they come back along
+ the ridge they will be facing it, and if a flash of lightning came they
+ would see that it was half open, and even if they did not catch sight of
+ our faces they would think it suspicious that the window should be open,
+ and it might put them on their guard."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; and we may as well turn in at once, John. Like enough when they get
+ back they will listen for a bit at their door, so as to make sure that
+ everything is quiet before they turn in. There is nothing more to see now.
+ Of course they will get in as they got out. You had better turn in as you
+ are, Cyril; they may listen at your door."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril at once went up to his room, closed the door, placed a chair against
+ it, and then lay down on his bed. He listened intently, and four or five
+ minutes later thought that he heard a door open; but he could not be sure,
+ for just at that moment heavy drops began to patter down upon the tiles.
+ The noise rose louder and louder until he could scarce have heard himself
+ speak. Then there was a bright flash and the deep rumble of the thunder
+ mingled with the sharp rattle of the raindrops overhead. He listened for a
+ time to the storm, and then dropped off to sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Things went on as usual at breakfast the next morning. During the meal,
+ Captain Dave gave the foreman several instructions as to the morning's
+ work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am going on board the <i>Royalist</i>," he said. "John Browning wants
+ me to overhaul all the gear, and see what will do for another voyage or
+ two, and what must be new. His skipper asked for new running rigging all
+ over, but he thinks that there can't be any occasion for its all being
+ renewed. I don't expect I shall be in till dinner-time, so anyone that
+ wants to see me must come again in the afternoon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten minutes later, Cyril went out, on his way to his work. Captain Dave
+ was standing a few doors away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Before I go on board the brig, lad, I am going up to the Chief
+ Constable's to arrange about this business. I want to get four men of the
+ watch. Of course, it may be some nights before this is tried again, so I
+ shall have the men stowed away in the kitchen. Then we must keep watch,
+ and as soon as we see those young villains on the roof, we will let the
+ men out at the front door. Two will post themselves this end of the lane,
+ and two go round into Leadenhall Street and station themselves at the
+ other end. When the boys go out after supper we will unlock the door at
+ the bottom of the stairs into the shop, and the door into the warehouse.
+ Then we will steal down into the shop and listen there until we hear them
+ open the door into the yard, and then go into the warehouse and be ready
+ to make a rush out as soon as they get the gate open. John will have his
+ boatswain's whistle ready, and will give the signal. That will bring the
+ watch up, so they will be caught in a trap."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should think that would be a very good plan, Captain Dave, though I
+ wish that it could have been done without Tom Frost being taken. He is a
+ timid sort of boy, and I have no doubt that he has been entirely under the
+ thumb of Robert."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, if he has he will get off lightly," the Captain said. "Even if a
+ boy is a timid boy, he knows what will be the consequences if he is caught
+ robbing his master. Cowardice is no excuse for crime, lad. The boys have
+ always been well treated, and though I dare say Ashford is the worst of
+ the two, if the other had been honest he would not have seen him robbing
+ me without letting me know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For six nights watch was kept without success. Every evening, when the
+ family and apprentices had retired to rest, John Wilkes went quietly
+ downstairs and admitted the four constables, letting them out in the
+ morning before anyone was astir. Mrs. Dowsett had been taken into her
+ husband's confidence so far as to know that he had discovered he had been
+ robbed, and was keeping a watch for the thieves. She was not told that the
+ apprentices were concerned in the matter, for Captain Dave felt sure that,
+ however much she might try to conceal it, Robert Ashford would perceive,
+ by her looks, that something was wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie was told a day or two later, for, although ignorant of her father's
+ nightly watchings, she was conscious from his manner, and that of her
+ mother, that something was amiss, and was so persistent in her inquiries,
+ that the Captain consented to her mother telling her that he had a
+ suspicion he was being robbed, and warning her that it was essential that
+ the subject must not be in any way alluded to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your father is worrying over it a good deal, Nellie, and it is better
+ that he should not perceive that you are aware of it. Just let things go
+ on as they were."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is the loss serious, mother?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; he thinks that a good deal of money has gone. I don't think he minds
+ that so much as the fact that, so far, he doesn't know who the people most
+ concerned in it may be. He has some sort of suspicion in one quarter, but
+ has no clue whatever to the men most to blame."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Does Cyril know anything about it?" Nellie asked suddenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, he knows, my dear; indeed, it was owing to his cleverness that your
+ father first came to have suspicions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh! that explains it," Nellie said. "He had been talking to father, and I
+ asked what it was about and he would not tell me, and I have been very
+ angry with him ever since."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have noticed that you have been behaving very foolishly," Mrs. Dowsett
+ said quietly, "and that for the last week you have been taking Robert with
+ you as an escort when you went out of an evening. I suppose you did that
+ to annoy Cyril, but I don't think that he minded much."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't think he did, mother," Nellie agreed, with a laugh which betrayed
+ a certain amount of irritation. "I saw that he smiled, two or three
+ evenings back, when I told Robert at supper that I wanted him to go out
+ with me, and I was rarely angry, I can tell you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had indeed troubled himself in no way about Nellie's coolness; but
+ when she had so pointedly asked Robert to go with her, he had been amused
+ at the thought of how greatly she would be mortified, when Robert was
+ haled up to the Guildhall for robbing her father, at the thought that he
+ had been accompanying her as an escort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I rather hope this will be our last watch, Captain Dave," he said, on the
+ seventh evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why do you hope so specially to-night, lad?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course I have been hoping so every night. But I think it is likely
+ that the men who take the goods come regularly once a week; for in that
+ case there would be no occasion for them to meet at other times to arrange
+ on what night they should be in the lane."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, that is like enough, Cyril; and the hour will probably be the same,
+ too. John and I will share your watch to-night, so as to be ready to get
+ the men off without loss of time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had always taken the first watch, which was from half-past nine till
+ twelve. The Captain and Wilkes had taken the other watches by turns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As before, just as the bell finished striking eleven, the three watchers
+ again heard through the slightly open casement the scraping noise on the
+ left. It had been agreed that they should not move, lest the sound should
+ be heard outside. Each grasped the stout cudgel he held in his hand, and
+ gazed at the roof of the warehouse, which could now be plainly seen, for
+ the moon was half full and the sky was clear. As before, the two figures
+ went along, and this time they could clearly recognise them. They were
+ both sitting astride of the ridge tiles, and moved themselves along by
+ means of their hands. They waited until they saw one after the other
+ disappear at the end of the roof, and then John Wilkes quietly stole
+ downstairs. The four constables had been warned to be specially wakeful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are at it again to-night," John said to them, as he entered. "Now,
+ do you two who go round into Leadenhall Street start at once, but don't
+ take your post at the end of the lane for another five or six minutes. The
+ thieves outside may not have come up at present. As you go out, leave the
+ door ajar; in five minutes you others should stand ready. Don't go to the
+ corner, but wait in the doorway below until you hear the whistle. They
+ will be only fifteen or twenty yards up the lane, and would see you if you
+ took up your station at the corner; but the moment you hear the whistle,
+ rush out and have at them. We shall be there before you will."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John went down with the last two men, entered the shop, and stood there
+ waiting until he should be joined by his master. The latter and Cyril
+ remained at the window until they saw the door of the warehouse open, and
+ then hurried downstairs. Both were in their stockinged feet, so that their
+ movements should be noiseless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come on, John; they are in the yard," the Captain whispered; and they
+ entered the warehouse and went noiselessly on, until they stood at the
+ door. The process of unbarring the gate was nearly accomplished. As it
+ swung open, John Wilkes put his whistle to his lips and blew a loud,
+ shrill call, and the three rushed forward. There was a shout of alarm, a
+ fierce imprecation, and three of the four figures at the gate sprang at
+ them. Scarce a blow had been struck when the two constables ran up and
+ joined in the fray. Two men fought stoutly, but were soon overpowered.
+ Robert Ashford, knife in hand, had attacked John Wilkes with fury, and
+ would have stabbed him, as his attention was engaged upon one of the men
+ outside, had not Cyril brought his cudgel down sharply on his knuckles,
+ when, with a yell of pain, he dropped the knife and fled up the lane. He
+ had gone but a short distance, however, when he fell into the hands of the
+ two constables, who were running towards him. One of them promptly knocked
+ him down with his cudgel, and then proceeded to bind his hands behind him,
+ while the other ran on to join in the fray. It was over before he got
+ there, and his comrades were engaged in binding the two robbers. Tom Frost
+ had taken no part in the fight. He stood looking on, paralysed with
+ terror, and when the two men were overpowered he fell on his knees
+ beseeching his master to have mercy on him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is too late, Tom," the Captain said. "You have been robbing me for
+ months, and now you have been caught in the act you will have to take your
+ share in the punishment. You are a prisoner of the constables here, and
+ not of mine, and even if I were willing to let you go, they would have
+ their say in the matter. Still, if you make a clean breast of what you
+ know about it, I will do all I can to get you off lightly; and seeing that
+ you are but a boy, and have been, perhaps, led into this, they will not be
+ disposed to be hard on you. Pick up that lantern and bring it here, John;
+ let us see what plunder, they were making off with."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no rope this time, but a bag containing some fifty pounds'
+ weight of brass and copper fittings. One of the constables took possession
+ of this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You had better come along with us to the Bridewell, Master Dowsett, to
+ sign the charge sheet, though I don't know whether it is altogether
+ needful, seeing that we have caught them in the act; and you will all
+ three have to be at the Court to-morrow at ten o'clock."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will go with you," the Captain said; "but I will first slip in and put
+ my shoes on; I brought them down in my hand and shall be ready in a
+ minute. You may as well lock up this gate again, John. I will go out
+ through the front door and join them in the lane." As he went into the
+ house, John Wilkes closed the gate and put up the bar, then took up the
+ lantern and said to Cyril,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Master Cyril, this has been a good night's work, and mighty
+ thankful I am that we have caught the pirates. It was a good day for us
+ all when you came to the Captain, or they might have gone on robbing him
+ till the time came that there was nothing more to rob; and I should never
+ have held up my head again, for though the Captain would never believe
+ that I had had a hand in bringing him to ruin, other people would not have
+ thought so, and I might never have got a chance of proving my innocence.
+ Now we will just go to the end of the yard and see if they did manage to
+ get into the warehouse by means of that crane, as you thought they did."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They found that the crane had been swung out just far enough to afford a
+ foot-hold to those lowering themselves on to it from the roof. The door of
+ the loft stood open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Just as you said. You could not have been righter, not if you had seen
+ them at it. And now I reckon we may as well lock up the place again, and
+ turn in. The Captain has got the key of the front door, and we will leave
+ the lantern burning at the bottom of the stairs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril got up as soon as he heard a movement in the house, and went down to
+ the shop, which had been already opened by John Wilkes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It seems quiet here, without the apprentices, John. Is there any way in
+ which I can help?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, thank you, sir. We shan't be moving the goods about till after
+ breakfast, and then, no doubt, the Captain will get an extra man in to
+ help me. I reckon he will have to get a neighbour in to give an eye to the
+ place while we are all away at the Court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see there is the rope still hanging from their window," Cyril said, as
+ he went out into the yard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought it best to leave it there," John Wilkes replied, "and I ain't
+ been up into the loft either. It is best to leave matters just as they
+ were. Like enough, they will send an officer down from the Court to look
+ at them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the family assembled at breakfast, Mrs. Dowsett was looking very
+ grave. The Captain, on the other hand, was in capital spirits. Nellie, as
+ usual, was somewhat late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where is everybody?" she asked in surprise, seeing that Cyril alone was
+ in his place with her father and mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "John Wilkes is downstairs, looking after the shop, and will come up and
+ have his breakfast when we have done," her father replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are both the apprentices out, then?" she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The apprentices are in limbo," the Captain said grimly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In limbo, father! What does that mean?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It means that they are in gaol, my dear."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie put down the knife and fork that she had just taken up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you joking, father?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very far from it, my dear; it is no joke to any of us&mdash;certainly not
+ to me, and not to Robert Ashford, or Tom Frost. They have been robbing me
+ for the last year, and, for aught I know, before that. If it had not been
+ for Master Cyril it would not have been very long before I should have had
+ to put my shutters up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But how could they rob you, father?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By stealing my goods, and selling them, Nellie. The way they did it was
+ to lower themselves by a rope from their window on to the roof of the
+ warehouse, and to get down at the other end on to the crane, and then into
+ the loft. Then they went down and took what they had a fancy to, undid the
+ door, and went into the yard, and then handed over their booty to the
+ fellows waiting at the gate for it. Last night we caught them at it, after
+ having been on the watch for ten days."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is what I heard last night, then," she said. "I was woke by a loud
+ whistle, and then I heard a sound of quarrelling and fighting in the lane.
+ I thought it was some roysterers going home late. Oh, father, it is
+ dreadful to think of! And what will they do to them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a hanging matter," the Captain said; "it is not only theft, but
+ mutiny. No doubt the judges will take a lenient view of Tom Frost's case,
+ both on the ground of his youth, and because, no doubt, he was influenced
+ by Ashford; but I would not give much for Robert's chances. No doubt it
+ will be a blow to you, Nellie, for you seem to have taken to him mightily
+ of late."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie was about to give an emphatic contradiction, but as she remembered
+ how pointedly she had asked for his escort during the last few days, she
+ flushed up, and was silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is terrible to think of," she said, after a pause. "I suppose this is
+ what you and Cyril were consulting about, father. I have to ask your
+ pardon, Master Cyril, for my rudeness to you; but of course I did not
+ think it was anything of consequence, or that you could not have told me
+ if you had wished to do so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You need not beg my pardon, Mistress Nellie. No doubt you thought it
+ churlish on my part to refuse to gratify your curiosity, and I am not
+ surprised that you took offence. I knew that when you learned how
+ important it was to keep silence over the matter, that you would acquit me
+ of the intention of making a mystery about nothing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I suppose you knew, mother?" Nellie asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I knew that your father believed that he was being robbed, Nellie, and
+ that he was keeping watch for some hours every night, but I did not know
+ that he suspected the apprentices. I am glad that we did not, for
+ assuredly we should have found it very hard to school our faces so that
+ they should not guess that aught was wrong."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That was why we said nothing about it, Nellie. It has been as much as I
+ have been able to do to sit at table, and talk in the shop as usual, with
+ boys I knew were robbing me; and I know honest John Wilkes must have felt
+ it still more. But till a week ago we would not believe that they had a
+ hand in the matter. It is seven nights since Cyril caught them creeping
+ along the roof, and called me to the window in John Wilkes's room, whence
+ he was watching the yard, not thinking the enemy was in the house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And how did you come to suspect that robbery was going on, Cyril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Simply because, on making up the books, I found there was a great
+ deficiency in the stores."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is what he was doing when he was sitting up at night, after you were
+ in bed, Miss Nellie," her father said. "You may thank your stars that he
+ took a berth in this ship, for the scoundrels would have foundered her to
+ a certainty, if he had not done so. I tell you, child, he has saved this
+ craft from going to the bottom. I have not said much to him about it, but
+ he knows that I don't feel it any the less."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And who were the other men who were taken, father?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I can't tell you, Nellie. I went to the Bridewell with them, and as
+ soon as I saw them safely lodged there I came home. They will be had up
+ before the Lord Mayor this morning, and then I dare say I shall know all
+ about them. Now I must go and take my watch below, and let John Wilkes
+ come off duty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, John, what is the matter?" Mrs. Dowsett said, when the foreman
+ entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing worth speaking of, Mistress. I got a clip over the eye from one
+ of the pirates we were capturing. The thing mattered nothing, one way or
+ the other, but it might have cost me my life, because, for a moment, it
+ pretty well dazed me. That young villain, Bob, was just coming at me with
+ his knife, and I reckon it would have gone hard with me if Master Cyril
+ here hadn't, just in the nick of time, brought his stick down on Robert's
+ knuckles, and that so sharply that the fellow dropped his knife with a
+ yell, and took to his heels, only to fall into the hands of two of the
+ watch coming from the other end of the lane. You did me a good turn, lad,
+ and if ever I get the chance of ranging up alongside of you in a fray, you
+ may trust me to return it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He held out his hand to Cyril, and gave a warm grip to the hand the latter
+ laid in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a rum start, Mistress," John went on, as he sat down to his meal,
+ "that two old hands like the Captain and I were sailing on, not dreaming
+ of hidden rocks or sand-banks, when this lad, who I used to look upon as a
+ young cockerel who was rather above his position, should come forward and
+ have saved us all from shipwreck."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is indeed, John," his mistress said earnestly, "and I thank God indeed
+ that He put the thought into the minds of Captain Dave and myself to ask
+ him to take up his abode with us. It seemed to us then that we were doing
+ a little kindness that would cost us nothing, whereas it has turned out
+ the saving of us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear, dear!" Nellie, who had been sitting with a frown on her pretty
+ face, said pettishly. "What a talk there will be about it all, and how
+ Jane Greenwood and Martha Stebbings and the rest of them will laugh at me!
+ They used to say they wondered how I could go about with such an ugly
+ wretch behind me, and of course I spoke up for him and said that he was an
+ honest knave and faithful; and now it turns out that he is a villain and a
+ robber. I shall never hear the last of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will get over that, Nellie," her mother said severely. "It would be
+ much better if, instead of thinking of such trifles, you would consider
+ how sad a thing it is that two lads should lose their character, and
+ perhaps their lives, simply for their greed of other people's goods. I
+ could cry when I think of it. I know that Robert Ashford has neither
+ father nor mother to grieve about him, for my husband's father took him
+ out of sheer charity; but Tom's parents are living, and it will be
+ heart-breaking indeed to them when they hear of their son's misdoings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I trust that Captain Dave will get him off," Cyril said. "As he is so
+ young he may turn King's evidence, and I feel sure that he did not go
+ willingly into the affair. I have noticed many times that he had a
+ frightened look, as if he had something on his mind. I believe that he
+ acted under fear of the other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as John Wilkes had finished his breakfast he went with Captain
+ Dave and Cyril to the Magistrates' Court at the Guildhall. Some other
+ cases were first heard, and then the apprentices, with the two men who had
+ been captured in the lane, were brought in and placed in the dock. The men
+ bore marks that showed they had been engaged in a severe struggle, and
+ that the watch had used their staves with effect. One was an elderly man
+ with shaggy grey eyebrows; the other was a very powerfully built fellow,
+ who seemed, from his attire, to follow the profession of a sailor. Tom
+ Frost was sobbing bitterly. One of Robert Ashford's hands was bandaged up.
+ As he was placed in the dock he cast furtive glances round with his shifty
+ eyes, and as they fell upon Cyril an expression of deadly hate came over
+ his face. The men of the watch who had captured them first gave their
+ evidence as to finding them in the act of robbery, and testified to the
+ desperate resistance they had offered to capture. Captain Dave then
+ entered the witness-box, and swore first to the goods that were found on
+ them being his property, and then related how, it having come to his
+ knowledge that he was being robbed, he had set a watch, and had, eight
+ days previously, seen his two apprentices getting along the roof, and how
+ they had come out from the warehouse door, had opened the outer gate, and
+ had handed over some goods they had brought out to persons unknown waiting
+ to receive them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why did you not stop them in their commission of the theft?" the Alderman
+ in the Chair asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because, sir, had I done so, the men I considered to be the chief
+ criminals, and who had doubtless tempted my apprentices to rob me, would
+ then have made off. Therefore, I thought it better to wait until I could
+ lay hands on them also, and so got four men of the watch to remain in the
+ house at night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he went on to relate how, after watching seven nights, he had again
+ seen the apprentices make their way along the roof, and how they and the
+ receivers of their booty were taken by the watch, aided by himself, his
+ foreman, and Master Cyril Shenstone, who was dwelling in his house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After John Wilkes had given his evidence, Cyril went into the box and
+ related how, being engaged by Captain David Dowsett to make up his books,
+ he found, upon stock being taken, that there was a deficiency to the
+ amount of many hundreds of pounds in certain stores, notably such as were
+ valuable without being bulky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is anything known as to the prisoners?" the magistrate asked the officer
+ of the city watch in charge of the case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing is known of the two boys, your honour; but the men are well
+ known. The elder, who gave the name of Peter Johnson, is one Joseph
+ Marner; he keeps a marine shop close to the Tower. For a long time he has
+ been suspected of being a receiver of stolen goods, but we have never been
+ able to lay finger on him before. The other man has, for the last year,
+ acted as his assistant in the shop; he answers closely to the description
+ of a man, Ephraim Fowler, who has long been wanted. This man was a seaman
+ in a brig trading to Yarmouth. After an altercation with the captain he
+ stabbed him, and then slew the mate who was coming to his assistance; then
+ with threats he compelled the other two men on board to let him take the
+ boat. When they were off Brightlingsea he rowed away, and has not been
+ heard of since. If you will remand them, before he comes up again I hope
+ to find the men who were on board, and see if they identify him. We are in
+ possession of Joseph Marner's shop, and have found large quantities of
+ goods that we have reason to believe are the proceeds of these and other
+ robberies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the prisoners had left the dock, Captain Dave went up to the
+ officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe," he said, "that the boy has not voluntarily taken part in
+ these robberies, but has been led away, or perhaps obliged by threats to
+ take part in them; he may be able to give you some assistance, for maybe
+ these men are not the only persons to whom the stolen goods have been
+ sold, and he may be able to put you on the track of other receivers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The matter is out of my hands now," the officer said, "but I will
+ represent what you say in the proper quarter; and now you had better come
+ round with me; you may be able to pick out some of your property. We only
+ made a seizure of the place an hour ago. I had all the men who came in on
+ duty this morning to take a look at the prisoners. Fortunately two or
+ three of them recognised Marner, and you may guess we lost no time in
+ getting a search warrant and going down to his place. It is the most
+ important capture we have made for some time, and may lead to the
+ discovery of other robberies that have been puzzling us for months past.
+ There is a gang known as the Black Gang, but we have never been able to
+ lay hands on any of their leaders, and such fellows as have been captured
+ have refused to say a word, and have denied all knowledge of it. There
+ have been a number of robberies of a mysterious kind, none of which have
+ we been able to trace, and they have been put down to the same gang. The
+ Chief Constable is waiting for me there, and we shall make a thorough
+ search of the premises, and it is like enough we shall come across some
+ clue of importance. At any rate, if we can find some of the articles
+ stolen in the robberies I am speaking of, it will be a strong proof that
+ Marner is one of the chiefs of the gang, and that may lead to further
+ discoveries."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You had better come with us, John," Captain Dave said. "You know our
+ goods better than I do myself. Will you come, Cyril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should be of no use in identifying the goods, sir, and I am due in half
+ an hour at one of my shops."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The search was an exhaustive one. There was no appearance of an
+ underground cellar, but on some of the boards of the shop being taken up,
+ it was found that there was a large one extending over the whole house.
+ This contained an immense variety of goods. In one corner was a pile of
+ copper bolts that Captain Dave and John were able to claim at once, as
+ they bore the brand of the maker from whom they obtained their stock.
+ There were boxes of copper and brass ship and house fittings, and a very
+ large quantity of rope, principally of the sizes in which the stock had
+ been found deficient; but to these Captain Dave was unable to swear. In
+ addition to these articles the cellar contained a number of chests, all of
+ which were found to be filled with miscellaneous articles of wearing
+ apparel&mdash;rolls of silk, velvet, cloth, and other materials&mdash;curtains,
+ watches, clocks, ornaments of all kinds, and a considerable amount of
+ plate. As among these were many articles which answered to the
+ descriptions given of goods that had been stolen from country houses, the
+ whole were impounded by the Chief Constable, and carried away in carts.
+ The upper part of the house was carefully searched, the walls tapped,
+ wainscotting pulled down, and the floors carefully examined. Several
+ hiding-places were found, but nothing of any importance discovered in
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should advise you," the Chief Constable said to Captain Dave, "to put
+ in a claim for every article corresponding with those you have lost. Of
+ course, if anyone else comes forward and also puts in a claim, the matter
+ will have to be gone into, and if neither of you can absolutely swear to
+ the things, I suppose you will have to settle it somehow between you. If
+ no one else claims them, you will get them all without question, for you
+ can swear that, to the best of your knowledge and belief, they are yours,
+ and bring samples of your own goods to show that they exactly correspond
+ with them. I have no doubt that a good deal of the readily saleable stuff,
+ such as ropes, brass sheaves for blocks, and things of that sort, will
+ have been sold, but as it is clear that there is a good deal of your stuff
+ in the stock found below, I hope your loss will not be very great. There
+ is no doubt it has been a splendid find for us. It is likely enough that
+ we shall discover among those boxes goods that have been obtained from a
+ score of robberies in London, and likely enough in the country. We have
+ arrested three men we found in the place, and two women, and may get from
+ some of them information that will enable us to lay hands on some of the
+ others concerned in these robberies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V &mdash; KIDNAPPED
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ That afternoon Captain Dave went down to the Bridewell, and had an
+ interview with Tom Frost, in the presence of the Master of the prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Tom, I never expected to have to come to see you in a place like
+ this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am glad I am here, master," the boy said earnestly, with tears in his
+ eyes. "I don't mind if they hang me; I would rather anything than go on as
+ I have been doing. I knew it must come, and whenever I heard anyone walk
+ into the shop I made sure it was a constable. I am ready to tell
+ everything, master; I know I deserve whatever I shall get, but that won't
+ hurt me half as much as it has done, having to go on living in the house
+ with you, and knowing I was helping to rob you all along."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Anything that you say must be taken down," the officer said; "and I can't
+ promise that it will make any difference in your sentence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not care anything about that; I am going to tell the truth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well, then, I will take down anything you say. But wait a minute."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went to the door of the room and called.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is the Chief Constable in?" he asked a man who came up. "If he is, ask
+ him to step here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A minute later the Chief Constable came in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This prisoner wishes to make a confession, Master Holmes. I thought it
+ best that you should be here. You can hear what he says then, and it may
+ help you in your inquiry. Besides, you may think of questions on points he
+ may not mention; he understands that he is speaking entirely of his own
+ free will, and that I have given him no promise whatever that his so doing
+ will alter his sentence, although no doubt it will be taken into
+ consideration."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quite so," the constable said. "This is not a case where one prisoner
+ would be ordinarily permitted to turn King's evidence against the others,
+ because, as they were caught in the act, no such evidence is necessary. We
+ know all about how the thing was done, and who did it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I want to tell how I first came to rob my master," the boy said. "I never
+ thought of robbing him. When I came up to London, my father said to me,
+ 'Whatever you do, Tom, be honest. They say there are rogues up in London;
+ don't you have anything to do with them.' One evening, about a year ago I
+ went out with Robert, and we went to a shop near the wall at Aldgate. I
+ had never been there before, but Robert knew the master, who was the old
+ man that was taken in the lane. Robert said the man was a relation of his
+ father's, and had been kind to him. We sat down and talked for a time, and
+ then Robert, who was sitting close to me, moved for something, and put his
+ hand against my pocket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Hullo!' he said; 'what have you got there?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Nothing,' I said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Oh, haven't you?' and he put his hand in my pocket, and brought out ten
+ guineas. 'Hullo!' he said; 'where did you get these? You told me yesterday
+ you had not got a groat. Why, you young villain, you must have been
+ robbing the till!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was so frightened that I could not say anything, except that I did not
+ know how they came there and I could swear that I had not touched the
+ till. I was too frightened to think then, but I have since thought that
+ the guineas were never in my pocket at all, but were in Robert's hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'That won't do, boy,' the man said. 'It is clear that you are a thief. I
+ saw Robert take them from your pocket, and, as an honest man, it is my
+ duty to take you to your master and tell him what sort of an apprentice he
+ has. You are young, and you will get off with a whipping at the pillory,
+ and that will teach you that honesty is the best policy.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So he got his hat and put it on, and took me by the collar as if to haul
+ me out into the street. I went down on my knees to beg for mercy, and at
+ last he said that he would keep the matter quiet if I would swear to do
+ everything that Robert told me; and I was so frightened that I swore to do
+ so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For a bit there wasn't any stealing, but Robert used to take me out over
+ the roof, and we used to go out together and go to places where there were
+ two or three men, and they gave us wine. Then Robert proposed that we
+ should have a look through the warehouse. I did not know what he meant,
+ but as we went through he filled his pockets with things and told me to
+ take some too. I said I would not. Then he threatened to raise the alarm,
+ and said that when Captain Dave came down he should say he heard me get up
+ to come down by the rope on to the warehouse, and that he had followed me
+ to see what I was doing, and had found me in the act of taking goods, and
+ that, as he had before caught me with money stolen from the till, as a
+ friend of his could testify, he felt that it was his duty to summon you at
+ once. I know I ought to have refused, and to have let him call you down,
+ but I was too frightened. At last I agreed to do what he told me, and ever
+ since then we have been robbing you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What have you done with the money you got for the things?" the constable
+ asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had a groat sometimes," the boy said, "but that is all. Robert said
+ first that I should have a share, but I said I would have nothing to do
+ with it. I did as he ordered me because I could not help it. Though I have
+ taken a groat or two sometimes, that is all I have had."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you know anything about how much Robert had?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, sir; I never saw him paid any money. I supposed that he had some
+ because he has said sometimes he should set up a shop for himself, down at
+ some seaport town, when he was out of his apprenticeship; but I have never
+ seen him with any money beyond a little silver. I don't know what he used
+ to do when we had given the things to the men that met us in the lane. I
+ used always to come straight back to bed, but generally he went out with
+ them. I used to fasten the gate after him, and he got back over the wall
+ by a rope. Most times he didn't come in till a little before daybreak."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Were they always the same men that met you in the lane?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, sir. The master of the shop was very seldom there. The big man has
+ come for the last three or four months, and there were two other men. They
+ used to be waiting for us together until the big man came, but since then
+ one or other of them came with him, except when the master of the shop was
+ there himself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Describe them to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy described them as well as he could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Could you swear to them if you saw them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think so. Of course, sometimes it was moonlight, and I could see their
+ faces well; and besides, the light of the lantern often fell upon their
+ faces."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The constable nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The descriptions answer exactly," he said to Captain Dave, "to the two
+ men we found in the shop. The place was evidently the headquarters of a
+ gang of thieves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Please, sir," the boy said, "would you have me shut up in another place?
+ I am afraid of being with the others. They have sworn they will kill me if
+ I say a word, and when I get back they will ask me who I have seen and
+ what I have said."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Dave took the other two men aside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Could you not let the boy come home with me?" he said. "I believe his
+ story is a true one. He has been terrified into helping that rascal,
+ Robert Ashford. Of course he himself was of no good to them, but they were
+ obliged to force him into it, as otherwise he would have found out
+ Robert's absences and might have reported them to me. I will give what
+ bail you like, and will undertake to produce him whenever he is required."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I could not do that myself," the constable said, "but I will go round to
+ the Court now with the boy's confession, and I have no doubt the Alderman
+ will let him go. But let me give you a word of advice: don't let him stir
+ out of the house after dark. We have no doubt that there is a big gang
+ concerned in this robbery, and the others of which we found the booty at
+ the receiver's. They would not know how much this boy could tell about
+ them, but if he went back to you they would guess that he had peached. If
+ he went out after dark, the chances would be against his ever coming back
+ again. No, now I think of it, I am sure you had better let him stay where
+ he is. The Master will put him apart from the others, and make him
+ comfortable. You see, at present we have no clue as to the men concerned
+ in the robberies. You may be sure that they are watching every move on our
+ part, and if they knew that this boy was out, they might take the alarm
+ and make off."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, if you think so, I will leave him here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sure that it would be the best plan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will make him comfortable, Master Holroyd?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; you need not worry about him, Captain Dowsett."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They then turned to the boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will be moved away from the others, Tom," Captain Dave said, "and Mr.
+ Holroyd has promised to make you comfortable."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, Captain Dave," the boy burst out, "will you forgive me? I don't mind
+ being punished, but if you knew how awfully miserable I have been all this
+ time, knowing that I was robbing you while you were so kind to me, I think
+ you would forgive me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I forgive you, Tom," Captain Dave said, putting his hand on the boy's
+ shoulder. "I hope that this will be a lesson to you, all your life. You
+ see all this has come upon you because you were a coward. If you had been
+ a brave lad you would have said, 'Take me to my master.' You might have
+ been sure that I would have heard your story as well as theirs, and I
+ don't think I should have decided against you under the circumstances. It
+ was only your word against Robert's; and his taking you to this man's, and
+ finding the money in your pocket in so unlikely a way, would certainly
+ have caused me to have suspicions. There is nothing so bad as cowardice;
+ it is the father of all faults. A coward is certain to be a liar, for he
+ will not hesitate to tell any falsehood to shelter him from the
+ consequences of a fault. In your case, you see, cowardice has made you a
+ thief; and in some cases it might drive a man to commit a murder. However,
+ lad, I forgive you freely. You have been weak, and your weakness has made
+ you a criminal; but it has been against your own will. When all this is
+ over, I will see what can be done for you. You may live to be an honest
+ man and a good citizen yet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days later Cyril was returning home late in the evening after being
+ engaged longer than usual in making up a number of accounts for one of his
+ customers. He had come through Leadenhall Street, and had entered the lane
+ where the capture of the thieves had been made, when he heard a footstep
+ behind him. He turned half round to see who was following him, when he
+ received a tremendous blow on the head which struck him senseless to the
+ ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a time he was dimly conscious that he was being carried along. He
+ was unable to move; there was something in his mouth that prevented him
+ from calling out, and his head was muffled in a cloak. He felt too weak
+ and confused to struggle. A minute later he heard a voice, that sounded
+ below him, say,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you got him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have got him all right," was the answer of the man who was carrying
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he felt that he was being carried down some stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Someone took him, and he was thrown roughly down; then there was a slight
+ rattling noise, followed by a regular sound. He wondered vaguely what it
+ was, but as his senses came back it flashed upon him; it was the sound of
+ oars; he was in a boat. It was some time before he could think why he
+ should be in a boat. He had doubtless been carried off by some of the
+ friends of the prisoners', partly, perhaps, to prevent his giving evidence
+ against them, partly from revenge for the part he had played in the
+ discovery of the crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few minutes the sound of oars ceased, and there was a bump as the
+ boat struck against something hard. Then he was lifted up, and someone
+ took hold of him from above. He was carried a few steps and roughly thrust
+ in somewhere. There was a sound of something heavy being thrown down above
+ him, and then for a long time he knew nothing more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he became conscious again, he was able, as he lay there, to come to a
+ distinct conclusion as to where he was. He had been kidnapped, carried
+ off, taken out in a boat to some craft anchored in the river, and was now
+ in the hold. He felt almost suffocated. The wrap round his head prevented
+ his breathing freely, the gag in his mouth pressed on his tongue, and gave
+ him severe pain, while his head ached acutely from the effects of the
+ blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first thing to do was, if possible, to free his hands, so as to
+ relieve himself from the gag and muffling. An effort or two soon showed
+ him that he was but loosely bound. Doubtless the man who had attacked him
+ had not wasted much time in securing his arms, believing that the blow
+ would be sufficient to keep him quiet until he was safe on board ship. It
+ was, therefore, without much difficulty that he managed to free one of his
+ hands, and it was then an easy task to get rid of the rope altogether. The
+ cloak was pulled from his face, and, feeling for his knife, he cut the
+ lashings of the gag and removed it from his mouth. He lay quiet for a few
+ minutes, panting from his exhaustion. Putting up his hand he felt a beam
+ about a foot above his body. He was, then, in a hold already stored with
+ cargo. The next thing was to shift his position among the barrels and
+ bales upon which he was lying, until he found a comparatively level spot.
+ He was in too great pain to think of sleep; his head throbbed fiercely,
+ and he suffered from intense thirst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From time to time heavy footsteps passed overhead. Presently he heard a
+ sudden rattling of blocks, and the flapping of a sail. Then he noticed
+ that there was a slight change in the level of his position, and knew that
+ the craft was under way on her voyage down the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed an immense time to him before he saw a faint gleam of light, and
+ edging himself along, found himself again under the hatchway, through a
+ crack in which the light was shining. It was some hours before the hatch
+ was lifted off, and he saw two men looking down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Water!" he said. "I am dying of thirst."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bring a pannikin of water," one of the men said, "but first give us a
+ hand, and we will have him on deck."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stooping down, they took Cyril by the shoulders and hoisted him out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is a decent-looking young chap," the speaker went on. "I would have
+ seen to him before, if I had known him to be so bad. Those fellows didn't
+ tell us they had hurt him. Here is the water, young fellow. Can you sit up
+ to drink it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril sat up and drank off the contents of the pannikin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, the back of your head is all covered with blood!" the man who had
+ before spoken said. "You must have had an ugly knock?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't care so much for that," Cyril replied. "It's the gag that hurt
+ me. My tongue is so much swollen I can hardly speak."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, you can stay here on deck if you will give me your promise not to
+ hail any craft we may pass. If you won't do that I must put you down under
+ hatches again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will promise that willingly," Cyril said; "the more so that I can
+ scarce speak above a whisper."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mind, if you as much as wave a hand, or do anything to bring an eye on
+ us, down you go into the hold again, and when you come up next time it
+ will be to go overboard. Now just put your head over the rail, and I will
+ pour a few buckets of water over it. I agreed to get you out of the way,
+ but I have got no grudge against you, and don't want to do you harm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Getting a bucket with a rope tied to the handle, he dipped it into the
+ river, and poured half-a-dozen pailfuls over Cyril's head. The lad felt
+ greatly refreshed, and, sitting down on the deck, was able to look round.
+ The craft was a coaster of about twenty tons burden. There were three men
+ on deck besides the man who had spoken to him, and who was evidently the
+ skipper. Besides these a boy occasionally put up his head from a hatchway
+ forward. There was a pile of barrels and empty baskets amidship, and the
+ men presently began to wash down the decks and to tidy up the ropes and
+ gear lying about. The shore on both sides was flat, and Cyril was
+ surprised at the width of the river. Behind them was a small town,
+ standing on higher ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What place is that?" he asked a sailor who passed near him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is Gravesend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes afterwards the boy again put his head out of the hatchway
+ and shouted,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Breakfast!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can you eat anything, youngster?" the skipper asked Cyril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, thank you, my head aches too much; and my mouth is so sore I am sure
+ I could not get anything down."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, you had best lie down, then, with your head on that coil of rope; I
+ allow you did not sleep much last night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few minutes Cyril was sound asleep, and when he awoke the sun was
+ setting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have had a good bout of it, lad," the skipper said, as he raised
+ himself on his elbow and looked round. "How are you feeling now?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A great deal better," Cyril said, as he rose to his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Supper will be ready in a few minutes, and if you can manage to get a bit
+ down it will do you good."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will try, anyhow," Cyril said. "I think that I feel hungry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The land was now but a faint line on either hand. A gentle breeze was
+ blowing from the south-west, and the craft was running along over the
+ smooth water at the rate of three or four miles an hour. Cyril wondered
+ where he was being taken to, and what was going to be done with him, but
+ determined to ask no questions. The skipper was evidently a kind-hearted
+ man, although he might be engaged in lawless business, but it was as well
+ to wait until he chose to open the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the boy hailed, the captain led the way to the hatchway. They
+ descended a short ladder into the fo'castle, which was low, but roomy.
+ Supper consisted of boiled skate&mdash;a fish Cyril had never tasted
+ before&mdash;oaten bread, and beer. His mouth was still sore, but he
+ managed to make a hearty meal of fish, though he could not manage the hard
+ bread. One of the men was engaged at the helm, but the other two shared
+ the meal, all being seated on lockers that ran round the cabin. The fish
+ were placed on an earthenware dish, each man cutting off slices with his
+ jack-knife, and using his bread as a platter. Little was said while the
+ meal went on; but when they went on deck again, the skipper, having put
+ another man at the tiller, while the man released went forward to get his
+ supper, said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I think you are in luck, lad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril opened his eyes in surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You don't think so?" the man went on. "I don't mean that you are in luck
+ in being knocked about and carried off, but that you are not floating down
+ the river at present instead of walking the deck here. I can only suppose
+ that they thought your body might be picked up, and that it would go all
+ the harder with the prisoners, if it were proved that you had been put out
+ of the way. You don't look like an informer either!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am not an informer," Cyril said indignantly. "I found that my employer
+ was being robbed, and I aided him to catch the thieves. I don't call that
+ informing. That is when a man betrays others engaged in the same work as
+ himself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, well, it makes no difference to me," the skipper said. "I was
+ engaged by a man, with whom I do business sometimes, to take a fellow who
+ had been troublesome out of the way, and to see that he did not come back
+ again for some time. I bargained that there was to be no foul play; I
+ don't hold with things of that sort. As to carrying down a bale of goods
+ sometimes, or taking a few kegs of spirits from a French lugger, I see no
+ harm in it; but when it comes to cutting throats, I wash my hands of it. I
+ am sorry now I brought you off, though maybe if I had refused they would
+ have put a knife into you, and chucked you into the river. However, now
+ that I have got you I must go through with it. I ain't a man to go back
+ from my word, and what I says I always sticks to. Still, I am sorry I had
+ anything to do with the business. You look to me a decent young gentleman,
+ though your looks and your clothes have not been improved by what you have
+ gone through. Well, at any rate, I promise you that no harm shall come to
+ you as long as you are in my hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And how long is that likely to be, captain?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! that is more than I can tell you. I don't want to do you harm, lad,
+ and more than that, I will prevent other people from doing you harm as
+ long as you are on board this craft. But more than that I can't say. It is
+ likely enough I shall have trouble in keeping that promise, and I can't go
+ a step farther. There is many a man who would have chucked you overboard,
+ and so have got rid of the trouble altogether, and of the risk of its
+ being afterwards proved that he had a hand in getting you out of the way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I feel that, captain," Cyril said, "and I thank you heartily for your
+ kind treatment of me. I promise you that if at any time I am set ashore
+ and find my way back to London, I will say no word which can get you into
+ trouble."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is Tom coming upon deck. You had better turn in. You have had a
+ good sleep, but I have no doubt you can do with some more, and a night's
+ rest will set you up. You take the left-hand locker. The boy sleeps on the
+ right hand, and we have bunks overhead."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril was soon soundly asleep, and did not wake when the others turned in.
+ He was alone in the cabin when he opened his eyes, but the sun was shining
+ brightly through the open hatchway. He sprang up and went on deck. The
+ craft was at anchor. No land could be seen to the south, but to the north
+ a low shore stretched away three or four miles distant. There was scarcely
+ a breath of wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, you have had a good sleep, lad," the captain said. "You had best
+ dip that bucket overboard and have a wash; you will feel better after it.
+ Now, boy, slip down and get your fire going; we shall be ready for
+ breakfast as soon as it is ready for us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril soused his head with the cold water, and felt, as the captain had
+ said, all the better for it, for the air in the little cabin was close and
+ stuffy, and he had felt hot and feverish before his wash.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The wind died out, you see," the captain said, "and we had to anchor when
+ tide turned at two o'clock. There is a dark line behind us, and as soon as
+ the wind reaches us, we will up anchor. The force of the tide is spent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wind, however, continued very light, and the vessel did little more
+ than drift with the tide, and when it turned at two o'clock they had to
+ drop anchor again close under some high land, on the top of which stood a
+ lofty tower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is a land-mark," the captain said. "There are some bad sands outside
+ us, and that stands as a mark for vessels coming through."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had enjoyed the quiet passage much. The wound at the back of his
+ head still smarted, and he had felt disinclined for any exertion. More
+ than once, in spite of the good allowance of sleep he had had, he dozed
+ off as he sat on the deck with his back against the bulwark, watching the
+ shore as they drifted slowly past it, and wondering vaguely, how it would
+ all end. They had been anchored but half an hour when the captain ordered
+ the men to the windlass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is a breeze coming, lads," he said; "and even if it only lasts for
+ an hour, it will take us round the head and far enough into the bay to get
+ into the tide running up the rivers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The breeze, however, when it came, held steadily, and in two hours they
+ were off Harwich; but on coming opposite the town they turned off up the
+ Orwell, and anchored, after dark, at a small village some six miles up the
+ river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you will give me your word, lad, that you will not try to escape, and
+ will not communicate with anyone who may come off from the shore, I will
+ continue to treat you as a passenger; but if not, I must fasten you up in
+ the cabin, and keep a watch over you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will promise, captain. I should not know where to go if I landed. I
+ heard you say, 'There is Harwich steeple,' when we first came in sight of
+ it, but where that is I have no idea, nor how far we are from London. As I
+ have not a penny in my pocket, I should find it well-nigh impossible to
+ make my way to town, which may, for aught I know, be a hundred miles away;
+ for, in truth, I know but little of the geography of England, having been
+ brought up in France, and not having been out of sight of London since I
+ came over."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as he was speaking, the splash of an oar was heard close by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Up, men," the captain said in a low tone to those in the fo'castle.
+ "Bring up the cutlasses. Who is that?" he called, hailing the boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Merry men all," was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right. Come alongside. You saw our signal, then?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay, we saw it; but there is an officer with a boat-load of sailors
+ ashore from the King's ship at Harwich. He is spending the evening with
+ the revenue captain here, and we had to wait until the two men left in
+ charge of the boat went up to join their comrades at the tavern. What have
+ you got for us?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Six boxes and a lot of dunnage, such as cables, chains, and some small
+ anchors."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, you had better wait for an hour before you take the hatches off.
+ You will hear the gig with the sailors row past soon. The tide has begun
+ to run down strong, and I expect the officer won't be long before he
+ moves. As soon as he has gone we will come out again. We shall take the
+ goods up half a mile farther. The revenue man on that beat has been paid
+ to keep his eyes shut, and we shall get them all stored in a hut, a mile
+ away in the woods, before daybreak. You know the landing-place; there will
+ be water enough for us to row in there for another two hours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boat rowed away to the shore, which was not more than a hundred yards
+ distant. A little later they heard a stir on the strand, then came the
+ sound of oars, and two minutes later a boat shot past close to them, and
+ then, bearing away, rowed down the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, lads," the captain said, "get the hatches off. The wind is coming
+ more offshore, which is all the better for us, but do not make more noise
+ than you can help."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hatches were taken off, and the men proceeded to get up a number of
+ barrels and bales, some sail-cloth being thrown on the deck to deaden the
+ sound. Lanterns, passed down into the hold, gave them light for their
+ operations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is the lot," one of the sailors said presently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Six large boxes were then passed up and put apart from the others. Then
+ followed eight or ten coils of rope, a quantity of chain, some kedge
+ anchors, a number of blocks, five rolls of canvas, and some heavy bags
+ that, by the sound they made when they were laid down, Cyril judged to
+ contain metal articles of some sort. Then the other goods were lowered
+ into the hold and the hatches replaced. The work had scarcely concluded
+ when the boat again came alongside, this time with four men on board.
+ Scarcely a word was spoken as the goods were transferred to the boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will be going to-morrow?" one of the men in the boat asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I shall get up to Ipswich on the top of the tide&mdash;that is, if I
+ don't stick fast in this crooked channel. My cargo is all either for
+ Ipswich or Aldborough. Now let us turn in," as the boatmen made their way
+ up the river. "We must be under way before daylight, or else we shall not
+ save the tide down to-morrow evening. I am glad we have got that lot
+ safely off. I always feel uncomfortable until we get rid of that part of
+ the cargo. If it wasn't that it paid better than all the rest together I
+ would not have anything to do with it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril was very glad to lie down on the locker, while the men turned into
+ their berths overhead. He had not yet fully recovered from the effects of
+ the blow he had received, but in spite of the aching of his head he was
+ soon sound asleep. It seemed to him that he had scarcely closed his eyes
+ when he was roused by the captain's voice,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tumble up, lads. The light is beginning to show."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten minutes later they were under way. The breeze had almost died out, and
+ after sailing for some two miles in nearly a straight course, the boat was
+ thrown over, two men got into it, and, fastening a rope to the ketch's
+ bow, proceeded to tow her along, the captain taking the helm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Cyril's surprise, they turned off almost at right angles to the course
+ they had before been following, and made straight for the opposite shore.
+ They approached it so closely that Cyril expected that in another moment
+ the craft would take ground, when, at a shout from the captain, the men in
+ the boat started off parallel with the shore, taking the craft's head
+ round. For the next three-quarters of an hour they pursued a serpentine
+ course, the boy standing in the chains and heaving the lead continually.
+ At last the captain shouted,&mdash;"You can come on board now, lads. We
+ are in the straight channel at last." Twenty minutes later they again
+ dropped their anchor opposite a town of considerable size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is Ipswich, lad," the captain said. "It is as nasty a place to get
+ into as there is in England, unless you have got the wind due aft."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The work of unloading began at once, and was carried on until after dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is the last of them," the captain said, to Cyril's satisfaction. "We
+ can be off now when the tide turns, and if we hadn't got clear to-night we
+ might have lost hours, for there is no getting these people on shore to
+ understand that the loss of a tide means the loss of a day, and that it is
+ no harder to get up and do your work at one hour than it is at another. I
+ shall have a clean up, now, and go ashore. I have got your promise, lad,
+ that you won't try to escape?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril assented. Standing on the deck there, with the river bank but twenty
+ yards away, it seemed hard that he should not be able to escape. But, as
+ he told himself, he would not have been standing there if it had not been
+ for that promise, but would have been lying, tightly bound, down in the
+ hold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril and the men were asleep when the captain came aboard, the boy alone
+ remaining up to fetch him off in the boat when he hailed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no wind, captain," Cyril said, as the anchor was got up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, lad, I am glad there is not. We can drop down with the tide and the
+ boat towing us, but if there was a head wind we might have to stop here
+ till it either dropped or shifted. I have been here three weeks at a
+ spell. I got some news ashore," he went on, as he took his place at the
+ helm, while the three men rowed the boat ahead. "A man I sometimes bring
+ things to told me that he heard there had been an attempt to rescue the
+ men concerned in that robbery. I heard, before I left London, it was
+ likely that it would be attempted."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were a lot of people concerned in that affair, one way and another,
+ and I knew they would move heaven and earth to get them out, for if any of
+ them peached there would be such a haul as the constables never made in
+ the city before. Word was passed to the prisoners to be ready, and as they
+ were being taken from the Guildhall to Newgate there was a sudden rush
+ made. The constables were not caught napping, and there was a tough fight,
+ till the citizens ran out of their shops and took part with them, and the
+ men, who were sailors, watermen, 'longshore-men, and rascals of all sorts,
+ bolted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But two of the prisoners were missing. One was, I heard, an apprentice
+ who was mixed up in the affair, and no one saw him go. They say he must
+ have stooped down and wriggled away into the crowd. The other was a man
+ they called Black Dick; he struck down two constables, broke through the
+ crowd, and got clean away. There is a great hue and cry, but so far
+ nothing has been heard of them. They will be kept in hiding somewhere till
+ there is a chance of getting them through the gates or on board a craft
+ lying in the river. Our men made a mess of it, or they would have got them
+ all off. I hear that they are all in a fine taking that Marner is safely
+ lodged in Newgate with the others taken in his house; he knows so much
+ that if he chose to peach he could hang a score of men. Black Dick could
+ tell a good deal, but he wasn't in all the secrets, and they say Marner is
+ really the head of the band and had a finger in pretty nigh every robbery
+ through the country. All those taken in his place are also in Newgate, and
+ they say the constables are searching the city like ferrets in a
+ rabbit-warren, and that several other arrests have been made."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am not sorry the apprentice got away," Cyril said. "He is a bad fellow,
+ there is no doubt, and, by the look he gave me, he would do me harm if he
+ got a chance, but I suppose that is only natural. As to the other man, he
+ looked to me to be a desperate villain, and he also gave me so evil a look
+ that, though he was in the dock with a constable on either side of him, I
+ felt horribly uncomfortable, especially when I heard what sort of man he
+ was."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What did they say of him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They said they believed he was a man named Ephraim Fowler, who had
+ murdered the skipper and mate of a coaster and then went off in the boat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is that the man? Then truly do I regret that he has escaped. I knew both
+ John Moore, the master, and George Monson, the mate, and many a flagon of
+ beer we have emptied together. If I had known the fellow's whereabouts, I
+ would have put the constables on his track. I am heartily sorry now, boy,
+ that I had a hand in carrying you off, though maybe it is best for you
+ that it has been so. If I hadn't taken you someone else would, and more
+ than likely you would not have fared so well as you have done, for some of
+ them would have saved themselves all further trouble and risk, by chucking
+ you overboard as soon as they were well out of the Pool."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can't you put me ashore now, captain?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, boy; I have given my word and taken my money, and I am not one to
+ fail to carry out a bargain because I find that I have made a bad one.
+ They have trusted me with thousands of pounds' worth of goods, and I have
+ no reason to complain of their pay, and am not going to turn my back on
+ them now they have got into trouble; besides, though I would trust you not
+ to round upon me, I would not trust them. If you were to turn up in London
+ they would know that I had sold them, and Marner would soon hear of it.
+ There is a way of getting messages to a man even in prison. Then you may
+ be sure that, if he said nothing else, he would take good care to let out
+ that I was the man who used to carry their booty away, sometimes to quiet
+ places on the coast, and sometimes across to Holland, and the first time I
+ dropped anchor in the Pool I should find myself seized and thrown into
+ limbo. No, lad; I must carry out my agreement&mdash;which is that I am not
+ to land you in England, but that I am to take you across to Holland or
+ elsewhere&mdash;the elsewhere meaning that if you fall overboard by the
+ way there will be no complaints as to the breach of the agreement. That
+ is, in fact, what they really meant, though they did not actually put it
+ into words. They said, 'We have a boy who is an informer, and has been the
+ means of Marner being seized and his place broken up, and there is no
+ saying that a score of us may not get a rope round our necks. In
+ consequence, we want him carried away. What you do with him is nothing to
+ us so long as he don't set foot in England again.' 'Will Holland suit you?
+ I am going across there,' I said, 'after touching at Ipswich and
+ Aldborough.' 'It would be much safer for you and everyone else if it
+ happen that he falls over before he gets there. However, we will call it
+ Holland.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then if I were to fall overboard," Cyril said, with a smile, "you would
+ not be breaking your agreement, captain? I might fall overboard to-night,
+ you know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would not advise it, lad. You had much better stay where you are. I
+ don't say I mightn't anchor off Harwich, and that if you fell overboard
+ you couldn't manage to swim ashore, but I tell you I would not give
+ twopence for your life when you got back to London. It is to the interest
+ of a score of men to keep Marner's mouth shut. They have shown their
+ willingness to help him as far as they could, by getting you out of the
+ way, and if you got back they would have your life the first time you
+ ventured out of doors after dark; they would be afraid Marner would
+ suppose they had sold him if you were to turn up at his trial, and as like
+ as not he would round on the whole lot. Besides, I don't think it would be
+ over safe for me the first time I showed myself in London afterwards, for,
+ though I never said that I would do it, I have no doubt they reckoned that
+ I should chuck you overboard, and if you were to make your appearance in
+ London they would certainly put it down that I had sold them. You keep
+ yourself quiet, and I will land you in Holland, but not as they would
+ expect, without a penny or a friend; I will put you into good hands, and
+ arrange that you shall be sent back again as soon as the trial is over."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you very much, captain. I have no relations in London, and no
+ friends, except my employer, Captain David Dowsett, and by this time he
+ will have made up his mind that I am dead, and it won't make much
+ difference whether I return in four or five days or as many weeks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI &mdash; A NARROW ESCAPE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The <i>Eliza</i>, for this Cyril, after leaving Ipswich, learnt was her
+ name, unloaded the rest of her cargo at Aldborough, and then sailed across
+ to Rotterdam. The skipper fulfilled his promise by taking Cyril to the
+ house of one of the men with whom he did business, and arranging with him
+ to board the boy until word came that he could safely return to England.
+ The man was a diamond-cutter, and to him packets of jewellery and gems
+ that could not be disposed of in England had often been brought over by
+ the captain. The latter had nothing to do with the pecuniary arrangements,
+ which were made direct by Marner, and he had only to hand over the packets
+ and take back sums of money to England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You understand," the captain said to Cyril, "that I have not said a word
+ touching the matter for which you are here. I have only told him that it
+ had been thought it was as well you should be out of England for a time.
+ Of course, he understood that you were wanted for an affair in which you
+ had taken part; but it matters not what he thinks. I have paid him for a
+ month's board for you, and here are three pounds, which will be enough to
+ pay for your passage back if I myself should not return. If you do not
+ hear from me, or see the <i>Eliza</i>, within four weeks, there is no
+ reason why you should not take passage back. The trial will be over by
+ that time, and as the members of the gang have done their part in
+ preventing you from appearing, I see not why they should have further
+ grudge against you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot thank you too much for your kindness, captain. I trust that when
+ I get back you will call at Captain Dowsett's store in Tower Street, so
+ that I may see you and again thank you; I know that the Captain himself
+ will welcome you heartily when I tell him how kindly you have treated me.
+ He will be almost as glad as I shall myself to see you. I suppose you
+ could not take him a message or letter from me now?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think not, lad. It would never do for him to be able to say at the
+ trial that he had learnt you had been kidnapped. They might write over
+ here to the Dutch authorities about you. There is one thing further. From
+ what I heard when I landed yesterday, it seems that there is likely to be
+ war between Holland and England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I heard a talk of it in London," Cyril said, "but I do not rightly
+ understand the cause, nor did I inquire much about the matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is something about the colonies, and our taxing their goods, but I
+ don't rightly understand the quarrel, except that the Dutch think, now
+ that Blake is gone and our ships for the most part laid up, they may be
+ able to take their revenge for the lickings we have given them. Should
+ there be war, as you say you speak French as well as English, I should
+ think you had best make your way to Dunkirk as a young Frenchman, and from
+ there you would find no difficulty in crossing to England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know Dunkirk well, captain, having indeed lived there all my life. I
+ should have no difficulty in travelling through Holland as a French boy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If there is a war," the captain said, "I shall, of course, come here no
+ more; but it may be that you will see me at Dunkirk. French brandy sells
+ as well as Dutch Schiedam, and if I cannot get the one I may perhaps get
+ the other; and there is less danger in coming to Dunkirk and making across
+ to Harwich than there is in landing from Calais or Nantes on the south
+ coast, where the revenue men are much more on the alert than they are at
+ Harwich."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you not afraid of getting your boat captured? You said it was your
+ own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not much, lad. I bring over a regular cargo, and the kegs are stowed away
+ under the floor of the cabin, and I run them at Pin-mill&mdash;that is the
+ place we anchored the night before we got to Ipswich. I have been
+ overhauled a good many times, but the cargo always looks right, and after
+ searching it for a bit, they conclude it is all regular. You see, I don't
+ bring over a great quantity&mdash;fifteen or twenty kegs is as much as I
+ can stow away&mdash;and it is a long way safer being content with a small
+ profit than trying to make a big one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril parted with regret from the captain, whose departure had been
+ hastened by a report that war might be declared at any moment, in which
+ case the <i>Eliza</i> might have been detained for a considerable time. He
+ had, therefore, been working almost night and day to get in his cargo, and
+ Cyril had remained on board until the last moment. He had seen the diamond
+ dealer but once, and hoped that he should not meet him often, for he felt
+ certain that awkward questions would be asked him. This man was in the
+ habit of having dealings with Marner, and had doubtless understood from
+ the captain that he was in some way connected with his gang; and were he
+ to find out the truth he would view him with the reverse of a friendly
+ eye. He had told him that he was to take his meals with his clerk, and
+ Cyril hoped, therefore, that he should seldom see him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wandered about the wharf until it became dark. Then he went in and took
+ supper with the clerk. As the latter spoke Dutch only, there was no
+ possibility of conversation. Cyril was thinking of going up to his bed
+ when there was a ring at the bell. The clerk went to answer it, leaving
+ the door open as he went out, and Cyril heard a voice ask, in English, if
+ Herr Schweindorf was in. The clerk said something in Dutch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The fool does not understand English, Robert," the man said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tell him," he said, in a louder voice, to the clerk, "that two persons
+ from England&mdash;England, you understand&mdash;who have only just
+ arrived, want to see him on particular business. There, don't be blocking
+ up the door; just go and tell your master what I told you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He pushed his way into the passage, and the clerk, seeing that there was
+ nothing else to do, went upstairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A minute later he came down again, and made a sign for them to follow him.
+ As they went up Cyril stole out and looked after them. The fact that they
+ had come from England, and that one of them was named Robert, and that
+ they had business with this man, who was in connection with Marner, had
+ excited his suspicions, but he felt a shiver of fear run through him as he
+ recognised the figures of Robert Ashford and the man who was called Black
+ Dick. He remembered the expression of hatred with which they had regarded
+ him in the Court, and felt that his danger would be great indeed did they
+ hear that he was in Rotterdam. A moment's thought convinced him that they
+ would almost certainly learn this at once from his host. The letter would
+ naturally mention that the captain had left a lad in his charge who was,
+ as he believed, connected with them. They would denounce him as an enemy
+ instead of a friend. The diamond merchant would expel him from his house,
+ terrified at the thought that he possessed information as to his dealings
+ with this band in England; and once beyond the door he would, in this
+ strange town, be at the mercy of his enemies. Cyril's first impulse was to
+ run back into the room, seize his cap, and fly. He waited, however, until
+ the clerk came down again; then he put his cap carelessly on his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am going for a walk," he said, waving his hand vaguely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man nodded, went with him to the door, and Cyril heard him put up the
+ bar after he had gone out. He walked quietly away, for there was no fear
+ of immediate pursuit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Black Dick had probably brought over some more jewels to dispose of, and
+ that business would be transacted, before there would be any talk of other
+ matters. It might be a quarter of an hour before they heard that he was an
+ inmate of the house; then, when they went downstairs with the dealer, they
+ would hear that he had gone out for a walk and would await his return, so
+ that he had two or three hours at least before there would be any search.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was early yet. Some of the boats might be discharging by torchlight. At
+ any rate, he might hear of a ship starting in the morning. He went down to
+ the wharf. There was plenty of bustle here; boats were landing fish, and
+ larger craft were discharging or taking in cargo; but his inability to
+ speak Dutch prevented his asking questions. He crossed to the other side
+ of the road. The houses here were principally stores or drinking taverns.
+ In the window of one was stuck up, "English and French Spoken Here." He
+ went inside, walked up to the bar, and called for a glass of beer in
+ English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You speak English, landlord?" he asked, as the mug was placed before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I want to take passage either to England or to France," he said. "I came
+ out here but a few days ago, and I hear that there is going to be trouble
+ between the two countries. It will therefore be of no use my going on to
+ Amsterdam. I wish to get back again, for I am told that if I delay I may
+ be too late. I cannot speak Dutch, and therefore cannot inquire if any
+ boat will be sailing in the morning for England or Dunkirk. I have
+ acquaintances in Dunkirk, and speak French, so it makes no difference to
+ me whether I go there or to England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My boy speaks French," the landlord said, "and if you like he can go
+ along the port with you. Of course, you will give him something for his
+ trouble?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Willingly," Cyril said, "and be much obliged to you into the bargain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The landlord left the bar and returned in a minute with a boy twelve years
+ old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He does not speak French very well," he said, "but I dare say it will be
+ enough for your purpose. I have told him that you want to take ship to
+ England, or that, if you cannot find one, to Dunkirk. If that will not do,
+ Ostend might suit you. They speak French there, and there are boats always
+ going between there and England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That would do; though I should prefer the other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There would be no difficulty at any other time in getting a boat for
+ England, but I don't know whether you will do so now. They have been
+ clearing off for some days, and I doubt if you will find an English ship
+ in port now, though of course there may be those who have been delayed for
+ their cargo."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril went out with the boy, and after making many inquiries learnt that
+ there was but one English vessel still in port. However, Cyril told his
+ guide that he would prefer one for Dunkirk if they could find one, for if
+ war were declared before the boat sailed, she might be detained. After
+ some search they found a coasting scow that would sail in the morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They will touch at two or three places," the boy said to Cyril, after a
+ talk with the captain; "but if you are not in a hurry, he will take you
+ and land you at Dunkirk for a pound&mdash;that is, if he finds food; if
+ you find food he will take you for eight shillings. He will start at
+ daybreak."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tell him that I agree to his price. I don't want the trouble of getting
+ food. As he will be going so early, I will come on board at once. I will
+ get my bundle, and will be back in half an hour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went with the boy to one of the sailors' shops near, bought a rough
+ coat and a thick blanket, had them wrapped up into a parcel, and then,
+ after paying the boy, went on board.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he expected, he found there were no beds or accommodation for
+ passengers, so he stretched himself on a locker in the cabin, covered
+ himself with his blanket, and put the coat under his head for a pillow.
+ His real reason for choosing this craft in preference to the English ship
+ was that he thought it probable that, when he did not return to the house,
+ it would at once be suspected that he had recognised the visitors, and was
+ not going to return at all. In that case, they might suspect that he would
+ try to take passage to England, and would, the first thing in the morning,
+ make a search for him on board any English vessels that might be in the
+ port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be easy then for them to get him ashore, for the diamond merchant
+ might accuse him of theft, and so get him handed over to him. Rather than
+ run that risk, he would have started on foot had he not been able to find
+ a native craft sailing early in the morning. Failing Dunkirk and Ostend,
+ he would have taken a passage to any other Dutch port, and run his chance
+ of getting a ship from there. The great point was to get away from
+ Rotterdam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The four men forming the crew of the scow returned late, and by their loud
+ talk Cyril, who kept his eyes closed, judged that they were in liquor. In
+ a short time they climbed up into their berths, and all was quiet. At
+ daybreak they were called up by the captain. Cyril lay quiet until, by the
+ rippling of the water against the side, he knew that the craft was under
+ way. He waited a few minutes, and then went up on deck. The scow, clumsy
+ as she looked, was running along fast before a brisk wind, and in an hour
+ Rotterdam lay far behind them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voyage was a pleasant one. They touched at Dordrecht, at Steenbergen
+ on the mainland, and Flushing, staying a few hours in each place to take
+ in or discharge cargo. After this, they made out from the Islands, and ran
+ along the coast, putting into Ostend and Nieuport, and, four days after
+ starting, entered the port of Dunkirk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril did not go ashore at any of the places at which they stopped. It was
+ possible that war might have been declared with England, and as it might
+ be noticed that he was a foreigner he would in that case be questioned and
+ arrested. As soon, therefore, as they neared a quay, he went down to the
+ cabin and slept until they got under way again. The food was rough, but
+ wholesome; it consisted entirely of fish and black bread; but the sea air
+ gave him a good appetite, and he was in high spirits at the thought that
+ he had escaped from danger and was on his way back again. At Dunkirk he
+ was under the French flag, and half an hour after landing had engaged a
+ passage to London on a brig that was to sail on the following day. The
+ voyage was a stormy one, and he rejoiced in the possession of his
+ great-coat, which he had only bought in order that he might have a packet
+ to bring on board the scow, and so avoid exciting any suspicion or
+ question as to his being entirely unprovided with luggage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was three days before the brig dropped anchor in the Pool. As soon as
+ she did so, Cyril hailed a waterman, and spent almost his last remaining
+ coin in being taken to shore. He was glad that it was late in the
+ afternoon and so dark that his attire would not be noticed. His clothes
+ had suffered considerably from his capture and confinement on board the <i>Eliza</i>,
+ and his great-coat was of a rough appearance that was very much out of
+ character in the streets of London. He had, however, but a short distance
+ to traverse before he reached the door of the house. He rang at the bell,
+ and the door was opened by John Wilkes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is it?" the latter asked. "The shop is shut for the night, and I
+ ain't going to open for anyone. At half-past seven in the morning you can
+ get what you want, but not before."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't you know me, John?" Cyril laughed. The old sailor stepped back as
+ if struck with a blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Eh, what?" he exclaimed. "Is it you, Cyril? Why, we had all thought you
+ dead! I did not know you in this dim light and in that big coat you have
+ got on. Come upstairs, master. Captain Dave and the ladies will be glad
+ indeed to see you. They have been mourning for you sadly, I can tell you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril took off his wrap and hung it on a peg, and then followed John
+ upstairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There, Captain Dave," the sailor said, as he opened the door of the
+ sitting-room. "There is a sight for sore eyes!&mdash;a sight you never
+ thought you would look on again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment Captain Dave, his wife, and daughter stared at Cyril as if
+ scarce believing their eyes. Then the Captain sprang to his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's the lad, sure enough. Why, Cyril," he went on, seizing him by the
+ hand, and shaking it violently, "we had never thought to see you alive
+ again; we made sure that those pirates had knocked you on the head, and
+ that you were food for fishes by this time. There has been no comforting
+ my good wife; and as to Nellie, if it had been a brother she had lost, she
+ could not have taken it more hardly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They did knock me on the head, and very hard too, Captain Dave. If my
+ skull hadn't been quite so thick, I should, as you say, have been food for
+ fishes before now, for that is what they meant me for, and there is no
+ thanks to them that I am here at present. I am sorry that you have all
+ been made so uncomfortable about me."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+"We should have been an ungrateful lot indeed if we had not,
+considering that in the first place you saved us from being ruined by
+those pirates, and that it was, as we thought, owing to the services
+you had done us that you had come to your end."
+
+ "But where have you been, Master Cyril?" Nellie broke in. "What has
+happened to you? We have been picturing all sorts of horrors, mother
+and I. That evil had befallen you we were sure, for we knew that you
+would not go away of a sudden, in this fashion, without so much as
+saying goodbye. We feared all the more when, two days afterwards, the
+wretches were so bold as to attack the constables, and to rescue
+Robert Ashford and another from their hands. Men who would do this in
+broad daylight would surely hesitate at nothing."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Let him eat his supper without asking further questions, Nellie," her
+ father said. "It is ill asking one with victuals before him to begin a
+ tale that may, for aught I know, last an hour. Let him have his food,
+ lass, and then I will light my pipe, and John Wilkes shall light his here
+ instead of going out for it, and we will have the yarn in peace and
+ comfort. It spoils a good story to hurry it through. Cyril is here, alive
+ and well; let that content you for a few minutes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I must, I must," Nellie said, with a little pout. "But you should
+ remember, father, that, while you have been all your life having
+ adventures of some sort, this is the very first that I have had; for
+ though Cyril is the one to whom it befell, it is all a parcel with the
+ robbery of the house and the capture of the thieves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When does the trial come off, Captain Dave?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It came off yesterday. Marner is to be hung at the end of the week. He
+ declared that he was but in the lane by accident when two lads opened the
+ gate. He and the man with him, seeing that they were laden with goods,
+ would have seized them, when they themselves were attacked and beaten
+ down. But this ingenuity did not save him. Tom Frost had been admitted as
+ King's evidence, and testified that Marner had been several times at the
+ gate with the fellow that escaped, to receive the stolen goods. Moreover,
+ there were many articles among those found at his place that I was able to
+ swear to, besides the proceeds of over a score of burglaries. The two men
+ taken in his house will have fifteen years in gaol. The women got off
+ scot-free; there was no proof that they had taken part in the robberies,
+ though there is little doubt they knew all about them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But how did they prove the men were concerned?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They got all the people whose property had been found there, and four of
+ these, on seeing the men in the yard at Newgate, were able to swear to
+ them as having been among those who came into their rooms and frightened
+ them well-nigh to death. It was just a question whether they should be
+ hung or not, and there was some wonder that the Judge let them escape the
+ gallows."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what has become of Tom?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They kept Tom in the prison till last night. I saw him yesterday, and I
+ am sure the boy is mighty sorry for having been concerned in the matter,
+ being, as I truly believe, terrified into it. I had written down to an old
+ friend of mine who has set up in the same way as myself at Plymouth. Of
+ course I told him all the circumstances, but assured him, that according
+ to my belief, the boy was not so much to blame, and that I was sure the
+ lesson he had had, would last him for life; so I asked him to give Tom
+ another chance, and if he did so, to keep the knowledge of this affair
+ from everyone. I got his answer yesterday morning, telling me to send him
+ down to him; he would give him a fair trial, and if he wasn't altogether
+ satisfied with him, would then get him a berth as ship's boy. So, last
+ night after dark, he was taken down by John Wilkes, and put on board a
+ coaster bound for Plymouth. I would have taken him back here, but after
+ your disappearance I feared that his life would not be safe; for although
+ they had plenty of other cases they could have proved against Marner,
+ Tom's evidence brought this business home to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Dave would not allow Cyril to begin his story until the table had
+ been cleared and he and John Wilkes had lighted their pipes. Then Cyril
+ told his adventure, the earlier part of which elicited many exclamations
+ of pity from Dame Dowsett and Mistress Nellie, and some angry ejaculations
+ from the Captain when he heard that Black Dick and Robert Ashford had got
+ safely off to Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By St. Anthony, lad," he broke out, when the story was finished, "you had
+ a narrow escape from those villains at Rotterdam. Had it chanced that you
+ were out at the time they came, I would not have given a groat for your
+ life. By all accounts, that fellow Black Dick is a desperate villain. They
+ say that they had got hold of evidence enough against him to hang a dozen
+ men, and it seems that there is little doubt that he was concerned in
+ several cases, where, not content with robbing, the villain had murdered
+ the inmates of lonely houses round London. He had good cause for hating
+ you. It was through you that he had been captured, and had lost his share
+ in all that plunder at Marner's. Well, I trust the villain will never
+ venture to show his face in London again; but there is never any saying. I
+ should like to meet that captain who behaved so well to you, and I will
+ meet him too, and shake him by the hand and tell him that any gear he may
+ want for that ketch of his, he is free to come in here to help himself.
+ There is another thing to be thought of. I must go round in the morning to
+ the Guildhall and notify the authorities that you have come back. There
+ has been a great hue and cry for you. They have searched the thieves' dens
+ of London from attic to cellar; there have been boats out looking for your
+ body; and on the day after you were missing they overhauled all the ships
+ in the port. Of course the search has died out now, but I must go and tell
+ them, and you will have to give them the story of the affair."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shan't say a word that will give them a clue that will help them to lay
+ hands on the captain. He saved my life, and no one could have been kinder
+ than he was. I would rather go away for a time altogether, for I don't see
+ how I am to tell the story without injuring him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; it is awkward, lad. I see that, even if you would not give them the
+ name of the craft, they might find out what vessels went into Ipswich on
+ that morning, and also the names of those that sailed from Rotterdam on
+ the day she left."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It seems to me, Captain, that the only way will be for me to say the
+ exact truth, namely, that I gave my word to the captain that I would say
+ naught of the matter. I could tell how I was struck down, and how I did
+ not recover consciousness until I found myself in a boat, and was lifted
+ on board a vessel and put down into the hold, and was there kept until
+ morning. I could say that when I was let out I found we were far down the
+ river, that the captain expressed great regret when he found that I had
+ been hurt so badly, that he did everything in his power for me, and that
+ after I had been some days on board the ship he offered to land me in
+ Holland, and to give me money to pay my fare back here if I would give him
+ my word of honour not to divulge his name or the name of the ship, or that
+ of the port at which he landed me. Of course, they can imprison me for a
+ time if I refuse to tell, but I would rather stay in gaol for a year than
+ say aught that might set them upon the track of Captain Madden. It was not
+ until the day he left me in Holland that I knew his name, for of course
+ the men always called him captain, and so did I."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is the only way I can see out of it, lad. I don't think they will
+ imprison you after the service you have done in enabling them to break up
+ this gang, bring the head of it to justice, and recover a large amount of
+ property."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So indeed, on their going to the Guildhall next morning, it turned out.
+ The sitting Alderman threatened Cyril with committal to prison unless he
+ gave a full account of all that had happened to him, but Captain Dowsett
+ spoke up for him, and said boldly that instead of punishment he deserved
+ honour for the great service he had done to justice, and that, moreover,
+ if he were punished for refusing to keep the promise of secrecy he had
+ made, there was little chance in the future of desperate men sparing the
+ lives of those who fell into their hands. They would assuredly murder them
+ in self-defence if they knew that the law would force them to break any
+ promise of silence they might have made. The Magistrate, after a
+ consultation with the Chief Constable, finally came round to this view,
+ and permitted Cyril to leave the Court, after praising him warmly for the
+ vigilance he had shown in the protection of his employer's interests. He
+ regretted that he had not been able to furnish them with the name of a man
+ who had certainly been, to some extent, an accomplice of those who had
+ assaulted him, but this was not, however, so much to be regretted, since
+ the man had done all in his power to atone for his actions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no further information you can give us, Master Cyril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Only this, your worship: that on the day before I left Holland, I caught
+ sight of the two persons who had escaped from the constables. They had
+ just landed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sorry to hear it," the Alderman said. "I had hoped that they were
+ still in hiding somewhere in the City, and that the constables might yet
+ be able to lay hands on them. However, I expect they will be back again
+ erelong. Your ill-doer is sure to return here sooner or later, either with
+ the hope of further gain, or because he cannot keep away from his old
+ haunts and companions. If they fall into the hands of the City Constables,
+ I will warrant they won't escape again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He nodded to Cyril, who understood that his business was over and left the
+ Court with Captain Dave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am not so anxious as the Alderman seemed to be that Black Dick and
+ Robert Ashford should return to London, Captain Dave."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; I can understand that, Cyril. And even now that you know they are
+ abroad, it would be well to take every precaution, for the others whose
+ business has been sorely interrupted by the capture of that villain Marner
+ may again try to do you harm. No doubt other receivers will fill his place
+ in time, but the loss of a ready market must incommode them much. Plate
+ they can melt down themselves, and I reckon they would have but little
+ difficulty in finding knaves ready to purchase the products of the
+ melting-pot; but it is only a man with premises specially prepared for it
+ who will buy goods of all kinds, however bulky, without asking questions
+ about them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril was now in high favour with Mistress Nellie, and whenever he was not
+ engaged when she went out he was invited to escort her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day he went with her to hear a famous preacher hold forth at St.
+ Paul's. Only a portion of the cathedral was used for religious services;
+ the rest was utilised as a sort of public promenade, and here people of
+ all classes met&mdash;gallants of the Court, citizens, their wives and
+ daughters, idlers and loungers, thieves and mendicants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Nellie walked forward to join the throng gathered near the pulpit,
+ Cyril noticed a young man in a Court suit, standing among a group who were
+ talking and laughing much louder than was seemly, take off his plumed hat,
+ and make a deep bow, to which she replied by a slight inclination of the
+ head, and passed on with somewhat heightened colour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril waited until the service was over, when, as he left the cathedral
+ with her, he asked,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who was that ruffler in gay clothes, who bowed so deeply to you, Mistress
+ Nellie?&mdash;that is, if there is no indiscretion in my asking."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I met him in a throng while you were away," she said, with an attempt at
+ carelessness which he at once detected. "There was a great press, and I
+ well-nigh fainted, but he very courteously came to my assistance, and
+ brought me safely out of the crowd."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And doubtless you have seen him since, Mistress?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie tossed her head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't see what right you have to question me, Master Cyril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No right at all," Cyril replied good-temperedly, "save that I am an
+ inmate of your father's house, and have received great kindness from him,
+ and I doubt if he would be pleased if he knew that you bowed to a person
+ unknown to him and unknown, I presume, to yourself, save that he has
+ rendered you a passing service."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is a gentleman of the Court, I would have you know," she said angrily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not know that that is any great recommendation if the tales one
+ hears about the Court are true," Cyril replied calmly. "I cannot say I
+ admire either his companions or his manners, and if he is a gentleman he
+ should know that if he wishes to speak to an honest citizen's daughter it
+ were only right that he should first address himself to her father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Heigh ho!" Nellie exclaimed, with her face flushed with indignation. "Who
+ made you my censor, I should like to know? I will thank you to attend to
+ your own affairs, and to leave mine alone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The affairs of Captain Dave's daughter are mine so long as I am abroad
+ with her," Cyril said firmly. "I am sorry to displease you, but I am only
+ doing what I feel to be my duty. Methinks that, were John Wilkes here in
+ charge of you, he would say the same, only probably he would express his
+ opinion as to yonder gallant more strongly than I do;" he nodded in the
+ direction of the man, who had followed them out of the cathedral, and was
+ now walking on the other side of the street and evidently trying to
+ attract Nellie's attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie bit her lips. She was about to answer him passionately, but
+ restrained herself with a great effort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are mistaken in the gentleman, Cyril," she said, after a pause; "he
+ is of a good family, and heir to a fine estate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, he has told you as much as that, has he? Well, Mistress Nellie, it
+ may be as he says, but surely it is for your father to inquire into that,
+ when the gentleman comes forward in due course and presents himself as a
+ suitor. Fine feathers do not always make fine birds, and a man may ruffle
+ it at King Charles's Court without ten guineas to shake in his purse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment the young man crossed the street, and, bowing deeply to
+ Nellie, was about to address her when Cyril said gravely,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir, I am not acquainted with your name, nor do I know more about you
+ save that you are a stranger to this lady's family. That being so, and as
+ she is at present under my escort, I must ask you to abstain from
+ addressing her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You insolent young varlet!" the man said furiously. "Had I a cane instead
+ of a sword I would chastise you for your insolence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is as it may be," Cyril said quietly. "That sort of thing may do
+ down at Whitehall, but if you attempt to make trouble here in Cheapside
+ you will very speedily find yourself in the hands of the watch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For Heaven's sake, sir," Nellie said anxiously, as several passers-by
+ paused to see what was the matter, "do not cause trouble. For my sake, if
+ not for your own, pray leave me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I obey you, Mistress," the man said again, lifting his hat and bowing
+ deeply. "I regret that the officiousness of this blundering varlet should
+ have mistaken my intentions, which were but to salute you courteously."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he replaced his hat, and, with a threatening scowl at Cyril,
+ pushed his way roughly through those standing round, and walked rapidly
+ away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie was very pale, and trembled from head to foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take me home, Cyril," she murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He offered her his arm, and he made his way along the street, while his
+ face flushed with anger at some jeering remarks he heard from one or two
+ of those who looked on at the scene. It was not long before Nellie's anger
+ gained the upper hand of her fears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A pretty position you have placed me in, with your interference!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You mean, I suppose, Mistress Nellie, a pretty position that man placed
+ you in, by his insolence. What would Captain Dave say if he heard that his
+ daughter had been accosted by a Court gallant in the streets?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you going to tell him?" she asked, removing her hand sharply from his
+ arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have no doubt I ought to do so, and if you will take my advice you will
+ tell him yourself as soon as you reach home, for it may be that among
+ those standing round was someone who is acquainted with both you and your
+ father; and you know as well as I do what Captain Dave would say if it
+ came to his ears in such fashion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie walked for some time in silence. Her anger rose still higher
+ against Cyril at the position in which his interference had placed her,
+ but she could not help seeing that his advice was sound. She had indeed
+ met this man several times, and had listened without chiding to his
+ protestations of admiration and love. Nellie was ambitious. She had been
+ allowed to have her own way by her mother, whose sole companion she had
+ been during her father's absence at sea. She knew that she was remarkably
+ pretty, and saw no reason why she, like many another citizen's daughter,
+ should not make a good match. She had readily given the man her promise to
+ say nothing at home until he gave her leave to do so, and she had been
+ weak, enough to take all that he said for gospel. Now she felt that, at
+ any rate, she must smooth matters over and put it so that as few questions
+ as possible should be asked. After a long pause, then, she said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps you are right, Cyril. I will myself tell my father and mother. I
+ can assure you that I had no idea I should meet him to-day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Cyril could readily believe, for certainly she would not have asked
+ him to accompany her if she had known. However, he only replied gravely,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am glad to hear that you will tell them, Mistress Nellie, and trust
+ that you will take them entirely into your confidence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Nellie had no idea of doing; but she said no further word until they
+ reached home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII &mdash; SAVED FROM A VILLAIN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "I find that I have to give you thanks for yet another service, Cyril,"
+ Captain Dave said heartily, when they met the next morning. "Nellie tells
+ me a young Court gallant had the insolence to try to address her yesterday
+ in Cheapside, on her way back from St. Paul's, that you prevented his
+ doing so, and that there was quite a scene in the street. If I knew who he
+ was I would break his sconce for him, were he Rochester himself. A pretty
+ pass things have come to, when a citizen's daughter cannot walk home from
+ St. Paul's without one of these impudent vagabonds of the Court venturing
+ to address her! Know you who he was?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; I have never seen the fellow before, Captain Dave. I do know many of
+ the courtiers by sight, having, when we first came over, often gone down
+ to Whitehall with my father when he was seeking to obtain an audience with
+ the King; but this man's face is altogether strange to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, well! I will take care that Nellie shall not go abroad again except
+ under her mother's escort or mine. I know, Cyril, that she would be as
+ safe under your charge as in ours, but it is better that she should have
+ the presence of an older person. It is not that I doubt your courage or
+ your address, lad, but a ruffling gallant of this sort would know naught
+ of you, save that you are young, and besides, did you interfere, there
+ might be a scene that would do serious harm to Nellie's reputation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I agree with you thoroughly, Captain Dave," Cyril said warmly. "It will
+ be far better that you or Mrs. Dowsett should be by her side as long as
+ there is any fear of further annoyance from this fellow. I should ask
+ nothing better than to try a bout with him myself, for I have been right
+ well taught how to use my sword; but, as you say, a brawl in the street is
+ of all things to be avoided."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three or four weeks passed quietly. Nellie seldom went abroad; when she
+ did so her mother always accompanied her if it were in the daytime, and
+ her father whenever she went to the house of any friend after dusk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril one day caught sight of the gallant in Tower Street, and although he
+ was on his way to one of his customers, he at once determined to break his
+ appointment and to find out who the fellow was. The man sauntered about
+ looking into the shops for full half an hour, but it was apparent to Cyril
+ that he paid little attention to their contents, and was really waiting
+ for someone. When the clock struck three he started, stamped his foot
+ angrily on the ground, and, walking away rapidly to the stairs of London
+ Bridge, took a seat in a boat, and was rowed up the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril waited until he had gone a short distance, and then hailed a wherry
+ rowing two oars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You see that boat over there?" he said. "I don't wish to overtake it at
+ present. Keep a hundred yards or so behind it, but row inshore so that it
+ shall not seem that you are following them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men obeyed his instructions until they had passed the Temple; then, as
+ the other boat still kept in the middle of the stream, Cyril had no doubt
+ that it would continue its course to Westminster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now stretch to your oars," he said to the watermen. "I want to get to
+ Westminster before the other boat, and to be well away from the stairs
+ before it comes up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rest of the journey was performed at much greater speed, and Cyril
+ alighted at Westminster while the other boat was some three or four
+ hundred yards behind. Paying the watermen, he went up the stairs, walked
+ away fifty or sixty yards, and waited until he saw the man he was
+ following appear. The latter walked quietly up towards Whitehall and
+ entered a tavern frequented by young bloods of the Court. Cyril pressed
+ his hat down over his eyes. His dress was not the same as that in which he
+ had escorted Nellie to the cathedral, and he had but small fear of being
+ recognised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he entered he sat down at a vacant table, and, having ordered a stoup
+ of wine, looked round. The man had joined a knot of young fellows like
+ himself, seated at a table. They were dissipated-looking blades, and were
+ talking loudly and boisterously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Harvey, how goes it? Is the lovely maiden we saw when we were with
+ you at St. Paul's ready to drop into your arms?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Things are going on all right," Harvey said, with an air of
+ consciousness; "but she is watched by two griffins, her father and mother.
+ 'Tis fortunate they do not know me by sight, and I have thus chances of
+ slipping a note in her hand when I pass her. I think it will not be long
+ before you will have to congratulate me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She is an heiress and only daughter, is she not, honest John?" another
+ asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She is an only child, and her father bears the reputation of doing a good
+ business; but as to what I shall finally do, I shall not yet determine. As
+ to that, I shall be guided by circumstances."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course, of course," the one who had first spoken said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had gained the information he required. The man's name was John
+ Harvey, and Nellie was keeping up a clandestine correspondence with him.
+ Cyril felt that were he to listen longer he could not restrain his
+ indignation, and, without touching the wine he had paid for, he hastily
+ left the tavern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he walked towards the city, he was unable to decide what he had better
+ do. Were he to inform Captain Dave of what he had heard there would be a
+ terrible scene, and there was no saying what might happen. Still, Nellie
+ must be saved from falling into the hands of this fellow, and if he
+ abstained from telling her father he must himself take steps to prevent
+ the possibility of such a thing taking place. The more he thought of it
+ the more he felt of the heavy responsibility it would be. Anxious as he
+ was to save Nellie from the anger of her father, it was of far greater
+ consequence to save her from the consequences of her own folly. At last he
+ resolved to take John Wilkes into his counsels. John was devoted to his
+ master, and even if his advice were not of much value, his aid in keeping
+ watch would be of immense service. Accordingly, that evening, when John
+ went out for his usual pipe after supper, Cyril, who had to go to a trader
+ in Holborn, followed him out quickly and overtook him a few yards from the
+ door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I want to have a talk with you, John."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay, sir. Where shall it be? Nothing wrong, I hope? That new
+ apprentice looks to me an honest sort of chap, and the man we have got in
+ the yard now is an old mate of mine. He was a ship's boy on board the <i>Dolphin</i>
+ twenty-five years back, and he sailed under the Captain till he left the
+ sea. I would trust that chap just as I would myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is nothing of that sort, John. It is another sort of business
+ altogether, and yet it is quite as serious as the last. I have got half an
+ hour before I have to start to do those books at Master Hopkins'. Where
+ can we have a talk in a quiet place where there is no chance of our being
+ overheard?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is a little room behind the bar at the place I go to, and I have no
+ doubt the landlord will let us have it, seeing as I am a regular
+ customer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At any rate we can see, John. It is too cold for walking about talking
+ here; and, besides, I think one can look at a matter in all lights much
+ better sitting down than one can walking about."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is according to what you are accustomed to," John said, shaking his
+ head. "It seems to me that I can look further into the innards of a
+ question when I am walking up and down the deck on night watch with just
+ enough wind aloft to take her along cheerful, and not too much of it, than
+ I can at any other time; but then, you see, that is just what one is
+ accustomed to. This is the place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He entered a quiet tavern, and, nodding to five or six
+ weather-beaten-looking men, who were sitting smoking long pipes, each with
+ a glass of grog before him, went up to the landlord, who formed one of the
+ party. He had been formerly the master of a trader, and had come into the
+ possession of the tavern by marriage with its mistress, who was still the
+ acting head of the establishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have got a piece of business we want to overhaul, Peter. I suppose we
+ can have that cabin in yonder for a bit?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay. There is a good fire burning. You will find pipes on the table.
+ You will want a couple of glasses of grog, of course?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John nodded, and then led the way into the little snuggery at the end of
+ the room. It had a glass door, so that, if desired, a view could be
+ obtained of the general room, but there was a curtain to draw across this.
+ There was a large oak settle on either side of the fire, and there was a
+ table, with pipes and a jar of tobacco standing between them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is a tidy little crib," John said, as he seated himself and began to
+ fill a pipe. "There is no fear of being disturbed here. There has been
+ many a voyage talked over and arranged in this 'ere room. They say that
+ Blake himself, when the Fleet was in the river, would drop in here
+ sometimes, with one of his captains, for a quiet talk."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A minute later a boy entered and placed two steaming glasses of grog on
+ the table. The door closed after him, and John said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now you can get under way, Master Cyril. You have got a fair course now,
+ and nothing to bring you up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a serious matter, John. And before I begin, I must tell you that I
+ rely on your keeping absolute silence as to what I am going to tell you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That in course," John said, as he lifted his glass to his lips. "You
+ showed yourself a first-rate pilot in that last job, and I am content to
+ sail under you this time without asking any questions as to the ship's
+ course, and to steer according to orders."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril told the story, interrupted frequently by angry ejaculations on the
+ part of the old bo'swain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dash my wig!" he exclaimed, when Cyril came to an end. "But this is a bad
+ business altogether, Master Cyril. One can engage a pirate and beat him
+ off if the crew is staunch, but when there is treason on board ship, it
+ makes it an awkward job for those in command."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The question is this, John: ought we to tell the Captain, or shall we try
+ to take the affair into our own hands, and so to manage it that he shall
+ never know anything about it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sailor was silent for a minute or two, puffing his pipe meditatively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see it is an awkward business to decide," he said. "On one side, it
+ would pretty nigh kill Captain Dave to know that Mistress Nellie has been
+ steering wild and has got out of hand. She is just the apple of his eye.
+ Then, on the other hand, if we undertook the job without telling him, and
+ one fine morning we was to find out she was gone, we should be in a mighty
+ bad fix, for the Captain would turn round and say, 'Why didn't you tell
+ me? If you had done so, I would have locked her up under hatches, and
+ there she would be, safe now.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is just what I see, and it is for that reason I come to you. I could
+ not be always on the watch, but I think that you and I together would keep
+ so sharp a look-out that we might feel pretty sure that she could not get
+ away without our knowledge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We could watch sharply enough at night, Master Cyril. There would be no
+ fear of her getting away then without our knowing it. But how would it be
+ during the day? There am I in the shop or store from seven in the morning
+ until we lock up before supper-time. You are out most of your time, and
+ when you are not away, you are in the office at the books, and she is free
+ to go in and out of the front door without either of us being any the
+ wiser."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't think he would venture to carry her off by daylight," Cyril said.
+ "She never goes out alone now, and could scarcely steal away unnoticed.
+ Besides, she would know that she would be missed directly, and a hue and
+ cry set up. I should think she would certainly choose the evening, when we
+ are all supposed to be in bed. He would have a chair waiting somewhere
+ near; and there are so often chairs going about late, after city
+ entertainments, that they would get off unnoticed. I should say the most
+ dangerous time is between nine o'clock and midnight. She generally goes
+ off to bed at nine or soon after, and she might very well put on her hood
+ and cloak and steal downstairs at once, knowing that she would not be
+ missed till morning. Another dangerous time would be when she goes out to
+ a neighbour's. The Captain always takes her, and goes to fetch her at nine
+ o'clock, but she might make some excuse to leave quite early, and go off
+ in that way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That would be awkward, Mr. Cyril, for neither you nor I could be away at
+ supper-time without questions being asked. It seems to me that I had
+ better take Matthew into the secret. As he don't live in the house he
+ could very well watch wherever she is, till I slip round after supper to
+ relieve him, and he could watch outside here in the evening till either
+ you or I could steal downstairs and take his place. You can count on him
+ keeping his mouth shut just as you can on me. The only thing is, how is he
+ to stop her if he finds her coming out from a neighbour's before the
+ Captain has come for her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If he saw her coming straight home he could follow her to the door
+ without being noticed, John, but if he found her going some other way he
+ must follow her till he sees someone speak to her, and must then go
+ straight up and say, 'Mistress Dowsett, I am ready to escort you home.' If
+ she orders him off, or the man she meets threatens him, as is like enough,
+ he must say, 'Unless you come I shall shout for aid, and call upon
+ passers-by to assist me'; and, rather than risk the exposure, she would
+ most likely return with him. Of course, he would carry with him a good
+ heavy cudgel, and choose a thoroughfare where there are people about to
+ speak to her, and not an unfrequented passage, for you may be sure the
+ fellow would have no hesitation in running him through if he could do so
+ without being observed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Matthew is a stout fellow," John Wilkes said, "and was as smart a sailor
+ as any on board till he had his foot smashed by being jammed by a spare
+ spar that got adrift in a gale, so that the doctors had to cut off the leg
+ under the knee, and leave him to stump about on a timber toe for the rest
+ of his life. I tell you what, Master Cyril: we might make the thing safer
+ still if I spin the Captain a yarn as how Matthew has strained his back
+ and ain't fit to work for a bit; then I can take on another hand to work
+ in the yard, and we can put him on watch all day. He might come on duty at
+ nine o'clock in the morning, and stop until I relieve him as soon as
+ supper is over. Of course, he would not keep opposite the house, but might
+ post himself a bit up or down the street, so that he could manage to keep
+ an eye on the door."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That would be excellent," Cyril said. "Of course, at the supper-hour he
+ could go off duty, as she could not possibly leave the house between that
+ time and nine o'clock. You always come in about that hour, and I hear you
+ go up to bed. When you get there, you should at once take off your boots,
+ slip downstairs again with them, and go quietly out. I often sit talking
+ with Captain Dave till half-past nine or ten, but directly I can get away
+ I will come down and join you. I think in that way we need feel no
+ uneasiness as to harm coming from our not telling Captain Dave, for it
+ would be impossible for her to get off unnoticed. Now that is all arranged
+ I must be going, for I shall be late at my appointment unless I hurry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shall I go round and begin my watch at once, Master Cyril?".
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, there is no occasion for that. We know that he missed her to-day, and
+ therefore can have made no appointment; and I am convinced by what he said
+ to the fellows he met, that matters are not settled yet. However, we will
+ begin to-morrow. You can take an opportunity during the day to tell
+ Matthew about it, and he can pretend to strain his back in the afternoon,
+ and you can send him away. He can come round again next morning early, and
+ when the Captain comes down you can tell him that you find that Matthew
+ will not be able to work for the present, and ask him to let you take
+ another man on until he can come back again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril watched Nellie closely at meal-times and in the evening for the next
+ few days. He thought that he should be certain to detect some slight
+ change in her manner, however well she might play her part, directly she
+ decided on going off with this man. She would not dream that she was
+ suspected in any way, and would therefore be the less cautious. Matthew
+ kept watch during the day, and followed if she went out with her father to
+ a neighbour's, remaining on guard outside the house until John Wilkes
+ relieved him as soon as he had finished his supper. If she remained at
+ home in the evening John went out silently, after his return at his usual
+ hour, and was joined by Cyril as soon as Captain Dave said good-night and
+ went in to his bedroom. At midnight they re-entered the house and stole up
+ to their rooms, leaving their doors open and listening attentively for
+ another hour before they tried to get to sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the sixth morning Cyril noticed that Nellie was silent and abstracted
+ at breakfast-time. She went out marketing with her mother afterwards, and
+ at dinner her mood had changed. She talked and laughed more than usual.
+ There was a flush of excitement on her cheeks, and he drew the conclusion
+ that in the morning she had not come to an absolute decision, but had
+ probably given an answer to the man during the time she was out with her
+ mother, and that she felt the die was now cast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pass the word to Matthew to keep an extra sharp watch this afternoon and
+ to-morrow, John. I think the time is close at hand," he said, as they went
+ downstairs together after dinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you think so? Well, the sooner the better. It is trying work, this
+ here spying, and I don't care how soon it is over. I only hope it will end
+ by our running down this pirate and engaging him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope so too, John. I feel it very hard to be sitting at table with her
+ and Captain Dave and her mother, and to know that she is deceiving them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can't say a word for her," the old sailor said, shaking his head. "She
+ has as good parents as a girl could want to have. They would give their
+ lives for her, either of them, cheerful, and there she is thinking of
+ running away from them with a scamp she knows nothing of and has probably
+ never spoken with for an hour. I knew her head was a bit turned with young
+ fellows dangling after her, and by being noticed by some of the Court
+ gallants at the last City ball, and by being made the toast by many a
+ young fellow in City taverns&mdash;'Pretty Mistress Nellie Dowsett'; but I
+ did not think her head was so turned that she would act as she is doing.
+ Well, well, we must hope that this will be a lesson, Master Cyril, that
+ she will remember all her life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope so, John, and I trust that we shall be able to manage it all so
+ that the matter will never come to her parents' ears."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope so, and I don't see why it should. The fellow may bluster, but he
+ will say nothing about it because he would get into trouble for trying to
+ carry off a citizen's daughter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And besides that, John,&mdash;which would be quite as serious in the eyes
+ of a fellow of this sort,&mdash;he would have the laugh against him among
+ all his companions for having been outwitted in the City. So I think when
+ he finds the game is up he will be glad enough to make off without causing
+ trouble."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't you think we might give him a sound thrashing? It would do him a
+ world of good."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't think it would do a man of that sort much good, John, and he
+ would be sure to shout, and then there would be trouble, and the watch
+ might come up, and we should all get hauled off together. In the morning
+ the whole story would be known, and Mistress Nellie's name in the mouth of
+ every apprentice in the City. No, no; if he is disposed to go off quietly,
+ by all means let him go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have no doubt that you are right, Master Cyril, but it goes mightily
+ against the grain to think that a fellow like that is to get off with a
+ whole skin. However, if one should fall foul of him some other time, one
+ might take it out of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Dave found Cyril but a bad listener to his stories that evening,
+ and, soon after nine, said he should turn in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know what ails you to-night, Cyril," he said. "Your wits are
+ wool-gathering, somewhere. I don't believe that you heard half that last
+ story I was telling you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I heard it all, sir; but I do feel a little out of sorts this evening."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You do too much writing, lad. My head would be like to go to pieces if I
+ were to sit half the hours that you do at a desk."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Captain Dave went into his room, Cyril walked upstairs and closed his
+ bedroom door with a bang, himself remaining outside. Then he took off his
+ boots, and, holding them in his hand, went noiselessly downstairs to the
+ front door. The lock had been carefully oiled, and, after putting on his
+ boots again, he went out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are right, Master Cyril, sure enough," John Wilkes said when he
+ joined him, fifty yards away from the house. "It is to-night she is going
+ to try to make off. I thought I had best keep Matthew at hand, so I bid
+ him stop till I came out, then sent him round to have a pint of ale at the
+ tavern, and when he came back told him he had best cruise about, and look
+ for signs of pirates. He came back ten minutes ago, and told me that a
+ sedan chair had just been brought to the other end of the lane. It was set
+ down some thirty yards from Fenchurch Street. There were the two chairmen
+ and three fellows wrapped up in cloaks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That certainly looks like action, John. Well, I should say that Matthew
+ had better take up his station at the other end of the lane, there to
+ remain quiet until he hears an uproar at the chair; then he can run up to
+ our help if we need it. We will post ourselves near the door. No doubt
+ Harvey, and perhaps one of his friends, will come and wait for her. We
+ can't interfere with them here, but must follow and come up with her just
+ before they reach the chair. The further they are away from the house the
+ better. Then if there is any trouble Captain Dave will not hear anything
+ of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That will be a good plan of operations," John agreed. "Matthew is just
+ round the next corner. I will send him to Fenchurch Street at once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went away, and rejoined Cyril in two or three minutes. They then went
+ along towards the house, and took post in a doorway on the other side of
+ the street, some thirty yards from the shop. They had scarcely done so,
+ when they heard footsteps, and presently saw two men come along in the
+ middle of the street. They stopped and looked round.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is not a soul stirring," one said. "We can give the signal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he sang a bar or two of a song popular at the time, and they
+ then drew back from the road into a doorway and waited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Five minutes later, Cyril and his fellow-watcher heard a very slight
+ sound, and a figure stepped out from Captain Dowsett's door. The two men
+ crossed at once and joined her. A few low words were spoken, and they
+ moved away together, and turned up the lane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as they disappeared from sight, Cyril and John Wilkes issued out.
+ The latter had produced some long strips of cloth, which he wound round
+ both their boots, so as, he said, to muffle the oars. Their steps,
+ therefore, as they followed, were almost noiseless. Walking fast, they
+ came up to the three persons ahead of them just as they reached the sedan
+ chair. The two chairmen were standing at the poles, and a third man was
+ holding the door open with his hat in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Avast heaving, mates!" John Wilkes said. "It seems to me as you are
+ running this cargo without proper permits."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie gave a slight scream on hearing the voice, while the man beside her
+ stepped forward, exclaiming furiously:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "S" death, sir! who are you, and what are you interfering about?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am an honest man I hope, master. My name is John Wilkes, and, as that
+ young lady will tell you, I am in the employ of her father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then I tell you, John Wilkes, or John the Devil, or whatever your name
+ maybe, that if you don't at once take yourself off, I will let daylight
+ into you," and he drew his sword, as did his two companions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John gave a whistle, and the wooden-legged man was heard hurrying up from
+ Fenchurch Street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Cut the scoundrel down, Penrose," Harvey exclaimed, "while I put the lady
+ into the chair."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man addressed sprang at Wilkes, but in a moment his Court sword was
+ shivered by a blow from the latter's cudgel, which a moment later fell
+ again on his head, sending him reeling back several paces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Stay, sir, or I will run you through," Cyril said, pricking Harvey
+ sharply in the arm as he was urging Nellie to enter the chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, it's you, is it?" the other exclaimed, in a tone of fury. "My boy of
+ Cheapside! Well, I can spare a moment to punish you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, do not fight with him, my lord!" Nellie exclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My lord!" Cyril laughed. "So he has become a lord, eh?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he changed his tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mistress Nellie, you have been deceived. This fellow is no lord. He is a
+ hanger-on of the Court, one John Harvey, a disreputable blackguard whom I
+ heard boasting to his boon-companions of his conquest. I implore you to
+ return home as quietly as you went. None will know of this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He broke off suddenly, for, with an oath, Harvey rushed at him. Their
+ swords clashed, there was a quick thrust and parry, and then Harvey
+ staggered back with a sword-wound through the shoulder, dropping his sword
+ to the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your game is up, John Harvey," Cyril said. "Did you have your deserts I
+ would pass my sword through your body. Now call your fellows off, or it
+ will be worse for them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, it is not true? Surely it cannot be true?" Nellie cried, addressing
+ Harvey. "You cannot have deceived me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fellow, smarting with pain, and seeing that the game was up, replied
+ with a savage curse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You may think yourself lucky that you are only disabled, you villain!"
+ Cyril said, taking a step towards him with his sword menacingly raised.
+ "Begone, sir, before my patience is exhausted, or, by heaven! it will be
+ your dead body that the chairmen will have to carry away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Disabled or not," John Wilkes exclaimed, "I will have a say in the
+ matter;" and, with a blow with his cudgel, he stretched Harvey on the
+ ground, and belaboured him furiously until Cyril dragged him away by
+ force. Harvey rose slowly to his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take yourself off, sir," Cyril said. "One of your brave companions has
+ long ago bolted; the other is disarmed, and has his head broken. You may
+ thank your stars that you have escaped with nothing worse than a
+ sword-thrust through your shoulder, and a sound drubbing. Hanging would be
+ a fit punishment for knaves like you. I warn you, if you ever address or
+ in any way molest this lady again, you won't get off so easily."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he turned and offered his arm to Nellie, who was leaning against the
+ wall in a half-fainting state. Not a word was spoken until they emerged
+ from the lane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No one knows of this but ourselves, Mistress Nellie, and you will never
+ hear of it from us. Glad indeed I am that I have saved you from the misery
+ and ruin that must have resulted from your listening to that plausible
+ scoundrel. Go quietly upstairs. We will wait here till we are sure that
+ you have gone safely into your room; then we will follow. I doubt not that
+ you are angry with me now, but in time you will feel that you have been
+ saved from a great danger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door was not locked. He lifted the latch silently, and held the door
+ open for her to pass in. Then he closed it again, and turned to the two
+ men who followed them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This has been a good night's work, John."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That has it. I don't think that young spark will be coming after City
+ maidens again. Well, it has been a narrow escape for her. It would have
+ broken the Captain's heart if she had gone in that way. What strange
+ things women are! I have always thought Mistress Nellie as sensible a girl
+ as one would want to see. Given a little over-much, perhaps, to thinking
+ of the fashion of her dress, but that was natural enough, seeing how
+ pretty she is and how much she is made of; and yet she is led, by a few
+ soft speeches from a man she knows nothing of, to run away from home, and
+ leave father, and mother, and all. Well, Matthew, lad, we sha'n't want any
+ more watching. You have done a big service to the master, though he will
+ never know it. I know I can trust you to keep a stopper on your jaws.
+ Don't you let a soul know of this&mdash;not even your wife."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You trust me, mate," the man replied. "My wife is a good soul, but her
+ tongue runs nineteen to the dozen, and you might as well shout a thing out
+ at Paul's Cross as drop it into her ear. I think my back will be well
+ enough for me to come to work again to-morrow," he added, with a laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right, mate. I shall be glad to have you again, for the chap who has
+ been in your place is a landsman, and he don't know a marling-spike from
+ an anchor. Good-night, mate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Master Cyril," he went on, as the sailor walked away, "I don't
+ think there ever was such a good wind as that which blew you here. First
+ of all you saved Captain Dave's fortune, and now you save his daughter. I
+ look on Captain Dave as being pretty nigh the same as myself, seeing as I
+ have been with him man and boy for over thirty years, and I feel what you
+ have done for him just as if you had done it for me. I am only a rough
+ sailor-man, and I don't know how to put it in words, but I feel just full
+ up with a cargo of thankfulness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is all right," Cyril said, holding out his hand, which John Wilkes
+ shook with a heartiness that was almost painful. "Captain Dave offered me
+ a home when I was alone without a friend in London, and I am glad indeed
+ that I have been able to render him service in return. I myself have done
+ little enough, though I do not say that the consequences have not been
+ important. It has been just taking a little trouble and keeping a few
+ watches&mdash;a thing not worth talking about one way or the other. I hope
+ this will do Mistress Nellie good. She is a nice girl, but too fond of
+ admiration, and inclined to think that she is meant for higher things than
+ to marry a London citizen. I think to-night's work will cure her of that.
+ This fellow evidently made himself out to her to be a nobleman of the
+ Court. Now she sees that he is neither a nobleman nor a gentleman, but a
+ ruffian who took advantage of her vanity and inexperience, and that she
+ would have done better to have jumped down the well in the yard than to
+ have put herself in his power. Now we can go up to bed. There is no more
+ probability of our waking the Captain than there has been on other nights;
+ but mind, if we should do so, you stick to the story we agreed on, that
+ you thought there was someone by the gate in the lane again, and so called
+ me to go down with you to investigate, not thinking it worth while to
+ rouse up the Captain on what might be a false alarm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything remained perfectly quiet as they made their way upstairs to
+ their rooms as silently as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where is Nellie?" Captain Dave asked, when they assembled at breakfast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She is not well," his wife replied, "I went to her room just now and
+ found that she was still a-bed. She said that she had a bad headache, and
+ I fear that she is going to have a fever, for her face is pale and her
+ eyes red and swollen, just as if she had been well-nigh crying them out of
+ her head; her hands are hot and her pulse fast. Directly I have had
+ breakfast I shall make her some camomile tea, and if that does not do her
+ good I shall send for the doctor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do so, wife, without delay. Why, the girl has never ailed a day for
+ years! What can have come to her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She says it is only a bad headache&mdash;that all she wants is to be left
+ alone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes; that is all very well, but if she does not get better soon she
+ must be seen to. They say that there were several cases last week of that
+ plague that has been doing so much harm in foreign parts, and if that is
+ so it behoves us to be very careful, and see that any illness is attended
+ to without delay."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't think that there is any cause for alarm," his wife said quietly.
+ "The child has got a headache and is a little feverish, but there is no
+ occasion whatever for thinking that it is anything more. There is nothing
+ unusual in a girl having a headache, but Nellie has had such good health
+ that if she had a prick in the finger you would think it was serious."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By the way, John," Captain Dave said suddenly, "did you hear any noise in
+ the lane last night? Your room is at the back of the house, and you were
+ more likely to have heard it than I was. I have just seen one of the
+ watch, and he tells me that there was a fray there last night, for there
+ is a patch of blood and marks of a scuffle. It was up at the other end.
+ There is some mystery about it, he thinks, for he says that one of his
+ mates last night saw a sedan chair escorted by three men turn into the
+ lane from Fenchurch Street just before ten o'clock, and one of the
+ neighbours says that just after that hour he heard a disturbance and a
+ clashing of swords there. On looking out, he saw something dark that might
+ have been a chair standing there, and several men engaged in a scuffle. It
+ seemed soon over, and directly afterwards three people came down the lane
+ this way. Then he fancied that someone got into the chair, which was
+ afterwards carried out into Fenchurch Street."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did hear something that sounded like a quarrel or a fray," John Wilkes
+ said, "but there is nothing unusual about that. As everything was soon
+ quiet again, I gave no further thought to it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, it seems a curious affair, John. However, it is the business of the
+ City watch and not mine, so we need not bother ourselves about it. I am
+ glad to see you have got Matthew at work again this morning. He tells me
+ that he thinks he has fairly got over that sprain in his back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII &mdash; THE CAPTAIN'S YARN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mindful of the fact that this affair had added a new enemy to those he had
+ acquired by the break-up of the Black Gang, Cyril thought it as well to go
+ round and give notice to the two traders whose books he attended to in the
+ evening, that unless they could arrange for him to do them in the daytime
+ he must give up the work altogether. Both preferred the former
+ alternative, for they recognised the advantage they had derived from his
+ work, and that at a rate of pay for which they could not have obtained the
+ services of any scrivener in the City.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was three or four days before Nellie Dowsett made her appearance at the
+ general table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can't make out what ails the girl," her mother said, on the previous
+ evening. "The fever speedily left her, as I told you, but she is weak and
+ languid, and seems indisposed to talk."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She will soon get over that, my dear," Captain Dave said. "Girls are not
+ like men. I have seen them on board ship. One day they are laughing and
+ fidgeting about like wild things, the next day they are poor, woebegone
+ creatures. If she gets no better in a few days, I will see when my old
+ friend, Jim Carroll, is starting in his brig for Yarmouth, and will run
+ down with her myself&mdash;and of course with you, wife, if you will go&mdash;and
+ stay there a few days while he is unloading and filling up again. The
+ sea-air will set her up again, I warrant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at this time of year," Dame Dowsett said firmly. "With these bitter
+ winds it is no time for a lass to go a-sailing; and they say that Yarmouth
+ is a great deal colder than we are here, being exposed to the east winds."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, well, Dame, then we will content ourselves with a run in the hoy
+ down to Margate. If we choose well the wind and tide we can start from
+ here in the morning and maybe reach there late in the evening, or, if not,
+ the next morning to breakfast. Or if you think that too far we will stop
+ at Sheerness, where we can get in two tides easily enough if the wind be
+ fair."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That would be better, David; but it were best to see how she goes on. It
+ may be, as you say, that she will shortly gain her strength and spirits
+ again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was evident, when Nellie entered the room at breakfast-time the next
+ morning, that her mother's reports had not been exaggerated. She looked,
+ indeed, as if recovering from a severe illness, and when she said
+ good-morning to her father her voice trembled and her eyes filled with
+ tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tut, tut, lass! This will never do. I shall soon hardly own you for my
+ Nellie. We shall have to feed you up on capons and wine, child, or send
+ you down to one of the baths for a course of strengthening waters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She smiled faintly, and then turning, gave her hand to Cyril. As she did
+ so, a slight flush of colour came into her cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am heartily glad to see you down again, Mistress Nellie," he said, "and
+ wish you a fair and speedy recovery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall be better presently," she replied, with an effort. "Good-morning,
+ John."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good-morning, Mistress Nellie. Right glad are we to see you down again,
+ for it makes but a dull table without your merry laugh to give an edge to
+ our appetites."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She sat down now, and the others, seeing that it was best to let her alone
+ for a while, chatted gaily together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no talk in the City but of the war, Cyril," the Captain said
+ presently. "They say that the Dutch make sure of eating us up, but they
+ won't find it as easy a job as they fancy. The Duke of York is to command
+ the Fleet. They say that Prince Rupert will be second. To my mind they
+ ought to have entrusted the whole matter to him. He proved himself as
+ brave a captain at sea as he was on land, and I will warrant he would lead
+ his ships into action as gallantly as he rode at the head of his Cavaliers
+ on many a stricken field. The ships are fitting out in all haste, and they
+ are gathering men at every sea-port. I should say they will have no lack
+ of hands, for there are many ships laid up, that at other times trade with
+ Holland, and Dantzic, and Dunkirk, and many a bold young sailor who will
+ be glad to try whether he can fight as stoutly against the Dutch under
+ York and Rupert as his father did under Blake."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For my part," Cyril said, "I cannot understand it; for it seems to me
+ that the English and Dutch have been fighting for the last year. I have
+ been too busy to read the Journal, and have not been in the way of hearing
+ the talk of the coffeehouses and taverns; but, beyond that it is some
+ dispute about the colonies, I know little of the matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am not greatly versed in it myself, lad. Nellie here reads the Journal,
+ and goes abroad more than any of us, and should be able to tell us
+ something about it. Now, girl, can't you do something to set us right in
+ this matter, for I like not to be behind my neighbours, though I am such a
+ stay-at-home, having, as I thank the Lord, much happiness here, and no
+ occasion to go out to seek it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was much discourse about it, father, the evening I went to Dame
+ King's. There were several gentlemen there who had trade with the East,
+ and one of them held shares in the English Company trading thither. After
+ supper was over, they discoursed more fully on the matter than was
+ altogether pleasing to some of us, who would much rather that, as we had
+ hoped, we might have dancing or singing. I could see that Dame King
+ herself was somewhat put out that her husband should have, without her
+ knowing of his intention, brought in these gentlemen. Still, the matter of
+ their conversation was new to us, and we became at last so mightily
+ interested in it that we listened to the discourse without bemoaning
+ ourselves that we had lost the amusement we looked for. I know I wished at
+ the time that you had been there. I say not that I can repeat all that I
+ heard, but as I had before read some of the matters spoken of in the
+ Journal, I could follow what the gentlemen said more closely. Soon after
+ the coming of the King to the throne the friendship between us and the
+ Spaniards, that had been weakened during the mastership of Cromwell, was
+ renewed, and they gave our ships many advantages at their ports, while, on
+ the other hand, they took away the privileges the Dutch had enjoyed there,
+ and thus our commerce with Spain increased, while that of the Dutch
+ diminished."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is certainly true, Nellie," her father said. "We have three ships
+ sailing through the Mediterranean now to one that sailed there ten years
+ ago, and doubtless the Dutch must have suffered by the increase in our
+ trade."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then he said that, as we had obtained the Island of Bombay in the East
+ Indies and the City of Tangier in Africa as the dowry of the Queen, and
+ had received the Island of Poleron for our East India Company by the
+ treaty with Holland, our commerce everywhere increased, and raised their
+ jealousy higher and higher. There was nothing in this of which complaint
+ could be made by the Dutch Government, but nevertheless they gave
+ encouragement to their East and West India Companies to raise trouble.
+ Their East India Company refused to hand over the Island, and laid great
+ limitations as to the places at which our merchants might trade in India.
+ The other Company acted in the same manner, and lawlessly took possession
+ of Cape Coast Castle, belonging to our English Company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Duke of York, who was patron and governor of our African Company,
+ sent Sir Robert Holmes with four frigates to Guinea to make reprisals. He
+ captured a place from the Dutch and named it James's Fort, and then,
+ proceeding to the river Gambia, he turned out the Dutch traders there and
+ built a fort. A year ago, as the Dutch still held Cape Coast Castle, Sir
+ Robert was sent out again with orders to take it by force, and on the way
+ he overhauled a Dutch ship and found she carried a letter of secret
+ instructions from the Dutch Government to the West India Company to take
+ the English Fort at Cormantin. Seeing that the Hollanders, although
+ professing friendship, were thus treacherously inclined, he judged himself
+ justified in exceeding the commission he had received, and on his way
+ south he touched at Cape Verde. There he first captured two Dutch ships
+ and then attacked their forts on the Island of Gorse and captured them,
+ together with a ship lying under their guns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the fort he found a great quantity of goods ready to be shipped. He
+ loaded his own vessels, and those that he had captured, with the
+ merchandise, and carried it to Sierra Leone. Then he attacked the Dutch
+ fort of St. George del Mena, the strongest on the coast, but failed there;
+ but he soon afterwards captured Cape Coast Castle, though, as the
+ gentlemen said, a mightily strong place. Then he sailed across to America,
+ and, as you know, captured the Dutch Settlements of New Netherlands, and
+ changed the name into that of New York. He did this not so much out of
+ reprisal for the misconduct of the Dutch in Africa, but because the land
+ was ours by right, having been discovered by the Cabots and taken
+ possession of in the name of King Henry VII., and our title always
+ maintained until the Dutch seized it thirty years ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then the Dutch sent orders to De Ruyter, who commanded the fleet which
+ was in the Mediterranean, to sail away privately and to make reprisals on
+ the Coast of Guinea and elsewhere. He first captured several of our
+ trading forts, among them that of Cormantin, taking great quantities of
+ goods belonging to our Company; he then sailed to Barbadoes, where he was
+ beaten off by the forts. Then he captured twenty of our ships off
+ Newfoundland, and so returned to Holland, altogether doing damage, as the
+ House of Commons told His Majesty, to the extent of eight hundred thousand
+ pounds. All this time the Dutch had been secretly preparing for war, which
+ they declared in January, which has forced us to do the same, although we
+ delayed a month in hopes that some accommodation might be arrived at. I
+ think, father, that is all that he told us, though there were many details
+ that I do not remember."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And very well told, lass, truly. I wonder that your giddy head should
+ have taken in so much matter. Of course, now you tell them over, I have
+ heard these things before&mdash;the wrong that the Dutch did our Company
+ by seizing their post at Cape Coast, and the reprisals that Sir Robert
+ Holmes took upon them with our Company's ships&mdash;but they made no
+ great mark on my memory, for I was just taking over my father's work when
+ the first expedition took place. At any rate, none can say that we have
+ gone into this war unjustly, seeing that the Dutch began it, altogether
+ without cause, by first attacking our trading posts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It seems to me, Captain Dave," John Wilkes said, "that it has been mighty
+ like the war that our English buccaneers waged against the Spaniards in
+ the West Indies, while the two nations were at peace at home."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is curious," Cyril said, "that the trouble begun in Africa should have
+ shifted to the other side of the Atlantic."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, lad; just as that first trouble was at last fought out in the English
+ Channel, off the coast of France, so this is likely to be decided in
+ well-nigh the same waters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The gentlemen, the other night, were all of opinion," Nellie said, "that
+ the matter would never have come to such a head had it not been that De
+ Witt, who is now the chief man in Holland, belongs to the French party
+ there, and has been urged on by King Louis, for his own interest, to make
+ war with us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That may well be, Nellie. In all our English wars France has ever had a
+ part either openly or by intrigues. France never seems to be content with
+ attending to her own business, but is ever meddling with her neighbours',
+ and, if not fighting herself, trying to set them by the ears against each
+ other. If I were a bit younger, and had not lost my left flipper, I would
+ myself volunteer for the service. As for Master Cyril here, I know he is
+ burning to lay aside the pen and take to the sword."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is so, Captain Dave. As you know, I only took up the pen to keep me
+ until I was old enough to use a sword. I have been two years at it now,
+ and I suppose it will be as much longer before I can think of entering the
+ service of one of the Protestant princes; but as soon as I am fit to do
+ so, I shall get an introduction and be off; but I would tenfold rather
+ fight for my own country, and would gladly sail in the Fleet, though I
+ went but as a ship's boy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is the right spirit, Master Cyril," John Wilkes exclaimed. "I would
+ go myself if the Captain could spare me and they would take such a
+ battered old hulk."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I couldn't spare you, John," Captain Dave said. "I have been mighty near
+ making a mess of it, even with you as chief mate, and I might as well shut
+ up shop altogether if you were to leave me. I should miss you, too,
+ Cyril," he went on, stretching his arm across the table to shake hands
+ with the lad. "You have proved a real friend and a true; but were there a
+ chance of your going as an officer, I would not balk you, even if I could
+ do so. It is but natural that a lad of spirit should speak and think as
+ you do; besides, the war may not last for long, and when you come back,
+ and the ships are paid off, you would soon wipe off the arrears of work,
+ and get the books into ship-shape order. But, work or no work, that room
+ of yours will always stand ready for you while I live, and there will
+ always be a plate for you on this table."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you, Captain Dave. You always overrate my services, and forget that
+ they are but the consequence of the kindness that you have shown to me.
+ But I have no intention of going. It was but a passing thought. I have but
+ one friend who could procure me a berth as a volunteer, and as it is to
+ him I must look for an introduction to some foreign prince, I would not go
+ to him twice for a favour, especially as I have no sort of claim on his
+ kindness. To go as a cabin boy would be to go with men under my own
+ condition, and although I do not shirk hard work and rough usage, I should
+ not care for them in such fashion. Moreover, I am doing work which, even
+ without your hospitality, would suffice to keep me comfortably, and if I
+ went away, though but for a month, I might find that those for whom I work
+ had engaged other assistance. Spending naught, I am laying by money for
+ the time when I shall have to travel at my own expense and to provide
+ myself necessaries, and, maybe, to keep myself for a while until I can
+ procure employment. I have the prospect that, by the end of another two
+ years, I shall have gathered a sufficient store for all my needs, and I
+ should be wrong to throw myself out of employment merely to embark on an
+ adventure, and so to make a break, perhaps a long one, in my plans."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't you worry yourself on that score," Captain Dave said warmly, and
+ then checked himself. "It will be time to talk about that when the time
+ comes. But you are right, lad. I like a man who steadfastly holds on the
+ way he has chosen, and will not turn to the right or left. There is not
+ much that a man cannot achieve if he keeps his aim steadily in view. Why,
+ Cyril, if you said you had made up your mind to be Lord Mayor of London, I
+ would wager that you would some day be elected."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall never set my eyes in that direction, nor do I think the thing I
+ have set myself to do will ever be in my power&mdash;that is, to buy back
+ my father's estate; but so long as I live I shall keep that in view."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "More unlikely things have happened, lad. You have got first to rise to be
+ a General; then, what with your pay and your share in the sack of a city
+ or two, and in other ways, you may come home with a purse full enough even
+ for that. But it is time for us to be going down below. Matthew will think
+ that we have forgotten him altogether."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another fortnight passed. Nellie had, to a considerable extent, recovered
+ from the shock that she had suffered, but her manner was still quiet and
+ subdued, her sallies were less lively, and her father noticed, with some
+ surprise, that she no longer took any great interest in the gossip he
+ retailed of the gay doings of the Court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can't think what has come over the girl," he said to his wife. "She
+ seems well in health again, but she is changed a good deal, somehow. She
+ is gentler and softer. I think she is all the better for it, but I miss
+ her merry laugh and her way of ordering things about, as if her pleasure
+ only were to be consulted."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think she is very much improved," Mrs. Dowsett said decidedly; "though
+ I can no more account for it than you can. She never used to have any care
+ about the household, and now she assists me in my work, and is in all
+ respects dutiful and obedient, and is not for ever bent upon gadding about
+ as she was before. I only hope it will continue so, for, in truth, I have
+ often sighed over the thought that she would make but a poor wife for an
+ honest citizen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tut, tut, wife. It has never been as bad as that. Girls will be girls,
+ and if they are a little vain of their good looks, that will soften down
+ in time, when they get to have the charge of a household. You yourself,
+ dame, were not so staid when I first wooed you, as you are now; and I
+ think you had your own little share of vanity, as was natural enough in
+ the prettiest girl in Plymouth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Nellie was in the room Cyril did his best to save her from being
+ obliged to take part in the conversation, by inducing Captain Dave to tell
+ him stories of some of his adventures at sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You were saying, Captain Dave, that you had had several engagements with
+ the Tunis Rovers," he said one evening. "Were they ever near taking you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They did take me once, lad, and that without an engagement; but,
+ fortunately, I was not very long a prisoner. It was not a pleasant time
+ though, John, was it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was not, Captain Dave. I have been in sore danger of wreck several
+ times, and in three big sea-fights; but never did I feel so out of heart
+ as when I was lying, bound hand and foot, on the ballast in the hold of
+ that corsair. No true sailor is afraid of being killed; but the thought
+ that one might be all one's life a slave among the cruel heathen was
+ enough to take the stiffness out of any man's courage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But how was it that you were taken without an engagement, Captain Dave?
+ And how did you make your escape?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, lad, it was the carelessness of my first mate that did it; but as
+ he paid for his fault with his life let us say naught against him. He was
+ a handsome, merry young fellow, and had shipped as second mate, but my
+ first had died of fever in the Levant, and of course he got the step,
+ though all too young for the responsibility. We had met with some bad
+ weather when south of Malta, and had had a heavy gale for three days,
+ during which time we lost our main topmast, and badly strained the mizzen.
+ The weather abated when we were off Pantellaria, which is a bare rock
+ rising like a mountain peak out of the sea, and with only one place where
+ a landing can be safely effected. As the gale had blown itself out, and it
+ was likely we should have a spell of settled weather, I decided to anchor
+ close in to the Island, and to repair damages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We were hard at work for two days. All hands had had a stiff time of it,
+ and the second night, having fairly repaired damages, I thought to give
+ the crew a bit of a rest, and, not dreaming of danger, ordered that half
+ each watch might remain below. John Wilkes was acting as my second mate.
+ Pettigrew took the first watch; John had the middle watch; and then the
+ other came up again. I turned out once or twice, but everything was quiet&mdash;we
+ had not seen a sail all day. There was a light breeze blowing, but no
+ chance of its increasing, and as we were well sheltered in the only spot
+ where the anchorage was good, I own that I did not impress upon Pettigrew
+ the necessity for any particular vigilance. Anyhow, just as morning was
+ breaking I was woke by a shout. I ran out on deck, but as I did so there
+ was a rush of dark figures, and I was knocked down and bound before I knew
+ what had happened. As soon as I could think it over, it was clear enough.
+ The Moor had been coming into the anchorage, and, catching sight of us in
+ the early light, had run alongside and boarded us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The watch, of course, must have been asleep. There was not a shot fired
+ nor a drop of blood shed, for those on deck had been seized and bound
+ before they could spring to their feet, and the crew had all been caught
+ in their bunks. It was bitter enough. There was the vessel gone, and the
+ cargo, and with them my savings of twenty years' hard work, and the
+ prospect of slavery for life. The men were all brought aft and laid down
+ side by side. Young Pettigrew was laid next to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I wish to heaven, captain,' he said, 'you had got a pistol and your hand
+ free, and would blow out my brains for me. It is all my fault, and hanging
+ at the yard-arm is what I deserve. I never thought there was the slightest
+ risk&mdash;not a shadow of it&mdash;and feeling a bit dozy, sat down for
+ five minutes' caulk. Seeing that, no doubt the men thought they might do
+ the same; and this is what has come of it. I must have slept half an hour
+ at least, for there was no sail in sight when I went off, and this Moor
+ must have come round the point and made us out after that.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The corsair was lying alongside of us, her shrouds lashed to ours. There
+ was a long jabbering among the Moors when they had taken off our hatches
+ and seen that we were pretty well full up with cargo; then, after a bit,
+ we were kicked, and they made signs for us to get on our feet and to cross
+ over into their ship. The crew were sent down into the forward hold, and
+ some men went down with them to tie them up securely. John Wilkes,
+ Pettigrew, and myself were shoved down into a bit of a place below the
+ stern cabin. Our legs were tied, as well as our arms. The trap was shut,
+ and there we were in the dark. Of course I told Pettigrew that, though he
+ had failed in his duty, and it had turned out badly, he wasn't to be
+ blamed as if he had gone to sleep in sight of an enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I had never given the Moors a thought myself,' I said, 'and it was not
+ to be expected that you would. But no sailor, still less an officer, ought
+ to sleep on his watch, even if his ship is anchored in a friendly harbour,
+ and you are to blame that you gave way to drowsiness. Still, even if you
+ hadn't, it might have come to the same thing in the long run, for the
+ corsair is a large one, and might have taken us even if you had made her
+ out as she rounded the point.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, in spite of all I could say to cheer him, he took it to heart badly,
+ and was groaning and muttering to himself when they left us in the dark,
+ so I said to him,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Look here, lad, the best way to retrieve the fault you have committed is
+ to try and get us out of the scrape. Set your brains to work, and let us
+ talk over what had best be done. There is no time to be lost, for with a
+ fair wind they can run from here to Tunis in four-and-twenty hours, and
+ once there one may give up all hope. There are all our crew on board this
+ ship. The Moor carried twice as many men as we do, but we may reckon they
+ will have put more than half of them on board our barque; they don't
+ understand her sails as well as they do their own, and will therefore want
+ a strong prize crew on board.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I am ready to do anything, captain,' the young fellow said firmly. 'If
+ you were to give me the word, I would get into their magazine if I could,
+ and blow the ship into the air.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Well, I don't know that I will give you that order, Pettigrew. To be a
+ heathen's slave is bad, but, at any rate, I would rather try that life for
+ a bit than strike my colours at once. Now let us think it over. In the
+ first place we have to get rid of these ropes; then we have to work our
+ way forward to the crew; and then to get on deck and fight for it. It is a
+ stiff job, look at it which way one will, but at any rate it will be
+ better to be doing something&mdash;even if we find at last that we can't
+ get out of this dog-kennel&mdash;than to lie here doing nothing.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After some talk, we agreed that it was not likely the Moors would come
+ down to us for a long time, for they might reckon that we could hold on
+ without food or water easy enough until they got to Tunis; having agreed
+ as to that point, we set to work to get our ropes loose. Wriggling
+ wouldn't do it, though we tried until the cords cut into our flesh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At last Pettigrew said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'What a fool I am! I have got my knife hanging from a lanyard round my
+ neck. It is under my blouse, so they did not notice it when they turned my
+ pockets out.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was a long job to get at that knife. At last I found the string behind
+ his neck, and, getting hold of it with my teeth, pulled till the knife
+ came up to his throat. Then John got it in his teeth, and the first part
+ of the job was done. The next was easy enough. John held the handle of the
+ knife in his teeth and Pettigrew got hold of the blade in his, and between
+ them they made a shift to open it; then, after a good deal of trouble,
+ Pettigrew shifted himself till he managed to get the knife in his hands. I
+ lay across him and worked myself backwards and forwards till the blade cut
+ through the rope at my wrist; then, in two more minutes, we were free.
+ Then we felt about, and found that the boarding between us and the main
+ hold was old and shaky, and, with the aid of the knife and of our three
+ shoulders, we made a shift at last to wrench one of the boards from its
+ place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pettigrew, who was slightest, crawled through, and we soon got another
+ plank down. The hold was half full of cargo, which, no doubt, they had
+ taken out of some ship or other. We made our way forward till we got to
+ the bulkhead, which, like the one we had got through, was but a make-shift
+ sort of affair, with room to put your fingers between the planks. So we
+ hailed the men and told them how we had got free, and that if they didn't
+ want to work all their lives as slaves they had best do the same. They
+ were ready enough, you may be sure, and, finding a passage between the
+ planks wider in one place than the rest, we passed the knife through to
+ them, and told them how to set about cutting the rope. They were a deal
+ quicker over it than we had been, for in our place there had been no
+ height where we could stand upright, but they were able to do so. Two men,
+ standing back to back and one holding the knife, made quick work of
+ cutting the rope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We had plenty of strength now, and were not long in getting down a couple
+ of planks. The first thing was to make a regular overhaul of the cargo&mdash;as
+ well as we could do it, without shifting things and making a noise&mdash;to
+ look for weapons or for anything that would come in handy for the fight.
+ Not a thing could we find, but we came upon a lot of kegs that we knew, by
+ their feel, were powder. If there had been arms and we could have got up,
+ we should have done it at once, trusting to seize the ship before the
+ other could come up to her help. But without arms it would be madness to
+ try in broad daylight, and we agreed to wait till night, and to lie down
+ again where we were before, putting the ropes round our legs again and our
+ hands behind our backs, so that, if they did look in, everything should
+ seem secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'We shall have plenty of time,' one of the sailors said, 'for they have
+ coiled a big hawser down on the hatch.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When we got back to our lazaret, we tried the hatch by which we had been
+ shoved down, but the three of us couldn't move it any more than if it had
+ been solid stone. We had a goodish talk over it, and it was clear that the
+ hatchway of the main hold was our only chance of getting out; and we might
+ find that a tough job.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'If we can't do it in any other way,' Pettigrew said, 'I should say we
+ had best bring enough bales and things to fill this place up to within a
+ foot of the top; then on that we might put a keg of powder, bore a hole in
+ it, and make a slow match that would blow the cabin overhead into
+ splinters, while the bales underneath it would prevent the force of the
+ explosion blowing her bottom out.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We agreed that, if the worst came to the worst, we would try this, and
+ having settled that, went back to have a look at the main hatch. Feeling
+ about round it, we found the points of the staple on which the hatchway
+ bar worked above; they were not fastened with nuts as they would have been
+ with us, but were simply turned over and clinched. We had no means of
+ straightening them out, but we could cut through the woodwork round them.
+ Setting to work at that, we took it by turns till we could see the light
+ through the wood; then we left it to finish after dark. All this time we
+ knew we were under sail by the rippling of the water along the sides. The
+ men on board were evidently in high delight at their easy capture, and
+ kicked up so much noise that there was no fear of their hearing any slight
+ stir we made below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very carefully we brought packages and bales under the hatchway, till we
+ built up a sort of platform about four feet below it. We reckoned that,
+ standing as thick as we could there, and all lifting together, we could
+ make sure of hoisting the hatchway up, and could then spring out in a
+ moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pettigrew still stuck to his plan, and talked us into carrying it out,
+ both under the fore and aft hatches, pointing out that the two explosions
+ would scare the crew out of their wits, that some would be killed, and
+ many jump overboard in their fright. We came to see that the scheme was
+ really a good one, so set all the crew to carry out the business, and
+ they, working with stockinged feet, built up a platform under their hatch,
+ as well as in our den aft. Then we made holes in two of the kegs of
+ powder, and, shaking a little out, damped it, and rubbed it into two
+ strips of cotton. Putting an end of a slow match into each of the holes,
+ we laid the kegs in their places and waited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We made two other fuses, so that a man could go forward, and another aft,
+ to fire them both together. Two of the men were told off for this job, and
+ the rest of us gathered under the main hatch, for we had settled now that
+ if we heard them making any move to open the hatches we would fire the
+ powder at once, whatever hour it was. In order to be ready, we cut deeper
+ into the woodwork round the staple till there was but the thickness of a
+ card remaining, and we could tell by this how light it was above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It don't take long to tell you, but all this had taken us a good many
+ hours; and so baked were we by the heat down below, and parched by thirst,
+ that it was as much as I could do to persuade the men to wait until
+ nightfall. At last we saw the light in the cut fade and darken. Again the
+ men wanted to be at work, but I pointed out that if we waited till the
+ crew had laid down on the deck, we might carry it through without losing a
+ life, but if they were all awake, some of them would be sure to come at us
+ with their weapons, and, unarmed as we were, might do us much harm. Still,
+ though I succeeded in keeping the men quiet, I felt it was hard work to
+ put a stopper on my own impatience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At last even John here spoke up for action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I expect those who mean to sleep are off by this time,' he said. 'As to
+ reckoning upon them all going off, there ain't no hope of it; they will
+ sit and jabber all night. They have made a good haul, and have taken a
+ stout ship with a full hold, and five-and-twenty stout slaves, and that
+ without losing a man. There won't be any sleep for most of them. I reckon
+ it is two bells now. I do think, Captain, we might as well begin, for
+ human nature can't stand this heat and thirst much longer.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'All right, John,' I said. 'Now, lads, remember that when the first
+ explosion comes&mdash;for we can't reckon on the two slow matches burning
+ just the same time&mdash;we all heave together till we find the hatch
+ lifts; then, when the second comes, we chuck it over and leap out. If you
+ see a weapon, catch it up, but don't waste time looking about, but go at
+ them with your fists. They will be scared pretty well out of their senses,
+ and you will not be long before you all get hold of weapons of some sort.
+ Now, Pettigrew, shove your blade up through the wood and cut round the
+ staple. Now, Jack Brown, get out that tinder-box you said you had about
+ you, and get a spark going.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Three or four clicks were heard as the sailor struck his flint against
+ the steel lid of the tinder-box.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'All right, yer honour,' he said, 'I have got the spark.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then the two hands we had given the slow matches to, lit them at the
+ tinder-box, and went fore and aft, while as many of the rest of us as
+ could crowded under the hatch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Are you ready, fore and aft?' I asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The two men hailed in reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Light the matches, then, and come here.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I suppose it was not above a minute, but it seemed ten before there was a
+ tremendous explosion aft. The ship shook from stem to stern. There was a
+ moment's silence, and then came yells and screams mixed with the sound of
+ timbers and wreckage falling on the deck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Now lift,' I said. 'But not too high. That is enough&mdash;she is free.
+ Wait for the other.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was a rush of feet overhead as the Moors ran forward. Then came the
+ other explosion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Off with her, lads!' I shouted, and in a moment we flung the hatch off
+ and leapt out with a cheer. There was no fighting to speak of. The
+ officers had been killed by the first explosion under their cabin, and
+ many of the men had either been blown overboard or lay crushed under the
+ timber and wreckage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The second explosion had been even more destructive, for it happened just
+ as the crew, in their terror, had rushed forward. Many of those unhurt had
+ sprung overboard at once, and as we rushed up most of the others did the
+ same. There was no difficulty about arms, for the deck was strewn with
+ weapons. Few of us, however, stopped to pick one up, but, half mad with
+ rage and thirst, rushed forward at the Moors. That finished them; and
+ before we got to them the last had sprung overboard. There was a rush on
+ the part of the men to the scuttle butt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Take one drink, lads,' I shouted, 'and then to the buckets.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It took us a quarter of an hour's hard work to put out the flames, and it
+ was lucky the powder had blown so much of the decks up that we were
+ enabled to get at the fire without difficulty, and so extinguish it before
+ it got any great hold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As soon as we had got it out I called a muster. There was only one
+ missing;&mdash;it was Pettigrew, he being the first to leap out and rush
+ aft. There had been but one shot fired by the Moors. One fellow, as he
+ leapt on to the rail, drew his pistol from his belt and fired before he
+ sprang overboard. In the excitement and confusion no one had noticed
+ whether the shot took effect, for two or three men had stumbled and fallen
+ over fragments of timber or bodies as we rushed aft. But now we searched,
+ and soon came on the poor young fellow. The ball had struck him fair on
+ the forehead, and he had fallen dead without a word or a cry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was, however, no time to grieve. We had got to re-capture the
+ barque, which had been but a cable's length away when we rushed on deck;
+ while we had been fighting the fire she had sailed on, regardless of the
+ shrieks and shouts of the wretches who had sprung overboard from us. But
+ she was still near us; both vessels had been running before the wind, for
+ I had sent John Wilkes to the tiller the moment that we got possession of
+ the corsair, and the barque was but about a quarter of a mile ahead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The wind was light, and we were running along at four knots an hour. The
+ Moors on board the <i>Kate</i> had, luckily, been too scared by the
+ explosion to think of getting one of the guns aft and peppering us while
+ we were engaged in putting out the fire; and indeed, they could not have
+ done us much harm if they had, for the high fo'castle hid us from their
+ view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As soon as we had found Pettigrew's body and laid it on the hatch we had
+ thrown off, I went aft to John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Are we gaining on her, John?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'No; she has drawn away a little. But this craft is not doing her best. I
+ expect they wanted to keep close to the barque, and so kept her sheets in.
+ If you square the sails, captain, we shall soon be upon her.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That was quickly done, and then the first thing was to see that the men
+ were all armed. We could have got a gun forward, but I did not want to
+ damage the <i>Kate</i>, and we could soon see that we were closing on her.
+ We shoved a bag of musket-balls into each cannon, so as to sweep her decks
+ as we came alongside, for we knew that her crew was a good deal stronger
+ than we were. Still, no one had any doubt as to the result, and it was
+ soon evident that the Moors had got such a scare from the fate of their
+ comrades that they had no stomach for fighting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'They are lowering the boats,' John shouted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'All the better,' I said. 'They would fight like rats caught in a trap if
+ we came up to them, and though we are men enough to capture her, we might
+ lose half our number.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As soon as the boats reached the water they were all pulled up to the
+ starboard side, and then the helm was put down, and the barque came round
+ till she was broadside on to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Down with your helm, John Wilkes!' I shouted. 'Hard down, man!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "John hesitated, for he had thought that I should have gone round to the
+ other side of her and so have caught all the boats; but, in truth, I was
+ so pleased at the thought of getting the craft back again that I was
+ willing to let the poor villains go, since they were of a mind to do so
+ without giving us trouble. We had punished them enough, and the shrieks
+ and cries of those left behind to drown were ringing in my ears then. So
+ we brought the corsair up quietly by the side of the <i>Kate</i>, lashed
+ her there, and then, with a shout of triumph, sprang on board the old
+ barky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not a Moor was left on board. The boats were four or five hundred yards
+ away, rowing at the top of their speed. The men would have run to the
+ guns, but I shouted,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Let them go, lads. We have punished them heavily enough; we have taken
+ their ship, and sent half of them to Eternity. Let them take the tale back
+ to Tunis how a British merchantman re-captured their ship. Now set to work
+ to get some of the sail off both craft, and then, when we have got things
+ snug, we will splice the main brace and have a meal.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no more to tell. We carried the rover into Gibraltar and sold
+ her and her cargo there. It brought in a good round sum, and, except for
+ the death of Pettigrew, we had no cause to regret the corsair having taken
+ us by surprise that night off Pantellaria."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That was an exciting business, indeed, Captain Dave," Cyril said, when
+ the Captain brought his story to a conclusion. "If it had not been for
+ your good fortune in finding those kegs of powder, and Pettigrew's idea of
+ using them as he did, you and John might now, if you had been alive, have
+ been working as slaves among the Moors."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, lad. And not the least lucky thing was that Pettigrew's knife and
+ Jack Brown's tinder-box had escaped the notice of the Moors. Jack had it
+ in an inside pocket sewn into his shirt so as to keep it dry. It was a
+ lesson to me, and for the rest of the time I was at sea I always carried a
+ knife, with a lanyard round my neck, and stowed away in an inside pocket
+ of my shirt, together with a tinder-box. They are two as useful things as
+ a sailor can have about him, for, if cast upon a desert shore after a
+ wreck, a man with a knife and tinder-box may make shift to live, when,
+ without them, he and his comrades might freeze to death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX &mdash; THE FIRE IN THE SAVOY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The next evening John Wilkes returned after an absence of but half an
+ hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, John, you can but have smoked a single pipe! Did you not find your
+ cronies there?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hurried back, Captain, because a man from one of the ships in the Pool
+ landed and said there was a great light in the sky, and that it seemed to
+ him it was either a big fire in the Temple, or in one of the mansions
+ beyond the walls; so methought I would come in and ask Cyril if he would
+ like to go with me to see what was happening."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should like it much, John. I saw a great fire in Holborn just after I
+ came over from France, and a brave sight it was, though very terrible; and
+ I would willingly see one again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took his hat and cloak and was about to be off, when Captain Dave
+ called after him,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Buckle on your sword, lad, and leave your purse behind you. A fire ever
+ attracts thieves and cut-throats, who flock round in hopes of stealing
+ something in the confusion. Besides, as I have told you before, you should
+ never go out after dark without your sword, even were it but to cross the
+ road."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril ran upstairs to his room, buckled on his weapon, and ran down again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Captain is right," John Wilkes said, as he joined him at the door.
+ "After your two adventures, it would be folly for you to go out unarmed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I expect they have forgotten about me long ago," Cyril laughed
+ lightly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know," John Wilkes said seriously. "As to Marner's gang, I think
+ that there is not much fear from them, unless that young rascal Robert and
+ the scoundrel who was with him have returned from Holland; and that they
+ are not likely to do for some time to come. But it would not be in human
+ nature if the man you call John Harvey should take his defeat without
+ trying to pay you back for that wound you gave him, for getting Mistress
+ Nellie out of his hands, and for making him the laughing-stock of his
+ comrades. I tell you that there is scarce an evening that I have gone out
+ but some fellow passes me before I have gone twenty yards, and, as he
+ brushes my sleeve, turns his head to look at me. But yesternight I said to
+ one who so behaved, 'Look here, mate, this is not the first time you have
+ run against me. I warn you that if it happens again I will crack your head
+ with my cudgel.' The fellow went off, muttering and grumbling, but I have
+ no doubt that he and the others, for it certainly was not always the same
+ man, were watching for you. To-night there was no one about, or, if there
+ was, he did not come near me, and it may be that, finding you never leave
+ the house after nightfall, they have decided to give it up for the
+ present. But I thought I heard a footfall lower down the street, just as
+ we came out of the house, and it is like enough that we are followed now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At any rate, they would scarce attack two of us, John, and I should not
+ mind if they did. It is a stab in the back that I am afraid of more than
+ an open quarrel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You may have a better swordsman to deal with next time. The fellow
+ himself would scarcely care to cross swords with you again, but he would
+ have no difficulty in getting half-a-dozen cut-throats from the purlieus
+ of the Temple or Westminster, professional bullies, who are ready to use
+ their swords to those who care to purchase them, and who would cut a
+ throat for a few crowns, without caring a jot whose throat it was. Some of
+ these fellows are disbanded soldiers. Some are men who were ruined in the
+ wars. Some are tavern bullies&mdash;broken men, reckless and quarrelsome
+ gamblers so long as they have a shilling in their pockets, but equally
+ ready to take to the road or to rob a house when their pockets are empty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time they had passed the Exchange into Cheapside. Many people were
+ hurrying in the same direction and wondering where the fire was. Presently
+ one of the Fire Companies, with buckets, ladders, and axes, passed them at
+ a run. Even in Cheapside the glow in the sky ahead could be plainly seen,
+ but it was not until they passed St. Paul's and stood at the top of
+ Ludgate Hill that the flames, shooting up high in the air, were visible.
+ They were almost straight ahead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It must be at the other end of Fleet Street," Cyril said, as they broke
+ into a run.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Farther than that, lad. It must be one of the mansions along the Strand.
+ A fire always looks closer than it is. I have seen a ship in flames that
+ looked scarce a mile away, and yet, sailing with a brisk wind, it took us
+ over an hour to come up to it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crowd became thicker as they approached Temple Bar. The upper windows
+ of the houses were all open, and women were leaning out looking at the
+ sight. From every lane and alley men poured into the street and swelled
+ the hurrying current. They passed through the Bar, expecting to find that
+ the fire was close at hand. They had, however, some distance farther to
+ go, for the fire was at a mansion in the Savoy. Another Fire Company came
+ along when they were within a hundred yards of the spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Join in with them," Cyril said; and he and John Wilkes managed to push
+ their way into the ranks, joining in the shout, "Way there, way! Make room
+ for the buckets!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aided by some of the City watch the Company made its way through the
+ crowd, and hurried down the hill from the Strand into the Savoy. A party
+ of the King's Guard, who had just marched up, kept back the crowd, and,
+ when once in the open space, Cyril and his companion stepped out from the
+ ranks and joined a group of people who had arrived before the constables
+ and soldiers had come up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mansion from which the fire had originated was in flames from top to
+ bottom. The roof had fallen in. Volumes of flame and sparks shot high into
+ the air, threatening the safety of several other houses standing near. The
+ Fire Companies were working their hand-pumps, throwing water on to the
+ doors and woodwork of these houses. Long lines of men were extended down
+ to the edge of the river and passed the buckets backwards and forwards.
+ City officials, gentlemen of the Court, and officers of the troops, moved
+ to and fro shouting directions and superintending the work. From many of
+ the houses the inhabitants were bringing out their furniture and goods,
+ aided by the constables and spectators.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a grand sight," Cyril said, as, with his companion, he took his
+ place in a quiet corner where a projecting portico threw a deep shadow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It will soon be grander still. The wind is taking the sparks and flames
+ westwards, and nothing can save that house over there. Do you see the
+ little jets of flame already bursting through the roof?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The house seems empty. There is not a window open."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It looks so, Cyril, but there may be people asleep at the back. Let us
+ work round and have a look from behind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They turned down an alley, and in a minute or two came out behind the
+ house. There was a garden and some high trees, but it was surrounded by a
+ wall, and they could not see the windows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here, Cyril, I will give you a hoist up. If you stand on my shoulders,
+ you can reach to the top of the wall and pull yourself up. Come along here
+ to where that branch projects over. That's it. Now drop your cloak, and
+ jump on to my back. That is right. Now get on to my shoulders."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril managed to get up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can just touch the top, but I can't get my fingers on to it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Put your foot on my head. I will warrant it is strong enough to bear your
+ weight."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril did as he was told, grasped the top of the wall, and, after a sharp
+ struggle, seated himself astride on it. Just as he did so, a window in a
+ wing projecting into the garden was thrown open, and a female voice
+ uttered a loud scream for help. There was light enough for Cyril to see
+ that the lower windows were all barred. He shouted back,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can't you get down the staircase?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; the house is full of smoke. There are some children here. Help!
+ Help!" and the voice rose in a loud scream again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril dropped down into the roadway by the side of John Wilkes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are some women and children in there, John. They can't get out. We
+ must go round to the other side and get some axes and break down the
+ door."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Snatching up his cloak, he ran at full speed to his former position,
+ followed by Wilkes. The roof of the house was now in flames. Many of the
+ shutters and window-frames had also caught fire, from the heat. He ran up
+ to two gentlemen who seemed to be directing the operations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are some women and children in a room at the back of that house,"
+ he said. "I have just been round there to see. They are in the second
+ storey, and are crying for help."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I fear the ladders are too short."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can tie two or three of them together," Wilkes said. "I am an old
+ sailor and can answer for the knots."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The firemen were already dashing water on the lower windows of the front
+ of the house. A party with axes were cutting at the door, but this was so
+ massive and solid that it resisted their efforts. One of the gentlemen
+ went down to them. At his orders eight or ten men seized ladders. Cyril
+ snatched some ropes from a heap that had been thrown down by the firemen,
+ and the party, with one of the gentlemen, ran round to the back of the
+ house. Two ladders were placed against the wall. John Wilkes, running up
+ one of them, hauled several of the others up, and lowered them into the
+ garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The flames were now issuing from some of the upper windows. Cyril dropped
+ from the wall into the garden, and, running close up to the house, shouted
+ to three or four women, who were screaming loudly, and hanging so far out
+ that he thought they would fall, that help was at hand, and that they
+ would be speedily rescued. John Wilkes rapidly tied three of the short
+ ladders together. These were speedily raised, but it was found that they
+ just reached the window. One of the firemen ran up, while John set to work
+ to prepare another long ladder. As there was no sign of life at any other
+ window he laid it down on the grass when finished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you will put it up at the next window," Cyril said, "I will mount it.
+ The woman said there were children in the house, and possibly I may find
+ them. Those women are so frightened that they don't know what they are
+ doing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One woman had already been got on to the other ladder, but instead of
+ coming down, she held on tightly, screaming at the top of her voice, until
+ the fireman with great difficulty got up by her side, wrenched her hands
+ from their hold, threw her across his shoulder, and carried her down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The room was full of smoke as Cyril leapt into it, but he found that it
+ was not, as he had supposed, the one in which the women at the next window
+ were standing. Near the window, however, an elderly woman was lying on the
+ floor insensible, and three girls of from eight to fourteen lay across
+ her. Cyril thrust his head out of the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come up, John," he shouted. "I want help."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lifted the youngest of the girls, and as he got her out of the window,
+ John's head appeared above the sill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take her down quick, John," he said, as he handed the child to him.
+ "There are three others. They are all insensible from the smoke."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Filling his lungs with fresh air, he turned into the blinding smoke again,
+ and speedily reappeared at the window with another of the girls. John was
+ not yet at the bottom; he placed her with her head outside the window, and
+ was back with the eldest girl by the time Wilkes was up again. He handed
+ her to him, and then, taking the other, stepped out on to the ladder and
+ followed Wilkes down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Brave lad!" the gentleman said, patting him on the shoulder. "Are there
+ any more of them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One more&mdash;a woman, sir. Do you go up, John. I will follow, for I
+ doubt whether I can lift her by myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He followed Wilkes closely up the ladder. There was a red glow now in the
+ smoke. Flames were bursting through the door. John was waiting at the
+ window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Which way, lad? There is no seeing one's hand in the smoke."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Just in front, John, not six feet away. Hold your breath."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They dashed forward together, seized the woman between them, and, dragging
+ her to the window, placed her head and shoulders on the sill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You go first, John. She is too heavy for me," Cyril gasped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John stumbled out, half suffocated, while Cyril thrust his head as far as
+ he could outside the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is it, John; you take hold of her shoulder, and I will help you get
+ her on to your back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between them they pushed her nearly out, and then, with Cyril's
+ assistance, John got her across his shoulders. She was a heavy woman, and
+ the old sailor had great difficulty in carrying her down. Cyril hung far
+ out of the window till he saw him put his foot on the ground; then he
+ seized a rung of the ladder, swung himself out on to it, and was soon
+ down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time he felt confused and bewildered, and was conscious that if he
+ let go the ladder he should fall. He heard a voice say, "Bring one of
+ those buckets of water," and directly afterwards, "Here, lad, put your
+ head into this," and a handful of water was dashed into his face. It
+ revived him, and, turning round, he plunged his head into a bucket that a
+ man held up for him. Then he took a long breath or two, pressed the water
+ from his hair, and felt himself again. The women at the other window had
+ by this time been brought down. A door in the garden wall had been broken
+ down with axes, and the women and girls were taken away to a neighbouring
+ house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is nothing more to do here," the gentlemen said. "Now, men, you are
+ to enter the houses round about. Wherever a door is fastened, break it in.
+ Go out on to the roofs with buckets, put out the sparks as fast as they
+ fall. I will send some more men to help you at once." He then put his hand
+ on Cyril's shoulder, and walked back with him to the open space.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have saved them all," he said to the other gentleman who had now come
+ up, "but it has been a close touch, and it was only by the gallantry of
+ this young gentleman and another with him that the lives of three girls
+ and a woman were rescued. I think all the men that can be spared had
+ better go round to the houses in that direction. You see, the wind is
+ setting that way, and the only hope of stopping the progress of the fire
+ is to get plenty of men with buckets out on the roofs and at all the upper
+ windows."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other gentleman gave the necessary orders to an officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, young sir, may I ask your name?" the other said to Cyril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Cyril Shenstone, sir," he replied respectfully; for he saw that the two
+ men before him were persons of rank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shenstone? I know the name well. Are you any relation of Sir Aubrey
+ Shenstone?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He was my father, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A brave soldier, and a hearty companion," the other said warmly. "He rode
+ behind me scores of times into the thick of the fight. I am Prince Rupert,
+ lad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril doffed his hat in deep respect. His father had always spoken of the
+ Prince in terms of boundless admiration, and had over and over again
+ lamented that he had not been able to join the Prince in his exploits at
+ sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What has become of my old friend?" the Prince asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He died six months ago, Prince."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sorry to hear it. I did hear that, while I was away, he had been
+ suing at Court. I asked for him, but could get no tidings of his
+ whereabouts. But we cannot speak here. Ask for me to-morrow at Whitehall.
+ Do you know this gentleman?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, sir, I have not the honour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is the Duke of Albemarle, my former enemy, but now my good friend.
+ You will like the lad no worse, my Lord, because his father more than once
+ rode with me into the heart of your ranks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly not," the Duke said. "It is clear that the son will be as
+ gallant a gentleman as his father was before him, and, thank God! it is
+ not against Englishmen that he will draw his sword. You may count me as
+ your friend, sir, henceforth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril bowed deeply and retired, while Prince Rupert and the Duke hurried
+ away again to see that the operations they had directed were properly
+ carried out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X &mdash; HOW JOHN WILKES FOUGHT THE DUTCH
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ After leaving Prince Rupert, Cyril returned to John Wilkes, who was
+ standing a short distance away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "John! John!" he said eagerly, as he joined him. "Who do you think those
+ gentlemen are?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know, lad. It is easy to see that they are men of importance by
+ the way they order everyone about."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The one who went with us to the garden is Prince Rupert; the other is the
+ Duke of Albemarle. And the Prince has told me to call upon him to-morrow
+ at Whitehall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is a stroke of luck, indeed, lad, and right glad am I that I took it
+ into my head to fetch you out to see the fire. But more than that, you
+ have to thank yourself, for, indeed, you behaved right gallantly. You
+ nearly had the Prince for your helper, for just before I went up the
+ ladder the last time he stepped forward and said to me, 'You must be
+ well-nigh spent, man. I will go up this time.' However, I said that I
+ would finish the work, and so, without more ado, I shook off the hand he
+ had placed on my arm, and ran up after you. Well, it is a stroke of good
+ fortune to you, lad, that you should have shown your courage under his eye&mdash;no
+ one is more able to appreciate a gallant action. This may help you a long
+ way towards bringing about the aim you were talking about the other night,
+ and I may live to see you Sir Cyril Shenstone yet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You can see me that now," Cyril said, laughing. "My father was a baronet,
+ and therefore at his death I came into the title, though I am not silly
+ enough to go about the City as Sir Cyril Shenstone when I am but a poor
+ clerk. It will be time enough to call myself 'Sir' when I see some chance
+ of buying back our estate, though, indeed, I have thought of taking the
+ title again when I embark on foreign service, as it may help me somewhat
+ in obtaining promotion. But do not say anything about it at home. I am
+ Cyril Shenstone, and have been fortunate enough to win the friendship of
+ Captain Dave, and I should not be so comfortable were there any change
+ made in my position in the family. A title is an empty thing, John, unless
+ there are means to support it, and plain Cyril Shenstone suits my position
+ far better than a title without a guinea in my purse. Indeed, till you
+ spoke just now, I had well-nigh forgotten that I have the right to call
+ myself 'Sir.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They waited for two hours longer. At the end of that time four mansions
+ had been burnt to the ground, but the further progress of the flames had
+ been effectually stayed. The crowd had already begun to scatter, and as
+ they walked eastward the streets were full of people making their way
+ homeward. The bell of St. Paul's was striking midnight as they entered.
+ The Captain and his family had long since gone off to bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This reminds one of that last business," John whispered, as they went
+ quietly upstairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It does, John. But it has been a pleasanter evening in every way than
+ those fruitless watches we kept in the street below."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning the story of the fire was told, and excited great
+ interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who were the girls you saved, Cyril?" Nellie asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know. I did not think of asking to whom the house belonged, nor,
+ indeed, was there anyone to ask. Most of the people were too busy to talk
+ to, and the rest were spectators who had, like ourselves, managed to make
+ their way in through the lines of the soldiers and watch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Were they ladies?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I really don't know," Cyril laughed. "The smoke was too thick to see
+ anything about them, and I should not know them if I met them to-day; and,
+ besides, when you only see a young person in her nightdress, it is hard to
+ form any opinion as to her rank."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie joined in the laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I suppose not, Cyril. It might make a difference to you, though. Those
+ houses in the Savoy are almost all the property of noblemen, and you might
+ have gained another powerful friend if they had been the daughters of
+ one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should not think they were so," Cyril said. "There seemed to be no one
+ else in the house but three maid servants and the woman who was in the
+ room with them. I should say the family were all away and the house left
+ in charge of servants. The woman may have been a housekeeper, and the
+ girls her children; besides, even had it been otherwise, it was merely by
+ chance that I helped them out. It was John who tied the ladders together
+ and who carried the girls down, one by one. If I had been alone I should
+ only have had time to save the youngest, for I am not accustomed to
+ running up and down ladders, as he is, and by the time I had got her down
+ it would have been too late to have saved the others. Indeed, I am not
+ sure that we did save them; they were all insensible, and, for aught I
+ know, may not have recovered from the effects of the smoke. My eyes are
+ smarting even now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And so you are to see Prince Rupert to-day, Cyril?" Captain Dave said. "I
+ am afraid we shall be losing you, for he will, I should say, assuredly
+ appoint you to one of his ships if you ask him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That would be good fortune indeed," Cyril said. "I cannot but think
+ myself that he may do so, though it would be almost too good to be true.
+ Certainly he spoke very warmly, and, although he may not himself have the
+ appointment of his officers, a word from him at the Admiralty would, no
+ doubt, be sufficient. At any rate, it is a great thing indeed to have so
+ powerful a friend at Court. It may be that, at the end of another two
+ years, we may be at war with some other foreign power, and that I may be
+ able to enter our own army instead of seeking service abroad. If not, much
+ as I should like to go to sea to fight against the Dutch, service in this
+ Fleet would be of no real advantage to me, for the war may last but for a
+ short time, and as soon as it is over the ships will be laid up again and
+ the crews disbanded."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, but if you find the life of a sailor to your liking, Cyril, you might
+ do worse than go into the merchant service. I could help you there, and
+ you might soon get the command of a trader. And, let me tell you, it is a
+ deal better to walk the decks as captain than it is to be serving on shore
+ with twenty masters over you; and there is money to be made, too. A
+ captain is always allowed to take in a certain amount of cargo on his own
+ account; that was the way I scraped together money enough to buy my own
+ ship at last, and to be master as well as owner, and there is no reason
+ why you should not do the same."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you, Captain Dave. I will think it over when I find out whether I
+ like a sea life, but at present it seems to me that my inclinations turn
+ rather towards the plan that my father recommended, and that, for the last
+ two years, I have always had before me. You said, the other day, you had
+ fought the Dutch, John?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay, Master Cyril; but, in truth, it was from no wish or desire on my
+ part that I did so. I had come ashore from Captain Dave's ship here in the
+ Pool, and had been with some of my messmates who had friends in Wapping
+ and had got three days' leave ashore, as the cargo we expected had not
+ come on board the ship. We had kept it up a bit, and it was latish when I
+ was making my way down to the stairs. I expect that I was more intent on
+ making a straight course down the street than in looking about for
+ pirates, when suddenly I found myself among a lot of men. One of them
+ seized me by the arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Hands off, mate!' says I, and I lifted my fist to let fly at him, when I
+ got a knock at the back of the head. The next thing I knew was, I was
+ lying in the hold of a ship, and, as I made out presently, with a score of
+ others, some of whom were groaning, and some cursing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Hullo, mates!' says I. 'What port is this we are brought up in?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'We are on board the <i>Tartar</i>,' one said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I knew what that meant, for the <i>Tartar</i> was the receiving hulk
+ where they took the pressed men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The next morning, without question asked, we were brought up on deck,
+ tumbled into a small sloop, and taken down to Gravesend, and there put, in
+ batches of four or five, into the ships of war lying there. It chanced
+ that I was put on board Monk's flagship the <i>Resolution</i>. And that is
+ how it was I came to fight the Dutch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What year was that in, John?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'53&mdash;in May it was. Van Tromp, at that time, with ninety-eight ships
+ of war, and six fire-ships, was in the Downs, and felt so much Master of
+ the Sea that he sailed in and battered Dover Castle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then you were in the fight of the 2nd of June?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay; and in that of the 31st of July, which was harder still."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tell me all about it, John."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lor' bless you, sir, there is nothing to tell as far as I was concerned.
+ I was at one of the guns on the upper deck, but I might as well have been
+ down below for anything I saw of it. It was just load and fire, load and
+ fire. Sometimes, through the clouds of smoke, one caught a sight of the
+ Dutchman one was firing at; more often one didn't. There was no time for
+ looking about, I can tell you, and if there had been time there was
+ nothing to see. It was like being in a big thunderstorm, with thunderbolts
+ falling all round you, and a smashing and a grinding and a ripping that
+ would have made your hair stand on end if you had only had time to think
+ of it. But we hadn't time. It was 'Now then, my hearties, blaze away! Keep
+ it up, lads! The Dutchmen have pretty near had enough of it!' And then, at
+ last, 'They are running, lads. Run in your guns, and tend the sails.' And
+ then a cheer as loud as we could give&mdash;which wasn't much, I can tell
+ you, for we were spent with labour, and half choked with powder, and our
+ tongues parched up with thirst."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How many ships had you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We had ninety-five war-ships, and five fire-ships, so the game was an
+ equal one. They had Tromp and De Ruyter to command them, and we had Monk
+ and Deane. Both Admirals were on board our ship, and in the very first
+ broadside the Dutch fired a chain-shot, and pretty well cut Admiral Deane
+ in two. I was close to him at the time. Monk, who was standing by his
+ side, undid his own cloak in a moment, threw it over his comrade, and held
+ up his hand to the few of us that had seen what had happened, to take no
+ notice of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was a good thing that Deane and Monk were on board the same ship. If
+ it had not been so, Deane's flag would have been hauled down and all the
+ Fleet would have known of his death, which, at the commencement of the
+ fight, would have greatly discouraged the men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They told me, though I know naught about it, that Rear-Admiral Lawson
+ charged with the Blue Squadron right through the Dutch line, and so threw
+ them into confusion. However, about three o'clock, the fight having begun
+ at eleven, Van Tromp began to draw off, and we got more sail on the <i>Resolution</i>
+ and followed them for some hours, they making a sort of running fight of
+ it, till one of their big ships blew up, about nine in the evening, when
+ they laid in for shore. Blake came up in the night with eighteen ships.
+ The Dutch tried to draw off, but at eight o'clock we came up to them, and,
+ after fighting for four hours, they hauled off and ran, in great
+ confusion, for the flats, where we could not follow them, and so they
+ escaped to Zeeland. We heard that they had six of their best ships sunk,
+ two blown up and eleven taken, but whether it was so or not I knew not,
+ for, in truth, I saw nothing whatever of the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We sailed to the Texel, and there blocked in De Ruyter's squadron of
+ twenty-five large ships, and we thought that there would be no more
+ fighting, for the Dutch had sent to England to ask for terms of peace.
+ However, we were wrong, and, to give the Dutchmen their due, they showed
+ resolution greater than we gave them credit for, for we were astonished
+ indeed to hear, towards the end of July, that Van Tromp had sailed out
+ again with upwards of ninety ships.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the 29th they came in view, and we sailed out to engage them, but they
+ would not come to close quarters, and it was seven at night before the <i>Resolution</i>,
+ with some thirty other ships, came up to them and charged through their
+ line. By the time we had done that it was quite dark, and we missed them
+ altogether and sailed south, thinking Van Tromp had gone that way; but,
+ instead, he had sailed north, and in the morning we found he had picked up
+ De Ruyter's fleet, and was ready to fight. But we had other things to
+ think of besides fighting that day, for the wind blew so hard that it was
+ as much as we could do to keep off the shore, and if the gale had
+ continued a good part of the ships would have left their bones there.
+ However, by nightfall the gale abated somewhat, and by the next morning
+ the sea had gone down sufficient for the main deck ports to be opened. So
+ the Dutch, having the weather gauge, sailed down to engage us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought it rough work in the fight two months before, but it was as
+ nothing to this. To begin with, the Dutch fire-ships came down before the
+ wind, and it was as much as we could do to avoid them. They did, indeed,
+ set the <i>Triumph</i> on fire, and most of the crew jumped overboard; but
+ those that remained managed to put out the flames.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lawson, with the Blue Squadron, began the fighting, and that so briskly,
+ that De Ruyter's flagship was completely disabled and towed out of the
+ fight. However, after I had seen that, our turn began, and I had no more
+ time to look about. I only know that ship after ship came up to engage us,
+ seeming bent upon lowering Monk's flag. Three Dutch Admirals, Tromp,
+ Evertson, and De Ruyter, as I heard afterwards, came up in turn. We did
+ not know who they were, but we knew they were Admirals by their flags, and
+ pounded them with all our hearts; and so good was our aim that I myself
+ saw two of the Admirals' flags brought down, and they say that all three
+ of them were lowered. But you may guess the pounding was not all on our
+ side, and we suffered very heavily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Four men were hurt at the gun I worked, and nigh half the crew were
+ killed or wounded. Two of our masts were shot away, many of our guns
+ disabled, and towards the end of the fight we were towed out of the line.
+ How the day would have gone if Van Tromp had continued in command of the
+ Dutch, I cannot say, but about noon he was shot through the body by a
+ musket-ball, and this misfortune greatly discouraged the Dutchmen, who
+ fight well as long as things seem to be going their way, but lose heart
+ very easily when they think the matter is going against them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By about two o'clock the officers shouted to us that the Dutch were
+ beginning to draw off, and it was not long before they began to fly, each
+ for himself, and in no sort of order. Some of our light frigates, that had
+ suffered less than the line-of-battle ships, followed them until the one
+ Dutch Admiral whose flag was left flying, turned and fought them till two
+ or three of our heavier ships came up and he was sunk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We could see but little of the chase, having plenty of work, for, had a
+ gale come on, our ship, and a good many others, would assuredly have been
+ driven ashore, in the plight we were in. Anyhow, at night their ships got
+ into the Texel, and our vessels, which had been following them, anchored
+ five or six leagues out, being afraid of the sands. Altogether we had
+ burnt or sunk twenty-six of their ships of war, while we lost only two
+ frigates, both of which were burnt by their fire-ships.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As it was certain that they would not come out for some time again, and
+ many of our ships being unfit for further contention until repaired, we
+ returned to England, and I got my discharge and joined Captain Dave again
+ a fortnight later, when his ship came up the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monk is a good fighter, Master Cyril, and should have the command of the
+ Fleet instead of, as they say, the Duke of York. Although he is called
+ General, and not Admiral, he is as good a sea-dog as any of them, and he
+ can think as well as fight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Among our ships that day were several merchantmen that had been taken up
+ for the service at the last moment and had guns slapped on board, with
+ gunners to work them. Some of them had still their cargoes in the hold,
+ and Monk, thinking that it was likely the captains would think more of
+ saving their ships and goods than of fighting the Dutch, changed the
+ captains all round, so that no man commanded his own vessel. And the
+ consequence was that, as all admitted, the merchantmen were as willing to
+ fight as any, and bore themselves right stoutly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't you think, Master Cyril, if you go with the Fleet, that you are
+ going to see much of what goes on. It will be worse for you than it was
+ for me, for there was I, labouring and toiling like a dumb beast, with my
+ mind intent upon working the gun, and paying no heed to the roar and
+ confusion around, scarce even noticing when one beside me was struck down.
+ You will be up on the poop, having naught to do but to stand with your
+ hand on your sword hilt, and waiting to board an enemy or to drive back
+ one who tries to board you. You will find that you will be well-nigh dazed
+ and stupid with the din and uproar."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It does not sound a very pleasant outlook, John," Cyril laughed.
+ "However, if I ever do get into an engagement, I will think of what you
+ have said, and will try and prevent myself from getting either dazed or
+ stupid; though, in truth, I can well imagine that it is enough to shake
+ anyone's nerves to stand inactive in so terrible a scene."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will have to take great care of yourself, Cyril," Nellie said
+ gravely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Dave and John Wilkes both burst into a laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How is he to take care of himself, Nellie?" her father said. "Do you
+ suppose that a man on deck would be any the safer were he to stoop down
+ with his head below the rail, or to screw himself up on the leeward side
+ of a mast? No, no, lass; each man has to take his share of danger, and the
+ most cowardly runs just as great a risk as the man who fearlessly exposes
+ himself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI &mdash; PRINCE RUPERT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The next day Cyril went down to breakfast in what he had often called,
+ laughingly, his Court suit. This suit he had had made for him a short time
+ before his father's death, to replace the one he had when he came over,
+ that being altogether outgrown. He had done so to please Sir Aubrey, who
+ had repeatedly expressed his anxiety that Cyril should always be prepared
+ to take advantage of any good fortune that might befall him. This was the
+ first time he had put it on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, truly you look a pretty fellow, Cyril," the Captain said, as he
+ entered. "Don't you think so, Nellie?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know that I like him better than in his black suit, father. But
+ he looks very well."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hullo, lass! This is a change of opinion, truly! For myself I care not
+ one jot for the fashion of a man's clothes, but I had thought that you
+ always inclined to gay attire, and Cyril now would seem rather to belong
+ to the Court than to the City."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If it had been any other morning, father, I might have thought more of
+ Cyril's appearance; but what you were telling us but now of the
+ continuance of the Plague is so sad, that mourning, rather than Court
+ attire, would seem to be the proper wear."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is the Plague spreading fast, then, Captain Dave?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; but it is not decreasing, as we had hoped it would do. From the
+ beginning of December the deaths rose steadily until the end of January.
+ While our usual death-rate is under three hundred it went to four hundred
+ and seventy-four. Then the weather setting in very severe checked it till
+ the end of February, and we all hoped that the danger was over, and that
+ we should be rid of the distemper before the warm weather set in; but for
+ the last fortnight there has been a rise rather than a fall&mdash;not a
+ large one, but sufficient to cause great alarm that it will continue until
+ warm weather sets in, and may then grow into terrible proportions. So far,
+ there has been no case in the City, and it is only in the West that it has
+ any hold, the deaths being altogether in the parishes of St. Giles's, St.
+ Andrew's, St. Bride's, and St. James's, Clerkenwell. Of course, there have
+ been cases now and then for many years past, and nine years ago it spread
+ to a greater extent than now, and were we at the beginning of winter
+ instead of nearing summer there would be no occasion to think much of the
+ matter; but, with the hot weather approaching, and the tales we hear of
+ the badness of the Plague in foreign parts one cannot but feel anxious."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And they say, too, that there have been prophecies of grievous evils in
+ London," Nellie put in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We need not trouble about that," her father replied. "The Anabaptists
+ prophesied all sorts of evils in Elizabeth's time, but naught came of it.
+ There are always men and women with disordered minds, who think that they
+ are prophets, and have power to see further into the future than other
+ people, but no one minds them or thinks aught of their wild words save at
+ a time like the present, when there is a danger of war or pestilence. You
+ remember Bill Vokes, John?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I mind him, yer honour. A poor, half-crazed fellow he was, and yet a good
+ seaman, who would do his duty blow high or blow low. He sailed six voyages
+ with us, Captain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And never one of them without telling the crew that the ship would never
+ return to port. He had had dreams about it, and the black cat had mewed
+ when he left home, and he saw the three magpies in a tree hard by when he
+ stepped from the door, and many other portents of that kind. The first
+ time he well-nigh scared some of the crew, but after the first voyage&mdash;from
+ which we came back safely, of course&mdash;they did but laugh at him; and
+ as in all other respects he was a good sailor, and a willing fellow, I did
+ not like to discharge him, for, once the men found out that his prophecies
+ came to naught, they did no harm, and, indeed, they afforded them much
+ amusement. Just as it is on board a ship, so it is elsewhere. If our
+ vessel had gone down that first voyage, any man who escaped drowning would
+ have said that Bill Vokes had not been without reason in his warnings, and
+ that it was nothing less than flying in the face of Providence, to put to
+ sea when the loss of the ship had been so surely foretold. So, on shore,
+ the fools or madmen who have dreams and visions are not heeded when times
+ are good, and men's senses sound, whereas, in troubled times, men take
+ their ravings to heart. If all the scatterbrains had a good whipping at
+ the pillory it would be well, both for them and for the silly people who
+ pay attention to their ravings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes later, Cyril took a boat to the Whitehall steps, and after
+ some delay was shown up to Prince Rupert's room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "None the worse for your exertions yester-even, young gentleman, I hope?"
+ the Prince said, shaking hands with him warmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "None, sir. The exertion was not great, and it was but the inconvenience
+ of the smoke that troubled me in any way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you been to inquire after the young ladies who owe their lives to
+ you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, sir; I know neither their names nor their condition, nor, had I
+ wished it, could I have made inquiries, for I know not whither they were
+ taken."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I sent round early this morning," the Prince said, "and heard that they
+ were as well as might be expected after the adventure they went through.
+ And now tell me about yourself, and what you have been doing. 'Tis one of
+ the saddest things to me, since I returned to England, that so many good
+ men who fought by my side have been made beggars in the King's service,
+ and that I could do naught for them. 'Tis a grievous business, and yet I
+ see not how it is to be mended. The hardest thing is, that those who did
+ most for the King's service are those who have suffered most deeply. None
+ of those who were driven to sell their estates at a fraction of their
+ value, in order to raise money for the King's treasury or to put men into
+ the field, have received any redress. It would need a vast sum to buy back
+ all their lands, and Parliament would not vote money for that purpose; nor
+ would it be fair to turn men out of the estates that they bought and paid
+ for. Do you not think so?" he asked suddenly, seeing, by the lad's face,
+ that he was not in agreement with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, sir; it does not seem to me that it would be unfair. These men bought
+ the lands for, as you say, but a fraction of their value; they did so in
+ the belief that Parliament would triumph, and their purchase was but a
+ speculation grounded on that belief. They have had the enjoyment of the
+ estates for years, and have drawn from them an income which has, by this
+ time, brought them in a sum much exceeding that which they have
+ adventured, and it does not seem to me that there would be any hardship
+ whatever were they now called upon to restore them to their owners. 'Tis
+ as when a man risks his money in a venture at sea. If all goes as he hopes
+ he will make a great profit on his money. If the ship is cast away or
+ taken by pirates, it is unfortunate, but he has no reason to curse his
+ ill-luck if the ship had already made several voyages which have more than
+ recouped the money he ventured."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well and stoutly argued!" the Prince said approvingly. "But you must
+ remember, young sir, that the King, on his return, was by no means
+ strongly seated on the throne. There was the Army most evilly affected
+ towards him; there were the Puritans, who lamented the upset of the work
+ they or their fathers had done. All those men who had purchased the
+ estates of the Royalists had families and friends, and, had these estates
+ been restored to their rightful owners, there might have been an outbreak
+ that would have shaken the throne again. Many would have refused to give
+ up possession, save to force; and where was the force to come from? Even
+ had the King had troops willing to carry out such a measure, they might
+ have been met by force, and had blood once been shed, none can say how the
+ trouble might have spread, or what might have been the end of it. And now,
+ lad, come to your own fortunes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril briefly related the story of his life since his return to London,
+ stating his father's plan that he should some day take foreign service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have shown that you have a stout heart, young sir, as well as a brave
+ one, and have done well, indeed, in turning your mind to earn your living
+ by such talents as you have, rather than in wasting your time in vain
+ hopes and in ceaseless importunities for justice. It may be that you have
+ acted wisely in thinking of taking service on the Continent, seeing that
+ we have no Army; and when the time comes, I will further your wishes to
+ the utmost of my power. But in the meantime there is opportunity for
+ service at home, and I will gladly appoint you as a Volunteer in my own
+ ship. There are many gentlemen going with me in that capacity, and it
+ would be of advantage to you, if, when I write to some foreign prince on
+ your behalf, I can say that you have fought under my eye."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you greatly, Prince. I have been wishing, above all things, that I
+ could join the Fleet, and it would be, indeed, an honour to begin my
+ career under the Prince of whom I heard so often from my father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Rupert looked at his watch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King will be in the Mall now," he said. "I will take you across and
+ present you to him. It is useful to have the <i>entrée</i> at Court,
+ though perhaps the less you avail yourself of it the better."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he rose, put on his hat, and, throwing his cloak over his
+ shoulder, went across to the Mall, asking questions of Cyril as he went,
+ and extracting from him a sketch of the adventure of his being kidnapped
+ and taken to Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently they arrived at the spot where the King, with three or four
+ nobles and gentlemen, had been playing. Charles was in a good humour, for
+ he had just won a match with the Earl of Rochester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, my grave cousin," he said merrily, "what brings you out of your
+ office so early? No fresh demands for money, I hope?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at present. And indeed, it is not to you that I should come on such a
+ quest, but to the Duke of York."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And he would come to me," said the King; "so it is the same thing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have come across to present to your Majesty a very gallant young
+ gentleman, who yesterday evening, at the risk of his life, saved the three
+ daughters of the Earl of Wisbech from being burned at the fire in the
+ Savoy, where his Lordship's mansion was among those that were destroyed. I
+ beg to present to your Majesty Sir Cyril Shenstone, the son of the late
+ Sir Aubrey Shenstone, a most gallant gentleman, who rode under my banner
+ in many a stern fight in the service of your royal father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I knew him well," the King said graciously, "but had not heard of his
+ death. I am glad to hear that his son inherits his bravery. I have often
+ regretted deeply that it was out of my power to requite, in any way, the
+ services Sir Aubrey rendered, and the sacrifices he made for our House."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His brow clouded a little, and he looked appealingly at Prince Rupert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Cyril Shenstone has no more intention of asking for favours than I
+ have, Charles," the latter said. "He is going to accompany me as a
+ Volunteer against the Dutch, and if the war lasts I shall ask for a better
+ appointment for him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That he shall have," the King said warmly. "None have a better claim to
+ commissions in the Navy and Army than sons of gentlemen who fought and
+ suffered in the cause of our royal father. My Lords," he said to the
+ little group of gentlemen, who had been standing a few paces away while
+ this conversation had been going on, "I would have you know Sir Cyril
+ Shenstone, the son of a faithful adherent of my father, and who, yesterday
+ evening, saved the lives of the three daughters of My Lord of Wisbech in
+ the fire at the Savoy. He is going as a Volunteer with my cousin Rupert
+ when he sails against the Dutch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gentlemen all returned Cyril's salute courteously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He will be fortunate in beginning his career under the eyes of so brave a
+ Prince," the Earl of Rochester said, bowing to Prince Rupert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It would be well if you all," the latter replied bluntly, "were to ship
+ in the Fleet for a few months instead of wasting your time in empty
+ pleasures."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl smiled. Prince Rupert's extreme disapproval of the life at Court
+ was well known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We cannot all be Bayards, Prince, and most of us would, methinks, be too
+ sick at sea to be of much assistance, were we to go. But if the Dutchmen
+ come here, which is not likely&mdash;for I doubt not, Prince, that you
+ will soon send them flying back to their own ports&mdash;we shall all be
+ glad to do our best to meet them when they land."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince made no reply, but, turning to the King, said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We will not detain you longer from your game, Cousin Charles. I have
+ plenty to do, with all the complaints as to the state of the ships, and
+ the lack of stores and necessaries."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Remember, I shall be glad to see you at my <i>levées</i>, Sir Cyril," the
+ King said, holding out his hand. "Do not wait for the Prince to bring you,
+ for if you do you will wait long."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril doffed his hat, raised the King's hand to his lips, then, with a
+ deep bow and an expression of thanks, followed Prince Rupert, who was
+ already striding away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You might have been better introduced," the Prince said when he overtook
+ him. "Still it is better to be badly introduced than to have no
+ introduction at all. I am too old for the flippancies of the Court. You
+ had better show yourself there sometimes; you will make friends that may
+ be useful. By the way, I have not your address, and it may be a fortnight
+ or more before the <i>Henrietta</i> is ready to take her crew on board."
+ He took out his tablet and wrote down the address. "Come and see me if
+ there is anything you want to ask me. Do not let the clerks keep you out
+ with the pretence that I am busy, but send up your name to me, and tell
+ them that I have ordered it shall be taken up, however I may be engaged."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having no occasion for haste, Cyril walked back to the City after leaving
+ Prince Rupert. A great change had taken place in his fortunes in the last
+ twenty-four hours. Then he had no prospects save continuing his work in
+ the City for another two years, and even after that time he foresaw grave
+ difficulties in the way of his obtaining a commission in a foreign army;
+ for Sir John Parton, even if ready to carry out the promise he had
+ formerly made him, might not have sufficient influence to do so. Now he
+ was to embark in Prince Rupert's own ship. He would be the companion of
+ many other gentlemen going out as Volunteers, and, at a bound, spring from
+ the position of a writer in the City to that occupied by his father before
+ he became involved in the trouble between King and Parliament. He was
+ already admitted to Court, and Prince Rupert himself had promised to push
+ his fortunes abroad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet he felt less elated than he would have expected from his sudden
+ change. The question of money was the cloud that dulled the brightness of
+ his prospects. As a Volunteer he would receive no pay, and yet he must
+ make a fair show among the young noblemen and gentlemen who would be his
+ companions. Doubtless they would be victualled on board, but he would have
+ to dress well and probably pay a share in the expenses that would be
+ incurred for wine and other things on board. Had it not been for the
+ future he would have been inclined to regret that he had not refused the
+ tempting offer; but the advantages to be gained by Prince Rupert's
+ patronage were so large that he felt no sacrifice would be too great to
+ that end&mdash;even that of accepting the assistance that Captain Dave had
+ more than once hinted he should give him. It was just the dinner-hour when
+ he arrived home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Cyril, I see by your face that the Prince has said nothing in the
+ direction of your wishes," Captain Dave said, as he entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then my face is a false witness, Captain Dave, for Prince Rupert has
+ appointed me a Volunteer on board his own ship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am glad, indeed, lad, heartily glad, though your going will be a heavy
+ loss to us all. But why were you looking so grave over it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have been wondering whether I have acted wisely in accepting it," Cyril
+ said. "I am very happy here, I am earning my living, I have no cares of
+ any sort, and I feel that it is a very serious matter to make a change.
+ The Prince has a number of noblemen and gentlemen going with him as
+ Volunteers, and I feel that I shall be out of my element in such company.
+ At the same time I have every reason to be thankful, for Prince Rupert has
+ promised that he will, after the war is over, give me introductions which
+ will procure me a commission abroad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, then, it seems to me that things could not look better," Captain
+ Dave said heartily. "When do you go on board?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Prince says it may be another fortnight; so that I shall have time to
+ make my preparations, and warn the citizens I work for, that I am going to
+ leave them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should say the sooner the better, lad. You will have to get your outfit
+ and other matters seen to. Moreover, now that you have been taken under
+ Prince Rupert's protection, and have become, as it were, an officer on his
+ ship&mdash;for gentlemen Volunteers, although they have no duties in
+ regard to working the ship, are yet officers&mdash;it is hardly seemly
+ that you should be making up the accounts of bakers and butchers,
+ ironmongers, and ship's storekeepers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The work is honest, and I am in no way ashamed of it," Cyril said; "but
+ as I have many things to see about, I suppose I had better give them
+ notice at once. Prince Rupert presented me to the King to-day, and His
+ Majesty requested me to attend at Court, which I should be loath to do,
+ were it not that the Prince urged upon me that it was of advantage that I
+ should make myself known."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One would think, Master Cyril, that this honour which has suddenly
+ befallen you is regarded by you as a misfortune," Mrs. Dowsett said,
+ laughing. "Most youths would be overjoyed at such a change in their
+ fortune."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It would be all very pleasant," Cyril said, "had I the income of my
+ father's estate at my back; but I feel that I shall be in a false
+ position, thus thrusting myself among men who have more guineas in their
+ pockets than I have pennies. However, it seems that the matter has been
+ taken out of my own hands, and that, as things have turned out, so I must
+ travel. Who would have thought, when John Wilkes fetched me out last night
+ to go to the fire, it would make an alteration in my whole life, and that
+ such a little thing as climbing up a ladder and helping to get three girls
+ out of a room full of smoke&mdash;and John Wilkes did the most difficult
+ part of the work&mdash;was to change all my prospects?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was a Providence in it, Cyril," Mrs. Dowsett said gently. "Why,
+ else, should you have gone up that ladder, when, to all seeming, there was
+ no one there. The maids were so frightened, John says, that they would
+ never have said a word about there being anyone in that room, and the
+ girls would have perished had you not gone up. Now as, owing to that,
+ everything has turned out according to your wishes, it would be a sin not
+ to take advantage of it, for you may be sure that, as the way has thus
+ been suddenly opened to you, so will all other things follow in due
+ course."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you, madam," Cyril said simply. "I had not thought of it in that
+ light, but assuredly you are right, and I will not suffer myself to be
+ daunted by the difficulties there may be in my way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John Wilkes now came in and sat down to the meal. He was vastly pleased
+ when he heard of the good fortune that had befallen Cyril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It seems to me," Cyril said, "that I am but an impostor, and that at
+ least some share in the good luck ought to have fallen to you, John,
+ seeing that you carried them all down the ladder."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have carried heavier bales, many a time, much longer distances than
+ that&mdash;though I do not say that the woman was not a tidy weight, for,
+ indeed, she was; but I would have carried down ten of them for the honour
+ I had in being shaken by the hand by Prince Rupert, as gallant a sailor as
+ ever sailed a ship. No, no; what I did was all in a day's work, and no
+ more than lifting anchors and chains about in the storehouse. As for
+ honours, I want none of them. I am moored in a snug port here, and would
+ not leave Captain Dave if they would make a Duke of me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie had said no word of congratulation to Cyril, but as they rose from
+ dinner, she said, in low tones,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You know I am pleased, and hope that you will have all the good fortune
+ you deserve."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril set out at once to make a round of the shops where he worked. The
+ announcement that he must at once terminate his connection with them, as
+ he was going on board the Fleet, was everywhere received with great
+ regret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would gladly pay double," one said, "rather than that you should go,
+ for, indeed, it has taken a heavy load off my shoulders, and I know not
+ how I shall get on in the future."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should think there would be no difficulty in getting some other young
+ clerk to do the work," Cyril said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not so easy," the man replied. "I had tried one or two before, and found
+ they were more trouble than they were worth. There are not many who write
+ as neatly as you do, and you do as much in an hour as some would take a
+ day over. However, I wish you good luck, and if you should come back, and
+ take up the work again, or start as a scrivener in the City, I can promise
+ you that you shall have my books again, and that among my friends I can
+ find you as much work as you can get through."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something similar was said to him at each of the houses where he called,
+ and he felt much gratified at finding that his work had given such
+ satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he came in to supper, Cyril was conscious that something had occurred
+ of an unusual nature. Nellie's eyes were swollen with crying; Mrs. Dowsett
+ had also evidently been in tears; while Captain Dave was walking up and
+ down the room restlessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The servant was placing the things upon the table, and, just as they were
+ about to take their seats, the bell of the front door rang loudly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "See who it is, John," Captain Dave said. "Whoever it is seems to be in a
+ mighty hurry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a minute or two John returned, followed by a gentleman. The latter
+ paused at the door, and then said, bowing courteously, as he advanced, to
+ Mrs. Dowsett,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I must ask pardon for intruding on your meal, madam, but my business is
+ urgent. I am the Earl of Wisbech, and I have called to see Sir Cyril
+ Shenstone, to offer him my heartfelt thanks for the service he has
+ rendered me by saving the lives of my daughters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All had risen to their feet as he entered, and there was a slight
+ exclamation of surprise from the Captain, his wife, and daughter, as the
+ Earl said "Sir Cyril Shenstone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril stepped forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am Cyril Shenstone, my Lord," he said, "and had the good fortune to be
+ able, with the assistance of my friend here, John Wilkes, to rescue your
+ daughters, though, at the time, indeed, I was altogether ignorant of their
+ rank. It was a fortunate occurrence, but I must disclaim any merit in the
+ action, for it was by mere accident that, mounting to the window by a
+ ladder, I saw them lying insensible on the ground."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your modesty does you credit, sir," the Earl said, shaking him warmly by
+ the hand. "But such is not the opinion of Prince Rupert, who described it
+ to me as a very gallant action; and, moreover, he said that it was you who
+ first brought him the news that there were females in the house, which he
+ and others had supposed to be empty, and that it was solely owing to you
+ that the ladders were taken round."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will you allow me, my Lord, to introduce to you Captain Dowsett, his
+ wife, and daughter, who have been to me the kindest of friends?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A kindness, my Lord," Captain Dave said earnestly, "that has been repaid
+ a thousandfold by this good youth, of whose rank we were indeed ignorant
+ until you named it. May I ask you to honour us by joining in our meal?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That will I right gladly, sir," the Earl said, "for, in truth, I have
+ scarce broke my fast to-day. I was down at my place in Kent when I was
+ awoke this morning by one of my grooms, who had ridden down with the news
+ that my mansion in the Savoy had been burned, and that my daughters had
+ had a most narrow escape of their lives. Of course, I mounted at once and
+ rode to town, where I was happy in finding that they had well-nigh
+ recovered from the effects of their fright and the smoke. Neither they nor
+ the nurse who was with them could give me any account of what had
+ happened, save that they had, as they supposed, become insensible from the
+ smoke. When they recovered, they found themselves in the Earl of Surrey's
+ house, to which it seems they had been carried. After inquiry, I learned
+ that the Duke of Albemarle and Prince Rupert had both been on the scene
+ directing operations. I went to the latter, with whom I have the honour of
+ being well acquainted, and he told me the whole story, saying that had it
+ not been for Sir Cyril Shenstone, my daughters would certainly have
+ perished. He gave credit, too, to Sir Cyril's companion, who, he said,
+ carried them down the ladder, and himself entered the burning room the
+ last time, to aid in bringing out the nurse, who was too heavy for the
+ rescuer of my daughters to lift. Save a cup of wine and a piece of bread,
+ that I took on my first arrival, I have not broken my fast to-day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he seated himself on a chair that Cyril had placed for him between
+ Mrs. Dowsett and Nellie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Dave whispered to John Wilkes, who went out, and returned in two
+ or three minutes with three or four flasks of rare Spanish wine which the
+ Captain had brought back on his last voyage, and kept for drinking on
+ special occasions. The dame always kept an excellent table, and although
+ she made many apologies to the Earl, he assured her that none were needed,
+ for that he could have supped no better in his own house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hear," he said presently to Cyril, "that you are going out as a
+ Volunteer in Prince Rupert's ship. My son is also going with him, and I
+ hope, in a day or two, to introduce him to you. He is at present at
+ Cambridge, but, having set his mind on sailing with the Prince, I have
+ been fain to allow him to give up his studies. I heard from Prince Rupert
+ that you had recently been kidnapped and taken to Holland. He gave me no
+ particulars, nor did I ask them, being desirous of hurrying off at once to
+ express my gratitude to you. How was it that such an adventure befell you&mdash;for
+ it would hardly seem likely that you could have provoked the enmity of
+ persons capable of such an outrage?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was the result of his services to me, my Lord," Captain Dave said.
+ "Having been a sea-captain, I am but a poor hand at accounts; but, having
+ fallen into this business at the death of my father, it seemed simple
+ enough for me to get on without much book-learning. I made but a bad shape
+ at it; and when Master Shenstone, as he then called himself, offered to
+ keep my books for me, it seemed to me an excellent mode of saving myself
+ worry and trouble. However, when he set himself to making up the accounts
+ of my stock, he found that I was nigh eight hundred pounds short; and,
+ setting himself to watch, discovered that my apprentices were in alliance
+ with a band of thieves, and were nightly robbing me. We caught them and
+ two of the thieves in the act. One of the latter was the receiver, and on
+ his premises the proceeds of a great number of robberies were found, and
+ there was no doubt that he was the chief of a notorious gang, called the
+ 'Black Gang,' which had for a long time infested the City and the
+ surrounding country. It was to prevent Sir Cyril from giving evidence at
+ the trial that he was kidnapped and sent away. He was placed in the house
+ of a diamond merchant, to whom the thieves were in the habit of consigning
+ jewels; and this might well have turned out fatal to him, for to the same
+ house came my elder apprentice and one of the men captured with him&mdash;a
+ notorious ruffian&mdash;who had been rescued from the constables by a gang
+ of their fellows, in open daylight, in the City. These, doubtless, would
+ have compassed his death had he not happily seen them enter the house, and
+ made his escape, taking passage in a coaster bound for Dunkirk, from which
+ place he took another ship to England. Thus you see, my Lord, that I am
+ indebted to him for saving me from a further loss that might well have
+ ruined me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He paused, and glanced at Nellie, who rose at once, saying to the Earl,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I trust that your Lordship will excuse my mother and myself. My father
+ has more to tell you; at least, I should wish him to do so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, taking her mother's hand, she curtsied deeply, and they left the
+ room together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such, my Lord, as I have told you, is the service, so far as I knew till
+ this afternoon, Sir Cyril Shenstone has rendered me. That was no small
+ thing, but it is very little to what I know now that I am indebted to him.
+ After he went out I was speaking with my wife on money matters, desiring
+ much to be of assistance to him in the matter of the expedition on which
+ he is going. Suddenly my daughter burst into tears and left the room. I
+ naturally bade my wife follow her and learn what ailed her. Then, with
+ many sobs and tears, she told her mother that we little knew how much we
+ were indebted to him. She said she had been a wicked girl, having
+ permitted herself to be accosted several times by a well-dressed gallant,
+ who told her that he was the Earl of Harwich, who had professed great love
+ for her, and urged her to marry him privately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He was about to speak to her one day when she was out under Master
+ Cyril's escort. The latter interfered, and there was well-nigh a <i>fracas</i>
+ between them. Being afraid that some of the lookers-on might know her, and
+ bring the matter to our ears, she mentioned so much to us, and, in
+ consequence, we did not allow her to go out afterwards, save in the
+ company of her mother. Nevertheless, the man continued to meet her, and,
+ as he was unknown to her mother, passed notes into her hand. To these she
+ similarly replied, and at last consented to fly with him. She did so at
+ night, and was about to enter a sedan chair in the lane near this house
+ when they were interrupted by the arrival of Master Shenstone and my
+ friend John Wilkes. The former, it seems, had his suspicions, and setting
+ himself to watch, had discovered that she was corresponding with this man&mdash;whom
+ he had found was not the personage he pretended to be, but a disreputable
+ hanger-on of the Court, one John Harvey&mdash;and had then kept up an
+ incessant watch, with the aid of John Wilkes, outside the house at night,
+ until he saw her come out and join the fellow with two associates, when he
+ followed her to the chair they had in readiness for her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was, she says, a terrible scene. Swords were drawn. John Wilkes
+ knocked down one of the men, and Master Shenstone ran John Harvey through
+ the shoulder. Appalled now at seeing how she had been deceived, and how
+ narrowly she had escaped destruction, she returned with her rescuers to
+ the house, and no word was ever said on the subject until she spoke this
+ afternoon. We had noticed that a great change had come over her, and that
+ she seemed to have lost all her tastes for shows and finery, but little
+ did we dream of the cause. She said that she could not have kept the
+ secret much longer in any case, being utterly miserable at the thought of
+ how she had degraded herself and deceived us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was a sad story to have to hear, my Lord, but we have fully forgiven
+ her, having, indeed, cause to thank God both for her preservation and for
+ the good that this seems to have wrought in her. She had been a spoilt
+ child, and, being well-favoured, her head had been turned by flattery, and
+ she indulged in all sorts of foolish dreams. Now she is truly penitent for
+ her folly. Had you not arrived, my Lord, I should, when we had finished
+ our supper, have told Master Shenstone that I knew of this vast service he
+ has rendered us&mdash;a service to which the other was as nothing. That
+ touched my pocket only; this my only child's happiness. I have told you
+ the story, my Lord, by her consent, in order that you might know what sort
+ of a young fellow this gentleman who has rescued your daughter is. John, I
+ thank you for your share in this matter," and, with tears in his eyes, he
+ held out his hand to his faithful companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thank you deeply, Captain Dowsett, for having told me this story," the
+ Earl said gravely. "It was a painful one to tell, and I feel sure that the
+ circumstance will, as you say, be of lasting benefit to your daughter. It
+ shows that her heart is a true and loyal one, or she would not have had so
+ painful a story told to a stranger, simply that the true character of her
+ preserver should be known. I need not say that it has had the effect she
+ desired of raising Sir Cyril Shenstone highly in my esteem. Prince Rupert
+ spoke of him very highly and told me how he had been honourably supporting
+ himself and his father, until the death of the latter. Now I see that he
+ possesses unusual discretion and acuteness, as well as bravery. Now I will
+ take my leave, thanking you for the good entertainment that you have given
+ me. I am staying at the house of the Earl of Surrey, Sir Cyril, and I hope
+ that you will call to-morrow morning, in order that my daughters may thank
+ you in person."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Dave and Cyril escorted the Earl to the door and then returned to
+ the chamber above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII &mdash; NEW FRIENDS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ On arriving at the room upstairs, Captain Dave placed his hand on Cyril's
+ shoulder and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How can I thank you, lad, for what you have done for us?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By saying nothing further about it, Captain Dave. I had hoped that the
+ matter would never have come to your ears, and yet I rejoice, for her own
+ sake, that Mistress Nellie has told you all. I thought that she would do
+ so some day, for I, too, have seen how much she has been changed since
+ then, and though it becomes me not to speak of one older than myself, I
+ think that the experience has been for her good, and, above all, I am
+ rejoiced to find that you have fully forgiven her, for indeed I am sure
+ that she has been grievously punished."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, well, lad, it shall be as you say, for indeed I am but a poor hand
+ at talking, but believe me that I feel as grateful as if I could express
+ myself rightly, and that the Earl of Wisbech cannot feel one whit more
+ thankful to you for having saved the lives of his three children than I do
+ for your having saved my Nellie from the consequences of her own folly.
+ There is one thing that you must let me do&mdash;it is but a small thing,
+ but at present I have no other way of showing what I feel: you must let me
+ take upon myself, as if you had been my son, the expenses of this outfit
+ of yours. I was talking of the matter, as you may have guessed by what I
+ said to the Earl, when Nellie burst into tears; and if I contemplated this
+ when I knew only you had saved me from ruin, how much more do I feel it
+ now that you have done this greater thing? I trust that you will not
+ refuse me and my wife this small opportunity of showing our gratitude.
+ What say you, John Wilkes?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I say, Captain Dave, that it is well spoken, and I am sure Master Cyril
+ will not refuse your offer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will not, Captain Dave, providing that you let it be as a loan that I
+ may perhaps some day be enabled to repay you. I feel that it would be
+ churlish to refuse so kind an offer, and it will relieve me of the one
+ difficulty that troubled me when the prospects in all other respects
+ seemed so fair."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is right, lad, and you have taken a load off my mind. You have not
+ acted quite fairly by us in one respect, Master Cyril!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How is that?" Cyril asked in surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In not telling us that you were Sir Cyril Shenstone, and in letting us
+ put you up in an attic, and letting you go about as Nellie's escort, as if
+ you had been but an apprentice."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I said that my father was Sir Aubrey Shenstone, though I own that I did
+ not say so until I had been here some time; but the fact that he was a
+ Baronet and not a Knight made little difference. It was a friendless lad
+ whom you took in and gave shelter to, Captain Dave, and&mdash;it mattered
+ not whether he was plain Cyril or Sir Cyril. I had certainly no thought of
+ taking my title again until I entered a foreign army, and indeed it would
+ have been a disservice to me here in London. I should have cut but a poor
+ figure asking for work and calling myself Sir Cyril Shenstone. I should
+ have had to enter into all sorts of explanations before anyone would have
+ believed me, and I don't think that, even with you, I should have been so
+ comfortable as I have been."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, at any rate, no harm has been done," Captain Dave said; "but I
+ think you might have told me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I had, Captain Dave, you would assuredly have told your wife and
+ Mistress Nellie; and it was much more pleasant for me that things should
+ be as they were."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, perhaps you were right, lad. And I own that I might not have let
+ you work at my books, and worry over that robbery, had I known that you
+ were of a station above me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That you could never have known," Cyril said warmly. "We have been poor
+ ever since I can remember. I owed my education to the kindness of friends
+ of my mother, and in no way has my station been equal to that of a London
+ trader like yourself. As to the title, it was but a matter of birth, and
+ went but ill with an empty purse and a shabby doublet. In the future it
+ may be useful, but until now, it has been naught, and indeed worse than
+ naught, to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning when Cyril went into the parlour he found that Nellie was
+ busy assisting the maid to lay the table. When the latter had left the
+ room, the girl went up to Cyril and took his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have never thanked you yet," she said. "I could not bring myself to
+ speak of it, but now that I have told them I can do so. Ever since that
+ dreadful night I have prayed for you, morning and evening, and thanked God
+ for sending you to my rescue. What a wicked girl you must have thought me&mdash;and
+ with reason! But you could not think of me worse than I thought of myself.
+ Now that my father and mother have forgiven me I shall be different
+ altogether. I had before made up my mind to tell them. Still, it did not
+ seem to me that I should ever be happy again. But now that I have had the
+ courage to speak out, and they have been so good to me, a great weight is
+ lifted off my mind, and I mean to learn to be a good housewife like my
+ mother, and to try to be worthy, some day, of an honest man's love."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sure you will be," Cyril said warmly. "And so, Mistress Nellie, it
+ has all turned out for the best, though it did not seem so at one time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment Captain Dave came in. "I am glad to see you two talking
+ together as of old," he said. "We had thought that there must be some
+ quarrel between you, for you had given up rating him, Nellie. Give her a
+ kiss, Cyril; she is a good lass, though she has been a foolish one. Nay,
+ Nellie, do not offer him your cheek&mdash;it is the fashion to do that to
+ every idle acquaintance. Kiss him heartily, as if you loved him. That is
+ right, lass. Now let us to breakfast. Where is your mother? She is late."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I told her that I would see after the breakfast in future, father, and I
+ have begun this morning&mdash;partly because it is my duty to take the
+ work off her hands, and partly because I wanted a private talk with Sir
+ Cyril."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I won't be called Sir Cyril under this roof," the lad said, laughing.
+ "And I warn you that if anyone calls me so I will not answer. I have
+ always been Cyril with you all, and I intend to remain so to the end, and
+ you must remember that it is but a few months that I have had the right to
+ the title, and was never addressed by it until by Prince Rupert. I was for
+ the moment well nigh as much surprised as you were last night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour later Cyril again donned his best suit, and started to pay his
+ visit to the Earl. Had he not seen him over-night, he would have felt very
+ uncomfortable at the thought of the visit; but he had found him so
+ pleasant and friendly, and so entirely free from any air of pride or
+ condescension, that it seemed as if he were going to meet a friend. He was
+ particularly struck with the manner in which he had placed Captain Dave
+ and his family at their ease, and got them to talk as freely and naturally
+ with him as if he had been an acquaintance of long standing. It seemed
+ strange to him to give his name as Sir Cyril Shenstone to the lackeys at
+ the door, and he almost expected to see an expression of amusement on
+ their faces. They had, however, evidently received instructions respecting
+ him, for he was without question at once ushered into the room in which
+ the Earl of Wisbech and his daughters were sitting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl shook him warmly by the hand, and then, turning to his daughters,
+ said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is the gentleman to whom you owe your lives, girls. Sir Cyril, these
+ are my daughters&mdash;Lady Dorothy, Lady Bertha, and Lady Beatrice. It
+ seems somewhat strange to have to introduce you, who have saved their
+ lives, to them; but you have the advantage of them, for you have seen them
+ before, but they have not until now seen your face."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each of the girls as she was named made a deep curtsey, and then presented
+ her cheek to be kissed, as was the custom of the times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are somewhat tongue-tied," the Earl said, smiling, as the eldest of
+ the three cast an appealing glance to him, "and have begged me to thank
+ you in their names, which I do with all my heart, and beg you to believe
+ that their gratitude is none the less deep because they have no words to
+ express it. They generally have plenty to say, I can assure you, and will
+ find their tongues when you are a little better acquainted."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am most happy to have been of service to you, ladies," Cyril said,
+ bowing deeply to them. "I can hardly say that I have the advantage your
+ father speaks of, for in truth the smoke was so thick, and my eyes smarted
+ so with it, that I could scarce see your faces."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Their attire, too, in no way helped you," the Earl said, with a laugh,
+ "for, as I hear, their costume was of the slightest. I believe that
+ Dorothy's chief concern is that she did not have time to attire herself in
+ a more becoming toilette before the smoke overpowered her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, father," the girl protested, with a pretty colour in her cheeks,
+ "you know I have never said anything of the sort, though I did say that I
+ wished I had thrown a cloak round me. It is not pleasant, whatever you may
+ think, to know that one was handed down a ladder in one's nightdress."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't care about that a bit," Beatrice said; "but you did not say,
+ father, that it was a young gentleman, no older than Sydney, who found us
+ and carried us out. I had expected to see a great big man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't think I said anything about his age, Beatrice, but simply told
+ you that I had found out that it was Sir Cyril Shenstone that had saved
+ you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is the nurse recovering, my Lord?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She is still in bed, and the doctor says she will be some time before she
+ quite recovers from the fright and shock. They were all sleeping in the
+ storey above. It was Dorothy who first woke, and, after waking her
+ sisters, ran into the nurse's room, which was next door, and roused her.
+ The silly woman was so frightened that she could do nothing but stand at
+ the window and scream until the girls almost dragged her away, and forced
+ her to come downstairs. The smoke, however, was so thick that they could
+ get no farther than the next floor; then, guided by the screams of the
+ other servants, they opened a door and ran in, but, as you know, it was
+ not the room into which the women had gone. The nurse fell down in a faint
+ as soon as she got in. The girls, as it seems, dragged her as far as they
+ could towards the window, but she was too heavy for them; and as they had
+ not shut the door, the smoke poured in and overpowered them, and they fell
+ beside her. The rest you know. She is a silly woman, and she has quite
+ lost my confidence by her folly and cowardice, but she has been a good
+ servant, and the girls, all of whom she nursed, were fond of her. Still,
+ it is evident that she is not to be trusted in an emergency, and it was
+ only because the girls' governess is away on a visit to her mother that
+ she happened to be left in charge of them. Now, young ladies, you can
+ leave us, as I have other matters to talk over with Sir Cyril."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three girls curtsied deeply, first to their father, and then to Cyril,
+ who held the door for them to pass out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, Sir Cyril," the Earl said, as the door closed behind them, "we must
+ have a talk together. You may well believe that, after what has happened,
+ I look upon you almost as part of my family, and that I consider you have
+ given me the right to look after your welfare as if you were a near
+ relation of my own; and glad I am to have learned yesterday evening that
+ you are, in all respects, one whom I might be proud indeed to call a
+ kinsman. Had you been a cousin of mine, with parents but indifferently off
+ in worldly goods, it would have been my duty, of course, to push you
+ forward and to aid you in every way to make a proper figure on this
+ expedition. I think that, after what has happened, I have equally the
+ right to do so, and what would have been my duty, had you been a relation,
+ is no less a duty, and will certainly be a great gratification to me to do
+ now. You understand me, do you not? I wish to take upon myself all the
+ charges connected with your outfit, and to make you an allowance, similar
+ to that which I shall give to my son, for your expenses on board ship. All
+ this is of course but a slight thing, but, believe me, that when the
+ expedition is over it will be my pleasure to help you forward to
+ advancement in any course which you may choose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thank you most heartily, my Lord," Cyril said, "and would not hesitate
+ to accept your help in the present matter, did I need it. However, I have
+ saved some little money during the past two years, and Captain Dowsett has
+ most generously offered me any sum I may require for my expenses, and has
+ consented to allow me to take it as a loan to be repaid at some future
+ time, should it be in my power to do so. Your offer, however, to aid me in
+ my career afterwards, I most thankfully accept. My idea has always been to
+ take service under some foreign prince, and Prince Rupert has most kindly
+ promised to aid me in that respect; but after serving for a time at sea I
+ shall be better enabled to judge than at present as to whether that course
+ is indeed the best, and I shall be most thankful for your counsel in this
+ and all other matters, and feel myself fortunate indeed to have obtained
+ your good will and patronage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, if it must be so, it must," the Earl said. "Your friend Captain
+ Dowsett seems to me a very worthy man. You have placed him under an
+ obligation as heavy as my own, and he has the first claim to do you
+ service. In this matter, then, I must be content to stand aside, but on
+ your return from sea it will be my turn, and I shall be hurt and grieved
+ indeed if you do not allow me an opportunity of proving my gratitude to
+ you. As to the career you speak of, it is a precarious one. There are
+ indeed many English and Scotch officers who have risen to high rank and
+ honour in foreign service; but to every one that so succeeds, how many
+ fall unnoticed, and lie in unmarked graves, in well-nigh every country in
+ Europe? Were you like so many of your age, bent merely on adventure and
+ pleasure, the case would be different, but it is evident that you have a
+ clear head for business, that you are steady and persevering, and such
+ being the case, there are many offices under the Crown in which you might
+ distinguish yourself and do far better than the vast majority of those who
+ sell their swords to foreign princes, and become mere soldiers of fortune,
+ fighting for a cause in which they have no interest, and risking their
+ lives in quarrels that are neither their own nor their country's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "However, all this we can talk over when you come back after having, as I
+ hope, aided in destroying the Dutch Fleet. I expect my son up to-morrow,
+ and trust that you will accompany him to the King's <i>levée</i>, next
+ Monday. Prince Rupert tells me that he has already presented you to the
+ King, and that you were well received by him, as indeed you had a right to
+ be, as the son of a gentleman who had suffered and sacrificed much in the
+ Royal cause. But I will take the opportunity of introducing you to several
+ other gentlemen who will sail with you. On the following day I shall be
+ going down into Kent, and shall remain there until it is time for Sydney
+ to embark. If you can get your preparations finished by that time, I trust
+ that you will give us the pleasure of your company, and will stay with me
+ until you embark with Sydney. In this way you will come to know us better,
+ and to feel, as I wish you to feel, as one of the family."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril gratefully accepted the invitation, and then took his leave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Dave was delighted when he heard the issue of his visit to the
+ Earl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should never have forgiven you, lad, if you had accepted the Earl's
+ offer to help you in the matter of this expedition. It is no great thing,
+ and comes well within my compass, and I should have been sorely hurt had
+ you let him come between us; but in the future I can do little, and he
+ much. I have spoken to several friends who are better acquainted with
+ public affairs than I am, and they all speak highly of him. He holds, for
+ the most part, aloof from Court, which is to his credit seeing how matters
+ go on there; but he is spoken of as a very worthy gentleman and one of
+ merit, who might take a prominent part in affairs were he so minded. He
+ has broad estates in Kent and Norfolk, and spends the greater part of his
+ life at one or other of his country seats. Doubtless, he will be able to
+ assist you greatly in the future."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did not like to refuse his offer to go down with him to Kent," Cyril
+ said, "though I would far rather have remained here with you until we
+ sail."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You did perfectly right, lad. It will cut short your stay here but a
+ week, and it would be madness to refuse the opportunity of getting to know
+ him and his family better. The Countess died three years ago, I hear, and
+ he has shown no disposition to take another wife, as he might well do,
+ seeing he is but a year or two past forty, and has as pleasant a face and
+ manner as I have ever seen. He is not the sort of man to promise what he
+ will not perform, Cyril, and more than ever do I think that it was a
+ fortunate thing for you that John Wilkes fetched you to that fire in the
+ Savoy. And now, lad, you have no time to lose. You must come with me at
+ once to Master Woods, the tailor, in Eastcheap, who makes clothes not only
+ for the citizens but for many of the nobles and gallants of the Court. In
+ the first place, you will need a fitting dress for the King's <i>levée</i>;
+ then you will need at least one more suit similar to that you now wear,
+ and three for on board ship and for ordinary occasions, made of stout
+ cloth, but in the fashion; then you must have helmet, and breast- and
+ back-pieces for the fighting, and for these we will go to Master Lawrence,
+ the armourer, in Cheapside. All these we will order to-day in my name, and
+ put them down in your account to me. As to arms, you have your sword, and
+ there is but a brace of pistols to be bought. You will want a few things
+ such as thick cloaks for sea service; for though I suppose that Volunteers
+ do not keep their watch, you may meet with rains and heavy weather, and
+ you will need something to keep you dry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They sallied out at once. So the clothes were ordered, and the Court suit,
+ with the best of the others promised by the end of the week; the armour
+ was fitted on and bought, and a stock of fine shirts with ruffles, hose,
+ and shoes, was also purchased. The next day Sydney Oliphant, the Earl's
+ son, called upon Cyril. He was a frank, pleasant young fellow, about a
+ year older than Cyril. He was very fond of his sisters, and expressed in
+ lively terms his gratitude for their rescue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This expedition has happened in the nick of time for me," he said, when,
+ in accordance with his invitation, Cyril and he embarked in the Earl's
+ boat in which he had been rowed to the City, "for I was in bad odour with
+ the authorities, and was like, erelong, to have been sent home far less
+ pleasantly; and although the Earl, my father, is very indulgent, he would
+ have been terribly angry with me had it been so. To tell you the truth, at
+ the University we are divided into two sets&mdash;those who read and those
+ who don't&mdash;and on joining I found myself very soon among the latter.
+ I don't think it was quite my fault, for I naturally fell in with
+ companions whom I had known before, and it chanced that some of these were
+ among the wildest spirits in the University.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course I had my horses, and, being fond of riding, I was more often in
+ the saddle than in my seat in the college schools. Then there were
+ constant complaints against us for sitting up late and disturbing the
+ college with our melodies, and altogether we stood in bad odour with the
+ Dons; and when they punished us we took our revenge by playing them
+ pranks, until lately it became almost open war, and would certainly have
+ ended before long in a score or more of us being sent down. I should not
+ have minded that myself, but it would have grieved the Earl, and I am not
+ one of the new-fashioned ones who care naught for what their fathers may
+ say. He has been praising you up to the skies this morning, I can tell you&mdash;I
+ don't mean only as to the fire but about other things&mdash;and says he
+ hopes we shall be great friends, and I am sure I hope so too, and think
+ so. He had been telling me about your finding out about their robbing that
+ good old sea-captain you live with, and how you were kidnapped afterwards,
+ and sent to Holland; and how, in another adventure, although he did not
+ tell me how that came about, you pricked a ruffling gallant through the
+ shoulder; so that you have had a larger share of adventure, by a great
+ deal, than I have. I had expected to see you rather a solemn personage,
+ for the Earl told me you had more sense in your little finger than I had
+ in my whole body, which was not complimentary to me, though I dare say it
+ is true."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, as a rule, they say that sensible people are very disagreeable; but
+ I hope I shall not be disagreeable," Cyril laughed, "and I am certainly
+ not aware that I am particularly sensible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I am sure you won't be disagreeable, but I should have been quite
+ nervous about coming to see you if it had not been for the girls. Little
+ Beatrice told me she thought you were a prince in disguise, and had
+ evidently a private idea that the good fairies had sent you to her rescue.
+ Bertha said that you were a very proper young gentleman, and that she was
+ sure you were nice. Dorothy didn't say much, but she evidently approved of
+ the younger girls' sentiments, so I felt that you must be all right, for
+ the girls are generally pretty severe critics, and very few of my friends
+ stand at all high in their good graces. What amusement are you most fond
+ of?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am afraid I have had very little time for amusements," Cyril said. "I
+ was very fond of fencing when I was in France, but have had no opportunity
+ of practising since I came to England. I went to a bull-bait once, but
+ thought it a cruel sport."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I suppose you go to a play-house sometimes?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; I have never been inside one. A good deal of my work has been done in
+ the evening, and I don't know that the thought ever occurred to me to go.
+ I know nothing of your English sports, and neither ride nor shoot, except
+ with a pistol, with which I used to be a good shot when I was in France."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They rowed down as low as Greenwich, then, as the tide turned, made their
+ way back; and by the time Cyril alighted from the boat at London Bridge
+ stairs the two young fellows had become quite intimate with each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie looked with great approval at Cyril as he came downstairs in a full
+ Court dress. Since the avowal she had made of her fault she had recovered
+ much of her brightness. She bustled about the house, intent upon the
+ duties she had newly taken up, to the gratification of Mrs. Dowsett, who
+ protested that her occupation was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at all, mother. It is only that you are now captain of the ship, and
+ have got to give your orders instead of carrying them out yourself. Father
+ did not pull up the ropes or go aloft to furl the sails, while I have no
+ doubt he had plenty to do in seeing that his orders were carried out. You
+ will be worse off than he was, for he had John Wilkes, and others, who
+ knew their duty, while I have got almost everything to learn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although her cheerfulness had returned, and she could again be heard
+ singing snatches of song about the house, her voice and manner were
+ gentler and softer, and Captain Dave said to Cyril,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It has all turned out for the best, lad. The ship was very near wrecked,
+ but the lesson has been a useful one, and there is no fear of her being
+ lost from want of care or good seamanship in future. I feel, too, that I
+ have been largely to blame in the matter. I spoilt her as a child, and I
+ spoilt her all along. Her mother would have kept a firmer hand upon the
+ helm if I had not always spoken up for the lass, and said, 'Let her have
+ her head; don't check the sheets in too tautly.' I see I was wrong now.
+ Why, lad, what a blessing it is to us all that it happened when it did!
+ for if that fire had been but a month earlier, you would probably have
+ gone away with the Earl, and we should have known nothing of Nellie's
+ peril until we found that she was gone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Cyril&mdash;no, I really cannot call you Cyril now," Nellie said,
+ curtseying almost to the ground after taking a survey of the lad, "your
+ costume becomes you rarely; and I am filled with wonder at the thought of
+ my own stupidity in not seeing all along that you were a prince in
+ disguise. It is like the fairy tales my old nurse used to tell me of the
+ king's son who went out to look for a beautiful wife, and who worked as a
+ scullion in the king's palace without anyone suspecting his rank. I think
+ fortune has been very hard upon me, in that I was born five years too
+ soon. Had I been but fourteen instead of nineteen, your Royal Highness
+ might have cast favourable eyes upon me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But then, Mistress Nellie," Cyril said, laughing, "you would be filled
+ with grief now at the thought that I am going away to the wars."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl's face changed. She dropped her saucy manner and said earnestly,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am grieved, Cyril; and if it would do any good I would sit down and
+ have a hearty cry. The Dutchmen are brave fighters, and their fleet will
+ be stronger than ours; and there will be many who sail away to sea who
+ will never come back again. I have never had a brother; but it seems to me
+ that if I had had one who was wise, and thoughtful, and brave, I should
+ have loved him as I love you. I think the princess must always have felt
+ somehow that the scullion was not what he seemed; and though I have always
+ laughed at you and scolded you, I have known all along that you were not
+ really a clerk. I don't know that I thought you were a prince; but I
+ somehow felt a little afraid of you. You never said that you thought me
+ vain and giddy, but I knew you did think so, and I used to feel a little
+ malice against you; and yet, somehow, I respected and liked you all the
+ more, and now it seems to me that you are still in disguise, and that,
+ though you seem to be but a boy, you are really a man to whom some good
+ fairy has given a boy's face. Methinks no boy could be as thoughtful and
+ considerate, and as kind as you are."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are exaggerating altogether," Cyril said; "and yet, in what you say
+ about my age, I think you are partly right. I have lived most of my life
+ alone; I have had much care always on my shoulders, and grave
+ responsibility; thus it is that I am older in many ways than I should be
+ at my years. I would it were not so. I have not had any boyhood, as other
+ boys have, and I think it has been a great misfortune for me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It has not been a misfortune for us, Cyril; it has been a blessing indeed
+ to us all that you have not been quite like other boys, and I think that
+ all your life it will be a satisfaction for you to know that you have
+ saved one house from ruin, one woman from misery, and disgrace. Now it is
+ time for you to be going; but although you are leaving us tomorrow, Cyril,
+ I hope that you are not going quite out of our lives."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That you may be sure I am not, Nellie. If you have reason to be grateful
+ to me, truly I have much reason to be grateful to your father. I have
+ never been so happy as since I have been in this house, and I shall always
+ return to it as to a home where I am sure of a welcome&mdash;as the place
+ to which I chiefly owe any good fortune that may ever befall me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The <i>levée</i> was a brilliant one, and was attended, in addition to the
+ usual throng of courtiers, by most of the officers and gentlemen who were
+ going with the Fleet. Cyril was glad indeed that he was with the Earl of
+ Wisbech and his son, for he would have felt lonely and out of place in the
+ brilliant throng, in which Prince Rupert's face would have been the only
+ one with which he was familiar. The Earl introduced him to several of the
+ gentlemen who would be his shipmates, and by all he was cordially received
+ when the Earl named him as the gentleman who had rescued his daughters
+ from death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At times, when the Earl was chatting with his friends, Cyril moved about
+ through the rooms with Sydney, who knew by appearance a great number of
+ those present, and was able to point out all the distinguished persons of
+ the Court to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is the Prince," he said, "talking with the Earl of Rochester. What
+ a grave face he has now! It is difficult to believe that he is the Rupert
+ of the wars, and the headstrong prince whose very bravery helped to lose
+ well-nigh as many battles as he won. We may be sure that he will take us
+ into the very thick of the fight, Cyril. Even now his wrist is as firm,
+ and, I doubt not, his arm as strong as when he led the Cavaliers. I have
+ seen him in the tennis-court; there is not one at the Court, though many
+ are well-nigh young enough to be his sons, who is his match at tennis.
+ There is the Duke of York. They say he is a Catholic, but I own that makes
+ no difference to me. He is fond of the sea, and is never so happy as when
+ he is on board ship, though you would hardly think it by his grave face.
+ The King is fond of it, too. He has a pleasure vessel that is called a
+ yacht, and so has the Duke of York, and they have races one against the
+ other; but the King generally wins. He is making it a fashionable pastime.
+ Some day I will have one myself&mdash;that is, if I find I like the sea;
+ for it must be pleasant to sail about in your own vessel, and to go
+ wheresoever one may fancy without asking leave from any man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it came to his turn Cyril passed before the King with the Earl and
+ his son. The Earl presented Sydney, who had not before been at Court, to
+ the King, mentioning that he was going out as a Volunteer in Prince
+ Rupert's vessel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is as it should be, my Lord," the King said. "England need never
+ fear so long as her nobles and gentlemen are ready themselves to go out to
+ fight her battles, and to set an example to the seamen. You need not
+ present this young gentleman to me; my cousin Rupert has already done so,
+ and told me of the service he has rendered to your daughters. He, too,
+ sails with the Prince, and after what happened there can be no doubt that
+ he can stand fire well. I would that this tiresome dignity did not prevent
+ my being of the party. I would gladly, for once, lay my kingship down and
+ go out as one of the company to help give the Dutchmen a lesson that will
+ teach them that, even if caught unexpectedly, the sea-dogs of England can
+ well hold their own, though they have no longer a Blake to command them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wonder that the King ventures to use Blake's name," Sydney whispered,
+ as they moved away, "considering the indignities that he allowed the
+ judges to inflict on the body of the grand old sailor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was scandalous!" Cyril said warmly; "and I burned with indignation
+ when I heard of it in France. They may call him a traitor because he sided
+ with the Parliament, but even Royalists should never have forgotten what
+ great deeds he did for England. However, though they might have
+ dishonoured his body, they could not touch his fame, and his name will be
+ known and honoured as long as England is a nation and when the names of
+ the men who condemned him have been long forgotten."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After leaving the <i>levée</i>, Cyril went back to the City, and the next
+ morning started on horseback, with the Earl and his son, to the latter's
+ seat, near Sevenoaks, the ladies having gone down in the Earl's coach on
+ the previous day. Wholly unaccustomed as Cyril was to riding, he was so
+ stiff that he had difficulty in dismounting when they rode up to the
+ mansion. The Earl had provided a quiet and well-trained horse for his use,
+ and he had therefore found no difficulty in retaining his seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must ride every day while you are down here," the Earl said, "and by
+ the end of the week you will begin to be fairly at home in the saddle. A
+ good seat is one of the prime necessities of a gentleman's education, and
+ if it should be that you ever carry out your idea of taking service abroad
+ it will be essential for you, because, in most cases, the officers are
+ mounted. You can hardly expect ever to become a brilliant rider. For that
+ it is necessary to begin young; but if you can keep your seat under all
+ circumstances, and be able to use your sword on horseback, as well as on
+ foot, it will be all that is needful."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The week passed very pleasantly. Cyril rode and fenced daily with Sydney,
+ who was surprised to find that he was fully his match with the sword. He
+ walked in the gardens with the girls, who had now quite recovered from the
+ effects of the fire. Bertha and Beatrice, being still children, chatted
+ with him as freely and familiarly as they did with Sydney. Of Lady Dorothy
+ he saw less, as she was in charge of her <i>gouvernante</i>, who always
+ walked beside her, and was occupied in training her into the habits of
+ preciseness and decorum in vogue at the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do believe, Dorothy," Sydney said, one day, "that you are forgetting
+ how to laugh. You walk like a machine, and seem afraid to move your hands
+ or your feet except according to rule. I like you very much better as you
+ were a year ago, when you did not think yourself too fine for a romp, and
+ could laugh when you were pleased. That dragon of yours is spoiling you
+ altogether."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is a matter of opinion, Sydney," Dorothy said, with a deep curtsey.
+ "When you first began to fence, I have no doubt you were stiff and
+ awkward, and I am sure if you had always had someone by your side, saying,
+ 'Keep your head up!' 'Don't poke your chin forward!' 'Pray do not swing
+ your arms!' and that sort of thing, you would be just as awkward as I
+ feel. I am sure I would rather run about with the others; the process of
+ being turned into a young lady is not a pleasant one. But perhaps some
+ day, when you see the finished article, you will be pleased to give your
+ Lordship's august approval," and she ended with a merry laugh that would
+ have shocked her <i>gouvernante</i> if she had heard it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII &mdash; THE BATTLE OF LOWESTOFT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Earl returned with his son and Cyril to town, and the latter spent the
+ night in the City.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not know, Cyril," Captain Dave said, as they talked over his
+ departure, "that you run much greater risk in going than do we in staying
+ here. The Plague makes progress, and although it has not invaded the City,
+ we can hardly hope that it will be long before it appears here. There are
+ many evil prophecies abroad, and it is the general opinion that a great
+ misfortune hangs over us, and they say that many have prepared to leave
+ London. I have talked the matter over with my wife. We have not as yet
+ thought of going, but should the Plague come heavily, it may be that we
+ shall for a time go away. There will be no business to be done, for
+ vessels will not come up the Thames and risk infection, nor, indeed, would
+ they be admitted into ports, either in England or abroad, after coming
+ from an infected place. Therefore I could leave without any loss in the
+ way of trade. It will, of course, depend upon the heaviness of the malady,
+ but if it becomes widespread we shall perhaps go for a visit to my wife's
+ cousin, who lives near Gloucester, and who has many times written to us
+ urging us to go down with Nellie for a visit to her. Hitherto, business
+ has prevented my going, but if all trade ceases, it would be a good
+ occasion for us, and such as may never occur again. Still, I earnestly
+ desire that it may not arise, for it cannot do so without sore trouble and
+ pain alighting on the City. Did the Earl tell you, Cyril, what he has done
+ with regard to John?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; he did not speak to me on the subject."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His steward came here three days since with a gold watch and chain, as a
+ gift from the Earl. The watch has an inscription on the case, saying that
+ it is presented to John Wilkes from the Earl of Wisbech, as a memorial of
+ his gratitude for the great services rendered to his daughters. Moreover,
+ he brought a letter from the Earl saying that if John should at any time
+ leave my service, owing to my death or retirement from business, or from
+ John himself wishing, either from age or other reason, to leave me, he
+ would place at his service a cottage and garden on his estate, and a
+ pension of twenty pounds a year, to enable him to live in comfort for the
+ remainder of his days. John is, as you may suppose, mightily pleased, for
+ though I would assuredly never part with him as long as I live, and have
+ by my will made provision that will keep him from want in case I die
+ before him, it was mighty pleasant to receive so handsome a letter and
+ offer of service from the Earl. Nellie wrote for him a letter in which he
+ thanked the Earl for the kindness of his offer, for which, although he
+ hoped he should never be forced to benefit from it, he was none the less
+ obliged and grateful, seeing that he had done nothing that any other
+ bystander would not have done, to deserve it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early the next morning Sydney Oliphant rode up to the door, followed by
+ two grooms, one of whom had a led horse, and the other a sumpter-mule,
+ which was partly laden. Captain Dave went down with Cyril to the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I pray you to enter, my Lord," he said. "My wife will not be happy unless
+ you take a cup of posset before you start. Moreover, she and my daughter
+ desire much to see you, as you are going to sail with Sir Cyril, whom we
+ regard as a member of our family."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will come up right willingly," the young noble said, leaping lightly
+ from his horse. "If your good dame's posset is as good as the wine the
+ Earl, my father, tells me you gave him, it must be good indeed; for he
+ told me he believed he had none in his cellar equal to it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He remained for a few minutes upstairs, chatting gaily, vowing that the
+ posset was the best he had ever drank, and declaring to Nellie that he
+ regarded as a favourable omen for his expedition that he should have seen
+ so fair a face the last thing before starting. He shook hands with John
+ Wilkes heartily when he came up to say that Cyril's valises were all
+ securely packed on the horses, and then went off, promising to send
+ Captain Dave a runnet of the finest schiedam from the Dutch Admiral's
+ ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Truly, I am thankful you came up," Cyril said, as they mounted and rode
+ off. "Before you came we were all dull, and the Dame and Mistress Nellie
+ somewhat tearful; Now we have gone off amidst smiles, which is vastly more
+ pleasant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crossing London Bridge, they rode through Southwark, and then out into the
+ open country. Each had a light valise strapped behind the saddle, and the
+ servants had saddle-bags containing the smaller articles of luggage, while
+ the sumpter-mule carried two trunks with their clothes and sea
+ necessaries. It was late in the evening when they arrived at Chatham. Here
+ they put up at an hotel which was crowded with officers of the Fleet, and
+ with Volunteers like themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should grumble at these quarters, Cyril," Sydney said, as the landlord,
+ with many apologies, showed them into a tiny attic, which was the only
+ place he had unoccupied, "were it not that we are going to sea to-morrow,
+ and I suppose that our quarters will be even rougher there. However, we
+ may have elbow-room for a time, for most of the Volunteers will not join,
+ I hear, until the last thing before the Fleet sails, and it may be a
+ fortnight yet before all the ships are collected. I begged my father to
+ let me do the same, but he goes back again to-day to Sevenoaks, and he
+ liked not the idea of my staying in town, seeing that the Plague is
+ spreading so rapidly. I would even have stayed in the country had he let
+ me, but he was of opinion that I was best on board&mdash;in the first
+ place, because I may not get news down there in time to join the Fleet
+ before it sails, and in the second, that I might come to get over this
+ sickness of the sea, and so be fit and able to do my part when we meet the
+ Dutch. This was so reasonable that I could urge nothing against it; for,
+ in truth, it would be a horrible business if I were lying like a sick dog,
+ unable to lift my head, while our men were fighting the Dutch. I have
+ never been to sea, and know not how I shall bear it. Are you a good
+ sailor?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; I used to go out very often in a fishing-boat at Dunkirk, and never
+ was ill from the first. Many people are not ill at all, and it will
+ certainly be of an advantage to you to be on board for a short time in
+ quiet waters before setting out for sea."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On going downstairs, Lord Oliphant found several young men of his
+ acquaintance among those staying in the house. He introduced Cyril to
+ them. But the room was crowded and noisy; many of those present had drunk
+ more than was good for them, and it was not long before Cyril told his
+ friend that he should go up to bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am not accustomed to noisy parties, Sydney, and feel quite confused
+ with all this talk."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will soon get accustomed to it, Cyril. Still, do as you like. I dare
+ say I shall not be very long before I follow you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning after breakfast they went down to the quay, and took a
+ boat to the ship, which was lying abreast of the dockyard. The captain, on
+ their giving their names, consulted the list.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is right, gentlemen, though indeed I know not why you should have
+ come down until we are ready to sail, which may not be for a week or more,
+ though we shall go out from here to-morrow and join those lying in the
+ Hope; for indeed you can be of no use while we are fitting, and would but
+ do damage to your clothes and be in the way of the sailors. It is but
+ little accommodation you will find on board here, though we will do the
+ best we can for you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We do not come about accommodation, captain," Lord Oliphant laughed, "and
+ we have brought down gear with us that will not soil, or rather, that
+ cannot be the worse for soiling. There are three or four others at the inn
+ where we stopped last night who are coming on board, but I hear that the
+ rest of the Volunteers will probably join when the Fleet assembles in
+ Yarmouth roads."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then they must be fonder of journeying on horseback than I am," the
+ captain said. "While we are in the Hope, where, indeed, for aught I know,
+ we may tarry but a day or two, they could come down by boat conveniently
+ without trouble, whereas to Yarmouth it is a very long ride, with the risk
+ of losing their purses to the gentlemen of the road. Moreover, though the
+ orders are at present that the Fleet gather at Yarmouth, and many are
+ already there 'tis like that it may be changed in a day for Harwich or the
+ Downs. I pray you get your meals at your inn to-day, for we are, as you
+ see, full of work taking on board stores. If it please you to stay and
+ watch what is doing here you are heartily welcome, but please tell the
+ others that they had best not come off until late in the evening, by which
+ time I will do what I can to have a place ready for them to sleep. We
+ shall sail at the turn of the tide, which will be at three o'clock in the
+ morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oliphant wrote a few lines to the gentlemen on shore, telling them that
+ the captain desired that none should come on board until the evening, and
+ having sent it off by their boatmen, telling them to return in time to
+ take them back to dinner, he and Cyril mounted to the poop and surveyed
+ the scene round them. The ship was surrounded with lighters and boats from
+ the dockyards, and from these casks and barrels, boxes and cases, were
+ being swung on board by blocks from the yards, or rolled in at the
+ port-holes. A large number of men were engaged at the work, and as fast as
+ the stores came on board they were seized by the sailors and carried down
+ into the hold, the provisions piled in tiers of barrels, the powder-kegs
+ packed in the magazine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Tis like an ant-hill," Cyril said. "'Tis just as I have seen when a nest
+ has been disturbed. Every ant seizes a white egg as big as itself, and
+ rushes off with it to the passage below."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They work bravely," his companion said. "Every man seems to know that it
+ is important that the ship should be filled up by to-night. See! the other
+ four vessels lying above us are all alike at work, and may, perhaps, start
+ with us in the morning. The other ships are busy, too, but not as we are.
+ I suppose they will take them in hand when they have got rid of us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am not surprised that the captain does not want idlers here, for,
+ except ourselves, every man seems to have his appointed work."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I feel half inclined to take off my doublet and to go and help to roll
+ those big casks up the planks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I fancy, Sydney, we should be much more in the way there than here. There
+ is certainly no lack of men, and your strength and mine together would not
+ equal that of one of those strong fellows; besides, we are learning
+ something here. It is good to see how orderly the work is being carried
+ on, for, in spite of the number employed, there is no confusion. You see
+ there are three barges on each side; the upper tiers of barrels and bales
+ are being got on board through the portholes, while the lower ones are
+ fished up from the bottom by the ropes from the yards and swung into the
+ waist, and so passed below; and as fast as one barge is unloaded another
+ drops alongside to take its place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They returned to the inn to dinner, after which they paid a visit to the
+ victualling yard and dockyard, where work was everywhere going on. After
+ supper they, with the other gentlemen for Prince Rupert's ship, took boat
+ and went off together. They had learned that, while they would be
+ victualled on board, they must take with them wine and other matters they
+ required over and above the ship's fare. They had had a consultation with
+ the other gentlemen after dinner, and concluded that it would be best to
+ take but a small quantity of things, as they knew not how they would be
+ able to stow them away, and would have opportunities of getting, at
+ Gravesend or at Yarmouth, further stores, when they saw what things were
+ required. They therefore took only a cheese, some butter, and a case of
+ wine. As soon as they got on board they were taken below. They found that
+ a curtain of sail-cloth had been hung across the main deck, and hammocks
+ slung between the guns. Three or four lanterns were hung along the middle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is all we can do for you, gentlemen," the officer who conducted them
+ down said. "Had we been going on a pleasure trip we could have knocked up
+ separate cabins, but as we must have room to work the guns, this cannot be
+ done. In the morning the sailors will take down these hammocks, and will
+ erect a table along the middle, where you will take your meals. At
+ present, as you see, we have only slung hammocks for you, but when you all
+ come on board there will be twenty. We have, so far, only a list of
+ sixteen, but as the Prince said that two or three more might come at the
+ last moment we have railed off space enough for ten hammocks on each side.
+ We will get the place cleaned for you to-morrow, but the last barge was
+ emptied but a few minutes since, and we could do naught but just sweep the
+ deck down. To-morrow everything shall be scrubbed and put in order."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It will do excellently well," one of the gentlemen said. "We have not
+ come on board ship to get luxuries, and had we to sleep on the bare boards
+ you would hear no grumbling."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, gentlemen, as I have shown you your quarters, will you come up with
+ me to the captain's cabin? He has bade me say that he will be glad if you
+ will spend an hour with him there before you retire to rest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On their entering, the captain shook hands with Lord Oliphant and Cyril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I must apologise, gentlemen, for being short with you when you came on
+ board this morning; but my hands were full, and I had no time to be
+ polite. They say you can never get a civil answer from a housewife on her
+ washing-day, and it is the same thing with an officer on board a ship when
+ she is taking in her stores. However, that business is over, and now I am
+ glad to see you all, and will do my best to make you as comfortable as I
+ can, which indeed will not be much; for as we shall, I hope, be going into
+ action in the course of another ten days, the decks must all be kept
+ clear, and as we have the Prince on board, we have less cabin room than we
+ should have were we not an admiral's flagship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wine was placed on the table, and they had a pleasant chat. They learnt
+ that the Fleet was now ready for sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Four ships will sail with ours to-morrow," the captain said, "and the
+ other five will be off the next morning. They have all their munitions on
+ board, and will take in the rest of their provisions to-morrow. The Dutch
+ had thought to take us by surprise, but from what we hear they are not so
+ forward as we, for things have been pushed on with great zeal at all our
+ ports, the war being generally popular with the nation, and especially
+ with the merchants, whose commerce has been greatly injured by the
+ pretensions and violence of the Dutch. The Portsmouth ships, and those
+ from Plymouth, are already on their way round to the mouth of the Thames,
+ and in a week we may be at sea. I only hope the Dutch will not be long
+ before they come out to fight us. However, we are likely to pick up a
+ great many prizes, and, next to fighting, you know, sailors like
+ prize-money."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After an hour's talk the five gentlemen went below to their hammocks, and
+ then to bed, with much laughter at the difficulty they had in mounting
+ into their swinging cots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was scarce daylight when they were aroused by a great stir on board the
+ ship, and, hastily putting on their clothes, went on deck. Already a crowd
+ of men were aloft loosening the sails. Others had taken their places in
+ boats in readiness to tow the ship, for the wind was, as yet, so light
+ that it was like she would scarce have steerage way, and there were many
+ sharp angles in the course down the river to be rounded, and shallows to
+ be avoided. A few minutes later the moorings were cast off, the sails
+ sheeted home, and the crew gave a great cheer, which was answered from the
+ dockyard, and from boats alongside, full of the relations and friends of
+ the sailors, who stood up and waved their hats and shouted good bye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sails still hung idly, but the tide swept the ship along, and the men
+ in the boats ahead simply lay on their oars until the time should come to
+ pull her head round in one direction or another. They had not long to
+ wait, for, as they reached the sharp corner at the end of the reach,
+ orders were shouted, the men bent to their oars, and the vessel was taken
+ round the curve until her head pointed east. Scarcely had they got under
+ way when they heard the cheer from the ship astern of them, and by the
+ time they had reached the next curve, off the village of Gillingham, the
+ other four ships had rounded the point behind them, and were following at
+ a distance of about a hundred yards apart. Soon afterwards the wind sprang
+ up and the sails bellied out, and the men in the boats had to row briskly
+ to keep ahead of the ship. The breeze continued until they passed
+ Sheerness, and presently they dropped anchor inside the Nore sands. There
+ they remained until the tide turned, and then sailed up the Thames to the
+ Hope, where some forty men-of-war were already at anchor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning some barges arrived from Tilbury, laden with soldiers, of
+ whom a hundred and fifty came on board, their quarters being on the main
+ deck on the other side of the canvas division. A cutter also brought down
+ a number of impressed men, twenty of whom were put on board the <i>Henrietta</i>
+ to complete her crew. Cyril was standing on the poop watching them come on
+ board, when he started as his eye fell on two of their number. One was
+ Robert Ashford; the other was Black Dick. They had doubtless returned from
+ Holland when war was declared. Robert Ashford had assumed the dress of a
+ sailor the better to disguise himself, and the two had been carried off
+ together from some haunt of sailors at Wapping. He pointed them out to his
+ friend Sydney.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So those are the two scamps? The big one looks a truculent ruffian. Well,
+ they can do you no harm here, Cyril. I should let them stay and do their
+ share of the fighting, and then, when the voyage is over, if they have not
+ met with a better death than they deserve at the hands of the Dutch, you
+ can, if you like, denounce them, and have them handed over to the City
+ authorities."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I will do, as far as the big ruffian they call Black Dick is
+ concerned. He is a desperate villain, and for aught I know may have
+ committed many a murder, and if allowed to go free might commit many more.
+ Besides, I shall never feel quite safe as long as he is at large. As to
+ Robert Ashford, he is a knave, but I know no worse of him, and will
+ therefore let him go his way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the evening the other ships from Chatham came up, and the captain told
+ them later that the Earl of Sandwich, who was in command, would weigh
+ anchor in the morning, as the contingent from London, Chatham, and
+ Sheerness was now complete. Cyril thought that he had never seen a
+ prettier sight, as the Fleet, consisting of fifty men-of-war, of various
+ sizes, and eight merchant vessels that had been bought and converted into
+ fire-ships, got under way and sailed down the river. That night they
+ anchored off Felixstowe, and the next day proceeded, with a favourable
+ wind, to Yarmouth, where already a great number of ships were at anchor.
+ So far the five Volunteers had taken their meals with the captain, but as
+ the others would be coming on board, they were now to mess below, getting
+ fresh meat and vegetables from the shore as they required them. As to
+ other stores, they resolved to do nothing till the whole party arrived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had not long to wait, for, on the third day after their arrival, the
+ Duke of York and Prince Rupert, with a great train of gentlemen, arrived
+ in the town, and early the next morning embarked on board their respective
+ ships. A council was held by the Volunteers in their quarters, three of
+ their number were chosen as caterers, and, a contribution of three pounds
+ a head being agreed upon, these went ashore in one of the ship's boats,
+ and returned presently with a barrel or two of good biscuits, the
+ carcasses of five sheep, two or three score of ducks and chickens, and
+ several casks of wine, together with a large quantity of vegetables. The
+ following morning the signal was hoisted on the mast-head of the <i>Royal
+ Charles</i>, the Duke of York's flagship, for the Fleet to prepare to
+ weigh anchor, and they presently got under way in three squadrons, the red
+ under the special orders of the Duke, the white under Prince Rupert, and
+ the blue under the Earl of Sandwich.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Fleet consisted of one hundred and nine men-of-war and frigates, and
+ twenty-eight fire-ships and ketches, manned by 21,006 seamen and soldiers.
+ They sailed across to the coast of Holland, and cruised, for a few days,
+ off Texel, capturing ten or twelve merchant vessels that tried to run in.
+ So far, the weather had been very fine, but there were now signs of a
+ change of weather. The sky became overcast, the wind rose rapidly, and the
+ signal was made for the Fleet to scatter, so that each vessel should have
+ more sea-room, and the chance of collision be avoided. By nightfall the
+ wind had increased to the force of a gale, and the vessels were soon
+ labouring heavily. Cyril and two or three of his comrades who, like
+ himself, did not suffer from sickness, remained on deck; the rest were
+ prostrate below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For forty-eight hours the gale continued, and when it abated and the ships
+ gradually closed up round the three admirals' flags, it was found that
+ many had suffered sorely in the gale. Some had lost their upper spars,
+ others had had their sails blown away, some their bulwarks smashed in, and
+ two or three had lost their bowsprits. There was a consultation between
+ the admirals and the principal captains, and it was agreed that it was
+ best to sail back to England for repairs, as many of the ships were
+ unfitted to take their place in line of battle, and as the Dutch Fleet was
+ known to be fully equal to their own in strength, it would have been
+ hazardous to risk an engagement. So the ketches and some of the light
+ frigates were at once sent off to find the ships that had not yet joined,
+ and give them orders to make for Yarmouth, Lowestoft, or Harwich. All
+ vessels uninjured were to gather off Lowestoft, while the others were to
+ make for the other ports, repair their damages as speedily as possible,
+ and then rejoin at Lowestoft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner did the Dutch know that the English Fleet had sailed away than
+ they put their fleet to sea. It consisted of one hundred and twelve
+ men-of-war, and thirty fire-ships, and small craft manned by 22,365
+ soldiers and sailors. It was commanded by Admiral Obdam, having under him
+ Tromp, Evertson, and other Dutch admirals. On their nearing England they
+ fell in with nine ships from Hamburg, with rich cargoes, and a convoy of a
+ thirty-four gun frigate. These they captured, to the great loss of the
+ merchants of London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The <i>Henrietta</i> had suffered but little in the storm, and speedily
+ repaired her damages without going into port. With so much haste and
+ energy did the crews of the injured ships set to work at refitting them,
+ that in four days after the main body had anchored off Lowestoft, they
+ were rejoined by all the ships that had made for Harwich and Yarmouth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At midnight on June 2nd, a fast-sailing fishing-boat brought in the news
+ that the Dutch Fleet were but a few miles away, sailing in that direction,
+ having apparently learnt the position of the English from some ship or
+ fishing-boat they had captured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trumpets on the admiral's ship at once sounded, and Prince Rupert and
+ the Earl of Sandwich immediately rowed to her. They remained but a few
+ minutes, and on their return to their respective vessels made the signals
+ for their captains to come on board. The order, at such an hour, was
+ sufficient to notify all that news must have been received of the
+ whereabouts of the Dutch Fleet, and by the time the captains returned to
+ their ships the crews were all up and ready to execute any order. At two
+ o'clock day had begun to break, and soon from the mastheads of several of
+ the vessels the look-out shouted that they could perceive the Dutch Fleet
+ but four miles away. A mighty cheer rose throughout the Fleet, and as it
+ subsided a gun from the <i>Royal Charles</i> gave the order to weigh
+ anchor, and a few minutes later the three squadrons, in excellent order,
+ sailed out to meet the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They did not, however, advance directly towards them, but bore up closely
+ into the wind until they had gained the weather gauge of the enemy. Having
+ obtained this advantage, the Duke flew the signal to engage. The
+ Volunteers were all in their places on the poop, being posted near the
+ rail forward, that they might be able either to run down the ladder to the
+ waist and aid to repel boarders, or to spring on to a Dutch ship should
+ one come alongside, and also that the afterpart of the poop, where Prince
+ Rupert and the captain had taken their places near the wheel, should be
+ free. The Prince himself had requested them so to station themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At other times, gentlemen, you are my good friends and comrades," he
+ said, "but, from the moment that the first gun fires, you are soldiers
+ under my orders; and I pray you take your station and remain there until I
+ call upon you for action, for my whole attention must be given to the
+ manoeuvring of the ship, and any movement or talking near me might
+ distract my thoughts. I shall strive to lay her alongside of the biggest
+ Dutchman I can pick out, and as soon as the grapnels are thrown, and their
+ sides grind together, you will have the post of honour, and will lead the
+ soldiers aboard her. Once among the Dutchmen, you will know what to do
+ without my telling you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Tis a grand sight, truly, Cyril," Sydney said, in a low tone, as the
+ great fleets met each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A grand sight, truly, Sydney, but a terrible one. I do not think I shall
+ mind when I am once at it, but at present I feel that, despite my efforts,
+ I am in a tremor, and that my knees shake as I never felt them before."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am glad you feel like that, Cyril, for I feel much like it myself, and
+ began to be afraid that I had, without knowing it, been born a coward.
+ There goes the first gun."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, a puff of white smoke spouted out from the bows of one of the
+ Dutch ships, and a moment later the whole of their leading vessels opened
+ fire. There was a rushing sound overhead, and a ball passed through the
+ main topsail of the <i>Henrietta</i>. No reply was made by the English
+ ships until they passed in between the Dutchmen; then the <i>Henrietta</i>
+ poured her broadsides into the enemy on either side of her, receiving
+ theirs in return. There was a rending of wood, and a quiver through the
+ ship. One of the upper-deck-guns was knocked off its carriage, crushing
+ two of the men working it as it fell. Several others were hurt with
+ splinters, and the sails pierced with holes. Again and again as she
+ passed, did the <i>Henrietta</i> exchange broadsides with the Dutch
+ vessels, until&mdash;the two fleets having passed through each other&mdash;she
+ bore up, and prepared to repeat the manoeuvre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I feel all right now," Cyril said, "but I do wish I had something to do
+ instead of standing here useless. I quite envy the men there, stripped to
+ the waist, working the guns. There is that fellow Black Dick, by the gun
+ forward; he is a scoundrel, no doubt, but what strength and power he has!
+ I saw him put his shoulder under that gun just now, and slew it across by
+ sheer strength, so as to bear upon the stern of the Dutchman. I noticed
+ him and Robert looking up at me just before the first gun was fired, and
+ speaking together. I have no doubt he would gladly have pointed the gun at
+ me instead of at the enemy, for he knows that, if I denounce him, he will
+ get the due reward of his crimes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the ships were headed round they passed through the Dutch as
+ before, and this manoeuvre was several times repeated. Up to one o'clock
+ in the day no great advantage had been gained on either side. Spars had
+ been carried away; there were yawning gaps in the bulwarks; portholes had
+ been knocked into one, guns dismounted, and many killed; but as yet no
+ vessel on either side had been damaged to an extent that obliged her to
+ strike her flag, or to fall out of the fighting line. There had been a
+ pause after each encounter, in which both fleets had occupied themselves
+ in repairing damages, as far as possible, reeving fresh ropes in place of
+ those that had been shot away, clearing the wreckage of fallen spars and
+ yards, and carrying the wounded below. Four of the Volunteers had been
+ struck down&mdash;two of them mortally wounded, but after the first
+ passage through the enemy's fleet, Prince Rupert had ordered them to arm
+ themselves with muskets from the racks, and to keep up a fire at the Dutch
+ ships as they passed, aiming specially at the man at the wheel. The order
+ had been a very welcome one, for, like Cyril, they had all felt inactivity
+ in such a scene to be a sore trial. They were now ranged along on both
+ sides of the poop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At one o'clock Lord Sandwich signalled to the Blue Squadron to close up
+ together as they advanced, as before, against the enemy's line. His
+ position at the time was in the centre, and his squadron, sailing close
+ together, burst into the Dutch line before their ships could make any
+ similar disposition. Having thus broken it asunder, instead of passing
+ through it, the squadron separated, and the ships, turning to port and
+ starboard, each engaged an enemy. The other two squadrons similarly ranged
+ up among the Dutch, and the battle now became furious all along the line.
+ Fire-ships played an important part in the battles of the time, and the
+ thoughts of the captain of a ship were not confined to struggles with a
+ foe of equal size, but were still more engrossed by the need for avoiding
+ any fire-ship that might direct its course towards him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had now no time to give a thought as to what was passing elsewhere.
+ The <i>Henrietta</i> had ranged up alongside a Dutch vessel of equal size,
+ and was exchanging broadsides with her. All round were vessels engaged in
+ an equally furious encounter. The roar of the guns and the shouts of the
+ seamen on both sides were deafening. One moment the vessel reeled from the
+ recoil of her own guns, the next she quivered as the balls of the enemy
+ crashed through her sides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly, above the din, Cyril heard the voice of Prince Rupert sound like
+ a trumpet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hatchets and pikes on the starboard quarter! Draw in the guns and keep
+ off this fire-ship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Laying their muskets against the bulwarks, he and Sydney sprang to the
+ mizzen-mast, and each seized a hatchet from those ranged against it. They
+ then rushed to the starboard side, just as a small ship came out through
+ the cloud of smoke that hung thickly around them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a shock as she struck the <i>Henrietta</i>, and then, as she
+ glided alongside, a dozen grapnels were thrown by men on her yards. The
+ instant they had done so, the men disappeared, sliding down the ropes and
+ running aft to their boat. Before the last leaped in he stooped. A flash
+ of fire ran along the deck, there was a series of sharp explosions, and
+ then a bright flame sprang up from the hatchways, ran up the shrouds and
+ ropes, that had been soaked with oil and tar, and in a moment the sails
+ were on fire. In spite of the flames, a score of men sprang on to the
+ rigging of the <i>Henrietta</i> and cut the ropes of the grapnels, which,
+ as yet&mdash;so quickly had the explosion followed their throwing&mdash;had
+ scarce begun to check the way the fire-ship had on her as she came up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril, having cast over a grapnel that had fallen on the poop, looked down
+ on the fire-ship as she drifted along. The deck, which, like everything
+ else, had been smeared with tar, was in a blaze, but the combustible had
+ not been carried as far as the helm, where doubtless the captain had stood
+ to direct her course. A sudden thought struck him. He ran along the poop
+ until opposite the stern of the fire-ship, climbed over the bulwark and
+ leapt down on to the deck, some fifteen feet below him. Then he seized the
+ helm and jammed it hard down. The fire-ship had still steerage way on her,
+ and he saw her head at once begin to turn away from the <i>Henrietta</i>;
+ the movement was aided by the latter's crew, who, with poles and oars,
+ pushed her off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The heat was terrific, but Cyril's helmet and breast-piece sheltered him
+ somewhat; yet though he shielded his face with his arm, he felt that it
+ would speedily become unbearable. His eye fell upon a coil of rope at his
+ feet. Snatching it up, he fastened it to the tiller and then round a
+ belaying-pin in the bulwark, caught up a bucket with a rope attached,
+ threw it over the side and soused its contents over the tiller-rope, then,
+ unbuckling the straps of his breast- and back-pieces, he threw them off,
+ cast his helmet on the deck, blistering his hands as he did so, and leapt
+ overboard. It was with a delicious sense of coolness that he rose to the
+ surface and looked round. Hitherto he had been so scorched by the flame
+ and smothered by the smoke that it was with difficulty he had kept his
+ attention upon what he was doing, and would doubtless, in another minute,
+ have fallen senseless. The plunge into the sea seemed to restore his
+ faculties, and as he came up he looked eagerly to see how far success had
+ attended his efforts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He saw with delight that the bow of the fire-ship was thirty or forty feet
+ distant from the side of the <i>Henrietta</i> and her stern half that
+ distance. Two or three of the sails of the man-of-war had caught fire, but
+ a crowd of seamen were beating the flames out of two of them while
+ another, upon which the fire had got a better hold, was being cut away
+ from its yard. As he turned to swim to the side of the <i>Henrietta</i>,
+ three or four ropes fell close to him. He twisted one of these round his
+ body, and, a minute later, was hauled up into the waist. He was saluted
+ with a tremendous cheer, and was caught up by three or four strong
+ fellows, who, in spite of his remonstrances, carried him up on to the
+ poop. Prince Rupert was standing on the top of the ladder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nobly done, Sir Cyril!" he exclaimed. "You have assuredly saved the <i>Henrietta</i>
+ and all our lives. A minute later, and we should have been on fire beyond
+ remedy. But I will speak more to you when we have finished with the
+ Dutchman on the other side."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV &mdash; HONOURABLE SCARS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ During the time that the greater part of the crew of the <i>Henrietta</i>
+ had been occupied with the fire-ship, the enemy had redoubled their
+ efforts, and as the sailors returned to their guns, the mizzen-mast fell
+ with a crash. A minute later, a Dutch man-of-war ran alongside, fired a
+ broadside, and grappled. Then her crew, springing over the bulwarks,
+ poured on to the deck of the <i>Henrietta</i>. They were met boldly by the
+ soldiers, who had hitherto borne no part in the fight, and who, enraged at
+ the loss they had been compelled to suffer, fell upon the enemy with fury.
+ For a moment, however, the weight of numbers of the Dutchmen bore them
+ back, but the sailors, who had at first been taken by surprise, snatched
+ up their boarding pikes and axes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Rupert, with the other officers and Volunteers, dashed into the
+ thick of the fray, and, step by step, the Dutchmen were driven back, until
+ they suddenly gave way and rushed back to their own ship. The English
+ would have followed them, but the Dutch who remained on board their ship,
+ seeing that the fight was going against their friends, cut the ropes of
+ the grapnels, and the ships drifted apart, some of the last to leave the
+ deck of the <i>Henrietta</i> being forced to jump into the sea. The
+ cannonade was at once renewed on both sides, but the Dutch had had enough
+ of it&mdash;having lost very heavily in men&mdash;and drew off from the
+ action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had joined in the fray. He had risen to his feet and drawn his
+ sword, but he found himself strangely weak. His hands were blistered and
+ swollen, his face was already so puffed that he could scarce see out of
+ his eyes; still, he had staggered down the steps to the waist, and,
+ recovering his strength from the excitement, threw himself into the fray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarce had he done so, when a sailor next to him fell heavily against him,
+ shot through the head by one of the Dutch soldiers. Cyril staggered, and
+ before he could recover himself, a Dutch sailor struck at his head. He
+ threw up his sword to guard the blow, but the guard was beaten down as if
+ it had been a reed. It sufficed, however, slightly to turn the blow, which
+ fell first on the side of the head, and then, glancing down, inflicted a
+ terrible wound on the shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He fell at once, unconscious, and, when he recovered his senses, found
+ himself laid out on the poop, where Sydney, assisted by two of the other
+ gentlemen, had carried him. His head and shoulder had already been
+ bandaged, the Prince having sent for his doctor to come up from below to
+ attend upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The battle was raging with undiminished fury all round, but, for the
+ moment, the <i>Henrietta</i> was not engaged, and her crew were occupied
+ in cutting away the wreckage of the mizzen-mast, and trying to repair the
+ more important of the damages that she had suffered. Carpenters were
+ lowered over the side, and were nailing pieces of wood over the shot-holes
+ near the water-line. Men swarmed aloft knotting and splicing ropes and
+ fishing damaged spars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sydney, who was standing a short distance away, at once came up to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How are you, Cyril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My head sings, and my shoulder aches, but I shall do well enough. Please
+ get me lifted up on to that seat by the bulwark, so that I can look over
+ and see what is going on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't think you are strong enough to sit up, Cyril."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes I am; besides, I can lean against the bulwark."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril was placed in the position he wanted, and, leaning his arm on the
+ bulwark and resting his head on it, was able to see what was passing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly a tremendous explosion was heard a quarter of a mile away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Dutch admiral's ship has blown up," one of the men aloft shouted, and
+ a loud cheer broke from the crew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was true. The Duke of York in the <i>Royal Charles</i>, of eighty guns,
+ and the <i>Eendracht</i>, of eighty-four, the flagship of Admiral Obdam,
+ had met and engaged each other fiercely. For a time the Dutchmen had the
+ best of it. A single shot killed the Earl of Falmouth, Lord Muskerry, and
+ Mr. Boyle, three gentlemen Volunteers, who at the moment were standing
+ close to the Duke, and the <i>Royal Charles</i> suffered heavily until a
+ shot from one of her guns struck the Dutchman's magazine, and the <i>Eendracht</i>
+ blew up, only five men being rescued out of the five hundred that were on
+ board of her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This accident in no small degree decided the issue of the engagement, for
+ the Dutch at once fell into confusion. Four of their ships, a few hundred
+ yards from the <i>Henrietta</i>, fell foul of each other, and while the
+ crews were engaged in trying to separate them an English fire-ship sailed
+ boldly up and laid herself alongside. A moment later the flames shot up
+ high, and the boat with the crew of the fire-ship rowed to the <i>Henrietta</i>.
+ The flames instantly spread to the Dutch men-of-war, and the sailors were
+ seen jumping over in great numbers. Prince Rupert ordered the boats to be
+ lowered, but only one was found to be uninjured. This was manned and
+ pushed off at once, and, with others from British vessels near, rescued a
+ good many of the Dutch sailors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still the fight was raging all round; but a short time afterwards three
+ other of the finest ships in the Dutch Fleet ran into each other. Another
+ of the English fire-ships hovering near observed the opportunity, and was
+ laid alongside, with the same success as her consort, the three men-of-war
+ being all destroyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This took place at some distance from the <i>Henrietta</i>, but the
+ English vessels near them succeeded in saving, in their boats, a portion
+ of the crews. The Dutch ship <i>Orange</i>, of seventy-five guns, was
+ disabled after a sharp fight with the <i>Mary</i>, and was likewise burnt.
+ Two Dutch vice-admirals were killed, and a panic spread through the Dutch
+ Fleet. About eight o'clock in the evening between thirty and forty of
+ their ships made off in a body, and the rest speedily followed. During the
+ fight and the chase eighteen Dutch ships were taken, though some of these
+ afterwards escaped, as the vessels to which they had struck joined the
+ rest in the chase. Fourteen were sunk, besides those burnt and blown up.
+ Only one English ship, the <i>Charity</i>, had struck, having, at the
+ beginning of the fight been attacked by three Dutch vessels, and lost the
+ greater part of her men, and was then compelled to surrender to a Dutch
+ vessel of considerably greater strength that came up and joined the
+ others. The English loss was, considering the duration of the fight,
+ extremely small, amounting to but 250 killed, and 340 wounded. Among the
+ killed were the Earl of Marlborough, the Earl of Portland, who was present
+ as a Volunteer, Rear-Admiral Sampson, and Vice-Admiral Lawson, the latter
+ of whom died after the fight, from his wounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pursuit of the Dutch was continued for some hours, and then terminated
+ abruptly, owing to a Member of Parliament named Brounker, who was in the
+ suite of the Duke of York, giving the captain of the <i>Royal Charles</i>
+ orders, which he falsely stated emanated from the Duke, for the pursuit to
+ be abandoned. For this he was afterwards expelled the House of Commons,
+ and was ordered to be impeached, but after a time the matter was suffered
+ to drop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the battle was over Cyril was taken down to a hammock below. He
+ was just dozing off to sleep when Sydney came to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sorry to disturb you, Cyril, but an officer tells me that a man who
+ is mortally wounded wishes to speak to you; and from his description I
+ think it is the fellow you call Black Dick. I thought it right to tell
+ you, but I don't think you are fit to go to see him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will go," Cyril said, "if you will lend me your arm. I should like to
+ hear what the poor wretch has to say."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He lies just below; the hatchway is but a few yards distant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There had been no attempt to remove Cyril's clothes, and, by the aid of
+ Lord Oliphant and of a sailor he called to his aid, he made his way below,
+ and was led through the line of wounded, until a doctor, turning round,
+ said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is the man who wishes to see you, Sir Cyril."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although a line of lanterns hung from the beams, so nearly blind was he
+ that Cyril could scarce distinguish the man's features.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have sent for you," the latter said faintly, "to tell you that if it
+ hadn't been for your jumping down on to that fire-ship you would not have
+ lived through this day's fight. I saw that you recognised me, and knew
+ that, as soon as we went back, you would hand us over to the constables.
+ So I made up my mind that I would run you through in the <i>mêlée</i> if
+ we got hand to hand with the Dutchmen, or would put a musket-ball into you
+ while the firing was going on. But when I saw you standing there with the
+ flames round you, giving your life, as it seemed, to save the ship, I felt
+ that, even if I must be hung for it, I could not bring myself to hurt so
+ brave a lad; so there is an end of that business. Robert Ashford was
+ killed by a gun that was knocked from its carriage, so you have got rid of
+ us both. I thought I should like to tell you before I went that the brave
+ action you did saved your life, and that, bad as I am, I had yet heart
+ enough to feel that I would rather take hanging than kill you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last words had been spoken in a scarcely audible whisper. The man
+ closed his eyes; and the doctor, laying his hand on Cyril's arm, said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You had better go back to your hammock now, Sir Cyril. He will never
+ speak again. In a few minutes the end will come."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril spent a restless night. The wind was blowing strongly from the
+ north, and the crews had hard work to keep the vessels off the shore. His
+ wounds did not pain him much, but his hands, arms, face, and legs smarted
+ intolerably, for his clothes had been almost burnt off him, and,
+ refreshing as the sea-bath had been at the moment, it now added to the
+ smarting of the wounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the morning Prince Rupert came down to see him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was madness of you to have joined in that <i>mêlée</i>, lad, in the
+ state in which you were. I take the blame on myself in not ordering you to
+ remain behind; but when the Dutchmen poured on board I had no thought of
+ aught but driving them back again. It would have marred our pleasure in
+ the victory we have won had you fallen, for to you we all owe our lives
+ and the safety of the ship. No braver deed was performed yesterday than
+ yours. I fear it will be some time before you are able to fight by my side
+ again; but, at least, you have done your share, and more, were the war to
+ last a lifetime."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril was in less pain now, for the doctor had poured oil over his burns,
+ and had wrapped up his hands in soft bandages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was the thought of a moment, Prince," he said. "I saw the fire-ship
+ had steerage way on her, and if the helm were put down she would drive
+ away from our side, so without stopping to think about it one way or the
+ other, I ran along to the stern, and jumped down to her tiller."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, lad, it was but a moment's thought, no doubt, but it is one thing to
+ think, and another to execute, and none but the bravest would have
+ ventured that leap on to the fire-ship. By to-morrow morning we shall be
+ anchored in the river. Would you like to be placed in the hospital at
+ Sheerness, or to be taken up to London?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would rather go to London, if I may," Cyril said. "I know that I shall
+ be well nursed at Captain Dave's, and hope, erelong, to be able to
+ rejoin."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not for some time, lad&mdash;not for some time. Your burns will doubtless
+ heal apace, but the wound in your shoulder is serious. The doctor says
+ that the Dutchman's sword has cleft right through your shoulder-bone. 'Tis
+ well that it is your left, for it may be that you will never have its full
+ use again. You are not afraid of the Plague, are you? for on the day we
+ left town there was a rumour that it had at last entered the City."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am not afraid of it," Cyril said; "and if it should come to Captain
+ Dowsett's house, I would rather be there, that I may do what I can to help
+ those who were so kind to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Just as you like, lad. Do not hurry to rejoin. It is not likely there
+ will be any fighting for some time, for it will be long before the Dutch
+ are ready to take the sea again after the hammering we have given them,
+ and all there will be to do will be to blockade their coast and to pick up
+ their ships from foreign ports as prizes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning Cyril was placed on board a little yacht, called the <i>Fan
+ Fan</i>, belonging to the Prince, and sailed up the river, the ship's
+ company mustering at the side and giving him a hearty cheer. The wind was
+ favourable, and they arrived that afternoon in town. According to the
+ Prince's instructions, the sailors at once placed Cyril on a litter that
+ had been brought for the purpose, and carried him up to Captain Dowsett's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The City was in a state of agitation. The news of the victory had arrived
+ but a few hours before, and the church bells were all ringing, flags were
+ flying, the shops closed, and the people in the streets. John Wilkes came
+ down in answer to the summons of the bell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hullo!" he said; "whom have we here?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't you know me, John?" Cyril said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John gave a start of astonishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By St. Anthony, it is Master Cyril! At least, it is his voice, though it
+ is little I can see of him, and what I see in no way resembles him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is Sir Cyril Shenstone," the captain of the <i>Fan Fan</i>, who had
+ come with the party, said sternly, feeling ruffled at the familiarity with
+ which this rough-looking servitor of a City trader spoke of the gentleman
+ in his charge. "It is Sir Cyril Shenstone, as brave a gentleman as ever
+ drew sword, and who, as I hear, saved Prince Rupert's ship from being
+ burnt by the Dutchmen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He knows me," John Wilkes said bluntly, "and he knows no offence is
+ meant. The Captain and his dame, and Mistress Nellie are all out, Sir
+ Cyril, but I will look after you till they return. Bring him up, lads. I
+ am an old sailor myself, and fought the Dutch under Blake and Monk more
+ than once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He led the way upstairs into the best of the spare rooms. Here Cyril was
+ laid on a bed. He thanked the sailors heartily for the care they had taken
+ of him, and the captain handed a letter to John, saying,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The young Lord Oliphant asked me to give this to Captain Dowsett, but as
+ he is not at home I pray you to give it him when he returns."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as they had gone, John returned to the bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is terrible, Master Cyril. What have they been doing to you? I can
+ see but little of your face for those bandages, but your eyes look mere
+ slits, your flesh is all red and swollen, your eyebrows have gone, your
+ arms and legs are all swathed up in bandages&mdash;Have you been blown up
+ with gunpowder?&mdash;for surely no wound could have so disfigured you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have not been blown up, John, but I was burnt by the flames of a Dutch
+ fire-ship that came alongside. It is a matter that a fortnight will set
+ right, though I doubt not that I am an unpleasant-looking object at
+ present, and it will be some time before my hair grows again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you are not hurt otherwise, Master?" John asked anxiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; I am hurt gravely enough, though not so as to imperil my life. I
+ have a wound on the side of my head, and the same blow, as the doctor
+ says, cleft through my shoulder-bone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had best go and get a surgeon at once," John said; "though it will be
+ no easy matter, for all the world is agog in the streets."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Leave it for the present, John. There is no need whatever for haste. In
+ that trunk of mine is a bottle of oils for the burns, though most of the
+ sore places are already beginning to heal over, and the doctor said that I
+ need not apply it any more, unless I found that they smarted too much for
+ bearing. As for the other wounds, they are strapped up and bandaged, and
+ he said that unless they inflamed badly, they would be best let alone for
+ a time. So sit down quietly, and let me hear the news."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The news is bad enough, though the Plague has not yet entered the City."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Prince told me that there was a report, before he came on board at
+ Lowestoft, that it had done so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, it is not yet come; but people are as frightened as if it was raging
+ here. For the last fortnight they have been leaving in crowds from the
+ West End, and many of the citizens are also beginning to move. They
+ frighten themselves like a parcel of children. The comet seemed to many a
+ sign of great disaster."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If it could be seen only in London there might be something in it, but as
+ it can be seen all over Europe, it is hard to say why it should augur evil
+ to London especially. It was shining in the sky three nights ago when we
+ were chasing the Dutch, and they had quite as good reason for thinking it
+ was a sign of misfortune to them as have the Londoners."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is true enough," John Wilkes agreed; "though, in truth, I like not
+ to see the' thing in the sky myself. Then people have troubled their heads
+ greatly because, in Master Lilly's Almanack, and other books of
+ prediction, a great pestilence is foretold."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It needed no great wisdom for that," Cyril said, "seeing that the Plague
+ has been for some time busy in foreign parts, and that it was here, though
+ not so very bad, in the winter, when these books would have been written."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then," John Wilkes went on, "there is a man going through the streets,
+ night and day. He speaks to no one, but cries out continually, 'Oh! the
+ great and dreadful God!' This troubles many men's hearts greatly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a pity, John, that the poor fellow is not taken and shut up in some
+ place where madmen are kept. Doubtless, it is some poor coward whose brain
+ has been turned by fright. People who are frightened by such a thing as
+ that must be poor-witted creatures indeed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That may be, Master Cyril, but methinks it is as they say, one fool makes
+ many. People get together and bemoan themselves till their hearts fail
+ them altogether. And yet, methinks they are not altogether without reason,
+ for if the pestilence is so heavy without the walls, where the streets are
+ wider and the people less crowded than here, it may well be that we shall
+ have a terrible time of it in the City when it once passes the walls."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That may well be, John, but cowardly fear will not make things any
+ better. We knew, when we sailed out against the Dutch the other day, that
+ very many would not see the setting sun, yet I believe there was not one
+ man throughout the Fleet who behaved like a coward."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No doubt, Master Cyril; but there is a difference. One can fight against
+ men, but one cannot fight against the pestilence, and I do not believe
+ that if the citizens knew that a great Dutch army was marching on London,
+ and that they would have to withstand a dreadful siege, they would be
+ moved with fear as they are now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That may be so," Cyril agreed. "Now, John, I think that I could sleep for
+ a bit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do so, Master, and I will go into the kitchen and see what I can do to
+ make you a basin of broth when you awake; for the girl has gone out too.
+ She wanted to see what was going on in the streets; and as I had sooner
+ stay quietly at home I offered to take her place, as the shop was shut and
+ I had nothing to do. Maybe by the time you wake again Captain Dave and the
+ others will be back from their cruise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was dark when Cyril woke at the sound of the bell. He heard voices and
+ movements without, and then the door was quietly opened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am awake," he said. "You see I have taken you at your word, and come
+ back to be patched up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are heartily welcome," Mrs. Dowsett said. "Nellie, bring the light.
+ Cyril is awake. We were sorry indeed when John told us that you had come
+ in our absence. It was but a cold welcome for you to find that we were all
+ out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was nothing I needed, madam. Had there been, John would have done
+ it for me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie now appeared at the door with the light, and gave an exclamation of
+ horror as she approached the bedside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is not so bad as it looks, Nellie," Cyril said. "Not that I know how
+ it looks, for I have not seen myself in a glass since I left here; but I
+ can guess that I am an unpleasant object to look at."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Dowsett made a sign to Nellie to be silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "John told us that you were badly burned and were all wrapped up in
+ bandages, but we did not expect to find you so changed. However, that will
+ soon pass off, I hope."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I expect I shall be all right in another week, save for this wound in my
+ shoulder. As for that on my head, it is but of slight consequence. My
+ skull was thick enough to save my brain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Master Cyril," Captain Dave said heartily, as he entered the room
+ with a basin of broth in his hand, and then stopped abruptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Captain Dave, here I am, battered out of all shape, you see, but
+ not seriously damaged in my timbers. There, you see, though I have only
+ been a fortnight at sea, I am getting quite nautical."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is right, lad&mdash;that is right," Captain Dave said, a little
+ unsteadily. "My dame and Nellie will soon put you into ship-shape trim
+ again. So you got burnt, I hear, by one of those rascally Dutch
+ fire-ships? and John tells me that the captain of the sailors who carried
+ you here said that you had gained mighty credit for yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did my best, as everyone did, Captain Dave. There was not a man on
+ board the Fleet who did not do his duty, or we should never have beaten
+ the Dutchmen so soundly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You had better not talk any more," Mrs. Dowsett said. "You are in my
+ charge now, and my first order is that you must keep very quiet, or else
+ you will be having fever come on. You had best take a little of this broth
+ now. Nellie will sit with you while I go out to prepare you a cooling
+ drink."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will take a few spoonfuls of the soup since John has taken the trouble
+ to prepare it for me," Cyril said; "though, indeed, my lips are so parched
+ and swollen that the cooling drink will be much more to my taste."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think it were best first, dame," the Captain said, "that John and I
+ should get him comfortably into bed, instead of lying there wrapped up in
+ the blanket in which they brought him ashore. The broth will be none the
+ worse for cooling a bit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That will be best," his wife agreed. "I will fetch some more pillows, so
+ that we can prop him up. He can swallow more comfortably so, and will
+ sleep all the better when he lies down again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as Cyril was comfortably settled John Wilkes was sent to call in a
+ doctor, who, after examining him, said that the burns were doing well, and
+ that he would send in some cooling lotion to be applied to them
+ frequently. As to the wounds, he said they had been so skilfully bandaged
+ that it were best to leave them alone, unless great pain set in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another four days, and Cyril's face had so far recovered its usual
+ condition that the swelling was almost abated, and the bandages could be
+ removed. The peak of the helmet had sheltered it a good deal, and it had
+ suffered less than his hands and arms. Captain Dave and John had sat up
+ with him by turns at night, while the Dame and her daughter had taken care
+ of him during the day. He had slept a great deal, and had not been allowed
+ to talk at all. This prohibition was now removed, as the doctor said that
+ the burns were now all healing fast, and that he no longer had any fear of
+ fever setting in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By the way, Captain," John Wilkes said, that day, at dinner, "I have just
+ bethought me of this letter, that was given me by the sailor who brought
+ Cyril here. It is for you, from young Lord Oliphant. It has clean gone out
+ of my mind till now. I put it in the pocket of my doublet, and have
+ forgotten it ever since."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No harm can have come of the delay, John," Captain Dave said. "It was
+ thoughtful of the lad. He must have been sure that Cyril would not be in a
+ condition to tell us aught of the battle, and he may have sent us some
+ details of it, for the Gazette tells us little enough, beyond the ships
+ taken and the names of gentlemen and officers killed. Here, Nellie, do you
+ read it. It seems a long epistle, and my eyes are not as good as they
+ were."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie took the letter and read aloud:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'DEAR AND WORTHY SIR,&mdash;I did not think when I was so pleasantly
+ entertained at your house that it would befall me to become your
+ correspondent, but so it has happened, for, Sir Cyril being sorely hurt,
+ and in no state to tell you how the matter befell him&mdash;if indeed his
+ modesty would allow him, which I greatly doubt&mdash;it is right that you
+ should know how the business came about, and what great credit Sir Cyril
+ has gained for himself. In the heat of the fight, when we were briskly
+ engaged in exchanging broadsides with a Dutchman of our own size, one of
+ their fire-ships, coming unnoticed through the smoke, slipped alongside of
+ us, and, the flames breaking out, would speedily have destroyed us, as
+ indeed they went near doing. The grapnels were briskly thrown over, but
+ she had already touched our sides, and the flames were blowing across us
+ when Sir Cyril, perceiving that she had still some way on her, sprang down
+ on to her deck and put over the helm. She was then a pillar of flame, and
+ the decks, which were plentifully besmeared with pitch, were all in a
+ blaze, save just round the tiller where her captain had stood to steer
+ her. It was verily a furnace, and it seemed impossible that one could
+ stand there for only half a minute and live. Everyone on board was filled
+ with astonishment, and the Prince called out loudly that he had never seen
+ a braver deed. As the fire-ship drew away from us, we saw Sir Cyril fasten
+ the helm down with a rope, and then, lowering a bucket over, throw water
+ on to it; then he threw off his helmet and armour&mdash;his clothes being,
+ by this time, all in a flame&mdash;and sprang into the sea, the fire-ship
+ being now well nigh her own length from us. She had sheered off none too
+ soon, for some of our sails were on fire, and it was with great difficulty
+ that we succeeded in cutting them from the yards and so saving the ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'All, from the Prince down, say that no finer action was ever performed,
+ and acknowledge that we all owe our lives, and His Majesty owes his ship,
+ to it. Then, soon after we had hauled Sir Cyril on board, the Dutchmen
+ boarded us, and there was a stiff fight, all hands doing their best to
+ beat them back, in which we succeeded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Sir Cyril, though scarce able to stand, joined in the fray, unnoticed by
+ us all, who in the confusion had not thought of him, and being, indeed,
+ scarce able to hold his sword, received a heavy wound, of which, however,
+ the doctor has all hopes that he will make a good recovery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'It would have done you good to hear how the whole crew cheered Sir Cyril
+ as we dragged him on board. The Prince is mightily taken with him, and is
+ sending him to London in his own yacht, where I feel sure that your good
+ dame and fair daughter will do all that they can to restore him to health.
+ As soon as I get leave&mdash;though I do not know when that will be, for
+ we cannot say as yet how matters will turn out, or what ships will keep
+ the sea&mdash;I shall do myself the honour of waiting upon you. I pray you
+ give my respectful compliments to Mrs. Dowsett and Mistress Nellie, who
+ are, I hope, enjoying good health.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "'Your servant to command,
+
+ "'SYDNEY OLIPHANT.'"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The tears were standing in Nellie's eyes, and her voice trembled as she
+ read. When she finished she burst out crying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There!" John Wilkes exclaimed, bringing his fist down upon the table. "I
+ knew, by what that skipper said, the lad had been doing something quite
+ out of the way, but when I spoke to him about it before you came in he
+ only said that he had tried his best to do his duty, just as every other
+ man in the Fleet had done. Who would have thought, Captain Dave, that that
+ quiet young chap, who used to sit down below making out your accounts, was
+ going to turn out a hero?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who, indeed?" the Captain said, wiping his eyes with the back of his
+ hands. "Why, he wasn't more than fifteen then, and, as you say, such a
+ quiet fellow. He used to sit there and write, and never speak unless I
+ spoke to him. 'Tis scarce two years ago, and look what he has done! Who
+ would have thought it? I can't finish my breakfast," he went on, getting
+ up from his seat, "till I have gone in and shaken him by the hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You had better not, David," Mrs. Dowsett said gently. "We had best say
+ but little to him about it now. We can let him know we have heard how he
+ came by his burns from Lord Oliphant, but do not let us make much of it.
+ Had he wished it he would have told us himself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Dave sat down again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps you are right, my dear. At any rate, till he is getting strong we
+ will not tell him what we think of him. Anyhow, it can't do any harm to
+ tell him we know it, and may do him good, for it is clear he does not like
+ telling it himself, and may be dreading our questioning about the affair."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Dowsett and Nellie went into Cyril's room as soon as they had
+ finished breakfast. Captain Dave followed them a few minutes later.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have been hearing how you got burnt," he began. "Your friend, Lord
+ Oliphant, sent a letter about it by the skipper of his yacht. That stupid
+ fellow, John, has been carrying it about ever since, and only remembered
+ it just now, when we were at breakfast. It was a plucky thing to do, lad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It turned out a very lucky one," Cyril said hastily, "for it was the
+ means of saving my life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Saving your life, lad! What do you mean?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril then told how Robert Ashford and Black Dick had been brought on
+ board as impressed men, how the former had been killed, and the confession
+ that Black Dick had made to him before dying.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+"He said he had made up his mind to kill me during the fight, but
+that, after I had risked my life to save the <i>Henrietta</i>, he was
+ashamed to kill me, and that, rather than do so, he had resolved to
+take his chance of my denouncing him when he returned to land."
+
+ "There was some good in the knave, then," Captain Dave said. "Yes,
+it was a fortunate as well as a brave action, as it turned out."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Fortunate in one respect, but not in another," Cyril put in, anxious to
+ prevent the conversation reverting to the question of his bravery. "I put
+ down this wound in my shoulder to it, for if I had been myself I don't
+ think I should have got hurt. I guarded the blow, but I was so shaky that
+ he broke my guard down as if I had been a child, though I think that it
+ did turn the blow a little, and saved it from falling fair on my skull.
+ Besides, I should have had my helmet and armour on if it had not been for
+ my having to take a swim. So, you see, Captain Dave, things were pretty
+ equally balanced, and there is no occasion to say anything more about
+ them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have one piece of bad news to tell you, Cyril," Mrs. Dowsett remarked,
+ in order to give the conversation the turn which she saw he wished for.
+ "We heard this morning that the Plague has come at last into the City. Dr.
+ Burnet was attacked yesterday."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is bad news indeed, Dame, though it was not to be expected that it
+ would spare the City. If you will take my advice, you will go away at
+ once, before matters get worse, for if the Plague gets a hold here the
+ country people will have nothing to do with Londoners, fearing that they
+ will bring the infection among them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall not go until you are fit to go with us, Cyril," Nellie said
+ indignantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then you will worry me into a fever," Cyril replied. "I am getting on
+ well now, and as you said, when you were talking of it before, you should
+ leave John in charge of the house and shop, he will be able to do
+ everything that is necessary for me. If you stay here, and the Plague
+ increases, I shall keep on worrying myself at the thought that you are
+ risking your lives needlessly for me, and if it should come into the
+ house, and any of you die, I shall charge myself all my life with having
+ been the cause of your death. I pray you, for my sake as well as your own,
+ to lose no time in going to the sister Captain Dave spoke of, down near
+ Gloucester."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not agitate yourself," Mrs. Dowsett said gently, pressing him quietly
+ back on to the pillows from which he had risen in his excitement. "We will
+ talk it over, and see what is for the best. It is but a solitary case yet,
+ and may spread no further. In a few days we shall see how matters go.
+ Things have not come to a bad pass yet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril, however, was not to be consoled. Hitherto he had given
+ comparatively small thought to the Plague, but now that it was in the
+ City, and he felt that his presence alone prevented the family from
+ leaving, he worried incessantly over it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your patient is not so well," the doctor said to Mrs. Dowsett, next
+ morning. "Yesterday he was quite free from fever&mdash;his hands were
+ cool; now they are dry and hard. If this goes on, I fear that we shall
+ have great trouble."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is worrying himself because we do not go out of town. We had, indeed,
+ made up our minds to do so, but we could not leave him here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your nursing would be valuable certainly, but if he goes on as he is he
+ will soon be in a high fever; his wounds will grow angry and fester. While
+ yesterday he seemed in a fair way to recovery, I should be sorry to give
+ any favourable opinion as to what may happen if this goes on. Is there no
+ one who could take care of him if you went?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "John Wilkes will remain behind, and could certainly be trusted to do
+ everything that you directed; but that is not like women, doctor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I am well aware of that; but if things go on well he will really not
+ need nursing, while, if fever sets in badly, the best nursing may not save
+ him. Moreover, wounds and all other ailments of this sort do badly at
+ present; the Plague in the air seems to affect all other maladies. If you
+ will take my advice, Dame, you will carry out your intention, and leave at
+ once. I hear there are several new cases of the Plague today in the City,
+ and those who can go should lose no time in doing so; but, even if not for
+ your own sakes, I should say go for that of your patient."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will you speak to my husband, doctor? I am ready to do whatever is best
+ for your patient, whom we love dearly, and regard almost as a son."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If he were a son I should give the same advice. Yes, I will see Captain
+ Dowsett."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Half an hour later, Cyril was told what the doctor's advice had been, and,
+ seeing that he was bent on it, and that if they stayed they would do him
+ more harm than good, they resolved to start the next day for
+ Gloucestershire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV &mdash; THE PLAGUE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Reluctant as they were to leave Cyril, Mrs. Dowsett and her daughter
+ speedily saw that the doctor's advice was good. Cyril did not say much,
+ but an expression of restful satisfaction came over his face, and it was
+ not long before he fell into a quiet sleep that contrasted strongly with
+ the restless and fretful state in which he had passed the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You see I was right, madam," the doctor said that evening. "The fever has
+ not quite left him, but he is a different man to what he was this morning;
+ another quiet night's rest, and he will regain the ground he has lost. I
+ think you can go in perfect comfort so far as he is concerned. Another
+ week and he will be up, if nothing occurs to throw him back again; but of
+ course it will be weeks before he can use his arm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John Wilkes had been sent off as soon as it was settled that they would
+ go, and had bought, at Epping, a waggon and a pair of strong horses. It
+ had a tilt, and the ladies were to sleep in it on the journey, as it was
+ certain that, until they were far away from London, they would be unable
+ to obtain lodgings. A man was engaged to drive them down, and a sail and
+ two or three poles were packed in the waggon to make a tent for him and
+ Captain Dowsett. A store of provisions was cooked, and a cask of beer,
+ another of water, and a case of wine were also placed in. Mattresses were
+ laid down for the ladies to sit on during the day and to sleep on at
+ night; so they would be practically independent during the journey. Early
+ next morning they started.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It seems heartless to leave you, Cyril," Nellie said, as they came in to
+ say good-bye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not heartless at all," Cyril replied. "I know that you are going because
+ I wish it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is more than wishing, you tiresome boy. We are going because you have
+ made up your mind that you will be ill if we don't. You are too weak to
+ quarrel with now, but when we meet again, tremble, for I warn you I shall
+ scold you terribly then."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You shall scold me as much as you please, Nellie; I shall take it all
+ quite patiently."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nellie and her mother went away in tears, and Captain Dave himself was a
+ good deal upset. They had thought the going away from home on such a long
+ journey would be a great trial, but this was now quite lost sight of in
+ their regret at what they considered deserting Cyril, and many were the
+ injunctions that were given to John Wilkes before the waggon drove off.
+ They were somewhat consoled by seeing that Cyril was undoubtedly better
+ and brighter. He had slept all night without waking, his hands were cool,
+ and the flush had entirely left his cheek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If they were starting on a voyage to the Indies they could not be in a
+ greater taking," John Wilkes said, on returning to Cyril's bedside. "Why,
+ I have seen the Captain go off on a six months' voyage and less said about
+ it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am heartily glad they are gone, John. If the Plague grows there will be
+ a terrible time here. Is the shop shut?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay; the man went away two days ago, and we sent off the two 'prentices
+ yesterday. There is naught doing. Yesterday half the vessels in the Pool
+ cleared out on the news of the Plague having got into the City, and I
+ reckon that, before long, there won't be a ship in the port. We shall have
+ a quiet time of it, you and I; we shall be like men in charge of an old
+ hulk."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another week, and Cyril was up. All his bandages, except those on the
+ shoulder and head, had been thrown aside, and the doctor said that,
+ erelong, the former would be dispensed with. John had wanted to sit up
+ with him, but as Cyril would not hear of this he had moved his bed into
+ the same room, so that he could be up in a moment if anything was wanted.
+ He went out every day to bring in the news.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is little enough to tell, Master Cyril," he said one day. "So far,
+ the Plague grows but slowly in the City, though, indeed, it is no fault of
+ the people that it does not spread rapidly. Most of them seem scared out
+ of their wits; they gather together and talk, with white faces, and one
+ man tells of a dream that his wife has had, and another of a voice that he
+ says he has heard; and some have seen ghosts. Yesterday I came upon a
+ woman with a crowd round her; she was staring up at a white cloud, and
+ swore that she could plainly see an angel with a white sword, and some of
+ the others cried that they saw it too. I should like to have been a
+ gunner's mate with a stout rattan, and to have laid it over their
+ shoulders, to give them something else to think about for a few hours. It
+ is downright pitiful to see such cowards. At the corner of one street
+ there was a quack, vending pills and perfumes that he warranted to keep
+ away the Plague, and the people ran up and bought his nostrums by the
+ score; I hear there are a dozen such in the City, making a fortune out of
+ the people's fears. I went into the tavern I always use, and had a glass
+ of Hollands and a talk with the landlord. He says that he does as good a
+ trade as ever, though in a different way. There are no sailors there now,
+ but neighbours come in and drink down a glass of strong waters, which many
+ think is the best thing against the Plague, and then hurry off again. I
+ saw the Gazette there, and it was half full of advertisements of people
+ who said they were doctors from foreign parts, and all well accustomed to
+ cure the Plague. They say the magistrates are going to issue notices about
+ shutting up houses, as they do at St. Giles's, and to have watchmen at the
+ doors to see none come in or go out, and that they are going to appoint
+ examiners in every parish to go from house to house to search for infected
+ persons."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I suppose these are proper steps to take," Cyril said, "but it will be a
+ difficult thing to keep people shut up in houses where one is infected. No
+ doubt it would be a good thing at the commencement of the illness, but
+ when it has once spread itself, and the very air become infected, it seems
+ to me that it will do but little good, while it will assuredly cause great
+ distress and trouble. I long to be able to get up myself, and to see about
+ things."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The streets have quite an empty aspect, so many have gone away; and what
+ with that, and most of the shops being closed, and the dismal aspect of
+ the people, there is little pleasure in being out, Master Cyril."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I dare say, John. Still, it will be a change, and, as soon as I am strong
+ enough, I shall sally out with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another fortnight, and Cyril was able to do so. The Plague had still
+ spread, but so slowly that people began to hope that the City would be
+ spared any great calamity, for they were well on in July, and in another
+ six weeks the heat of summer would be passed. Some of those who had gone
+ into the country returned, more shops had been opened, and the panic had
+ somewhat subsided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you mean to do, Master Cyril?" John Wilkes asked that evening.
+ "Of course you cannot join the Fleet again, for it will be, as the doctor
+ says, another two months before your shoulder-bone will have knit strongly
+ enough for you to use your arm, and at sea it is a matter of more
+ consequence than on land for a man to have the use of both arms. The ship
+ may give a sudden lurch, and one may have to make a clutch at whatever is
+ nearest to prevent one from rolling into the lee scuppers; and such a
+ wrench as that would take from a weak arm all the good a three months'
+ nursing had done it, and might spoil the job of getting the bone to grow
+ straight again altogether. I don't say you are fit to travel yet, but you
+ should be able before long to start on a journey, and might travel down
+ into Gloucestershire, where, be sure, you will be gladly welcomed by the
+ Captain, his dame, and Mistress Nellie. Or, should you not care for that,
+ you might go aboard a ship. There are hundreds of them lying idle in the
+ river, and many families have taken up their homes there, so as to be free
+ from all risks of meeting infected persons in the streets."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think I shall stay here, John, and keep you company. If the Plague dies
+ away, well and good. If it gets bad, we can shut ourselves up. You say
+ that the Captain has laid in a great store of provisions, so that you
+ could live without laying out a penny for a year, and it is as sure as
+ anything can be, that when the cold weather comes on it will die out.
+ Besides, John, neither you nor I are afraid of the Plague, and it is
+ certain that it is fear that makes most people take it. If it becomes bad,
+ there will be terrible need for help, and maybe we shall be able to do
+ some good. If we are not afraid of facing death in battle, why should we
+ fear it by the Plague. It is as noble a death to die helping one's
+ fellow-countrymen in their sore distress as in fighting for one's
+ country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is true enough, Master Cyril, if folks did but see it so. I do not
+ see what we could do, but if there be aught, you can depend on me. I was
+ in a ship in the Levant when we had a fever, which, it seems to me, was
+ akin to this Plague, though not like it in all its symptoms. Half the crew
+ died, and, as you say, I verily believe that it was partly from the
+ lowness of spirits into which they fell from fear. I used to help nurse
+ the sick, and throw overboard the dead, and it never touched me. I don't
+ say that I was braver than others, but it seemed to me as it was just as
+ easy to take things comfortable as it was to fret over them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards the end of the month the Plague spread rapidly, and all work
+ ceased in the parishes most affected. But, just as it had raged for weeks
+ in the Western parishes outside the City, so it seemed restricted by
+ certain invisible lines, after it had made its entry within the walls, and
+ while it raged in some parts others were entirely unaffected, and here
+ shops were open, and the streets still retained something of their usual
+ appearance. There had been great want among the poorer classes, owing to
+ the cessation of work, especially along the riverside. The Lord Mayor,
+ some of the Aldermen, and most other rich citizens had hastened to leave
+ the City. While many of the clergy were deserting their flocks, and many
+ doctors their patients, others remained firmly at their posts, and worked
+ incessantly, and did all that was possible in order to check the spread of
+ the Plague and to relieve the distress of the poor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Numbers of the women were engaged as nurses. Examiners were appointed in
+ each parish, and these, with their assistants, paid house-to-house
+ visitations, in order to discover any who were infected; and as soon as
+ the case was discovered the house was closed, and none suffered to go in
+ or out, a watchman being placed before the door day and night. Two men
+ therefore were needed to each infected house, and this afforded employment
+ for numbers of poor. Others were engaged in digging graves, or in going
+ round at night, with carts, collecting the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So great was the dread of the people at the thought of being shut up in
+ their houses, without communication with the world, that every means was
+ used for concealing the fact that one of the inmates was smitten down.
+ This was the more easy because the early stages of the disease were
+ without pain, and people were generally ignorant that they had been
+ attacked until within a few hours, and sometimes within a few minutes, of
+ their death; consequently, when the Plague had once spread, all the
+ precautions taken to prevent its increase were useless, while they caused
+ great misery and suffering, and doubtless very much greater loss of life.
+ For, owing to so many being shut up in the houses with those affected, and
+ there being no escape from the infection, whole families, with the
+ servants and apprentices, sickened and died together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril frequently went up to view the infected districts. He was not moved
+ by curiosity, but by a desire to see if there were no way of being of use.
+ There was not a street but many of the houses were marked with the red
+ cross. In front of these the watchmen sat on stools or chairs lent by the
+ inmates, or borrowed from some house whence the inhabitants had all fled.
+ The air rang with pitiful cries. Sometimes women, distraught with terror
+ or grief, screamed wildly through open windows. Sometimes people talked
+ from the upper stories to their neighbours on either hand, or opposite,
+ prisoners like themselves, each telling their lamentable tale of misery,
+ of how many had died and how many remained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was by no means uncommon to see on the pavement men and women who, in
+ the excess of despair or pain, had thrown themselves headlong down. While
+ such sounds and sights filled Cyril with horror, they aroused still more
+ his feelings of pity and desire to be of some use. Very frequently he went
+ on errands for people who called down from above to him. Money was lowered
+ in a tin dish, or other vessel, in which it lay covered with vinegar as a
+ disinfectant. Taking it out, he would go and buy the required articles,
+ generally food or medicine, and, returning, place them in a basket that
+ was again lowered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The watchmen mostly executed these commissions, but many of them were
+ surly fellows, and, as they were often abused and cursed by those whom
+ they held prisoners, would do but little for them. They had, moreover, an
+ excuse for refusing to leave the door, because, as often happened, it
+ might be opened in their absence and the inmates escape. It was true that
+ the watchmen had the keys, but the screws were often drawn from the locks
+ inside; and so frequently was this done that at last chains with padlocks
+ were fastened to all the doors as soon as the watch was set over them. But
+ even this did not avail. Many of the houses had communications at the
+ backs into other streets, and so eluded the vigilance of the watch; while,
+ in other cases, communications were broken through the walls into other
+ houses, empty either by desertion or death, and the escape could thus be
+ made under the very eye of the watchman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very frequently Cyril went into a church when he saw the door open. Here
+ very small congregations would be gathered, for there was a fear on the
+ part of all of meeting with strangers, for these might, unknown to
+ themselves, be already stricken with the pest, and all public meetings of
+ any kind were, for this reason, strictly forbidden. One day, he was
+ passing a church that had hitherto been always closed, its incumbent being
+ one of those who had fled at the outbreak of the Plague. Upon entering he
+ saw a larger congregation than usual, some twenty or thirty people being
+ present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minister had just mounted the pulpit, and was beginning his address as
+ Cyril entered. The latter was struck with his appearance. He was a man of
+ some thirty years of age, with a strangely earnest face. His voice was
+ deep, but soft and flexible, and in the stillness of the almost empty
+ church its lowest tones seemed to come with impressive power, and Cyril
+ thought that he had never heard such preaching before. The very text
+ seemed strange at such a time: <i>"Rejoice ye, for the kingdom of heaven
+ is at hand."</i> From most of the discourses he had heard Cyril had gone
+ out depressed rather than inspirited. They had been pitched in one tone.
+ The terrible scourge that raged round them was held up as a punishment
+ sent by the wrath of God upon a sinful people, and the congregation were
+ warned to prepare themselves for the fate, that might at any moment be
+ theirs, by repentance and humiliation. The preacher to whom Cyril was now
+ listening spoke in an altogether different strain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are all soldiers of Christ," he said, "and now is an opportunity
+ given to you to show that you are worthy soldiers. When the troops of a
+ worldly monarch go into battle they do so with head erect, with proud and
+ resolute bearing, with flashing eye, and with high courage, determined to
+ bear aloft his banner and to crown it with victory, even though it cost
+ them their lives. Such is the mien that soldiers of Christ should bear in
+ the mortal strife now raging round us. Let them show the same fearlessness
+ of death, the same high courage, the same unlimited confidence in their
+ Leader. What matter if they die in His service? He has told them what
+ their work should be. He has bidden them visit the sick and comfort the
+ sorrowing. What if there be danger in the work? Did He shrink from the
+ Cross which was to end His work of love, and is it for His followers to do
+ so? 'Though you go down into the pit,' He has said, 'I am there also'; and
+ with His companionship one must be craven indeed to tremble. This is a
+ noble opportunity for holding high the banner of Christ. There is work to
+ be done for all, and as the work is done, men should see by the calm
+ courage, the cheerfulness, and the patience of those that do it, that they
+ know that they are doing His work, and that they are content to leave the
+ issue, whatever it be, in His hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the tone in which, for half an hour, he spoke. When he had
+ finished he offered up a prayer, gave the blessing, and then came down
+ from the pulpit and spoke to several of the congregation. He was evidently
+ personally known to most of them. One by one, after a few words, they left
+ the church. Cyril remained to the last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am willing to work, sir," he said, as the preacher came up, "but, so
+ far, no work has come in my way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you father or mother, or any dependent on you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No one, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then come along with me; I lodge close by. I have eaten nothing to-day,
+ and must keep up my strength, and I have a long round of calls to make."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is the first time I have seen the church open," Cyril said, as they
+ went out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is not my church, sir, nor do I belong to the Church of England; I am
+ an Independent. But as many of the pastors have fled and left their sheep
+ untended, so have we&mdash;for there are others besides myself who have
+ done so&mdash;taken possession of their empty pulpits, none gainsaying us,
+ and are doing what good we can. You have been in the war, I see," he went
+ on, glancing at Cyril's arm, which was carried in a sling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; I was at the battle of Lowestoft, and having been wounded there,
+ came to London to stay in a friend's house till I was cured. He and his
+ family have left, but I am living with a trusty foreman who is in charge
+ of the house. I have a great desire to be useful. I myself have little
+ fear of the Plague."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is the best of all preservatives from its ravages, although not a
+ sure one; for many doctors who have laboured fearlessly have yet died.
+ Have you thought of any way of being useful?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, sir; that is what is troubling me. As you see, I have but the use of
+ one arm, and I have not got back my full strength by a long way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Everyone can be useful if he chooses," the minister said. "There is need
+ everywhere among this stricken, frightened, helpless people, of men of
+ calm courage and cool heads. Nine out of ten are so scared out of their
+ senses, when once the Plague enters the houses, as to be well-nigh
+ useless, and yet the law hinders those who would help if they could. I am
+ compelled to labour, not among those who are sick, but among those who are
+ well. When one enters a house with the red cross on the door, he may leave
+ it no more until he is either borne out to the dead-cart, or the Plague
+ has wholly disappeared within it, and a month has elapsed. The sole
+ exception are the doctors; they are no more exempt from spreading the
+ infection than other men, but as they must do their work so far as they
+ can they have free passage; and yet, so few is their number and so heavy
+ already their losses, that not one in a hundred of those that are smitten
+ can have their aid. Here is one coming now, one of the best&mdash;Dr.
+ Hodges. If you are indeed willing so to risk your life, I will speak to
+ him. But I know not your name?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My name is Cyril Shenstone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clergyman looked at him suddenly, and would have spoken, but the
+ doctor was now close to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! Mr. Wallace," he said, "I am glad to see you, and to know that, so
+ far, you have not taken the disease, although constantly going into the
+ worst neighbourhoods."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Like yourself, Dr. Hodges, I have no fear of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not say I have no fear," the doctor replied. "I do my duty so far as
+ I can, but I do not doubt that, sooner or later, I shall catch the malady,
+ as many of us have done already. I take such precautions as I can, but the
+ distemper seems to baffle all precautions. My only grief is that our skill
+ avails so little. So far we have found nothing that seems to be of any
+ real use. Perhaps if we could attack it in the earlier stages we might be
+ more successful. The strange nature of the disease, and the way in which
+ it does its work well-nigh to the end, before the patient is himself aware
+ of it, puts it out of our power to combat it. In many cases I am not sent
+ for until the patient is at the point of death, and by the time I reach
+ his door I am met with the news that he is dead. But I must be going."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One moment, Dr. Hodges. This young gentleman has been expressing to me
+ his desire to be of use. I know nothing of him save that he was one of my
+ congregation this morning, but, as he fears not the Plague, and is moved
+ by a desire to help his fellows in distress, I take it that he is a good
+ youth. He was wounded in the battle of Lowestoft, and, being as ready to
+ encounter the Plague as he was the Dutch, would now fight in the cause of
+ humanity. Would you take him as an assistant? I doubt if he knows anything
+ of medicine, but I think he is one that would see your orders carried out.
+ He has no relations or friends, and therefore considers himself free to
+ venture his life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor looked earnestly at Cyril and then raised his hat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Young sir," he said, "since you are willing so to venture your life, I
+ will gladly accept your help. There are few enough clear heads in this
+ city, God knows. As for the nurses, they are Jezebels. They have the
+ choice of starving or nursing, and they nurse; but they neglect their
+ patients, they rob them, and there is little doubt that in many cases they
+ murder them, so that at the end of their first nursing they may have
+ enough money to live on without going to another house. But I am pressed
+ for time. Here is my card. Call on me this evening at six, and we will
+ talk further on the matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shaking hands with the minister he hurried away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come as far as my lodgings," Mr. Wallace said to Cyril, "and stay with me
+ while I eat my meal. 'Tis a diversion to one's mind to turn for a moment
+ from the one topic that all men are speaking of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your name is Shenstone. I come from Norfolk. There was a family of that
+ name formerly had estates near my native place. One Sir Aubrey Shenstone
+ was at its head&mdash;a brave gentleman. I well remember seeing him when I
+ was a boy, but he took the side of the King against the Parliament, and,
+ as we heard, passed over with Charles to France when his cause was lost. I
+ have not heard of him since."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Aubrey was my father," Cyril said quietly; "he died a year ago. I am
+ his only son."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And therefore Sir Cyril," the minister said, "though you did not so name
+ yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was needless," Cyril said. "I have no estates to support my title, and
+ though it is true that, when at sea with Prince Rupert, I was called Sir
+ Cyril, it was because the Prince had known my father, and knew that I, at
+ his death, inherited the title, though I inherited nothing else."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They now reached the door of Mr. Wallace's lodging, and went up to his
+ room on the first floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Neglect no precaution," the minister said. "No one should throw away his
+ life. I myself, although not a smoker, nor accustomed to take snuff, use
+ it now, and would, as the doctors advise, chew a piece of tobacco, but
+ 'tis too nasty, and when I tried it, I was so ill that I thought even the
+ risk of the Plague preferable. But I carry camphor in my pockets, and when
+ I return from preaching among people of whom some may well have the
+ infection, I bathe my face and hands with vinegar, and, pouring some on to
+ a hot iron, fill the room with its vapour. My life is useful, I hope, and
+ I would fain keep it, as long as it is the Lord's will, to work in His
+ service. As a rule, I take wine and bread before I go out in the morning,
+ though to-day I was pressed for time, and neglected it. I should advise
+ you always to do so. I am convinced that a full man has less chance of
+ catching the infection than a fasting one, and that it is the weakness
+ many men suffer from their fears, and from their loss of appetite from
+ grief, that causes them to take it so easily. When the fever was so bad in
+ St. Giles's, I heard that in many instances, where whole families were
+ carried away, the nurses shut up with them were untouched with the
+ infection, and I believe that this was because they had become hardened to
+ the work, and ate and drank heartily, and troubled not themselves at all
+ at the grief of those around them. They say that many of these harpies
+ have grown, wealthy, loading themselves with everything valuable they
+ could lay hands on in the houses of those they attended."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the meal, in which he insisted upon Cyril joining him, was
+ concluded, Mr. Wallace uttered a short prayer that Cyril might safely pass
+ through the work he had undertaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I trust," he said, "that you will come here frequently? I generally have
+ a few friends here of an evening. We try to be cheerful, and to strengthen
+ each other, and I am sure we all have comfort at these meetings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you, I will come sometimes, sir; but as a rule I must return home,
+ for my friend, John Wilkes, would sorely miss my company, and is so good
+ and faithful a fellow that I would not seem to desert him on any account."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do as you think right, lad, but remember there will always be a welcome
+ for you here when you choose to come."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John Wilkes was dismayed when he heard of Cyril's intention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Master Cyril," he said, after smoking his pipe in silence for some
+ time, "it is not for me to hinder you in what you have made up your mind
+ to do. I don't say that if I wasn't on duty here that I mightn't go and do
+ what I could for these poor creatures. But I don't know. It is one thing
+ to face a deadly fever like this Plague if it comes on board your own
+ ship, for there is no getting out of it; and as you have got to face it,
+ why, says I, do it as a man; but as for going out of your way to put
+ yourself in the middle of it, that is going a bit beyond me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, John, you didn't think it foolish when I went as a Volunteer to
+ fight the Dutch. It was just the same thing, you know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I suppose it was," John said reluctantly, after a pause. "But then, you
+ see, you were fighting for your country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, but in the present case I shall be fighting for my countrymen and
+ countrywomen, John. It is awful to think of the misery that people are
+ suffering, and it seems to me that, having nothing else to do here, it is
+ specially my duty to put my hand to the work of helping as far as I can.
+ The risk may, at present, be greater than it would be if I stayed at home,
+ but if the Plague spreads&mdash;and it looks as if all the City would
+ presently be affected&mdash;all will have to run the risk of contagion.
+ There are thousands of women now who voluntarily enter the houses as
+ nurses for a small rate of pay. Even robbers, they say, will enter and
+ ransack the houses of the dead in search of plunder. It will be a shame
+ indeed then if one should shrink from doing so when possibly one might do
+ good."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will say nothing more against it, Master Cyril. Still, I do not see
+ exactly what you are going to do; with one arm you could scarce hold down
+ a raving man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am not going to be a nurse, certainly, John," Cyril said, with a laugh.
+ "I expect that the doctor wants certain cases watched. Either he may doubt
+ the nurses, or he may want to see how some particular drug works. Nothing,
+ so far, seems of use, but that may be partly because the doctors are all
+ so busy that they cannot watch the patients and see, from hour to hour,
+ how medicines act."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When I was in the Levant, and the pest was bad there," John Wilkes said,
+ "I heard that the Turks, when seized with the distemper, sometimes wrapped
+ themselves up in a great number of clothes, so that they sweated heavily,
+ and that this seemed, in some cases, to draw off the fever, and so the
+ patient recovered."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That seems a sensible sort of treatment, John, and worth trying with this
+ Plague."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On calling on Dr. Hodges that afternoon, Cyril found that he had rightly
+ guessed the nature of the work that the doctor wished him to perform.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can never rely upon the nurses," he said. "I give instructions with
+ medicines, but in most cases I am sure that the instructions are never
+ carried out. The relations and friends are too frightened to think or act
+ calmly, too full of grief for the sick, and anxiety for those who have not
+ yet taken the illness, to watch the changes in the patient. As to the
+ nurses, they are often drunk the whole time they are in the house.
+ Sometimes they fear to go near the sick man or woman; sometimes,
+ undoubtedly, they hasten death. In most cases it matters little, for we
+ are generally called in too late to be of any service. The poor people
+ view us almost as enemies; they hide their malady from us in every way.
+ Half our time, too, is wasted uselessly, for many are there who frighten
+ themselves into the belief that they are ill, and send for us in all
+ haste. So far, we feel that we are working altogether in the dark; none of
+ us can see that any sort of drug avails even in the slightest degree when
+ the malady has once got a hold. One in twenty cases may live, but why we
+ know not. Still the fact that some do live shows that the illness is not
+ necessarily mortal, and that, could the right remedy befound, we might yet
+ overcome it. The first thing, however, is to try to prevent its spread.
+ Here we have ten or more people shut up in a house with one sick person.
+ It is a terrible necessity, for it is a sentence of death to many, if not
+ to all. We give the nurses instructions to fumigate the room by
+ evaporating vinegar upon hot irons, by burning spices and drugs, by
+ sprinkling perfumes. So far, I cannot see that these measures have been of
+ any service, but I cannot say how thoroughly they have been carried out,
+ and I sorely need an assistant to see that the system is fairly tried. It
+ is not necessary that he should be a doctor, but he must have influence
+ and power over those in the house. He must be calm and firm, and he must
+ be regarded by the people as a doctor. If you will undertake this, you
+ must put on a wig, for you know that that is looked upon as a necessary
+ part of a doctor's outfit by people in general. I shall introduce you as
+ my assistant, and say that you are to be obeyed as implicitly as if I
+ myself were present. There is another reason why you must pass as a
+ doctor, for you would otherwise be a prisoner and unable to pass in and
+ out. You had best wear a black suit. I will lend you one of my canes and a
+ snuff-box, and should advise you to take snuff, even if it is not your
+ habit, for I believe that it is good against infection, and one of the
+ experiments I wish to try is as to what its result may be if burnt freely
+ in the house. Are you ready to undertake this work?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quite ready, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then come round here at eight in the morning. I shall have heard by that
+ hour from the examiners of this parish of any fresh case they have found.
+ They begin their rounds at five o'clock."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day Cyril presented himself at the doctor's, dressed in black,
+ with white ruffles to his shirt, and a flowing wig he had purchased the
+ night before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here are the cane and snuff-box," Dr. Hodges said. "Now you will pass
+ muster very well as my assistant. Let us be off at once; for I have a long
+ list of cases."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril remained outside while Dr. Hodges went into three or four houses.
+ Presently he came down to the door, and said to him,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is a case where things are favourable for a first trial. It is a boy
+ who is taken ill, and the parents, though in deep grief, seem to have some
+ sense left."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned to the watchman, who had already been placed at the door. The
+ man, who evidently knew him, had saluted respectfully when he entered the
+ house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This gentleman is my assistant," he said, "and you will allow him to pass
+ in and out just as you would myself. He is going to take this case
+ entirely in hand, and you will regard him as being in charge here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then re-entered the house with Cyril, and led him to the room where the
+ parents of the boy, and two elder sisters, were assembled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is my assistant," he said, "and he has consented to take entire
+ charge of the case, though I myself shall look in and consult with him
+ every morning. In the first place, your son must be taken to the top
+ storey of the house. You say that you are ready to nurse him yourselves,
+ and do not wish that a paid nurse should be had in. I commend your
+ determination, for the nurses are, for the most part, worse than useless,
+ and carry the infection all over the house. But only one of you must go
+ into the room, and whoever goes in must stay there. It is madness for all
+ to be going in and out and exposing themselves to the infection when no
+ good can be done. When this is the case, one or other is sure to take the
+ malady, and then it spreads to all. Which of you will undertake the duty?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All four at once offered themselves, and there was an earnest contest
+ between them for the dangerous post. Dr. Hodges listened for a minute or
+ two, and then decided upon the elder of the two sisters&mdash;a quiet,
+ resolute-looking girl with a healthy face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This young lady shall be nurse," he said. "I feel that I can have
+ confidence in her. She looks healthy and strong, and would, methinks, best
+ resist the malady, should she take it. I am leaving my assistant here for
+ a time to see to the fumigation of the house. You will please see that his
+ orders are carried out in every respect. I have every hope that if this is
+ done the Plague will not spread further; but much must depend upon
+ yourselves. Do not give way to grief, but encourage each other, and go
+ about with calm minds. I see," he said, pointing to a Bible on the table,
+ "that you know where to go for comfort and strength. The first thing is to
+ carry the boy up to the room that we chose for him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will do that," the father said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He had better be left in the blankets in which he is lying. Cover him
+ completely over with them, for, above all, it is necessary that you should
+ not inhale his breath. You had better take the head and your daughter the
+ feet. But first see that the room upstairs is prepared."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few minutes the lad was transferred to the upper room, the doctor
+ warning the others not to enter that from which he had been carried until
+ it had been fumigated and sprinkled with vinegar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now," he said to the girl who was to remain with the patient, "keep the
+ window wide open; as there is no fireplace, keep a brazier of charcoal
+ burning near the window. Keep the door shut, and open it only when you
+ have need for something. Give him a portion of this medicine every half
+ hour. Do not lean over him&mdash;remember that his breath is a fatal
+ poison. Put a pinch of these powdered spices into the fire every few
+ minutes. Pour this perfume over your handkerchief, and put it over your
+ mouth and nose whenever you approach the bed. He is in a stupor now, poor
+ lad, and I fear that his chance of recovery is very slight; but you must
+ remember that your own life is of value to your parents, and that it
+ behoves you to do all in your power to preserve it, and that if you take
+ the contagion it may spread through the house. We shall hang a sheet,
+ soaked in vinegar, outside the door."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We could not have a better case for a trial," he said, as he went
+ downstairs and joined Cyril, whom he had bidden wait below. "The people
+ are all calm and sensible, and if we succeed not here, there is small
+ chance of our succeeding elsewhere."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor then gave detailed orders as to fumigating the house, and left.
+ Cyril saw at once that a brazier of charcoal was lighted and carried
+ upstairs, and he called to the girl to come out and fetch it in. As soon
+ as she had done so the sheet was hung over the door. Then he took another
+ brazier, placed it in the room from which the boy had been carried, laid
+ several lumps of sulphur upon it, and then left the room. All the doors of
+ the other rooms were then thrown open, and a quantity of tobacco, spices,
+ and herbs, were burnt on a red-hot iron at the foot of the stairs, until
+ the house was filled with a dense smoke. Half an hour later all the
+ windows were opened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI &mdash; FATHER AND SON
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The process of fumigation had well-nigh suffocated the wife and daughter
+ of the trader, but, as soon as the smoke cleared away, Cyril set them all
+ to work to carry up articles of furniture to another bedroom on the top
+ floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When your daughter is released from nursing, madam," he said, "she must
+ at once come into this room, and remain there secluded for a few days.
+ Therefore, it will be well to make it as comfortable as possible for her.
+ Her food must be taken up and put outside the door, so that she can take
+ it in there without any of you going near her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The occupation was a useful one, as it distracted the thoughts of those
+ engaged in it from the sick room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril did not enter there. He had told the girl to call him should there
+ be any necessity, but said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not call me unless absolutely needful, if, for instance, he becomes
+ violent, in which case we must fasten the sheets across him so as to
+ restrain him. But it is of no use your remaining shut up there if I go in
+ and out of the room to carry the infection to the others."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have hurt your arm, doctor?" the mother said, when the arrangements
+ were all made, and they had returned to the room below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," he said; "I met with an accident, and must, for a short time, keep
+ my arm in a sling."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You look young, sir, to be running these fearful perils."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am young," Cyril said, "and have not yet completed all my studies; but
+ Dr. Hodges judged that I was sufficiently advanced to be able to be of
+ service to him, not so much in prescribing as by seeing that his orders
+ were carried out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every half hour he went upstairs, and inquired, through the door, as to
+ the state of the boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Late in the afternoon he heard the girl crying bitterly within. He
+ knocked, and she cried out,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is dead, sir; he has just expired."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then you must think of yourself and the others," he said. "The small
+ packet I placed on the chair contains sulphur. Close the window, then
+ place the packet on the fire, and leave the room at once and go into the
+ next room, which is all ready for you. There, I pray you, undress, and
+ sponge yourself with vinegar, then make your clothes into a bundle and put
+ them outside the door. There will be a bowl of hot broth in readiness for
+ you there; drink that, and then go to bed at once, and keep the blankets
+ over you and try to sleep."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went part of the way downstairs, and, in a minute or two, heard a door
+ open and shut, then another door shut. Knowing that the order had been
+ carried out, he went downstairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madam," he said, "God has taken your boy. The doctor had but little hope
+ for him. For the sake of yourself and those around you, I pray you all to
+ bear up against the sorrow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mother burst into tears, and, leaving her with her husband and
+ daughter, Cyril went into the kitchen, where the maid and an apprentice
+ were sitting with pale faces, and bade the servant at once warm up the
+ broth, that had already been prepared. As soon as it was ready, he carried
+ a basin upstairs. The bundle of clothes had already been placed outside
+ the girl's room. He took this down and put it on the kitchen fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now," he said, "take four basins up to the parlour, and do you and the
+ boy each make a hearty meal. I think there is little fear of the Plague
+ spreading, and your best chance of avoiding it is by keeping up your
+ spirits and not fretting about it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the broth had been taken into the parlour, he went in and
+ persuaded them to eat and to take a glass of wine with it, while he
+ himself sat down with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are all weak," he said, "for, doubtless, you have eaten nothing
+ to-day, and you need strength as well as courage. I trust that your
+ daughter will presently go off into a sound sleep. The last thing before
+ you go to bed, take up with you a basin of good posset with a glass of
+ wine in it; knock gently at her door; if she is awake, tell her to come
+ out and take it in as soon as you have gone, but if she does not reply, do
+ not rouse her. I can be of no further use to-night, but will return in the
+ morning, when I hope to find all is well."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father accompanied him to the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will of course bring the poor boy down to-night. It were best that
+ you made some excuse to sleep in another room. Let your daughter sleep
+ with her mother. When you go in to fetch him, be careful that you do not
+ enter at once, for the fumes of the sulphur will scarcely have abated. As
+ you go in, place a wet handkerchief to your mouth, and make to the window
+ and throw it open, closing the door behind you. Sit at the window till the
+ air is tolerable, then wrap the blankets round him and carry him
+ downstairs when you hear the bell. After he has gone tell the servant to
+ have a brazier lighted, and to keep up the kitchen fire. As soon as he is
+ gone, burn on the brazier at the foot of the stairs, tobacco and spices,
+ as we did before; then take off your clothes and burn them on the kitchen
+ fire, and then go up to bed. You can leave the doors and windows of the
+ rooms that are not in use open, so that the smoke may escape."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God bless you, sir!" the man said. "You have been a comfort indeed to us,
+ and I have good hopes that the Plague will spread no further among us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril went first to the doctor's, and reported what had taken place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will go round in the morning and see how they are," he concluded, "and
+ bring you round word before you start on your rounds."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have done very well indeed," the doctor said. "If people everywhere
+ would be as calm, and obey orders as well as those you have been with, I
+ should have good hopes that we might check the spread of the Plague; but
+ you will find that they are quite the exception."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, indeed, proved to be the case. In many instances, the people were so
+ distracted with grief and fear that they ran about the house like mad
+ persons, crying and screaming, running in and out of the sick chamber, or
+ sitting there crying helplessly, and refusing to leave the body until it
+ was carried out to the dead-cart. But with such cases Cyril had nothing to
+ do, as the doctor would only send him to the houses where he saw that his
+ instructions would be carried out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To his great satisfaction, Cyril found that the precautions taken in the
+ first case proved successful. Regularly, every morning, he inquired at the
+ door, and received the answer, "All are well."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In August the Plague greatly increased in violence, the deaths rising to
+ ten thousand a week. A dull despair had now seized the population. It
+ seemed that all were to be swept away. Many went out of their minds. The
+ quacks no longer drove a flourishing trade in their pretended nostrums;
+ these were now utterly discredited, for nothing seemed of the slightest
+ avail. Some went to the opposite extreme, and affected to defy fate. The
+ taverns were filled again, and boisterous shouts and songs seemed to mock
+ the dismal cries from the houses with the red cross on the door. Robberies
+ were rife. Regardless of the danger of the pest, robbers broke into the
+ houses where all the inmates had perished by the Plague, and rifled them
+ of their valuables. The nurses plundered the dying. All natural affection
+ seemed at an end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those stricken were often deserted by all their relatives, and left alone
+ to perish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bands of reckless young fellows went through the streets singing, and,
+ dressing up in masks, performed the dance of death. The dead were too many
+ to be carried away in carts at night to the great pits prepared for them,
+ but the dismal tones of the bell, and the cries of "Bring out your dead!"
+ sounded in the streets all day. It was no longer possible to watch the
+ whole of the infected houses. Sometimes Plague-stricken men would escape
+ from their beds and run through the streets until they dropped dead. One
+ such man, in the height of his delirium, sprang into the river, and, after
+ swimming about for some time, returned to the shore, marvellously cured of
+ his malady by the shock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril went occasionally in the evening to the lodgings of Mr. Wallace. At
+ first he met several people gathered there, but the number became fewer
+ every time he went. He had told the minister that he thought that it would
+ be better for him to stay away, exposed as he was to infection, but Mr.
+ Wallace would take no excuses on this score.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are all in the hands of God," he said. "The streets are full of
+ infected people, and I myself frequently go to pray with my friends in the
+ earliest stages of the malady. There is no longer any use in precautions.
+ We can but all go on doing our duty until we are called away, and even
+ among the few who gather here of an evening there may be one or more who
+ are already smitten, though unconscious yet that their summons has come."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among others Cyril was introduced to a Mr. and Mrs. Harvey, who were, the
+ minister told him, from the country, but were staying in town on account
+ of a painful family business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have tried to persuade them to return home and to stay there until the
+ Plague ceases, but they conceive it their duty to remain. They are, like
+ myself, Independents, and are not easily to be turned from a resolution
+ they have taken."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril could easily understand that Mr. Harvey was exactly what he, from
+ the description he had heard of them, had pictured to himself that a
+ Roundhead soldier would be. He had a stern face, eyes deeply sunk in his
+ head, high cheekbones, a firm mouth, and a square jaw. He wore his hair
+ cut close. His figure was bony, and he must, as a young man, have been
+ very powerful. He spoke in a slow, deliberate way, that struck Cyril as
+ being the result of long effort, for a certain restless action of the
+ fingers and the quick movement of the eye, told of a naturally impulsive
+ and fiery disposition. He constantly used scriptural texts in the course
+ of his speech. His wife was gentle and quiet, but it was evident that
+ there was a very strong sympathy between them, and Cyril found, after
+ meeting them once or twice, that he liked them far better than he thought
+ he should do on their first introduction. This was, no doubt, partly due
+ to the fact that Mr. Harvey frequently entered into conversation with him,
+ and appeared to interest himself in him. He was, too, a type that was
+ altogether new to the lad. From his father, and his father's companions,
+ he had heard nothing good of the Puritans, but the evident earnestness of
+ this man's nature was, to some extent, in accordance with his own
+ disposition, and he felt that, widely as he might differ from him on all
+ points of politics, he could not but respect him. The evenings were
+ pleasant. As if by common consent, the conversation never turned on the
+ Plague, but they talked of other passing events, of the trials of their
+ friends, and of the laws that were being put in force against
+ Nonconformists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What think you of these persecutions, young sir?" Mr. Harvey abruptly
+ asked Cyril, one evening, breaking off in the midst of a general
+ conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril was a little confused at the unexpected question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think all persecutions for conscience' sake are wrong," he said, after
+ a moment's pause, "and generally recoil upon the persecutors. Spain lost
+ Holland owing to her persecution of the people. France lost great numbers
+ of her best citizens by her laws against the Protestants. I agree with you
+ thoroughly, that the persecution of the Nonconformists at present is a
+ grievous error, and a cruel injustice; but, at the same time, if you will
+ excuse my saying so, it is the natural consequence of the persecution by
+ the Nonconformists, when they were in power, of the ministers of the
+ Church of England. My tutor in France was an English clergyman, who had
+ been driven from his living, like thousands of other ministers, because he
+ would not give up his opinions. Therefore, you see, I very early was
+ imbued with a hatred of persecution in any form. I trust that I have not
+ spoken too boldly; but you asked for my opinion, and I was forced to give
+ it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At any rate, young sir, you have spoken manfully, and I like you none the
+ worse for it. Nor can I altogether gainsay your words. But you must
+ remember that we had before been oppressed, and that we have been engaged
+ in a desperate struggle for liberty of conscience."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Which, having won for ourselves, we proceeded to deny to others," Mr.
+ Wallace said, with a smile. "Cyril has us fairly, Mr. Harvey. We are
+ reaping what our fathers sowed. They thought that the power they had
+ gained was to be theirs to hold always, and they used it tyrannously,
+ being thereby false to all their principles. It is ever the persecuted,
+ when he attains power, who becomes the persecutor, and, hard as is the
+ pressure of the laws now, we should never forget that we have, in our
+ time, been persecutors, and that in defiance of the rights of conscience
+ we had fought to achieve. Man's nature is, I fear, unchangeable. The slave
+ longs, above all things, for freedom, but when he rises successfully
+ against his master he, in turn, becomes a tyrant, and not infrequently a
+ cruel and bloodthirsty one. Still, we must hope. It may be in the good
+ days that are to come, we may reach a point when each will be free to
+ worship in his own fashion, without any fear or hindrance, recognising the
+ fact that each has a right to follow his own path to Heaven, without its
+ being a subject of offence to those who walk in other ways."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One or two of the other visitors were on the point of speaking, when Mr.
+ Wallace put a stop to further argument by fetching a Bible from his
+ closet, and preparing for the short service of prayer with which the
+ evening always closed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One evening, Mr. Harvey and his wife were absent from the usual gathering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I feel anxious about them," Mr. Wallace said; "they have never, since
+ they arrived in town, missed coming here at seven o'clock. The bells are
+ usually striking the hour as they come. I fear that one or other of them
+ may have been seized by the Plague."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With your permission, sir, I will run round and see," Cyril said. "I know
+ their lodging, for I have accompanied them to the door several times. It
+ is but five minutes' walk from here. If one or other is ill I will run
+ round to Dr. Hodges, and I am sure, at my request, he will go round at
+ once to see them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril walked fast towards the lodging occupied by the Harveys. It was at
+ the house of a mercer, but he and his family had, three weeks before, gone
+ away, having gladly permitted his lodgers to remain, as their presence
+ acted as a guard to the house. They had brought up an old servant with
+ them, and were therefore able to dispense with other attendants. Cyril
+ hurried along, trying, as usual, to pay as little heed as he could to the
+ doleful cries that arose from many of the houses. Although it was still
+ broad daylight there was scarce a soul in the streets, and those he met
+ were, like himself, walking fast, keeping as far as possible from any one
+ they met, so as to avoid contact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he neared the house he heard a woman scream. A moment later a casement
+ was thrown open, and Mrs. Harvey's head appeared. She gave another
+ piercing cry for help, and was then suddenly dragged back, and the
+ casement was violently closed. Cyril had so frequently heard similar cries
+ that he would have paid no attention to it had it come from a stranger,
+ but he felt that Mrs. Harvey was not one to give way to wild despair, even
+ had her husband been suddenly attacked with the Plague. Her sudden
+ disappearance, and the closing of the casement, too, were unaccountable,
+ unless, indeed, her husband were in a state of violent delirium. He ran to
+ the door and flung himself against it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Help me to force it down," he cried to a man who was passing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are mad," the man replied. "Do you not see that they have got the
+ Plague? You may hear hundreds of such cries every day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril drew his sword, which he always carried when he went out of an
+ evening&mdash;for, owing to the deaths among the City watch, deeds of
+ lawlessness and violence were constantly perpetrated&mdash;and struck,
+ with all his strength, with the hilt upon the fastening of the casement
+ next the door. Several of the small panes of glass fell in, and the whole
+ window shook. Again and again he struck upon the same spot, when the
+ fastening gave way, and the window flew open. He sprang in at once, ran
+ through the shop into the passage, and then upstairs. The door was open,
+ and he nearly fell over the body of a man. As he ran into the room he
+ heard the words,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For the last time: Will you sign the deed? You think I will not do this,
+ but I am desperate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the words left his mouth, Cyril sprang forward between the man and Mr.
+ Harvey, who was standing with his arms folded, looking steadfastly at his
+ opponent, who was menacing him with a drawn sword. The man, with a
+ terrible oath, turned to defend himself, repeating the oath when he saw
+ who was his assailant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I let you off last time lightly, you scoundrel!" Cyril exclaimed. "This
+ time it is your life or mine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man made a furious lunge at him. Cyril parried it, and would at the
+ next moment have run him through had not Mr. Harvey suddenly thrown
+ himself between them, hurling Cyril's antagonist to the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Put up your sword," he said to Cyril. "This man is my son; scoundrel and
+ villain, yet still my son, even though he has raised his hand against me.
+ Leave him to God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had stepped a pace back in his surprise. At first he thought that
+ Mr. Harvey's trouble had turned his brain; then it flashed across him that
+ this ruffian's name was indeed John Harvey. The man was about to rise from
+ the floor when Cyril again sprang forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Drop that sword," he exclaimed, "or I will run you through. Now, sir," he
+ said to Mr. Harvey, "will you draw out that pistol, whose butt projects
+ from his pocket, or your son may do one of us mischief yet?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That such had been the man's intention was evident from the glance of
+ baffled rage he threw at Cyril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, sir, go," his father said sternly. "Remember that, henceforth, you
+ are no son of mine. Did I do my duty I should hand you over to the watch&mdash;not
+ for your threats to me, but for the sword-thrust you have given to Joseph
+ Edmonds, who has many times carried you on his shoulder when a child. You
+ may compass my death, but be assured that not one farthing will you gain
+ thereby. 'Vengeance is mine, saith the Lord.' I leave it to Him to pay it.
+ Now go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John Harvey rose to his feet, and walked to the door. Then he turned and
+ shook his fist at Cyril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Curse you!" he said. "I will be even with you yet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril now had time to look round. His eye fell upon the figure of Mrs.
+ Harvey, who had fallen insensible. He made a step towards her, but her
+ husband said, "She has but fainted. This is more pressing," and he turned
+ to the old servant. Cyril aided him in lifting the old man up and laying
+ him on the couch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He breathes," said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is wounded to death," Mr. Harvey said sadly; "and my son hath done
+ it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril opened the servant's coat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here is the wound, high up on the left side. It may not touch a vital
+ part. It bleeds freely, and I have heard that that is a good sign."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is so," Mr. Harvey said excitedly. "Perhaps he may yet recover. I
+ would give all that I am worth that it might be so, and that, bad as he
+ may be, the sin of this murder should not rest on my son's soul."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will run for the doctor, sir, but before I go let me help you to lift
+ your wife. She will doubtless come round shortly, and will aid you to
+ stanch the wound till the doctor comes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Harvey was indeed already showing signs of returning animation. She
+ was placed on a couch, and water sprinkled on her face. As soon as he saw
+ her eyes open Cyril caught up his hat and ran to Dr. Hodges. The doctor
+ had just finished his supper, and was on the point of going out again to
+ see some of his patients. On hearing from Cyril that a servant of some
+ friends of his had been wounded by a robber, he put some lint and bandages
+ in his pocket, and started with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These robberies are becoming more and more frequent," he said; "and so
+ bold and reckless are the criminals that they seem to care not a jot
+ whether they add murder to their other crimes. Where do you say the wound
+ is?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril pointed below his own shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is just about there, doctor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then it may be above the upper edge of the lung. If so, we may save the
+ man. Half an inch higher or lower will make all the difference between
+ life and death. As you say that it was bleeding freely, it is probable
+ that the sword has missed the lung, for had it pierced it, the bleeding
+ would have been chiefly internal, and the hope of saving him would have
+ been slight indeed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they reached the house Cyril found that Mrs. Harvey had quite
+ recovered. They had cut open the man's clothes and her husband was
+ pressing a handkerchief, closely folded, upon the wound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is serious, but, I think, not vital," Dr. Hodges said, after examining
+ it. "I feel sure that the sword has missed the lung."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After cutting off the rest of the man's upper garments, he poured, from a
+ phial he had brought with him, a few drops of a powerful styptic into the
+ wound, placed a thick pad of lint over it, and bandaged it securely. Then,
+ giving directions that a small quantity of spirits and water should be
+ given to the patient from time to time, and, above all things, that he
+ should be kept perfectly quiet, he hurried away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is there anything more I can do, sir?" Cyril asked Mr. Harvey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing more. You will understand, sir, what our feelings are, and that
+ our hearts are too full of grief and emotion for us to speak. We shall
+ watch together to-night, and lay our case before the Lord."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then I will come early in the morning and see if there is aught I can do,
+ sir. I am going back now to Mr. Wallace, who was uneasy at your absence. I
+ suppose you would wish me to say only that I found that there was a robber
+ in the place who, having wounded your servant, was on the point of
+ attacking you when I entered, and that he fled almost immediately."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That will do. Say to him that for to-night we shall be busy nursing, and
+ that my wife is greatly shaken; therefore I would not that he should come
+ round, but I pray him to call here in the morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will do so, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril went downstairs, closed the shutters of the window into which he had
+ broken, and put up the bars, and then went out at the door, taking special
+ pains to close it firmly behind him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was glad to be out of the house. He had seen many sad scenes during the
+ last few weeks, but it seemed to him that this was the saddest of all.
+ Better, a thousand times, to see a son stricken by the Plague than this.
+ He walked slowly back to the minister's. He met Mr. Wallace at the door of
+ his house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was coming round," the latter said. "Of course one or other of them are
+ stricken?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, sir; it was another cause that prevented their coming. Just as I
+ reached the house I heard a scream, and Mrs. Harvey appeared at the
+ casement calling for help. I forced open a window and ran up. I found that
+ a robber had entered the house. He had seriously wounded the old servant,
+ and was on the point of attacking Mr. Harvey when I entered. Taken by
+ surprise, the man fled almost immediately. Mrs. Harvey had fainted. At
+ first, we thought the servant was killed, but, finding that he lived, I
+ ran off and fetched Dr. Hodges, who has dressed the wound, and thinks that
+ the man has a good chance of recovery. As Mrs. Harvey had now come round,
+ and was capable of assisting her husband, they did not accept my offer to
+ stay and do anything I could. I said I was coming to you, and Mr. Harvey
+ asked me to say that, although they were too much shaken to see you this
+ evening, they should be glad if you would go round to them the first thing
+ in the morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then the robber got away unharmed?" Mr. Wallace asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He was unharmed, sir. I would rather that you did not question me on the
+ subject. Mr. Harvey will doubtless enter fully into the matter with you in
+ the morning. We did not exchange many words, for he was greatly disturbed
+ in spirit at the wounding of his old servant, and the scene he had gone
+ through; and, seeing that he and his wife would rather be alone with their
+ patient, I left almost directly after Dr. Hodges went away. However, I may
+ say that I believe that there are private matters in the affair, which he
+ will probably himself communicate to you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then I will ask no more questions, Cyril. I am well content to know that
+ it is not as I feared, and that the Plague had not attacked them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I said that I would call round in the morning, sir; but I have been
+ thinking of it as I came along, and consider that, as you will be there,
+ it is as well that I should not do so. I will come round here at ten
+ o'clock, and should you not have returned, will wait until you do. I do
+ not know that I can be of any use whatever, and do not wish to intrude
+ there. Will you kindly say this to them, but add that should they really
+ wish me to go, I will of course do so?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Wallace looked a little puzzled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will do as you ask me, but it seems to me that they will naturally wish
+ to see you, seeing that, had it not been for your arrival, they might have
+ been robbed and perhaps murdered."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will understand better when you have seen Mr. Harvey, sir. Now I will
+ be making for home; it is about my usual hour, and John Wilkes will be
+ beginning to wonder and worry about me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To John, Cyril told the same story as to Mr. Wallace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, how was it that you let the villain escape, Master Cyril? Why did
+ you not run him through the body?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had other things to think of, John. There was Mrs. Harvey lying
+ insensible, and the servant desperately wounded, and I thought more of
+ these than of the robber, and was glad enough, when he ran out, to be able
+ to turn my attention to them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay, that was natural enough, lad; but 'tis a pity the villain got off
+ scot-free. Truly it is not safe for two old people to be in an empty house
+ by themselves in these times, specially as, maybe, the houses on either
+ side are also untenanted, and robbers can get into them and make their way
+ along the roof, and so enter any house they like by the windows there. It
+ was a mercy you chanced to come along. Men are so accustomed now to hear
+ screams and calls for aid, that none trouble themselves as to such sounds.
+ And you still feel quite well?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never better, John, except for occasional twitches in my shoulder."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It does not knit so fast as it should do," John said. "In the first
+ place, you are always on the move; then no one can go about into infected
+ houses without his spirits being disturbed, and of all things a calm and
+ easy disposition is essential for the proper healing of wounds. Lastly, it
+ is certain that when there is poison in the air wounds do not heal so
+ quickly as at other times."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is going on well enough, John; indeed, I could not desire it to do
+ better. As soon as it is fairly healed I ought to join Prince Rupert
+ again; but in truth I do not wish to go, for I would fain see this
+ terrible Plague come to an end before I leave; for never since the days of
+ the Black Death, hundreds of years ago, was there so strange and terrible
+ a malady in this country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Wallace had returned to his house when Cyril called the next morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thinking over what you said last night, Cyril, I arrived at a pretty
+ correct conclusion as to what had happened, though I thought not that it
+ could be as bad as it was. I knew the object with which Mr. Harvey and his
+ wife had come up to London, at a time when most men were fleeing from it.
+ Their son has, ever since he came up three years ago, been a source of
+ grievous trouble to them, as he was, indeed, for a long time previously.
+ Some natures seem naturally to turn to evil, and this boy's was one of
+ them. It may be that the life at home was too rigid and severe, and that
+ he revolted against it. Certain it is that he took to evil courses and
+ consorted with bad companions. Severity was unavailing. He would break out
+ of the house at night and be away for days. He was drunken and dissolute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At last, just after a considerable sum of money had come into the house
+ from the tenants' rents, he stole it, and went up to London. His name was
+ not mentioned at home, though his father learnt from correspondents here
+ that he had become a hanger-on of the Court, where, his father being a man
+ of condition, he found friends without difficulty. He was a gambler and a
+ brawler, and bore a bad reputation even among the riff-raff of the Court.
+ His father learnt that he had disappeared from sight at the time the Court
+ went to Oxford early in June, and his correspondent found that he was
+ reported to have joined a band of abandoned ruffians, whose least crimes
+ were those of robbery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the Plague spread rapidly, Mr. Harvey and his wife determined to
+ come up to London, to make one more effort to draw him from his evil
+ courses. The only thing that they have been able to learn for certain was,
+ that he was one of the performers in that wicked mockery the dance of
+ death, but their efforts to trace him have otherwise failed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They had intended, if they had found him, and he would have made promises
+ of amendment, to have given him money that would have enabled him to go
+ over to America and begin a new life there, promising him a regular
+ allowance to maintain him in comfort. As they have many friends over
+ there, some of whom went abroad to settle before the Civil War broke out
+ here, they would be able to have news how he was going on; and if they
+ found he was living a decent life, and truly repented his past course,
+ they would in five years have had him back again, and reinstated him as
+ their heir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I knew their intentions in the matter, and have done my best to gain them
+ news of him. I did not believe in the reformation of one who had shown
+ himself to be of such evil spirit; but God is all-powerful, and might have
+ led him out from the slough into which he had fallen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yesterday evening, half an hour before you went there, his father and
+ mother were astonished at his suddenly entering. He saluted them at first
+ with ironical politeness, and said that having heard from one from the
+ same part of the country that he had seen them in London, he had had the
+ streets thereabouts watched, and having found where they lodged, had come
+ to pay his respects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was a reckless bravado in his manner that alarmed his mother, and
+ it was not long before the purpose of his visit came out. He demanded that
+ his father should at once sign a deed which he had brought drawn out in
+ readiness, assigning to him at once half his property.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'You have,' he said, 'far more than you can require. Living as you do,
+ you must save three-quarters of your income, and it would be at once an
+ act of charity, and save you the trouble of dealing with money that is of
+ no use to you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His father indignantly refused to take any such step, and then told him
+ the plans he had himself formed for him. At this he laughed scoffingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'You have the choice,' he said, 'of giving me half, or of my taking
+ everything.' And then he swore with terrible oaths that unless his father
+ signed the paper, that day should be his last. 'You are in my power,' he
+ said, 'and I am desperate. Do you think that if three dead bodies are
+ found in a house now any will trouble to inquire how they came to their
+ end? They will be tossed into the plague-cart, and none will make inquiry
+ about them.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hearing voices raised in anger, the old servant ran in. At once the
+ villain drew and ran at him, passing his sword through his body. Then, as
+ if transported at the sight of the blood he had shed, he turned upon his
+ father. It was at this moment that his mother ran to the window and called
+ for help. He dragged her back, and as she fell fainting with horror and
+ fear he again turned upon his father; his passion grew hotter and hotter
+ as the latter, upbraiding him with the deed he had done, refused to sign;
+ and there is no doubt that he would have taken his life had you not
+ luckily ran in at this moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It has truly been a terrible night for them. They have passed it in
+ prayer, and when I went this morning were both calm and composed, though
+ it was easy to see by their faces how they had suffered, and how much the
+ blow has told upon them. They have determined to save their son from any
+ further temptation to enrich himself by their deaths. I fetched a lawyer
+ for them; and when I left Mr. Harvey was giving him instructions for
+ drawing up his will, by which every farthing is left away from him. They
+ request me to go to them this evening with two or three of our friends to
+ witness it, as it is necessary in a time like this that a will should be
+ witnessed by as many as possible, as some may be carried off by the
+ Plague; and should all the witnesses be dead, the will might be disputed
+ as a forgery. So the lawyer will bring his clerks with him, and I shall
+ take four or five of our friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They will return to the country as soon as their servant can be moved.
+ Dr. Hodges came when I was there, and gives hopes that the cure will be a
+ speedy one. We are going to place some men in the house. I have among my
+ poorer friends two men who will be glad to establish themselves there with
+ their wives, seeing that they will pay no rent, and will receive wages as
+ long as Mr. Harvey remains there. There will thus be no fear of any
+ repetition of the attempt. Mr. Harvey, on my advice, will also draw up and
+ sign a paper giving a full account of the occurrence of last evening, and
+ will leave this in the hands of the lawyer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This will be a protection to him should his son follow him into the
+ country, as he will then be able to assure him that if he proceeds to
+ violence suspicion will at once fall upon him, and he will be arrested for
+ his murder. But, indeed, the poor gentleman holds but little to his life;
+ and it was only on my representing to him that this document might be the
+ means of averting the commission of the most terrible of all sins from the
+ head of his son, that he agreed to sign it. I gave him your message, and
+ he prays me to say that, deeply grateful as he and his wife are to you,
+ not so much for the saving of their lives, as for preventing their son's
+ soul being stained by the crime, they would indeed rather that you did not
+ call for a time, for they are so sorely shaken that they do not feel equal
+ to seeing you. You will not, I hope, take this amiss."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By no means," Cyril replied; "it is but a natural feeling; and, in truth,
+ I myself am relieved that such is their decision, for it would be
+ well-nigh as painful to me as to them to see them again, and to talk over
+ the subject."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By the way, Cyril, Mr. Harvey said that when you saw his son you cried
+ out his name, and that by the manner in which he turned upon you it was
+ clear that he had some cause for hating you. Is this so, or was it merely
+ his fancy?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was no fancy, sir. It is not long since I thwarted his attempt to
+ carry off the daughter of a city merchant, to whom he had represented
+ himself as a nobleman. He was in the act of doing so, with the aid of some
+ friends, when, accompanied by John Wilkes, I came up. There was a fray, in
+ the course of which I ran him through the shoulder. The young lady
+ returned home with us, and has since heartily repented of her folly. I had
+ not seen the man since that time till I met him yesterday; but certainly
+ the house was watched for some time, as I believe, by his associates who
+ would probably have done me an ill turn had I gone out after nightfall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That explains it, Cyril. I will tell Mr. Harvey, whose mind has been much
+ puzzled by your recognition of his son."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII &mdash; SMITTEN DOWN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Two days later, Cyril started at his usual hour to go to Dr. Hodges'; but
+ he had proceeded but a few yards when a man, who was leaning against the
+ wall, suddenly lurched forward and caught him round the neck. Thinking
+ that the fellow had been drinking, Cyril angrily tried to shake him off.
+ As he did so the man's hat, which had been pressed down over his eyes,
+ fell off, and, to his astonishment, Cyril recognised John Harvey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You villain! What are you doing here?" he exclaimed, as he freed himself
+ from the embrace, sending his assailant staggering back against the wall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man's face lit up with a look of savage exultation..
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I told you you should hear from me again," he said, "and I have kept my
+ word. I knew the hour you went out, and I have been waiting for you. You
+ are a doomed man. I have the Plague, and I have breathed in your face.
+ Before twenty-four hours have passed you will be, as I am, a dying man.
+ That is a good piece of vengeance. You may be a better swordsman than I
+ am, but you can't fight with the Plague."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril drew back in horror. As he did so, a change came over John Harvey's
+ face, he muttered a few words incoherently, swayed backwards and forwards,
+ and then slid to the ground in a heap. A rush of blood poured from his
+ mouth, and he fell over dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had seen more than one similar death in the streets, but the
+ horrible malignity of this man, and his sudden death, gave him a terrible
+ shock. He felt for the moment completely unmanned, and, conscious that he
+ was too unhinged for work, he turned and went back to the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You look pale, lad," John Wilkes said, as Cyril went upstairs. "What
+ brings you back so soon?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have had rather a shock, John." And he told him of what had happened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That was enough to startle you, lad. I should say the best thing you
+ could do would be to take a good strong tumbler of grog, and then lay
+ down."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I will do, and will take a dose of the medicine Dr. Hodges makes
+ everyone take when the infection first shows itself in a house. As you
+ know, I have never had any fear of the Plague hitherto. I don't say that I
+ am afraid of it now, but I have run a far greater risk of catching it than
+ I have ever done before, for until now I have never been in actual contact
+ with anyone with the disease."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a sleep Cyril rose, and feeling himself again, went to call upon Mr.
+ Wallace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall not come again for a few days," he said, after telling him what
+ had happened, but without mentioning the name of John Harvey, "but I will
+ send you a note every other day by John Wilkes. If he does not come, you
+ will know that I have taken the malady, and in that case, Mr. Wallace, I
+ know that I shall have your prayers for my recovery. I am sure that I
+ shall be well cared for by John Wilkes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of my prayers you maybe sure, Cyril; and, indeed, I have every faith
+ that, should you catch the malady, you will recover from it. You have
+ neither well-nigh frightened yourself to death, nor have you dosed
+ yourself with drugs until nature was exhausted before the struggle began.
+ You will, I am sure, be calm and composed, and above all you have faith in
+ God, and the knowledge that you have done your part to carry out His
+ orders, and to visit the sick and aid those in sorrow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day Cyril was conscious of no change except that he felt a
+ disinclination to exert himself. The next morning he had a feeling of
+ nausea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think that I am in for it, John," he said. "But at any rate it can do
+ no harm to try that remedy you spoke of that is used in the East. First of
+ all, let us fumigate the room. As far as I have seen, the smoke of tobacco
+ is the best preservative against the Plague. Now do you, John, keep a bit
+ of tobacco in your mouth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I mostly do, lad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, keep a bigger bit than usual, John, and smoke steadily. Still, that
+ will not be enough. Keep the fire burning, and an iron plate heated to
+ redness over it. Bring that into my room from time to time, and burn
+ tobacco on it. Keep the room full of smoke."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will do that," John said, "but you must not have too much of it. I am
+ an old hand, and have many times sat in a fo'castle so full of smoke that
+ one could scarce see one's hands, but you are not accustomed to it, and it
+ may like enough make you sick."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There will be no harm in that, John, so that one does not push it too
+ far. Now, how are you going to set about this sweating process?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "While you undress and get into bed I will get a blanket ready. It is to
+ be dipped in boiling water, and then wrung out until it is as dry as we
+ can get it. Then you are wrapped in that, and then rolled in five or six
+ dry blankets to keep in the heat. You will keep in that until you feel
+ almost weak with sweating; then I take you out and sponge you with warmish
+ water, and then wrap you in another dry blanket."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You had better sponge me with vinegar, John."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril undressed. When he had done so he carefully examined himself, and
+ his eye soon fell on a black spot on the inside of his leg, just above the
+ knee. It was the well-known sign of the Plague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have got it, John," he said, when the latter entered with a pile of
+ blankets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, then, we have got to fight it, Master Cyril, and we will beat it if
+ it is to be beaten. Now, lad, for the hot blanket."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lay it down on the bed, and I will wrap myself in it, and the same with
+ the others. Now I warn you, you are not to come nearer to me than you can
+ help, and above all you are not to lean over me. If you do, I will turn
+ you out of the room and lock the door, and fight it out by myself. Now
+ puff away at that pipe, and the moment you wrap me up get the room full of
+ smoke."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't you bother about me," he growled. "I reckon the Plague ain't going
+ to touch such a tough old bit of seasoned mahogany as I am. Still, I will
+ do as you tell me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few minutes Cyril was in a profuse perspiration, in which even his
+ head, which was above the blankets, shared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is grand," John said complacently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cloud of tobacco, with which the room was soon filled, was not long in
+ having the effect that John had predicted, and Cyril was soon violently
+ sick, which had the effect of further increasing the perspiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must open the window and let the smoke out a bit, John," he gasped.
+ "I can't stand any more of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was done, and for another hour Cyril lay between the blankets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall faint if I lie here any longer," he said at last. "Now, John, do
+ you go out of the room, and don't come back again until I call you. I see
+ you have put the vinegar handy. It is certain that if this is doing me any
+ good the blankets will be infected. You say you have got a big fire in the
+ kitchen. Well, I shall take them myself, and hang them up in front of it,
+ and you are not to go into the room till they are perfectly dry again. You
+ had better light another fire at once in the parlour, and you can do any
+ cooking there. I will keep the kitchen for my blankets."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John nodded and left the room, and Cyril at once proceeded to unroll the
+ blankets. As he came to the last he was conscious of a strong fetid odour,
+ similar to that he had more than once perceived in houses infected by the
+ Plague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe it is drawing it out of me," he said to himself. "I will give
+ it another trial presently."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He first sponged himself with vinegar, and felt much refreshed. He then
+ wrapped himself up and lay down for a few minutes, for he felt strangely
+ weak. Then he got up and carried the blankets into the kitchen, where a
+ huge fire had been made up by John. He threw the one that had been next to
+ him into a tub, and poured boiling water on it, and the others he hung on
+ chairs round it. Then he went back to his room, and lay down and slept for
+ half an hour. He returned to the kitchen and rearranged the blankets. When
+ John saw him go back to his room he followed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have got some strong broth ready," he said. "Do you think that you
+ could take a cupful?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, and a good-sized one, John. I feel sure that the sweating has done me
+ good, and I will have another turn at it soon. You must go at once and
+ report that I have got it, or when the examiners come round, and find that
+ the Plague is in the house, you will be fined, or perhaps imprisoned.
+ Before you go there, please leave word at Dr. Hodges' that I am ill, and
+ you might also call at Mr. Wallace's and leave the same message. Tell
+ them, in both cases, that I have everything that I want, and trust that I
+ shall make a good recovery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay, sir; I will be off as soon as I have brought you in your broth,
+ and will be back here in half an hour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril drank the broth, and then dozed again until John returned. When he
+ heard his step he called out to him to bring the hot iron, and he filled
+ the room with tobacco smoke before allowing him to enter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, John, the blankets are dry, and can be handled again, and I am ready
+ for another cooking."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four times that day did Cyril undergo the sweating process. By the evening
+ he was as weak as a child, but his skin was soft and cool, and he was free
+ from all feeling of pain or uneasiness. Dr. Hodges called half an hour
+ after he had taken it for the last time, having only received his message
+ when he returned late from a terrible day's work. Cyril had just turned in
+ for the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, lad, how are you feeling? I am so sorry that I did not get your
+ message before."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am feeling very well, doctor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your hand is moist and cool," Dr. Hodges said in surprise. "You must have
+ been mistaken. I see no signs whatever of the Plague."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was no mistake, doctor; there were the black marks on my thighs,
+ but I think I have pretty well sweated it out of me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then described the process he had followed, and said that John Wilkes
+ had told him that it was practised in the Levant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sweating is greatly used here, and I have tried it very repeatedly among
+ my patients, and in some cases, where I had notice of the disease early,
+ have saved them. Some bleed before sweating, but I have not heard of one
+ who did so who recovered. In many cases the patient, from terror or from
+ weakness of body, cannot get up the heat required, and even if they arrive
+ at it, have not the strength to support it. In your case you lost no time;
+ you had vital heat in plenty, and you had strength to keep up the heat in
+ full force until you washed, as it were, the malady out of you. Henceforth
+ I shall order that treatment with confidence when patients come to me whom
+ I suspect to have the Plague, although it may not have as yet fully
+ declared itself. What have you done with the blankets?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would not suffer John to touch them, but carried them myself into the
+ kitchen. The blankets next to me I throw into a tub and pour boiling water
+ over them; the others I hang up before a huge fire, so as to be dry for
+ the next operation. I take care that John does not enter the kitchen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How often have you done this?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Four times, and lay each time for an hour in the blankets. I feel very
+ weak, and must have lost very many pounds in weight, but my head is clear,
+ and I suffer no pain whatever. The marks on my legs have not spread, and
+ seem to me less dark in colour than they were."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your case is the most hopeful that I have seen," Dr. Hodges said. "The
+ system has had every advantage, and to this it owes its success. In the
+ first place, you began it as soon as you felt unwell. Most people would
+ have gone on for another twelve hours before they paid much attention to
+ the first symptoms, and might not have noticed the Plague marks even when
+ they went to bed. In the second place, you are cool and collected, and
+ voluntarily delivered yourself to the treatment. And in the third place,
+ which is the most important perhaps of all, you were in good health
+ generally. You had not weakened yourself by swallowing every nostrum
+ advertised, or wearing yourself out by vain terrors. Ninety-nine cases out
+ of a hundred would be probably beyond the reach of help before they were
+ conscious of illness, and be too weak to stand so severe a strain on the
+ system as that you have undergone. Another thing is that the remedy could
+ hardly be attempted in a house full of frightened people. There would be
+ sure to be carelessness in the matter of the blankets, which, unless
+ treated as you have done, would be a certain means of spreading the
+ infection over the house. At any rate, I would continue the sweating as
+ long as you can possibly stand it. Take nourishment in the shape of broth
+ frequently, but in small quantity. I would do it again at midnight; 'tis
+ well not to let the virus have time to gather strength again. I see you
+ have faith in tobacco."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, doctor. I never let John Wilkes into the room after I have taken a
+ bath until it is full of tobacco smoke. I have twice made myself ill with
+ it to-day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't carry it too far, lad; for although I also believe in the virtue of
+ the weed, 'tis a powerful poison, and you do not want to weaken yourself.
+ Well, I see I can do nothing for you. You and your man seem to me to have
+ treated the attack far more successfully than I should have done; for,
+ indeed, this month very few of those attacked have recovered, whatever the
+ treatment has been. I shall come round early tomorrow morning to see how
+ you are going on. At present nothing can be better. Since the first
+ outbreak, I have not seen a single case in which the patient was in so
+ fair a way towards recovery in so short a time after the discovery of the
+ infection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John Wilkes at this moment came in with a basin of broth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is my good friend, John Wilkes, doctor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You ought to be called Dr. John Wilkes," the doctor, who was one of the
+ most famous of his time, said, with a smile, as he shook hands with him.
+ "Your treatment seems to be doing wonders."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It seems to me he is doing well, doctor, but I am afraid he is carrying
+ it too far; he is so weak he can hardly stand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never mind that," the doctor said; "it will be easy enough to build him
+ up when we have once got the Plague out of him. I have told him to have
+ another turn in the blankets at twelve o'clock to-night; it will not do to
+ let the malady get a fresh hold of him. But don't push it too far, lad. If
+ you begin to feel faint, stop it, even if you have not been a quarter of
+ an hour in the blankets. Do not cover yourself up too warmly when you have
+ done; let nature have a rest. I shall be round between eight and nine, and
+ no doubt you will have had another bath before I come. Do not sleep in the
+ room, Wilkes; he is sure to go off soundly to sleep, and there is no use
+ your running any needless risk. Let his window stand open; indeed, it
+ should always be open, except when he gets out of his blankets, or is
+ fumigating the room. Let him have a chair by the open window, so as to get
+ as much fresh air as possible; but be sure that he is warmly wrapped up
+ with blankets, so as to avoid getting a chill. You might place a hand-bell
+ by the side of his bed to-night, so that he can summons you should he have
+ occasion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the doctor came next morning he nodded approvingly as soon as he felt
+ Cyril's hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing could be better," he said; "your pulse is even quieter than last
+ night. Now let me look at those spots."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are fainter," Cyril said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A great deal," Dr. Hodges said, in a tone of the greatest pleasure.
+ "Thank God, my lad, it is dying out. Not above three or four times since
+ the Plague began have I been able to say so. I shall go about my work with
+ a lighter heart today, and shall order your treatment in every case where
+ I see the least chance of its being carried out, but I cannot hope that it
+ will often prove as successful as it has with you. You have had everything
+ in your favour&mdash;youth, a good constitution, a tranquil mind, an
+ absence of fear, and a faith in God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And a good attendant, doctor&mdash;don't forget that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, that goes for a great deal, lad&mdash;for a great deal. Not one nurse
+ out of a hundred would carry out my instructions carefully; not one
+ patient in a thousand would be able to see that they were carried out. Of
+ course you will keep on with the treatment, but do not push it to
+ extremes; you have pulled yourself down prodigiously, and must not go too
+ far. Do you perceive any change in the odour when you take off the
+ blankets?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, doctor, a great change; I could scarcely distinguish it this
+ morning, and indeed allowed John Wilkes to carry them out, as I don't
+ think I myself could have walked as far as the kitchen, though it is but
+ ten or twelve paces away. I told him to smoke furiously all the time, and
+ to come out of the kitchen as soon as he had hung them up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril took three more baths in the course of the day, but was only able to
+ sustain them for twenty minutes each, as by the end of that time he nearly
+ fainted. The doctor came in late in the evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The spots are gone, doctor," Cyril said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then I think you may consider yourself cured, lad. Do not take the
+ treatment again to-night; you can take it once in the morning; and then if
+ I find the spots have not reappeared by the time I come, I shall pronounce
+ the cure as complete, and shall begin to build you up again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor was able to give this opinion in the morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall not come again, lad, unless you send for me, for every moment of
+ my time is very precious, and I shall leave you in the hands of Dr.
+ Wilkes. All you want now is nourishment; but take it carefully at first,
+ and not too much at a time; stick to broths for the next two or three
+ days, and when you do begin with solids do so very sparingly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was a gentleman here yesterday asking about you," John Wilkes said,
+ as Cyril, propped up in bed, sipped his broth. "It was Mr. Harvey. He rang
+ at the bell, and I went down to the lower window and talked to him through
+ that, for of course the watchman would not let me go out and speak to him.
+ I had heard you speak of him as one of the gentlemen you met at the
+ minister's, and he seemed muchly interested in you. He said that you had
+ done him a great service, and of course I knew it was by frightening that
+ robber away. I never saw a man more pleased than he was when I told him
+ that the doctor thought you were as good as cured, and he thanked God very
+ piously for the same. After he had done that, he asked me first whether
+ you had said anything to me about him. I said that you had told me you had
+ met him and his wife at the minister's, and that you said you had
+ disturbed a robber you found at his house. He said, quite sharp, 'Nothing
+ more?' 'No, not as I can think of. He is always doing good to somebody,'
+ says I, 'and never a word would he say about it, if it did not get found
+ out somehow. Why, he saved Prince Rupert's ship from being blown up by a
+ fire-vessel, and never should we have known of it if young Lord Oliphant
+ had not written to the Captain telling him all about it, and saying that
+ it was the gallantest feat done in the battle. Then there were other
+ things, but they were of the nature of private affairs.' 'You can tell me
+ about them, my good man,' he said; 'I am no vain babbler; and as you may
+ well believe, from what he did for me, and for other reasons, I would fain
+ know as much as I can of him.' So then I told him about how you found out
+ about the robbery and saved master from being ruined, and how you
+ prevented Miss Nellie from going off with a rascal who pretended he was an
+ earl."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then you did very wrong, John," Cyril said angrily. "I say naught about
+ your speaking about the robbery, for that was told in open Court, but you
+ ought not, on any account, to have said a word about Mistress Nellie's
+ affairs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, your honour, I doubt not Mistress Nellie herself would have told
+ the gentleman had she been in my place. I am sure he can be trusted not to
+ let it go further. I took care to tell him what good it had done Mistress
+ Nellie, and that good had come out of evil."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, you ought not to have said anything about it, John. It may be that
+ Mistress Nellie out of her goodness of heart might herself have told, but
+ that is no reason why anyone else should do so. I charge you in future
+ never to open your lips about that to anyone, no matter who. I say not
+ that any harm will come of it in this case, for Mr. Harvey is indeed a
+ sober and God-fearing man, and assuredly asked only because he felt an
+ interest in me, and from no idle curiosity. Still, I would rather that he
+ had not known of a matter touching the honour of Mistress Nellie."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mum's the word in future, Master Cyril. I will keep the hatches fast down
+ on my tongue. Now I will push your bed up near the window as the doctor
+ ordered, and then I hope you will get a good long sleep."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Plague and the process by which it had been expelled had left Cyril so
+ weak that it was some days before he could walk across the room. Every
+ morning he inquired anxiously of John how he felt, and the answer was
+ always satisfactory. John had never been better in his life; therefore, by
+ the time Cyril was able to walk to his easy-chair by the window, he began
+ to hope that John had escaped the infection, which generally declared
+ itself within a day or two, and often within a few hours, of the first
+ outbreak in a house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A week later the doctor, who paid him a flying visit every two or three
+ days, gave him the welcome news that he had ordered the red cross to be
+ removed from the door, and the watchmen to cease their attendance, as the
+ house might now be considered altogether free from infection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Plague continued its ravages with but slight abatement, moving
+ gradually eastward, and Aldgate and the district lying east of the walls
+ were now suffering terribly. It was nearly the end of September before
+ Cyril was strong enough to go out for his first walk. Since the beginning
+ of August some fifty thousand people had been carried off, so that the
+ streets were now almost entirely deserted, and in many places the grass
+ was shooting up thickly in the road. In some streets every house bore the
+ sign of a red cross, and the tolling of the bells of the dead-carts and
+ piteous cries and lamentations were the only sounds that broke the strange
+ silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scene was so disheartening that Cyril did not leave the house again
+ for another fortnight. His first visit was to Mr. Wallace. The sight of a
+ watchman at the door gave him quite a shock, and he was grieved indeed
+ when he heard from the man that the brave minister had died a fortnight
+ before. Then he went to Mr. Harvey's. There was no mark on the door, but
+ his repeated knockings met with no response, and a woman, looking out from
+ a window opposite, called to him that the house had been empty for
+ well-nigh a month, and the people that were in it had gone off in a cart,
+ she supposed into the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was a gentleman and lady," she said, "who seemed well enough, and
+ their servant, who was carried down and placed in the cart. It could not
+ have been the Plague, though the man looked as if he had been sorely ill."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day he called on Dr. Hodges, who had not been near him for the
+ last month. There was no watchman at the door, and his man opened it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can I see the doctor?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, you can see him," he said; "he is cured now, and will soon be about
+ again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Has he had the Plague, then?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That he has, but it is a week now since the watchman left."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril went upstairs. The doctor was sitting, looking pale and thin, by the
+ window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am grieved indeed to hear that you have been ill, doctor," Cyril said;
+ "had I known it I should have come a fortnight since, for I was strong
+ enough to walk this distance then. I did indeed go out, but the streets
+ had so sad an aspect that I shrank from stirring out again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I have had it," the doctor said. "Directly I felt it come on I
+ followed your system exactly, but it had gone further with me than it had
+ with you, and it was a week before I fairly drove the enemy out. I ordered
+ sweating in every case, but, as you know, they seldom sent for me until
+ too late, and it is rare that the system got a fair chance. However, in my
+ case it was a complete success. Two of my servants died; they were taken
+ when I was at my worst. Both were dead before I was told of it. The man
+ you saw was the one who waited on me, and as I adopted all the same
+ precautions you had taken with your man, he did not catch it, and it was
+ only when he went downstairs one day and found the other two servants
+ lying dead in the kitchen that he knew they had been ill."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Wallace has gone, you will be sorry to hear, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sorry," the doctor said; "but no one was more fitted to die. He was
+ a brave man and a true Christian, but he ran too many risks, and your news
+ does not surprise me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The only other friends I have, Mr. Harvey and his wife, went out of town
+ a month ago, taking with them their servant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; I saw them the day before I was taken ill," the doctor said, "and
+ told them that the man was so far out of danger that he might safely be
+ moved. They seemed very interested in you, and were very pleased when I
+ told them that I had now given up attending you, and that you were able to
+ walk across the room, and would, erelong, be yourself again. I hope we are
+ getting to the end of it now, lad. As the Plague travels East it abates in
+ the West, and the returns for the last week show a distinct fall in the
+ rate of mortality. There is no further East for it to go now, and I hope
+ that in another few weeks it will have worn itself out. We are half
+ through October, and may look for cold weather before long."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should think that I am strong enough to be useful again now, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't think you are strong enough, and I am sure I shall not give you
+ leave to do so," the doctor said. "I can hardly say how far a first attack
+ is a protection against a second, for the recoveries have been so few that
+ we have scarce means of knowing, but there certainly have been cases where
+ persons have recovered from a first attack and died from a second. Your
+ treatment is too severe to be gone through twice, and it is, therefore,
+ more essential that you should run no risk of infection than it was
+ before. I can see that you are still very far from strong, and your duty
+ now is, in the first place, to regain your health. I should say get on
+ board a hoy and go to Yarmouth. A week in the bracing air there would do
+ you more good than six months here. But it is useless to give you that
+ advice, because, in the first place, no shipping comes up the river, and,
+ even if you could get down to Yarmouth by road, no one would receive you.
+ Still, that is what I should do myself as soon as I could get away, were
+ it not that, in my case, I have my duties here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, doctor, what you said to me surely applies to yourself also?" Cyril
+ said, with a smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know that," the doctor said good-humouredly, "and expected it, but it
+ is not for a doctor to choose. He is not free, like other men; he has
+ adopted a vocation in which it is his first duty to go among the sick,
+ whatever their ailment may be, to do all that he can for them, and if, as
+ in the present case, he can do practically nothing else, to set them an
+ example of calmness and fearlessness. Still, for a time, at any rate, I
+ shall be able to go no more into houses where the Plague is raging. 'Tis
+ more than a month since you were cured, yet you are still a mere shadow of
+ what you were. I had a much harder fight with the enemy, and cannot walk
+ across the room yet without William's help. Therefore, it will be a
+ fortnight or three weeks yet before I can see patients, and much longer
+ before I shall have strength to visit them in their houses. By that time I
+ trust that the Plague will have very greatly abated. Thus, you see, I
+ shall not be called upon to stand face to face with it for some time.
+ Those who call upon me here are seldom Plague-stricken. They come for
+ other ailments, or because they feel unwell, and are nervous lest it
+ should be the beginning of an attack; but of late I have had very few come
+ here. My patients are mostly of the middle class, and these have either
+ fled or fallen victims to the Plague, or have shut themselves up in their
+ houses like fortresses, and nothing would tempt them to issue abroad.
+ Therefore, I expect that I shall have naught to do but to gain strength
+ again. Come here when you will, lad, and the oftener the better.
+ Conversation is the best medicine for both of us, and as soon as I can I
+ will visit you. I doubt not that John Wilkes has many a story of the sea
+ that will take our thoughts away from this sad city. Bring him with you
+ sometimes; he is an honest fellow, and the talk of sailors so smacks of
+ the sea that it seems almost to act as a tonic."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril stayed for an hour, and promised to return on the following evening.
+ He said, however, that he was sure John Wilkes would not accompany him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He never leaves the house unless I am in it. He considers himself on
+ duty; and although, as I tell him, there is little fear of anyone breaking
+ in, seeing how many houses with much more valuable and more portable goods
+ are empty and deserted, he holds to his purpose, saying that, even with
+ the house altogether empty, it would be just as much his duty to remain in
+ charge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, come yourself, Cyril. If we cannot get this old watch-dog out I
+ must wait until I can go to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall be very glad to come, doctor, for time hangs heavily on my hands.
+ John Wilkes spends hours every day in washing and scrubbing decks, as he
+ calls it, and there are but few books in the house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As to that, I can furnish you, and will do so gladly. Go across to the
+ shelves there, and choose for yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you very much indeed, sir. But will you kindly choose for me? I
+ have read but few English books, for of course in France my reading was
+ entirely French."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then take Shakespeare. I hold his writings to be the finest in our
+ tongue. I know them nearly by heart, for there is scarce an evening when I
+ do not take him down for an hour, and reading him I forget the worries and
+ cares of my day's work, which would otherwise often keep me from sleep.
+ 'Tis a bulky volume, but do not let that discourage you; it is full of wit
+ and wisdom, and of such romance that you will often find it hard to lay it
+ down. Stay&mdash;I have two editions, and can well spare one of them, so
+ take the one on that upper shelf, and keep it when you have read it. There
+ is but little difference between them, but I generally use the other, and
+ have come to look upon it as a friend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, sir, I will take it as a loan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will do nothing of the sort. I owe you a fee, and a bumping one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henceforth Cyril did not find his time hang heavy on his hands. It seemed
+ to him, as he sat at the window and read, that a new world opened to him.
+ His life had been an eminently practical one. He had studied hard in
+ France, and when he laid his books aside his time had been spent in the
+ open air. It was only since he had been with Captain Dave that he had ever
+ read for amusement, and the Captain's library consisted only of a few
+ books of travels and voyages. He had never so much as dreamt of a book
+ like this, and for the next few days he devoured its pages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are not looking so well, Cyril," Dr. Hodges said to him abruptly one
+ day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am doing nothing but reading Shakespeare, doctor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then you are doing wrong, lad. You will never build yourself up unless
+ you take exercise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The streets are so melancholy, doctor, and whenever I go out I return
+ sick at heart and in low spirits."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I can understand, lad. But we must think of something," and he sat
+ for a minute or two in silence. Then he said suddenly, "Do you understand
+ the management of a boat?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, doctor; it was my greatest pleasure at Dunkirk to be out with the
+ fishermen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That will do, then. Go down at once to the riverside. There are hundreds
+ of boats lying idle there, for there are no passengers and no trade, and
+ half of their owners are dead. You are sure to see some men there; having
+ nothing else to do, some will be hanging about. Say you want to hire a
+ boat for a couple of months or to buy one. You will probably get one for a
+ few shillings. Get one with a sail as well as oars. Go out the first thing
+ after breakfast, and go up or down the river as the tide or wind may suit.
+ Take some bread and meat with you, and don't return till supper-time. Then
+ you can spend your evenings with Shakespeare. Maybe I myself will come
+ down and take a sail with you sometimes. That will bring the colour back
+ into your cheeks, and make a new man of you. Would that I had thought of
+ it before!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril was delighted with the idea, and, going down to Blackfriars, bought
+ a wherry with a sail for a pound. Its owner was dead, but he learned where
+ the widow lived, and effected the bargain without difficulty, for she was
+ almost starving.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have bought it," he said, "because it may be that I may get it damaged
+ or sunk; but I only need it for six weeks or two months, and at the end of
+ that time I will give it you back again. As soon as the Plague is over
+ there will be work for boats, and you will be able to let it, or to sell
+ it at a fair price."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John Wilkes was greatly pleased when Cyril came back and told him what he
+ had done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is the very thing for you," he said. "I have been a thick-head not
+ to think of it. I have been worrying for the last week at seeing you sit
+ there and do nothing but read, and yet there seemed nothing else for you
+ to do, for ten minutes out in the streets is enough to give one the
+ heartache. Maybe I will go out for a sail with you myself sometimes, for
+ there is no fear of the house being broken into by daylight."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not in the slightest, John. I hope that you will come out with me always.
+ I should soon find it dull by myself, and besides, I don't think that I am
+ strong enough yet to manage a pair of sculls for long, and one must reckon
+ occasionally on having to row against the tide. Even if the worst
+ happened, and anyone did break in and carry off a few things, I am sure
+ Captain Dave would not grumble at the loss when he knew that I had wanted
+ you to come out and help me to manage the boat, which I was ordered to use
+ for my health's sake."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That he wouldn't," John said heartily; "not if they stripped the house
+ and shop of everything there was in them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII &mdash; A STROKE OF GOOD FORTUNE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Having finally disposed of John Wilkes's scruples as to leaving the house
+ during the daytime, Cyril thenceforth went out with him every day. If the
+ tide was in flood they rowed far up the river, and came down on the ebb.
+ If it was running out they went down as far as it would take them.
+ Whenever the wind was favourable they hoisted the sail; at other times,
+ they rowed. The fresh air, and the exercise, soon did their work. Cyril at
+ first could only take one scull, and that only for a short time, but at
+ the end of a fortnight was able to manage both for a time, or to row with
+ one for hours. The feeling of lassitude which had oppressed him passed
+ away speedily, the colour came back to his cheeks, his muscles
+ strengthened, and he began to put on flesh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were now in November, and needed warm garments when on the water, and
+ John insisted on completely muffling him up whenever they hoisted the
+ sail; but the colder weather braced him up, and he was often inclined to
+ shout with pleasure as the wind drove the boat along before it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was cheering to know that others were benefiting by the change. In the
+ week ending October 3rd the deaths officially given were 4,328, though at
+ least another thousand must be added to this, for great numbers of deaths
+ from the Plague were put down to other causes, and very many, especially
+ those of infants, were never counted at all. It was said that as many
+ people were infected as ever, but that the virulence of the disease was
+ abated, and that, whereas in August scarce one of those attacked
+ recovered, in October but one out of every three died of the malady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the second week of October, the number of deaths by the Plague was but
+ 2,665, and only 1,250 in the third week, though great numbers were still
+ attacked. People, however, grew careless, and ran unnecessary risks, and,
+ in consequence, in the first week of November the number of deaths rose by
+ 400. After this it decreased rapidly, and the people who had fled began to
+ come back again&mdash;the more so because it had now spread to other large
+ cities, and it seemed that there was less danger in London, where it had
+ spent its force, than in places where it had but lately broken out. The
+ shops began to open again, and the streets to reassume their former
+ appearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had written several times to Captain Dowsett, telling him how
+ matters were going on, and in November, hearing that they were thinking of
+ returning, he wrote begging them not to do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Many of those who have returned have fallen sick, and died," he said. "It
+ seems to me but a useless risk of life, after taking so much pains to
+ avoid infection, to hurry back before the danger has altogether passed. In
+ your case, Captain Dave, there is the less reason for it, since there is
+ no likelihood of the shipping trade being renewed for the present. All the
+ ports of Europe are closed to our ships, and it is like to be a long time
+ before they lose fear of us. Even the coasting trade is lost for the
+ present. Therefore, my advice is very strongly against your returning for
+ some weeks. All is going on well here. I am getting quite strong again,
+ and, by the orders of the doctor, go out with John daily for a long row,
+ and have gained much benefit from it. John sends his respects. He says
+ that everything is ship-shape above and below, and the craft holding well
+ on her way. He also prays you not to think of returning at present, and
+ says that it would be as bad seamanship, as for a captain who has made a
+ good offing in a gale, and has plenty of sea-room, to run down close to a
+ rocky shore under the lee, before the storm has altogether blown itself
+ out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Dave took the advice, and only returned with his wife and Nellie a
+ week before Christmas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am glad indeed to be back," he said, after the first greetings were
+ over. "'Twas well enough for the women, who used to help in the dairy, and
+ to feed the fowls, and gather the eggs, and make the butter, but for me
+ there was nothing to do, and it seemed as if the days would never come to
+ an end."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was not so bad as that, father," Nellie said. "First of all, you had
+ your pipe to smoke. Then, once a week you used to go over with the
+ market-cart to Gloucester and to look at the shipping there, and talk with
+ the masters and sailors. Then, on a Sunday, of course, there was church.
+ So there were only five days each week to get through; and you know you
+ took a good deal of interest in the horses and cows and pigs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I tried to take an interest in them, Nellie; but it was very hard work."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, father, that is just what you were saying you wanted, and I am sure
+ you spent hours every day walking about with the children, or telling them
+ stories."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, perhaps, when I think of it, it was not so very bad after all,"
+ Captain Dave admitted. "At any rate, I am heartily glad I am back here
+ again. We will open the shop to-morrow morning, John."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That we will, master. We sha'n't do much trade at present. Still, a few
+ coasters have come in, and I hope that every day things will get better.
+ Besides, all the vessels that have been lying in the Pool since June will
+ want painting up and getting into trim again before they sail out of the
+ river, so things may not be so slack after all. You will find everything
+ in order in the store. I have had little to do but to polish up brass work
+ and keep the metal from rusting. When do the apprentices come back again?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall write for them as soon as I find that there is something for them
+ to do. You are not thinking of running away as soon as we come back I
+ hope, Cyril? You said, when you last wrote, that you were fit for sea
+ again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am not thinking of going for some little time, if you will keep me,
+ Captain Dave. There is no news of the Fleet fitting out at present, and
+ they will not want us on board till they are just ready to start. They say
+ that Albemarle is to command this time instead of the Duke, at which I am
+ right glad, for he has fought the Dutch at sea many times, and although
+ not bred up to the trade, he has shown that he can fight as steadily on
+ sea as on land. All say the Duke showed courage and kept a firm
+ countenance at Lowestoft, but there was certainly great slackness in the
+ pursuit, though this, 'tis said, was not so much his fault as that of
+ those who were over-careful of his safety. Still, as he is the heir to the
+ throne, it is but right that he should be kept out of the fighting."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is like to be stern work next time, Cyril, if what I hear be true.
+ Owing partly to all men's minds being occupied by the Plague, and partly
+ to the great sums wasted by the King in his pleasures, nothing whatever
+ has been done for the Fleet. Of course, the squadron at sea has taken
+ great numbers of prizes; but the rest of the Fleet is laid up, and no new
+ ships are being built, while they say that the Dutch are busy in all their
+ ship-yards, and will send out a much stronger fleet this spring than that
+ which fought us at Lowestoft. I suppose you have not heard of any of your
+ grand friends?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No. I should have written to Sydney Oliphant, but I knew not whether he
+ was at sea or at home, and, moreover, I read that most folks in the
+ country are afraid of letters from London, thinking that they might carry
+ contagion. Many noblemen have now returned to the West End, and when I
+ hear that the Earl has also come back with his family it will, of course,
+ be my duty to wait upon him, and on Prince Rupert also. But I hope the
+ Prince will not be back yet, for he will be wanting me to go to Court
+ again, and for this, in truth, I have no inclination, and, moreover, it
+ cannot be done without much expense for clothes, and I have no intention
+ to go into expenses on follies or gew-gaws, or to trench upon the store of
+ money that I had from you, Captain Dave."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had just finished breakfast on the day before Christmas, when one of
+ the apprentices came up from the shop and said that one Master
+ Goldsworthy, a lawyer in the Temple, desired to speak to Sir Cyril
+ Shenstone. Cyril was about to go down when Captain Dave said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Show the gentleman up, Susan. We will leave you here to him, Cyril."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By no means," Cyril said. "I do not know him, and he can assuredly have
+ no private business with me that you may not hear."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Dowsett and her daughter, however, left the room. The lawyer, a
+ grave-looking gentleman of some fifty years of age, glanced at Cyril and
+ the Captain as he entered the room, and then advanced towards the former.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My name is unknown to you, Sir Cyril," he said, "but it has been said
+ that a bearer of good news needs no introduction, and I come in that
+ capacity. I bring you, sir, a Christmas-box," and he took from a bag he
+ carried a bundle of some size, and a letter. "Before you open it, sir, I
+ will explain the character of its contents, which would take you some time
+ to decipher and understand, while I can explain them in a very few words.
+ I may tell you that I am the legal adviser of Mr. Ebenezer Harvey, of
+ Upmead Court, Norfolk. You are, I presume, familiar with the name?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril started. Upmead Court was the name of his father's place, but with
+ the name of its present owner he was not familiar. Doubtless, he might
+ sometimes have heard it from his father, but the latter, when he spoke of
+ the present possessor of the Court, generally did so as "that Roundhead
+ dog," or "that canting Puritan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Court I know, sir," he said gravely, "as having once been my
+ father's, but I do not recall the name of its present owner, though it may
+ be that in my childhood my father mentioned it in my hearing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nevertheless, sir, you know the gentleman himself, having met him, as he
+ tells me, frequently at the house of Mr. Wallace, who was minister of the
+ chapel at which he worshipped, and who came up to London to minister to
+ those sorely afflicted and needing comfort. Not only did you meet with Mr.
+ Harvey and his wife, but you rendered to them very material service."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was certainly unaware," Cyril said, "that Mr. Harvey was the possessor
+ of what had been my father's estate, but, had I known it, it would have
+ made no difference in my feeling towards him. I found him a kind and godly
+ gentleman whom, more than others there, was good enough to converse
+ frequently with me, and to whom I was pleased to be of service."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The service was of a most important nature," the lawyer said, "being
+ nothing less than the saving of his life, and probably that of his wife.
+ He sent for me the next morning, and then drew out his will. By that will
+ he left to you the estates which he had purchased from your father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril gave a start of surprise, and would have spoken, but Master
+ Goldsworthy held up his hand, and said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Please let me continue my story to the end. This act was not the
+ consequence of the service that you had rendered him. He had previously
+ consulted me on the subject, and stated his intentions to me. He had met
+ you at Mr. Wallace's, and at once recognised your name, and learnt from
+ Mr. Wallace that you were the son of Sir Aubrey Shenstone. He studied your
+ character, had an interview with Dr. Hodges, and learnt how fearlessly you
+ were devoting yourself to the work of aiding those stricken with the
+ Plague. With his own son he had reason for being profoundly dissatisfied.
+ The young man had thrown off his authority, had become a notorious
+ reprobate, and had, he believed, sunk down to become a companion of
+ thieves and highwaymen. He had come up to London solely to make a last
+ effort to save him from his evil courses and to give him a chance of
+ reformation by sending him out to New England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Harvey is possessed of considerable property in addition to the
+ estates purchased of your father, for, previous to that purchase he had
+ been the owner of large tanneries at Norwich, which he has ever since
+ maintained, not so much for the sake of the income he derived from them as
+ because they afforded a livelihood to a large number of workmen. He had,
+ therefore, ample means to leave to his son, should the latter accept his
+ offer and reform his life, without the estates of Upmead. When he saw you,
+ he told me his conscience was moved. He had, of course, a legal right to
+ the estates, but he had purchased them for a sum not exceeding a fifth of
+ their value, and he considered that in the twenty years he had held them
+ he had drawn from them sums amply sufficient to repay him for the price he
+ had given for them, and had received a large interest on the money in
+ addition. He questioned, therefore, strongly whether he had any right
+ longer to retain them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When he consulted me on the subject, he alluded to the fact that, by the
+ laws of the Bible, persons who bought lands were bound to return the land
+ to its former possessors, at the end of seven times seven years. He had
+ already, then, made up his mind to leave that portion of his property to
+ you, when you rendered him that great service, and at the same time it
+ became, alas! but too evident to him that his son was hopelessly bad, and
+ that any money whatever left to him would assuredly be spent in evil
+ courses, and would do evil rather than good. Therefore, when I came in the
+ morning to him he said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'My will must be made immediately. Not one penny is to go to my son. I
+ may be carried off to-morrow by the Plague, or my son may renew his
+ attempt with success. So I must will it away from him at once. For the
+ moment, therefore, make a short will bequeathing the estate of Upmead to
+ Sir Cyril Shenstone, all my other possessions to my wife for her lifetime,
+ and at her death also to Sir Cyril Shenstone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I may alter this later on,' he said, 'but for the present I desire
+ chiefly to place them beyond my son's reach. Please draw up the document
+ at once, for no one can say what half an hour may bring forth to either of
+ us. Get the document in form by this evening, when some friends will be
+ here to witness it. Pray bring your two clerks also!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A few days later he called upon me again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I have been making further inquiries about Sir Cyril Shenstone,' he
+ said, 'and have learnt much concerning him from a man who is in the
+ employment of the trader with whom he lives. What I have learnt more than
+ confirms me in my impression of him. He came over from France, three years
+ ago, a boy of scarce fourteen. He was clever at figures, and supported his
+ reprobate father for the last two years of his life by keeping the books
+ of small traders in the City. So much was he esteemed that, at his
+ father's death, Captain Dowsett offered him a home in his house. He
+ rewarded the kindness by making the discovery that the trader was being
+ foully robbed, and brought about the arrest of the thieves, which
+ incidentally led to the breaking-up of one of the worst gangs of robbers
+ in London. Later on he found that his employer's daughter was in
+ communication with a hanger-on of the Court, who told her that he was a
+ nobleman. The young fellow set a watch upon her, came upon her at the
+ moment she was about to elope with this villain, ran him through the
+ shoulder, and took her back to her home, and so far respected her secret
+ that her parents would never have known of it had she not, some time
+ afterwards, confessed it to them. That villain, Mr. Goldsworthy,' he said,
+ 'was my son! Just after that Sir Cyril obtained the good will of the Earl
+ of Wisbech, whose three daughters he saved from being burnt to death at a
+ fire in the Savoy. Thus, you see, this youth is in every way worthy of
+ good fortune, and can be trusted to administer the estate of his fathers
+ worthily and well. I wish you to draw out, at once, a deed conveying to
+ him these estates, and rehearsing that, having obtained them at a small
+ price, and having enjoyed them for a time long enough to return to me the
+ money I paid for them with ample interest thereon, I now return them to
+ him, confident that they will be in good hands, and that their revenues
+ will be worthily spent.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In this parcel is the deed in question, duly signed and witnessed,
+ together with the parchments, deeds, and titles of which he became
+ possessed at his purchase of the estate. I may say, Sir Cyril, that I have
+ never carried out a legal transfer with greater pleasure to myself,
+ considering, as I do, that the transaction is alike just and honourable on
+ his part and most creditable to yourself. He begged me to hand the deeds
+ to you myself. They were completed two months since, but he himself
+ suggested that I should bring them to you on Christmas Eve, when it is the
+ custom for many to give to their friends tokens of their regard and good
+ will. I congratulate you heartily, sir, and rejoice that, for once, merit
+ has met with a due reward."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not know, sir," Cyril replied, "how I can express my feelings of
+ deep pleasure and gratitude at the wonderful tidings you have brought me.
+ I had set it before me as the great object of my life, that, some day,
+ should I live to be an old man, I might be enabled to repurchase the
+ estate of my father's. I knew how improbable it was that I should ever be
+ able to do so, and I can scarce credit that what seemed presumptuous even
+ as a hope should have thus been so strangely and unexpectedly realised. I
+ certainly do not feel that it is in any way due to what you are good
+ enough to call my merits, for in all these matters that you have spoken of
+ there has been nothing out of the way, or, so far as I can see, in any way
+ praiseworthy, in what I have done. It would seem, indeed, that in all
+ these matters, and in the saving of my life from the Plague, things have
+ arranged themselves so as to fall out for my benefit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is what Mr. Harvey feels very strongly, Sir Cyril. He has told me,
+ over and over again, that it seemed to him that the finger of God was
+ specially manifest in thus bringing you together, and in placing you in a
+ position to save his life. And now I will take my leave. I may say that in
+ all legal matters connected with the estate I have acted for Mr. Harvey,
+ and should be naturally glad if you will continue to entrust such matters
+ to me. I have some special facilities in the matter, as Mr. Popham, a
+ lawyer of Norwich, is married to my daughter, and we therefore act
+ together in all business connected with the estate, he performing what may
+ be called the local business, while I am advised by him as to matters
+ requiring attention here in London."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall be glad indeed if you and Mr. Popham will continue to act in the
+ same capacity for me," Cyril said warmly. "I am, as you see, very young,
+ and know nothing of the management of an estate, and shall be grateful if
+ you will, in all matters, act for me until I am of an age to assume the
+ duties of the owner of Upmead."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thank you, Sir Cyril, and we shall, I trust, afford you satisfaction.
+ The deed, you will observe, is dated the 29th of September, the day on
+ which it was signed, though there have been other matters to settle. The
+ tenants have already been notified that from that date they are to regard
+ you as their landlord. Now that you authorise us to act for you, my
+ son-in-law will at once proceed to collect the rents for this quarter. I
+ may say that, roughly, they amount to seventeen hundred pounds a year, and
+ as it may be a convenience to you to draw at once, if it so please you I
+ will place, on Monday next, the sum of four hundred pounds to your credit
+ with Messrs. Murchison and Graham, who are my bankers, or with any other
+ firm you may prefer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With the bankers you name, by all means," Cyril said; "and I thank you
+ heartily for so doing, for as I shall shortly rejoin the Fleet, a portion,
+ at least, of the money will be very useful to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Goldsworthy took his hat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is one thing further I have forgotten. Mr. Harvey requested me to
+ say that he wished for no thanks in this matter. He regards it as an act
+ of rightful restitution, and, although you will doubtless write to him, he
+ would be pleased if you will abstain altogether from treating it as a
+ gift."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will try to obey his wishes," Cyril said, "but it does not seem to me
+ that it will be possible for me to abstain from any expression of
+ gratitude for his noble act."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril accompanied the lawyer to the door, and then returned upstairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now I can speak," Captain Dowsett said. "I have had hard work to keep a
+ stopper on my tongue all this time, for I have been well-nigh bursting to
+ congratulate you. I wish you joy, my lad," and he wrung Cyril's hand
+ heartily, "and a pleasant voyage through life. I am as glad, ay, and a
+ deal more glad than if such a fortune had come in my way, for it would
+ have been of little use to me, seeing I have all that the heart of man
+ could desire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He ran to the door and shouted loudly for his wife and daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have news for you both," he said, as they came in. "What do you think?
+ Cyril, like the King, has come to his own again, and he is now Sir Cyril
+ Shenstone, the owner of the estate of Upmead."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both broke into exclamations of surprise and pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How has the wonder come about?" Nellie asked, after the first
+ congratulations were over. "What good fairy has brought this round?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The good fairy was the Mr. Harvey whose name Cyril once mentioned
+ casually, and whose life, as it now appears, he saved, though he has said
+ nothing to us about it. That gentleman was, most strangely, the man who
+ bought the estate from his father. He, it seems, is a wealthy man, and his
+ conscience has for some time been pricked with the thought that he had
+ benefited too largely from the necessities of Sir Aubrey, and that, having
+ received back from the rents all the money he paid, and goodly interest
+ thereon, he ought to restore the estate to its former owner. Possibly he
+ might never have acted on this thought, but he considered the circumstance
+ that he had so strangely met Cyril here at the time of the Plague, and
+ still more strangely that Cyril had saved his life, was a matter of more
+ than chance, and was a direct and manifest interposition of Providence;
+ and he has therefore made restitution, and that parcel on the table
+ contains a deed of gift to Cyril of all his father's estates."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He has done quite rightly," Mrs. Dowsett said warmly, "though, indeed, it
+ is not everyone who would see matters in that light. If men always acted
+ in that spirit it would be a better world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay, wife. There are not many men who, having got the best of a
+ bargain, voluntarily resign the profits they have made. It is pleasant to
+ come across one who so acts, more especially when one's best friend is the
+ gainer. Ah! Nellie, what a pity some good fairy did not tell you of what
+ was coming! What a chance you have lost, girl! See what might have
+ happened if you had set your cap at Cyril!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed, it is terrible to think of," Nellie laughed. "It was hard on me
+ that he was not five or six years older. Then I might have done it, even
+ if my good fairy had not whispered in my ear about this fortune. Never
+ mind. I shall console myself by looking forward to dance at his wedding&mdash;that
+ is, if he will send me an invitation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Like as not you will be getting past your dancing days by the time that
+ comes off, Nellie. I hope that, years before then, I shall have danced at
+ your wedding&mdash;that is to say," he said, imitating her, "if you will
+ send me an invitation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What are you going to do next, Cyril?" Captain Dave asked, when the laugh
+ had subsided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know, I am sure," Cyril replied. "I have not really woke up to it
+ all yet. It will be some time before I realise that I am not a penniless
+ young baronet, and that I can spend a pound without looking at it a dozen
+ times. I shall have to get accustomed to the thought before I can make any
+ plans. I suppose that one of the first things to do will be to go down to
+ Oxford to see Prince Rupert&mdash;who, I suppose, is with the Court,
+ though this I can doubtless learn at the offices of the Admiralty&mdash;and
+ to tell him that I am ready to rejoin his ship as soon as he puts to sea
+ again. Then I shall find out where Sydney Oliphant is, and how his family
+ have fared in the Plague. I would fain find out what has become of the
+ Partons, to whom, and especially to Lady Parton, I owe much. I suppose,
+ too, I shall have to go down to Norfolk, but that I shall put off as long
+ as I can, for it will be strange and very unpleasant at first to go down
+ as master to a place I have never seen. I shall have to get you to come
+ down with me, Captain Dave, to keep me in countenance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not I, my lad. You will want a better introducer. I expect that the
+ lawyer who was here will give you a letter to his son-in-law, who will, of
+ course, place himself at your service, establishing you in your house and
+ taking you round to your tenants."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, yes," Nellie said, clapping her hands. "And there will be fine
+ doings, and bonfires, and arches, and all sorts of festivities. I do begin
+ to feel how much I have missed the want of that good fairy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It will be all very disagreeable," Cyril said seriously; whereat the
+ others laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril then went downstairs with Captain Dave, and told John Wilkes of the
+ good fortune that had befallen him, at which he was as much delighted as
+ the others had been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten days later Cyril rode to Oxford, and found that Prince Rupert was at
+ present there. The Prince received him with much warmth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have wondered many times what had become of you, Sir Cyril," he said.
+ "From the hour when I saw you leave us in the <i>Fan Fan</i> I have lost
+ sight of you altogether. I have not been in London since, for the Plague
+ had set in badly before the ships were laid up, and as I had naught
+ particular to do there I kept away from it. Albemarle has stayed through
+ it, and he and Mr. Pepys were able to do all there was to do, but I have
+ thought of you often and wondered how you fared, and hoped to see you
+ here, seeing that there was, as it seemed to me, nothing to keep you in
+ London after your wounds had healed. I have spoken often to the King of
+ the brave deed by which you saved us all, and he declared that, had it not
+ been that you were already a baronet, he would knight you as soon as you
+ appeared, as many of the captains and others have already received that
+ honour; and he agreed with me that none deserved it better than yourself.
+ Now, what has become of you all this time?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril related how he had stayed in London, had had the Plague, and had
+ recovered from it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I must see about getting you a commission at once in the Navy," the
+ Prince said, "though I fear you will have to wait until we fit out again.
+ There will be no difficulty then, for of course there were many officers
+ killed in the action."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril expressed his thanks, adding,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no further occasion for me to take a commission, Prince, for,
+ strangely enough, the owner of my father's property has just made it over
+ to me. He is a good man, and, considering that he has already reaped large
+ benefits by his purchase, and has been repaid his money with good
+ interest, his conscience will no longer suffer him to retain it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then he is a Prince of Roundheads," the Prince said, "and I most heartily
+ congratulate you; and I believe that the King will be as pleased as I am.
+ He said but the other day, when I was speaking to him of you, that it
+ grieved him sorely that he was powerless to do anything for so many that
+ had suffered in his cause, and that, after the bravery you had shown, he
+ was determined to do something, and would insist with his ministers that
+ some office should be found for you,&mdash;though it is not an easy
+ matter, when each of them has special friends of his own among whom to
+ divide any good things that fall vacant. He holds a Court this evening,
+ and I will take you with me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King was most gracious when the Prince again presented Cyril to him
+ and told him of the good fortune that had befallen him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By my faith, Sir Cyril, you were born under a lucky star. First of all
+ you saved my Lord of Wisbech's daughters; then, as Prince Rupert tells me,
+ you saved him and all on board his ship from being burned; and now a
+ miracle has well-nigh happened in your favour. I see, too, that you have
+ the use of your arm, which the Prince doubted would ever altogether
+ recover."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "More still, Your Majesty," the Prince said. "He had the Plague in August
+ and recovered from it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall have to keep you about me, Sir Cyril," the King said, "as a sort
+ of amulet to guard me against ill luck."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am going to take him to sea first," Prince Rupert broke in, seeing that
+ Cyril was about to disclaim the idea of coming to Court. "I may want him
+ to save my ship again, and I suppose he will be going down to visit his
+ estate till I want him. You have never seen it, have you, Sir Cyril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, sir; at least not to have any remembrance of it. I naturally long to
+ see Upmead, of which I have heard much from my father. I should have gone
+ down at once, but I thought it my duty to come hither and report myself to
+ you as being ready to sail again as soon as you put to sea."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Duty first and pleasure afterwards," the King said. "I am afraid that is
+ a little beyond me&mdash;eh, Rupert?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very much so, I should say, Cousin Charles," the Prince replied, with a
+ smile. "However, I have no doubt Sir Cyril will not grudge us a few days
+ before he leaves. There are several of the gentlemen who were his comrades
+ on the <i>Henrietta</i> here, and they will be glad to renew their
+ acquaintance with him, knowing, as they all do, that they owe their lives
+ to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Cyril was walking down the High Street, he saw a student coming along
+ whose face seemed familiar to him. He looked hard at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Surely you must be Harry Parton?" he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is my name, sir; though I cannot recall where I have met you. Yet
+ there seems something familiar in your face, and still more in your
+ voice."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am Cyril Shenstone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, what has become of you, Cyril?" Harry said, shaking him warmly by
+ the hand. "I searched for you a year ago when I was in London, but could
+ obtain no tidings whatever of you, save that you had lost your father. We
+ are alike there, for my father died a few months after yours did."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sorry indeed, Harry. I had not heard of it before. I was not,
+ indeed, in the way of doing so, as I was working in the City and knew
+ nothing of what was passing elsewhere."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is my college, Cyril. Come up to my room; there we can talk
+ comfortably, and we have much to tell each other. How is it that you have
+ never been near us?" he went on, when they were seated in front of a
+ blazing fire in his room. "I know that there was some quarrel between our
+ fathers, but when we heard of Sir Aubrey's death, both my father and
+ mother thought that you would come to see us or would have written&mdash;for
+ indeed it was not until after my father's death that we paid a visit to
+ London. It was then my mother asked me to search for you; and after great
+ difficulty I found the quarter in which you had lived, and then from the
+ parish register learned where your father had died. Going there, I learned
+ that you had left the lodging directly after his death, but more than that
+ the people could not tell me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should have come to see your mother and Sir John, Harry. I know how
+ deeply I am indebted to them, and as long as I live shall never cease to
+ be grateful for Lady Parton's kindness to me. But I had received so much
+ kindness that I shrank from seeming to wish to presume upon it further. I
+ had, of course, to work for my living, and I wanted, before I recalled
+ myself to them, to be able to say that I had not come as a beggar for
+ further favours, but that I was making my way independently. Sooner or
+ later I should have come, for your father once promised me that if I
+ followed out what you remember was my plan, of entering foreign service,
+ he would give me letters of introduction that would be useful to me. Had I
+ that favour still to ask I could do it without shame. But more than that I
+ would not have asked, even had I wanted bread, which, thank God! was never
+ the case."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can understand your feeling, Cyril, but my mother assuredly would
+ always have been pleased to see you. You know you were a favourite of
+ hers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Had you been near town, Harry, I should certainly have come to see her
+ and you as soon as I had fairly established myself, but I heard from my
+ father that you had all gone away into the country soon after the
+ unfortunate quarrel he had with Sir John, and therefore delayed taking any
+ step for the time, and indeed did not know in what part of the country
+ your father's estates lay. I know that he recovered them as soon as he
+ returned."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They had never been forfeited," Harry said. "My father retired from the
+ struggle after Naseby, and as he had influential friends among the
+ Puritans, there was no forfeiture of his estates, and we were therefore
+ able, as you know, to live in comfort at Dunkirk, his steward sending over
+ such monies as were required. And now about yourself. Your brains must
+ have served you rarely somehow, for you are dressed in the latest fashion,
+ and indeed I took you for a Court gallant when you accosted me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have been truly fortunate, Harry, and indeed everything has turned out
+ as if specially designed for my good, and, in a most strange and
+ unlooked-for manner, I have just come into my father's estates again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am glad indeed to hear it, Cyril. Tell me how it has all come about."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril told the story of his life since he had come to London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have, indeed, had strange adventures, Cyril, and, though you say
+ little about it, you must have done something special to have gained
+ Prince Rupert's patronage and introduction to Court; but I shall worm all
+ that out of you some day, or get it from other lips. What a contrast your
+ life has been to mine! Here have you been earning your living bravely,
+ fighting in the great battle against the Dutch, going through that
+ terrible Plague, and winning your way back to fortune, while I have been
+ living the life of a school-boy. Our estates lie in Shropshire, and as
+ soon as we went down there my father placed me at a school at Shrewsbury.
+ There I remained till his death, and then, as was his special wish,
+ entered here. I have still a year of my course to complete. I only came up
+ into residence last week. When the summer comes I hope that you will come
+ down to Ardleigh and stay with us; it will give my mother great pleasure
+ to see you again, for I never see her but she speaks of you, and wonders
+ what has become of you, and if you are still alive."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Assuredly I will come, and that with the greatest pleasure," Cyril said,
+ "providing only that I am not then at sea, which is, I fear, likely, as I
+ rejoin the ship as soon as Prince Rupert takes the sea against the Dutch.
+ However, directly we return I will write to you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you do so, let it be to Ardleigh, near Shrewsbury, Shropshire. Should
+ I be here when your letter arrives, my mother will forward it to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX &mdash; TAKING POSSESSION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Cyril stayed a week at Oxford. He greatly enjoyed the visit; and not only
+ was he most warmly received by his former comrades on board the <i>Henrietta</i>,
+ but Prince Rupert spoke so strongly in his favour to other gentlemen to
+ whom he introduced him that he no longer felt a stranger at Court. Much of
+ his spare time he spent with Harry Parton, and in his rooms saw something
+ of college life, which seemed to him a very pleasant and merry one. He had
+ ascertained, as soon as he arrived, that the Earl of Wisbech and his
+ family were down at his estate, near the place from which he took his
+ title, and had at once written to Sydney, from whom he received an answer
+ on the last day of his stay at Oxford. It contained a warm invitation for
+ him to come down to Wisbech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You say you will be going to Norwich to take possession of your estate.
+ If you ride direct from Oxford, our place will be but little out of your
+ way, therefore we shall take no excuse for your not coming to see us, and
+ shall look for you within a week or so from the date of this. We were all
+ delighted to get your missive, for although what you say about infection
+ carried by letters is true enough, and, indeed there was no post out of
+ London for months, we had begun to fear that the worst must have befallen
+ you when no letter arrived from you in December. Still, we thought that
+ you might not know where we were, and so hoped that you might be waiting
+ until you could find that out. My father bids me say that he will take no
+ refusal. Since my return he more than ever regards you as being the good
+ genius of the family, and it is certainly passing strange that, after
+ saving my sisters' lives from fire you should, though in so different a
+ way, have saved me from a similar death. So set off as soon as you get
+ this&mdash;that is, if you can tear yourself away from the gaieties of
+ Oxford."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had, indeed, been specially waiting for Sydney's answer, having told
+ him that he should remain at Oxford until he received it, and on the
+ following morning he packed his valise and rode for Wisbech, where he
+ arrived three days' later. His welcome at the Earl's was a most cordial
+ one. He spent a week there, at the end of which time Sydney, at his
+ earnest request, started for Norwich with him. The Earl had insisted on
+ Cyril's accepting a splendid horse, and behind him, on his other animal,
+ rode a young fellow, the son of a small tenant on the Earl's estate, whom
+ he had engaged as a servant. He had written, three days before, to Mr.
+ Popham, telling him that he would shortly arrive, and begging him to order
+ the two old servants of his father, whom he had, at his request, engaged
+ to take care of the house to get two or three chambers in readiness for
+ him, which could doubtless be easily done, as he had learnt from the deed
+ that the furniture and all contents of the house had been included in the
+ gift. After putting up at the inn, he went to the lawyer's. Mr. Popham, he
+ found, had had a room prepared in readiness for him at his house, but
+ Cyril, while thanking him for so doing, said that, as Lord Oliphant was
+ with him, he would stay at the inn for the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning they rode over with Mr. Popham to Upmead, which was six
+ miles distant from the town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is the house," the lawyer said, as a fine old mansion came in sight.
+ "There are larger residences in the county, but few more handsome. Indeed,
+ it is almost too large for the estate, but, as perhaps you know, that was
+ at one time a good deal larger than it is at present, for it was
+ diminished by one of your ancestors in the days of Elizabeth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the gate where they turned into the Park an arch of evergreens had been
+ erected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You don't mean to say you let them know that I was coming home?" Cyril
+ said, in a tone of such alarm that Lord Oliphant laughed and Mr. Popham
+ said apologetically,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I certainly wrote to the tenants, sir, when I received your letter, and
+ sent off a message saying that you would be here this morning. Most of
+ them or their fathers were here in the old time, for Mr. Harvey made no
+ changes, and I am sure they would have been very disappointed if they had
+ not had notice that Sir Aubrey's son was coming home."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course it was quite right for you to do so, Mr. Popham, but you see I
+ am quite unaccustomed to such things, and would personally have been much
+ more pleased to have come home quietly. Still, as you say, it is only
+ right that the tenants should have been informed, and at any rate it will
+ be a satisfaction to get it all over at once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were indeed quite a large number of men and women assembled in front
+ of the house&mdash;all the tenants, with their wives and families, having
+ gathered to greet their young landlord&mdash;and loud bursts of cheering
+ arose as he rode up, Sydney and Mr. Popham reining back their horses a
+ little to allow him to precede them. Cyril took off his hat, and bowed
+ repeatedly in reply to the acclamations that greeted him. The tenants
+ crowded round, many of the older men pressing forward to shake him by the
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Welcome back to your own again, Sir Cyril!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I fought under your father, sir, and a good landlord he was to us all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were the exclamations that rose round him until he reached the door
+ of the mansion, and, dismounting, took his place at the top of the steps.
+ Then he took off his hat again, and when there was silence he said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thank you heartily, one and all, good friends, for the welcome that you
+ have given me. Glad indeed I am to come down to my father's home, and to
+ be so greeted by those who knew him, and especially by those who followed
+ him in the field in the evil days which have, we may hope, passed away for
+ ever. You all know, perhaps, that I owe my return here as master to the
+ noble generosity of Mr. Harvey, your late landlord, who restored me the
+ estates, not being bound in any way to do so, but solely because he
+ considered that he had already been repaid the money he gave for them.
+ This may be true, but, nevertheless, there is not one man in a hundred
+ thousand who would so despoil himself of the benefits of a bargain
+ lawfully made, and I beg you therefore to give three cheers, as hearty as
+ those with which you greeted me, for Mr. Harvey."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three cheers, as long and loud as those that had before risen, responded
+ to the appeal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such a man," Cyril went on, when they subsided, "must have been a just
+ and good landlord to you all, and I shall do my best to give you no cause
+ for regret at the change that has come about."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He paused for a moment to speak to Mr. Popham, who stood beside him, and
+ then went on,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did not know whether I could ask you to drink to my health, but I learn
+ from Mr. Popham that the cellars have been left well filled; therefore, my
+ first orders on coming to the house of my fathers will be that a cask of
+ wine shall be speedily broached, and that you shall be enabled to drink my
+ health. While that is being done, Mr. Popham will introduce you to me one
+ by one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another loud cheer arose, and then the tenants came forward with their
+ wives and families.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril shook hands with them all, and said a few words to each. The elder
+ men had all ridden by his father in battle, and most of the younger ones
+ said, as he shook hands with them,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My father fell, under Sir Aubrey, at Naseby," or "at Worcester," or in
+ other battles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time all had been introduced, a great cask of wine had been
+ broached, and after the tenants had drunk to his health, and he had, in
+ turn, pledged them, Cyril entered the house with Sydney and Mr. Popham,
+ and proceeded to examine it under the guidance of the old man who had been
+ his father's butler, and whose wife had also been a servant in Sir
+ Aubrey's time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Everything is just as it was then, Sir Cyril. A few fresh articles of
+ furniture have been added, but Mr. Harvey would have no general change
+ made. The family pictures hang just where they did, and your father
+ himself would scarce notice the changes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is indeed a fine old mansion, Cyril," Lord Oliphant said, when they
+ had made a tour of the house; "and now that I see it and its furniture I
+ am even more inclined than before to admire the man who could voluntarily
+ resign them. I shall have to modify my ideas of the Puritans. They have
+ shown themselves ready to leave the country and cross the ocean to
+ America, and begin life anew for conscience' sake&mdash;that is to say, to
+ escape persecution&mdash;and they fought very doughtily, and we must own,
+ very successfully, for the same reason, but this is the first time I have
+ ever heard of one of them relinquishing a fine estate for conscience'
+ sake."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Harvey is indeed a most worthy gentleman," Mr. Popham said, "and has
+ the esteem and respect of all, even of those who are of wholly different
+ politics. Still, it may be that although he would in any case, I believe,
+ have left this property to Sir Cyril, he might not have handed it over to
+ him in his lifetime, had not he received so great a service at his hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, what is this, Cyril?" Sydney said, turning upon him. "You have told
+ us nothing whatever of any services rendered. I never saw such a fellow as
+ you are for helping other people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was nothing worth speaking of," Cyril said, much vexed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Popham smiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Most people would think it was a very great service, Lord Oliphant.
+ However, I may not tell you what it was, although I have heard all the
+ details from my father-in-law, Mr. Goldsworthy. They were told in
+ confidence, and in order to enlighten me as to the relations between Mr.
+ Harvey and Sir Cyril, and as they relate to painful family matters I am
+ bound to preserve an absolute silence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will be content to wait, Cyril, till I get you to myself. It is a
+ peculiarity of Sir Cyril Shenstone, Mr. Popham, that he goes through life
+ doing all sorts of services for all sorts of people. You may not know that
+ he saved the lives of my three sisters in a fire at our mansion in the
+ Savoy; he also performed the trifling service of saving Prince Rupert's
+ ship and the lives of all on board, among whom was myself, from a Dutch
+ fire-ship, in the battle of Lowestoft. These are insignificant affairs,
+ that he would not think it worth while to allude to, even if you knew him
+ for twenty years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You do not know Lord Oliphant, Mr. Popham," Cyril laughed, "or you would
+ be aware that his custom is to make mountains out of molehills. But let us
+ sit down to dinner. I suppose it is your forethought, Mr. Popham, that I
+ have to thank for having warned them to make this provision? I had thought
+ that we should be lucky if the resources of the establishment sufficed to
+ furnish us with a meal of bread and cheese."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I sent on a few things with my messenger yesterday evening, Sir Cyril,
+ but for the hare and those wild ducks methinks you have to thank your
+ tenants, who doubtless guessed that an addition to the larder would be
+ welcome. I have no doubt that, good landlord as Mr. Harvey was, they are
+ really delighted to have you among them again. As you know, these eastern
+ counties were the stronghold of Puritanism, and that feeling is still held
+ by the majority. It is only among the tenants of many gentlemen who, like
+ your father, were devoted Royalists, that there is any very strong feeling
+ the other way. As you heard from their lips, most of your older tenants
+ fought under Sir Aubrey, while the fathers of the younger ones fell under
+ his banner. Consequently, it was galling to them that one of altogether
+ opposite politics should be their landlord, and although in every other
+ respect they had reason to like him, he was, as it were, a symbol of their
+ defeat, and I suppose they viewed him a good deal as the Saxons of old
+ times regarded their Norman lords."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can quite understand that, Mr. Popham."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Another feeling has worked in your favour, Sir Cyril," the lawyer went
+ on. "It may perhaps be a relic of feudalism, but there can be no doubt
+ that there exists, in the minds of English country folks, a feeling of
+ respect and of something like affection for their landlords when men of
+ old family, and that feeling is never transferred to new men who may take
+ their place. Mr. Harvey was, in their eyes, a new man&mdash;a wealthy one,
+ no doubt, but owing his wealth to his own exertions&mdash;and he would
+ never have excited among them the same feeling as they gave to the family
+ who had, for several hundred years, been owners of the soil."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril remained for a fortnight at Upmead, calling on all the tenants, and
+ interesting himself in them and their families. The day after his arrival
+ he rode into Norwich, and paid a visit to Mr. Harvey. He had, in
+ compliance to his wishes, written but a short letter of acknowledgment of
+ the restitution of the estate, but he now expressed the deep feeling of
+ gratitude that he entertained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have only done what is right," Mr. Harvey said quietly, "and would
+ rather not be thanked for it; but your feelings are natural, and I have
+ therefore not checked your words. It was assuredly God's doing in so
+ strangely bringing us together, and making you an instrument in saving our
+ lives, and so awakening an uneasy conscience into activity. I have had but
+ small pleasure from Upmead. I have a house here which is more than
+ sufficient for all my wants, and I have, I hope, the respect of my
+ townsfellows, and the affection of my workmen. At Upmead I was always
+ uncomfortable. Such of the county gentlemen who retained their estates
+ looked askance at me. The tenants, I knew, though they doffed their hats
+ as I passed them, regarded me as a usurper. I had no taste for the sports
+ and pleasures of country life, being born and bred a townsman. The
+ ill-doing of my son cast a gloom over my life of late. I have lived
+ chiefly here with the society of friends of my own religious and political
+ feeling. Therefore, I have made no sacrifice in resigning my tenancy of
+ Upmead, and I pray you say no further word of your gratitude. I have
+ heard, from one who was there yesterday, how generously you spoke of me to
+ your tenants, and I thank you for so doing, for it is pleasant for me to
+ stand well in the thoughts of those whose welfare I have had at heart."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I trust that Mrs. Harvey is in good health?" Cyril said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She is far from well, Cyril. The events of that night in London have told
+ heavily upon her, as is not wonderful, for she has suffered much sorrow
+ for years, and this last blow has broken her sorely. She mourns, as David
+ mourned over the death of Absalom, over the wickedness of her son, but she
+ is quite as one with me in the measures that I have taken concerning him,
+ save that, at her earnest prayer, I have made a provision for him which
+ will keep him from absolute want, and will leave him no excuse to urge
+ that he was driven by poverty into crime. Mr. Goldsworthy has not yet
+ discovered means of communicating with him, but when he does so he will
+ notify him that he has my instructions to pay to him fifteen pounds on the
+ first of every month, and that the offer of assistance to pay his passage
+ to America is still open to him, and that on arriving there he will
+ receive for three years the same allowance as here. Then if a favourable
+ report of his conduct is forthcoming from the magistrates and deacons of
+ the town where he takes up his residence, a correspondent of Mr.
+ Goldsworthy's will be authorised to expend four thousand pounds on the
+ purchase of an estate for him, and to hand to him another thousand for the
+ due working and maintenance of the same. For these purposes I have already
+ made provisions in my will, with proviso that if, at the end of five years
+ after my death, no news of him shall be obtained, the money set aside for
+ these purposes shall revert to the main provisions of the will. It may be
+ that he died of the Plague. It may be that he has fallen, or will fall, a
+ victim to his own evil courses and evil passions. But I am convinced that,
+ should he be alive, Mr. Goldsworthy will be able to obtain tidings of him
+ long before the five years have expired. And now," he said, abruptly
+ changing the subject, "what are you thinking of doing, Sir Cyril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the first place, sir, I am going to sea again with the Fleet very
+ shortly. I entered as a Volunteer for the war, and could not well, even if
+ I wished it, draw back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are a stiff-necked people," Mr. Harvey said. "That the Sovereigns of
+ Europe should have viewed with displeasure the overthrow of the monarchy
+ here was natural enough; but in Holland, if anywhere, we might have looked
+ for sympathy, seeing that as they had battled for freedom of conscience,
+ so had we done here; and yet they were our worst enemies, and again and
+ again had Blake to sail forth to chastise them. They say that Monk is to
+ command this time?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe so, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monk is the bruised reed that pierced our hand, but he is a good fighter.
+ And after the war is over, Sir Cyril, you will not, I trust, waste your
+ life in the Court of the profligate King?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly not," Cyril said earnestly. "As soon as the war is over I shall
+ return to Upmead and take up my residence there. I have lived too hard a
+ life to care for the gaieties of Court, still less of a Court like that of
+ King Charles. I shall travel for a while in Europe if there is a genuine
+ peace. I have lost the opportunity of completing my education, and am too
+ old now to go to either of the Universities. Not too old perhaps; but I
+ have seen too much of the hard side of life to care to pass three years
+ among those who, no older than myself, are still as boys in their
+ feelings. The next best thing, therefore, as it seems to me, would be to
+ travel, and perhaps to spend a year or two in one of the great
+ Universities abroad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The matter is worth thinking over," Mr. Harvey said. "You are assuredly
+ young yet to settle down alone at Upmead, and will reap much advantage
+ from speaking French which is everywhere current, and may greatly aid you
+ in making your travels useful to you. I have no fear of your falling into
+ Popish error, Sir Cyril; but if my wishes have any weight with you I would
+ pray you to choose the schools of Leyden or Haarlem, should you enter a
+ foreign University, for they turn out learned men and good divines."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly your wishes have weight with me, Mr. Harvey, and should events
+ so turn out that I can enter one of the foreign Universities, it shall be
+ one of those you name&mdash;that is, should we, after this war is ended,
+ come into peaceful relations with the Dutch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before leaving the Earl's, Cyril had promised faithfully that he would
+ return thither with Sydney, and accordingly, at the end of the fortnight,
+ he rode back with him there, and, three weeks later, journeyed up to
+ London with the Earl and his family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the middle of March when they reached London. The Court had come up
+ a day or two before, and the Fleet was, as Cyril learnt, being fitted out
+ in great haste. The French had now, after hesitating all through the
+ winter, declared war against us, and it was certain that we should have
+ their fleet as well as that of the Dutch to cope with. Calling upon Prince
+ Rupert on the day he arrived, Cyril learnt that the Fleet would assuredly
+ put to sea in a month's time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Would you rather join at once, or wait until I go on board?" the Prince
+ asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would rather join at once, sir. I have no business to do in London, and
+ it would be of no use for me to take an apartment when I am to leave so
+ soon; therefore, if I can be of any use, I would gladly join at once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You would be of no use on board," the Prince said, "but assuredly you
+ could be of use in carrying messages, and letting me know frequently, from
+ your own report, how matters are going on. I heard yesterday that the <i>Fan
+ Fan</i> is now fitted out. You shall take the command of her. I will give
+ you a letter to the boatswain, who is at present in charge, saying that I
+ have placed her wholly under your orders. You will, of course, live on
+ board. You will be chiefly at Chatham and Sheerness. If you call early
+ to-morrow I will have a letter prepared for you, addressed to all captains
+ holding commands in the White Squadron, bidding them to acquaint you,
+ whensoever you go on board, with all particulars of how matters have been
+ pushed forward, and to give you a list of all things lacking. Then, twice
+ a week you will sail up to town, and report to me, or, should there be any
+ special news at other times, send it to me by a mounted messenger. Mr.
+ Pepys, the secretary, is a diligent and hard-working man, but he cannot
+ see to everything, and Albemarle so pushes him that I think the White
+ Squadron does not get a fair share of attention; but if I can go to him
+ with your reports in hand, I may succeed in getting what is necessary
+ done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bidding farewell to the Earl and his family, and thanking him for his
+ kindness, Cyril stopped that night at Captain Dave's, and told him of all
+ that had happened since they met. The next morning he went early to Prince
+ Rupert's, received the two letters, and rode down to Chatham. Then,
+ sending the horses back by his servant, who was to take them to the Earl's
+ stable, where they would be cared for until his return, Cyril went on
+ board the <i>Fan Fan</i>. For the next month he was occupied early and
+ late with his duties. The cabin was small, but very comfortable. The crew
+ was a strong one, for the yacht rowed twelve oars, with which she could
+ make good progress even without her sails. He was waited on by his
+ servant, who returned as soon as he had left the horses in the Earl's
+ stables; his cooking was done for him in the yacht's galley. On occasions,
+ as the tide suited, he either sailed up to London in the afternoon, gave
+ his report to the Prince late in the evening, and was back at Sheerness by
+ daybreak, or he sailed up at night, saw the Prince as soon as he rose, and
+ returned at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince highly commended his diligence, and told him that his reports
+ were of great use to him, as, with them in his hand, he could not be put
+ off at the Admiralty with vague assurances. Every day one or more ships
+ went out to join the Fleet that was gathering in the Downs, and on April
+ 20th Cyril sailed in the <i>Fan Fan</i>, in company with the last vessel
+ of the White Squadron, and there again took up his quarters on board the
+ <i>Henrietta</i>, the <i>Fan Fan</i> being anchored hard by in charge of
+ the boatswain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 23rd, the Prince, with the Duke of Albemarle, and a great company
+ of noblemen and gentlemen, arrived at Deal, and came on board the Fleet,
+ which, on May 1st, weighed anchor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Oliphant was among the volunteers who came down with the Prince, and,
+ as many of the other gentlemen had also been on board during the first
+ voyage, Cyril felt that he was among friends, and had none of the feeling
+ of strangeness and isolation he had before experienced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The party was indeed a merry one. For upwards of a year the fear of the
+ Plague had weighed on all England. At the time it increased so terribly in
+ London, that all thought it would, like the Black Death, spread over
+ England, and that, once again, half the population of the country might be
+ swept away. Great as the mortality had been, it had been confined almost
+ entirely to London and some of the great towns, and now that it had died
+ away even in these, there was great relief in men's minds, and all felt
+ that they had personally escaped from a terrible and imminent danger. That
+ they were about to face peril even greater than that from which they had
+ escaped did not weigh on the spirits of the gentlemen on board Prince
+ Rupert's ship. To be killed fighting for their country was an honourable
+ death that none feared, while there had been, in the minds of even the
+ bravest, a horror of death by the Plague, with all its ghastly
+ accompaniments. Sailing out to sea to the Downs, then, they felt that the
+ past year's events lay behind them as an evil dream, and laughed and
+ jested and sang with light-hearted mirth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As yet, the Dutch had not put out from port, and for three weeks the Fleet
+ cruised off their coast. Then, finding that the enemy could not be tempted
+ to come out, they sailed back to the Downs. The day after they arrived
+ there, a messenger came down from London with orders to Prince Rupert to
+ sail at once with the White Squadron to engage the French Fleet, which was
+ reported to be on the point of putting to sea. The Prince had very little
+ belief that the French really intended to fight. Hitherto, although they
+ had been liberal in their promises to the Dutch, they had done nothing
+ whatever to aid them, and the general opinion was that France rejoiced at
+ seeing her rivals damage each other, but had no idea of risking her ships
+ or men in the struggle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe, gentlemen," Prince Rupert said to his officers, "that this is
+ but a ruse on the part of Louis to aid his Dutch allies by getting part of
+ our fleet out of the way. Still, I have nothing to do but to obey orders,
+ though I fear it is but a fool's errand on which we are sent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wind was from the north-east, and was blowing a fresh gale. The Prince
+ prepared to put to sea. While the men were heaving at the anchors a
+ message came to Cyril that Prince Rupert wished to speak to him in his
+ cabin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Cyril, I am going to restore you to your command. The wind is so
+ strong and the sea will be so heavy that I would not risk my yacht and the
+ lives of the men by sending her down the Channel. I do not think there is
+ any chance of our meeting the French, and believe that it is here that the
+ battle will be fought, for with this wind the Dutch can be here in a few
+ hours, and I doubt not that as soon as they learn that one of our
+ squadrons has sailed away they will be out. The <i>Fan Fan</i> will sail
+ with us, but will run into Dover as we pass. Here is a letter that I have
+ written ordering you to do so, and authorising you to put out and join the
+ Admiral's Fleet, should the Dutch attack before my return. If you like to
+ have young Lord Oliphant with you he can go, but he must go as a Volunteer
+ under you. You are the captain of the <i>Fan Fan</i>, and have been so for
+ the last two months; therefore, although your friend is older than you
+ are, he must, if he choose to go, be content to serve under you. Stay, I
+ will put it to him myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He touched the bell, and ordered Sydney to be sent for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lord Oliphant," he said, "I know that you and Sir Cyril are great
+ friends. I do not consider that the <i>Fan Fan</i>, of which he has for
+ some time been commander, is fit to keep the sea in a gale like this, and
+ I have therefore ordered him to take her into Dover. If the Dutch come out
+ to fight the Admiral, as I think they will, he will join the Fleet, and
+ although the <i>Fan Fan</i> can take but small share in the fighting, she
+ may be useful in carrying messages from the Duke while the battle is going
+ on. It seems to me that, as the <i>Fan Fan</i> is more likely to see
+ fighting than my ships, you, as a Volunteer, might prefer to transfer
+ yourself to her until she again joins us. Sir Cyril is younger than you
+ are, but if you go, you must necessarily be under his command seeing that
+ he is captain of the yacht. It is for you to choose whether you will
+ remain here or go with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should like to go with him, sir. He has had a good deal of experience
+ of the sea, while I have never set foot on board ship till last year. And
+ after what he did at Lowestoft I should say that any gentleman would be
+ glad to serve under him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is the right feeling," Prince Rupert said warmly. "Then get your
+ things transferred to the yacht. If you join Albemarle's Fleet, Sir Cyril,
+ you will of course report yourself to him, and say that I directed you to
+ place yourself under his orders."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Five minutes later Cyril and his friend were on board the <i>Fan Fan.</i>
+ Scarcely had they reached her, when a gun was fired from Prince Rupert's
+ ship as a signal, and the ships of the White Squadron shook out their
+ sails, and, with the wind free, raced down towards the South Foreland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are to put into Dover," Cyril said to the boatswain, a weatherbeaten
+ old sailor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Lord be praised for that, sir! She is a tight little craft, but there
+ will be a heavy sea on as soon we are beyond shelter of the sands, and
+ with these two guns on board of her she will make bad weather. Besides, in
+ a wind like this, it ain't pleasant being in a little craft in the middle
+ of a lot of big ones, for if we were not swamped by the sea, we might very
+ well be run down. We had better keep her close to the Point, yer honour,
+ and then run along, under shelter of the cliffs, into Dover. The water
+ will be pretty smooth in there, though we had best carry as little sail as
+ we can, for the gusts will come down from above fit to take the mast out
+ of her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am awfully glad you came with me, Sydney," Cyril said, as he took his
+ place with his friend near the helmsman, "but I wish the Prince had put
+ you in command. Of course, it is only a nominal thing, for the boatswain
+ is really the captain in everything that concerns making sail and giving
+ orders to the crew. Still, it would have been much nicer the other way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't see that it would, Cyril," Sydney laughed, "for you know as much
+ more about handling a boat like this than I do, as the boatswain does than
+ yourself. You have been on board her night and day for more than a month,
+ and even if you knew nothing about her at all, Prince Rupert would have
+ been right to choose you as a recognition of your great services last
+ time. Don't think anything about it. We are friends, and it does not
+ matter a fig which is the nominal commander. I was delighted to come, not
+ only to be with you, but because it will be a very great deal pleasanter
+ being our own masters on board this pretty little yacht than being
+ officers on board the <i>Henrietta</i> where we would have been only in
+ the way except when we went into action."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as they rounded the Point most of the sail was taken off the <i>Fan
+ Fan,</i> but even under the small canvas she carried she lay over until
+ her lee rail was almost under water when the heavy squalls swooped down on
+ her from the cliffs. The rest of the squadron was keeping some distance
+ out, presenting a fine sight as the ships lay over, sending the spray
+ flying high into the air from their bluff bows, and plunging deeply into
+ the waves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, it is very distinctly better being where we are," Lord Oliphant
+ said, as he gazed at them. "I was beginning to feel qualmish before we got
+ under shelter of the Point, and by this time, if I had been on board the
+ <i>Henrietta,</i> I should have been prostrate, and should have had I know
+ not how long misery before me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A quarter of an hour later they were snugly moored in Dover Harbour. For
+ twenty-four hours the gale continued; the wind then fell somewhat, but
+ continued to blow strongly from the same quarter. Two days later it veered
+ round to the south-west, and shortly afterwards the English Fleet could be
+ seen coming out past the Point. As soon as they did so they headed
+ eastward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are going out to meet the Dutch," Sydney said, as they watched the
+ ships from the cliffs, "The news must have arrived that their fleet has
+ put out to sea."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then we may as well be off after them, Sydney; they will sail faster than
+ we shall in this wind, for it is blowing too strongly for us to carry much
+ sail."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They hurried on board. A quarter of an hour later the <i>Fan Fan</i> put
+ out from the harbour. The change of wind had caused an ugly cross sea and
+ the yacht made bad weather of it, the waves constantly washing over her
+ decks, but before they were off Calais she had overtaken some of the
+ slower sailers of the Fleet. The sea was less violent as they held on, for
+ they were now, to some extent, sheltered by the coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a short time Cyril ran down into the cabin where Sydney was lying ill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Admiral has given the signal to anchor, and the leading ships are
+ already bringing up. We will choose a berth as near the shore as we can;
+ with our light draught we can lie well inside of the others, and shall be
+ in comparatively smooth water."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before dusk the Fleet was at anchor, with the exception of two or three of
+ the fastest frigates, which were sent on to endeavour to obtain some news
+ of the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX &mdash; THE FIGHT OFF DUNKIRK
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the <i>Fan Fan</i> had been brought to an anchor the boat was
+ lowered, and Cyril was rowed on board the Admiral's ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Albemarle was on the poop, and Cyril made his report to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well, sir," the Duke said, "I dare say I shall be able to make you
+ of some use. Keep your craft close to us when we sail. I seem to know your
+ face."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am Sir Cyril Shenstone, my Lord Duke. I had the honour of meeting you
+ first at the fire in the Savoy, and Prince Rupert afterwards was good
+ enough to present me to you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes, I remember. And it was you who saved the <i>Henrietta</i> from
+ the fire-ship at Lowestoft. You have begun well indeed, young sir, and are
+ like to have further opportunities of showing your bravery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril bowed, and then, going down the side to his boat, returned to the <i>Fan
+ Fan.</i> She was lying in almost smooth water, and Sydney had come up on
+ deck again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You heard no news of the Dutch, I suppose, Cyril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; I asked a young officer as I left the ship, and he said that, so far
+ as he knew, nothing had been heard of them, but news had come in, before
+ the Admiral sailed from the Downs, that everything was ready for sea, and
+ that orders were expected every hour for them to put out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is rather to be hoped that they won't put out for another two days,"
+ Sydney said. "That will give the Prince time to rejoin with his squadron.
+ The wind is favourable now for his return, and I should think, as soon as
+ they hear in London that the Dutch are on the point of putting out, and
+ Albemarle has sailed, they will send him orders to join us at once. We
+ have only about sixty sail, while they say that the Dutch have over
+ ninety, which is too heavy odds against us to be pleasant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should think the Duke will not fight till the Prince comes up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't think he will wait for him if he finds the Dutch near. All say
+ that he is over-confident, and apt to despise the Dutch too much. Anyhow,
+ he is as brave as a lion, and, though he might not attack unless the Dutch
+ begin it, I feel sure he will not run away from them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning early, the <i>Bristol</i> frigate was seen returning from
+ the east. She had to beat her way back in the teeth of the wind, but, when
+ still some miles away, a puff of white smoke was seen to dart out from her
+ side, and presently the boom of a heavy gun was heard. Again and again she
+ fired, and the signal was understood to be a notification that she had
+ seen the Dutch. The signal for the captains of the men-of-war to come on
+ board was at once run up to the mast-head of the flagship, followed by
+ another for the Fleet to be prepared to weigh anchor. Captain Bacon, of
+ the <i>Bristol</i>, went on board as soon as his ship came up. In a short
+ time the boats were seen to put off, and as the captains reached their
+ respective ships the signal to weigh anchor was hoisted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was hailed with a burst of cheering throughout the Fleet, and all
+ felt that it signified that they would soon meet the Dutch. The <i>Fan Fan</i>
+ was under sail long before the men-of-war had got up their heavy anchors,
+ and, sailing out, tacked backwards and forwards until the Fleet were under
+ sail, when Cyril told the boatswain to place her within a few cables'
+ length of the flagship on her weather quarter. After two hours' sail the
+ Dutch Fleet were made out, anchored off Dunkirk. The Blue Squadron, under
+ Sir William Berkley, led the way, the Red Squadron, under the Duke,
+ following.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will put a man in the chains with the lead," the boatswain said to
+ Cyril. "There are very bad sands off Dunkirk, and though we might get over
+ them in safety, the big ships would take ground, and if they did so we
+ should be in a bad plight indeed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In that case, we had best slack out the sheet a little, and take up our
+ post on the weather bow of the Admiral, so that we can signal to him if we
+ find water failing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The topsail was hoisted, and the <i>Fan Fan,</i> which was a very fast
+ craft in comparatively smooth water, ran past the Admiral's flagship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shall I order him back, your Grace?" the Captain asked angrily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Albemarle looked at the <i>Fan Fan</i> attentively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They have got a man sounding," he said. "It is a wise precaution. The
+ young fellow in command knows what he is doing. We ought to have been
+ taking the same care. See! he is taking down his topsail again. Set an
+ officer to watch the yacht, and if they signal, go about at once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The soundings continued for a short time at six fathoms, when suddenly the
+ man at the lead called out sharply,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Three fathoms!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril ran to the flagstaff, and as the next cry came&mdash;"Two fathoms!"&mdash;hauled
+ down the flag and stood waving his cap, while the boatswain, who had gone
+ to the tiller, at once pushed it over to starboard, and brought the yacht
+ up into the wind. Cyril heard orders shouted on board the flagship, and
+ saw her stern sweeping round. A moment later her sails were aback, but the
+ men, who already clustered round the guns, were not quick enough in
+ hauling the yards across, and, to his dismay, he saw the main topmast
+ bend, and then go over the side with a crash. All was confusion on board,
+ and for a time it seemed as if the other topmast would also go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Run her alongside within hailing distance," Cyril said to the boatswain.
+ "They will want to question us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they came alongside the flagship the Duke himself leant over the side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What water had you when you came about, sir?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We went suddenly from six fathoms to three, your Grace," Cyril shouted,
+ "and a moment after we found but two."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well, sir," the Duke called back. "In that case you have certainly
+ saved our ship. I thought perhaps that you had been over-hasty, and had
+ thus cost us our topmast, but I see it was not so, and thank you. Our
+ pilot assured us there was plenty of water on the course we were taking."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ships of the Red Squadron had all changed their course on seeing the
+ flagship come about so suddenly, and considerable delay and confusion was
+ caused before they again formed in order, and, in obedience to the Duke's
+ signal, followed in support of the Blue Squadron. This had already dashed
+ into the midst of the Dutch Fleet, who were themselves in some confusion;
+ for, so sudden had been the attack, that they had been forced to cut their
+ cables, having no time to get up their anchors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The British ships poured in their broadsides as they approached, while the
+ Dutch opened a tremendous cannonade. Besides their great inferiority in
+ numbers, the British were under a serious disadvantage. They had the
+ weather gauge, and the wind was so strong that it heeled them over, so
+ that they were unable to open their lower ports, and were therefore
+ deprived of the use of their heaviest guns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four of the ships of the Red Squadron remained by the flagship, to protect
+ her if attacked, and to keep off fire-ships, while her crew laboured to
+ get up another topmast. More than three hours were occupied in this
+ operation, but so busily did the rest of the Fleet keep the Dutch at work
+ that they were unable to detach sufficient ships to attack her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the topmast was in place and the sails hoisted, the flagship
+ and her consorts hastened to join their hard-pressed comrades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fight was indeed a desperate one. Sir William Berkley and his ship,
+ the <i>Swiftsure,</i> a second-rate, was taken, as was the <i>Essex,</i> a
+ third-rate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The <i>Henry,</i> commanded by Sir John Harman, was surrounded by foes.
+ Her sails and rigging were shot to pieces, so she was completely disabled,
+ and the Dutch Admiral, Cornelius Evertz, summoned Sir John Harman to
+ surrender.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It has not come to that yet," Sir John shouted back, and continued to
+ pour such heavy broadsides into the Dutch that several of their ships were
+ greatly damaged, and Evertz himself killed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Dutch captains drew off their vessels, and launched three fire-ships
+ at the <i>Henry.</i> The first one, coming up on her starboard quarter,
+ grappled with her. The dense volumes of smoke rising from her prevented
+ the sailors from discovering where the grapnels were fixed, and the flames
+ were spreading to her when her boatswain gallantly leapt on board the
+ fire-ship, and, by the light of its flames, discovered the grapnels and
+ threw them overboard, and succeeded in regaining his ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A moment later, the second fire-ship came up on the port side, and so
+ great a body of flames swept across the <i>Henry</i> that her chaplain and
+ fifty men sprang overboard. Sir John, however, drew his sword, and
+ threatened to cut down the first man who refused to obey orders, and the
+ rest of the crew, setting manfully to work, succeeded in extinguishing the
+ flames, and in getting free of the fire-ship. The halliards of the main
+ yard were, however, burnt through, and the spar fell, striking Sir John
+ Harman to the deck and breaking his leg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The third fire-ship was received with the fire of four cannon loaded with
+ chain shot. These brought her mast down, and she drifted by, clear of the
+ <i>Henry,</i> which was brought safely into Harwich.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fight continued the whole day, and did not terminate until ten o'clock
+ in the evening. The night was spent in repairing damages, and in the
+ morning the English recommenced the battle. It was again obstinately
+ contested. Admiral Van Tromp threw himself into the midst of the British
+ line, and suffered so heavily that he was only saved by the arrival of
+ Admiral de Ruyter. He, in his turn, was in a most perilous position, and
+ his ship disabled, when fresh reinforcements arrived. And so the battle
+ raged, until, in the afternoon, as if by mutual consent, the Fleets drew
+ off from each other, and the battle ceased. The fighting had been
+ extraordinarily obstinate and determined on both sides, many ships had
+ been sunk, several burnt, and some captured. The sea was dotted with
+ wreckage, masts, and spars, fragments of boats and <i>débris</i> of all
+ kinds. Both fleets presented a pitiable appearance; the hulls, but
+ forty-eight hours ago so trim and smooth, were splintered and jagged,
+ port-holes were knocked into one, bulwarks carried away, and stern
+ galleries gone. The sails were riddled with shot-holes, many of the ships
+ had lost one or more masts, while the light spars had been, in most cases,
+ carried away, and many of the yards had come down owing to the destruction
+ of the running gear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In so tremendous a conflict the little <i>Fan Fan</i> could bear but a
+ small part. Cyril and Lord Oliphant agreed, at the commencement of the
+ first day's fight, that it would be useless for them to attempt to fire
+ their two little guns, but that their efforts should be entirely directed
+ against the enemy's fire-ships. During each day's battle, then, they
+ hovered round the flagship, getting out of the way whenever she was
+ engaged, as she often was, on both broadsides, and although once or twice
+ struck by stray shots, the <i>Fan Fan</i> received no serious damage. In
+ this encounter of giants, the little yacht was entirely overlooked, and
+ none of the great ships wasted a shot upon her. Two or three times each
+ day, when the Admiral's ship had beaten off her foes, a fire-ship directed
+ its course against her. Then came the <i>Fan Fan's</i> turn for action.
+ Under the pressure of her twelve oars she sped towards the fire-ship, and
+ on reaching her a grapnel was thrown over the end of the bowsprit, and by
+ the efforts of the rowers her course was changed, so that she swept
+ harmlessly past the flagship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twice when the vessels were coming down before the wind at a rate of speed
+ that rendered it evident that the efforts of the men at the oars would be
+ insufficient to turn her course, the <i>Fan Fan</i> was steered alongside,
+ grapnels were thrown, and, headed by Lord Oliphant and Cyril, the crew
+ sprang on board, cut down or drove overboard the few men who were in
+ charge of her. Then, taking the helm and trimming the sails, they directed
+ her against one of the Dutch men-of-war, threw the grapnels on board,
+ lighted the train, leapt back into the <i>Fan Fan</i>, rowed away, and
+ took up their place near the Admiral, the little craft being greeted with
+ hearty cheers by the whole ship's company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The afternoon was spent in repairing damages as far as practicable, but
+ even the Duke saw it was impossible to continue the fight. The Dutch had
+ received a reinforcement while the fighting was going on that morning, and
+ although the English had inflicted terrible damage upon the Dutch Fleet,
+ their own loss in ships was greater than that which they had caused their
+ adversaries. A considerable portion of their vessels were not in a
+ condition to renew the battle, and the carpenters had hard work to save
+ them from sinking outright. Albemarle himself embarked on the <i>Fan Fan</i>,
+ and sailed from ship to ship, ascertaining the condition of each, and the
+ losses its crew had suffered. As soon as night fell, the vessels most
+ disabled were ordered to sail for England as they best could. The crew of
+ three which were totally dismasted and could hardly be kept afloat, were
+ taken out and divided between the twenty-eight vessels which alone
+ remained in a condition to renew the fight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These three battered hulks were, early the next morning, set on fire, and
+ the rest of the Fleet, in good order and prepared to give battle, followed
+ their companions that had sailed on the previous evening. The Dutch
+ followed, but at a distance, thinking to repair their damages still
+ farther before they again engaged. In the afternoon the sails of a
+ squadron were seen ahead, and a loud cheer ran from ship to ship, for all
+ knew that this was Prince Rupert coming up with the White Squadron. A
+ serious loss, however, occurred a few minutes afterwards. The <i>Royal
+ Prince</i>, the largest and most powerful vessel in the Fleet, which was
+ somewhat in rear of the line, struck on the sands. The tide being with
+ them and the wind light, the rest of the Fleet tried in vain to return to
+ her assistance, and as the Dutch Fleet were fast coming up, and some of
+ the fire-ships making for the <i>Royal Prince</i>, they were forced to
+ give up the attempt to succour her, and Sir George Ayscue, her captain,
+ was obliged to haul down his flag and surrender.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the White Squadron joined the remnant of the Fleet the whole
+ advanced against the Dutch, drums beating and trumpets sounding, and twice
+ made their way through the enemy's line. But it was now growing dark, and
+ the third day's battle came to an end. The next morning it was seen that
+ the Dutch, although considerably stronger than the English, were almost
+ out of sight. The latter at once hoisted sail and pursued, and, at eight
+ o'clock, came up with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Dutch finding the combat inevitable, the terrible fight was renewed,
+ and raged, without intermission, until seven in the evening. Five times
+ the British passed through the line of the Dutch. On both sides many ships
+ fell out of the fighting line wholly disabled. Several were sunk, and some
+ on both sides forced to surrender, being so battered as to be unable to
+ withdraw from the struggle. Prince Rupert's ship was wholly disabled, and
+ that of Albemarle almost as severely damaged, and the battle, like those
+ of the preceding days, ended without any decided advantage on either side.
+ Both nations claimed the victory, but equally without reason. The Dutch
+ historians compute our loss at sixteen men-of-war, of which ten were sunk
+ and six taken, while we admitted only a loss of nine ships, and claimed
+ that the Dutch lost fifteen men-of-war. Both parties acknowledged that it
+ was the most terrible battle fought in this, or any other modern war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Witte, who at that time was at the head of the Dutch Republic, and who
+ was a bitter enemy of the English, owned, some time afterwards, to Sir
+ William Temple, "that the English got more glory to their nation through
+ the invincible courage of their seamen during those engagements than by
+ the two victories of this war, and that he was sure that his own fleet
+ could not have been brought on to fight the fifth day, after the
+ disadvantages of the fourth, and he believed that no other nation was
+ capable of it but the English."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril took no part in the last day's engagement, for Prince Rupert, when
+ the <i>Fan Fan</i> came near him on his arrival on the previous evening,
+ returned his salute from the poop, and shouted to him that on no account
+ was he to adventure into the fight with the <i>Fan Fan</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morning after the battle ended, Lord Oliphant and Cyril rowed on
+ board Prince Rupert's ship, where every unwounded man was hard at work
+ getting up a jury-mast or patching up the holes in the hull.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Sir Cyril, I see that you have been getting my yacht knocked
+ about," he said, as they came up to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is not much damage done, sir. She has but two shot-holes in her
+ hull."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And my new mainsail spoiled. Do you know, sir, that I got a severe rating
+ from the Duke yesterday evening, on your account?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril looked surprised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I trust, sir, that I have not in any way disobeyed orders?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, it was not that. He asked after the <i>Fan Fan</i>, and said that he
+ had seen nothing of her during the day's fighting, and I said I had
+ strictly ordered you not to come into the battle. He replied, 'Then you
+ did wrong, Prince, for that little yacht of yours did yeomen's service
+ during the first two days' fighting. I told Sir Cyril to keep her near me,
+ thinking that she would be useful in carrying orders, and during those two
+ days she kept close to us, save when we were surrounded by the enemy. Five
+ times in those three days did she avert fire-ships from us. We were so
+ damaged that we could sail but slowly, and, thinking us altogether
+ unmanageable, the Dutch launched their fire-ships. The <i>Fan Fan</i>
+ rowed to meet them. Three of them were diverted from their course by a
+ rope being thrown over the bowsprit, and the crew rowing so as to turn her
+ head. On the second day there was more wind, and the fire-ships could have
+ held on their course in spite of the efforts of the men on board the <i>Fan
+ Fan</i>. Twice during the day the little boat was boldly laid alongside
+ them, while the crew boarded and captured them, and then, directing them
+ towards the Dutch ships, grappled and set them on fire. One of the
+ Dutchmen was burned, the other managed to throw off the grapnels. It was
+ all done under our eyes, and five times in the two days did my crew cheer
+ your little yacht as she came alongside. So you see, Prince, by ordering
+ her out of the fight you deprived us of the assistance of as boldly
+ handled a little craft as ever sailed.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I am quite proud of my little yacht, gentlemen, and I thank you for
+ having given her so good a christening under fire. But I must stay no
+ longer talking. Here is the despatch I have written of my share of the
+ engagement. You, Sir Cyril, will deliver this. You will now row to the
+ Duke's ship, and he will give you his despatches, which you, Lord
+ Oliphant, will deliver. I need not say that you are to make all haste to
+ the Thames. We have no ship to spare except the <i>Fan Fan</i>, for we
+ must keep the few that are still able to manoeuvre, in case the Dutch
+ should come out again before we have got the crippled ones in a state to
+ make sail. '"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taking leave of the Prince, they were at once rowed to the Duke's
+ flagship. They had a short interview with the Admiral, who praised them
+ highly for the service they had rendered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will have to tell the story of the fighting," he said, "for the
+ Prince and myself have written but few lines; we have too many matters on
+ our minds to do scribe's work. They will have heard, ere now, of the first
+ two days' fighting, for some of the ships that were sent back will have
+ arrived at Harwich before this. By to-morrow morning I hope to have the
+ Fleet so far refitted as to be able to follow you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Five minutes later, the <i>Fan Fan</i>, with every stitch of sail set, was
+ on her way to the Thames. As a brisk wind was blowing, they arrived in
+ London twenty-four hours later, and at once proceeded to the Admiralty,
+ the despatches being addressed to the Duke of York. They were immediately
+ ushered in to him. Without a word he seized the despatches, tore them
+ open, and ran his eye down them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God be praised!" he exclaimed, when he finished them. "We had feared even
+ worse intelligence, and have been in a terrible state of anxiety since
+ yesterday, when we heard from Harwich that one of the ships had come in
+ with the news that more than half the Fleet was crippled or destroyed, and
+ that twenty-eight only remained capable of continuing the battle. The only
+ hope was that the White Squadron might arrive in time, and it seems that
+ it has done so. The account of our losses is indeed a terrible one, but at
+ least we have suffered no defeat, and as the Dutch have retreated, they
+ must have suffered well-nigh as much as we have done. Come along with me
+ at once, gentlemen; I must go to the King to inform him of this great
+ news, which is vastly beyond what we could have hoped for. The Duke, in
+ his despatch, tells me that the bearers of it, Lord Oliphant and Sir Cyril
+ Shenstone, have done very great service, having, in Prince Rupert's little
+ yacht, saved his flagship no less than five times from the attacks of the
+ Dutch fire-ships."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke had ordered his carriage to be in readiness as soon as he learnt
+ that the bearers of despatches from the Fleet had arrived. It was already
+ at the door, and, taking his seat in it, with Lord Oliphant and Cyril
+ opposite to him, he was driven to the Palace, learning by the way such
+ details as they could give him of the last two days' fighting. He led them
+ at once to the King's dressing-room. Charles was already attired, for he
+ had passed a sleepless night, and had risen early.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What news, James?" he asked eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good news, brother. After two more days' fighting&mdash;and terrible
+ fighting, on both sides&mdash;the Dutch Fleet has returned to its ports."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A victory!" the King exclaimed, in delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A dearly-bought one with the lives of so many brave men, but a victory
+ nevertheless. Here are the despatches from Albemarle and Rupert. They have
+ been brought by these gentlemen, with whom you are already acquainted, in
+ Rupert's yacht. Albemarle speaks very highly of their conduct."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King took the despatches, and read them eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It has indeed been a dearly-bought victory," he said, "but it is
+ marvellous indeed how our captains and men bore themselves. Never have
+ they shown greater courage and endurance. Well may Monk say that, after
+ four days of incessant fighting and four nights spent in the labour of
+ repairing damages, the strength of all has well-nigh come to an end, and
+ that he himself can write but a few lines to tell me of what has happened,
+ leaving all details for further occasion. I thank you both, gentlemen, for
+ the speed with which you have brought me this welcome news, and for the
+ services of which the Duke of Albemarle speaks so warmly. This is the
+ second time, Sir Cyril, that my admirals have had occasion to speak of
+ great and honourable service rendered by you. Lord Oliphant, the Earl,
+ your father, will have reason to be proud when he hears you so highly
+ praised. Now, gentlemen, tell me more fully than is done in these
+ despatches as to the incidents of the fighting. I have heard something of
+ what took place in the first two days from an officer who posted up from
+ Harwich yesterday."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Oliphant related the events of the first two days, and then went on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of the last two I can say less, Your Majesty, for we took no part in,
+ having Prince Rupert's orders, given as he came up, that we should not
+ adventure into the fight. Therefore, we were but spectators, though we
+ kept on the edge of the fight and, if opportunity had offered, and we had
+ seen one of our ships too hard pressed, and threatened by fire-ships, we
+ should have ventured so far to transgress orders as to bear in and do what
+ we could on her behalf; but indeed, the smoke was so great that we could
+ see but little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was a strange sight, when, on the Prince's arrival, his ships and
+ those of the Duke's, battered as they were, bore down on the Dutch line;
+ the drums beating, the trumpets sounding, and the crews cheering loudly.
+ We saw them disappear into the Dutch line; then the smoke shut all out
+ from view, and for hours there was but a thick cloud of smoke and a
+ continuous roar of the guns. Sometimes a vessel would come out from the
+ curtain of smoke torn and disabled. Sometimes it was a Dutchman, sometimes
+ one of our own ships. If the latter, we rowed up to them and did our best
+ with planks and nails to stop the yawning holes close to the water-line,
+ while the crew knotted ropes and got up the spars and yards, and then
+ sailed back into the fight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The first day's fighting was comparatively slight, for the Dutch seemed
+ to be afraid to close with the Duke's ships, and hung behind at a
+ distance. It was not till the White Squadron came up, and the Duke turned,
+ with Prince Rupert, and fell upon his pursuers like a wounded boar upon
+ the dogs, that the battle commenced in earnest; but the last day it went
+ on for nigh twelve hours without intermission; and when at last the roar
+ of the guns ceased, and the smoke slowly cleared off, it was truly a
+ pitiful sight, so torn and disabled were the ships.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As the two fleets separated, drifting apart as it would almost seem, so
+ few were the sails now set, we rowed up among them, and for hours were
+ occupied in picking up men clinging to broken spars and wreckage, for but
+ few of the ships had so much as a single boat left. We were fortunate
+ enough to save well-nigh a hundred, of whom more than seventy were our own
+ men, the remainder Dutch. From these last we learnt that the ships of Van
+ Tromp and Ruyter had both been so disabled that they had been forced to
+ fall out of battle, and had been towed away to port. They said that their
+ Admirals Cornelius Evertz and Van der Hulst had both been killed, while on
+ our side we learnt that Admiral Sir Christopher Mings had fallen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did the Dutch Fleet appear to be as much injured as our own?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, Your Majesty. Judging by the sail set when the battle was over,
+ theirs must have been in better condition than ours, which is not
+ surprising, seeing how superior they were in force, and for the most part
+ bigger ships, and carrying more guns."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then you will have your hands full, James, or they will be ready to take
+ to sea again before we are. Next time I hope that we shall meet them with
+ more equal numbers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will do the best I can, brother," the Duke replied. "Though we have so
+ many ships sorely disabled there have been but few lost, and we can supply
+ their places with the vessels that have been building with all haste. If
+ the Dutch will give us but two months' time I warrant that we shall be
+ able to meet them in good force."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the audience was over, Cyril and his friend returned to the <i>Fan
+ Fan</i>, and after giving the crew a few hours for sleep, sailed down to
+ Sheerness, where, shortly afterwards, Prince Rupert arrived with a portion
+ of the Fleet, the rest having been ordered to Harwich, Portsmouth, and
+ other ports, so that they could be more speedily refitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the work went on almost without intermission day and night, the
+ repairs were not completed before the news arrived that the Dutch Fleet
+ had again put to sea. Two days later they arrived off our coast, where,
+ finding no fleet ready to meet them, they sailed away to France, where
+ they hoped to be joined by their French allies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days later, however, our ships began to assemble at the mouth of the
+ Thames, and on June 24th the whole Fleet was ready to take to sea. It
+ consisted of eighty men-of-war, large and small, and nineteen fire-ships.
+ Prince Rupert was in command of the Red Squadron, and the Duke of
+ Albemarle sailed with him, on board the same ship. Sir Thomas Allen was
+ Admiral of the White, and Sir Jeremiah Smith of the Blue Squadron. Cyril
+ remained on board the <i>Fan Fan</i>, Lord Oliphant returning to his
+ duties on board the flagship. Marvels had been effected by the zeal and
+ energy of the crews and dockyard men. But three weeks back, the English
+ ships had, for the most part, been crippled seemingly almost beyond
+ repair, but now, with their holes patched, with new spars, and in the
+ glory of fresh paint and new canvas, they made as brave a show as when
+ they had sailed out from the Downs a month previously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were anchored off the Nore when, late in the evening, the news came
+ out from Sheerness that a mounted messenger had just ridden in from Dover,
+ and that the Dutch Fleet had, in the afternoon, passed the town, and had
+ rounded the South Foreland, steering north.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Orders were at once issued that the Fleet should sail at daybreak, and at
+ three o'clock the next morning they were on their way down the river. At
+ ten o'clock the Dutch Fleet was seen off the North Foreland. According to
+ their own accounts they numbered eighty-eight men-of-war, with twenty-five
+ fire-ships, and were also divided into three squadrons, under De Ruyter,
+ John Evertz, and Van Tromp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The engagement began at noon by an attack by the White Squadron upon that
+ commanded by Evertz. An hour later, Prince Rupert and the Duke, with the
+ Red Squadron, fell upon De Ruyter, while that of Van Tromp, which was at
+ some distance from the others, was engaged by Sir Jeremiah Smith with the
+ Blue Squadron. Sir Thomas Allen completely defeated his opponents, killing
+ Evertz, his vice- and rear-admirals, capturing the vice-admiral of
+ Zeeland, who was with him, and burning a ship of fifty guns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Red Squadron was evenly matched by that of De Ruyter, and each vessel
+ laid itself alongside an adversary. Although De Ruyter himself and his
+ vice-admiral, Van Ness, fought obstinately, their ships in general,
+ commanded, for the most part, by men chosen for their family influence
+ rather than for either seamanship or courage, behaved but badly, and all
+ but seven gradually withdrew from the fight, and went off under all sail;
+ and De Ruyter, finding himself thus deserted, was forced also to draw off.
+ During this time, Van Tromp, whose squadron was the strongest of the three
+ Dutch divisions, was so furiously engaged by the Blue Squadron, which was
+ the weakest of the English divisions, that he was unable to come to the
+ assistance of his consorts; when, however, he saw the defeat of the rest
+ of the Dutch Fleet, he, too, was obliged to draw off, lest he should have
+ the whole of the English down upon him, and was able the more easily to do
+ so as darkness was closing in when the battle ended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Dutch continued their retreat during the night, followed at a distance
+ by the Red Squadron, which was, next morning, on the point of overtaking
+ them, when the Dutch sought refuge by steering into the shallows, which
+ their light draught enabled them to cross, while the deeper English ships
+ were unable to follow. Great was the wrath and disappointment of the
+ English when they saw themselves thus baulked of reaping the full benefit
+ of the victory. Prince Rupert shouted to Cyril, who, in the <i>Fan Fan</i>,
+ had taken but small share in the engagement, as the fire-ships had not
+ played any conspicuous part in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Cyril, we can go no farther, but do you pursue De Ruyter and show him
+ in what contempt we hold him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril lifted his hat to show that he heard and understood the order. Then
+ he ordered his men to get out their oars, for the wind was very light,
+ and, amidst loud cheering, mingled with laughter, from the crews of the
+ vessels that were near enough to hear Prince Rupert's order, the <i>Fan
+ Fan</i> rowed out from the English line in pursuit of the Dutch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI &mdash; LONDON IN FLAMES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The sailors laughed and joked as they rowed away from the Fleet, but the
+ old boatswain shook his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall have to be careful, Sir Cyril," he said. "It is like a small cur
+ barking at the heels of a bull&mdash;it is good fun enough for a bit, but
+ when the bull turns, perchance the dog will find himself thrown high in
+ the air."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril nodded. He himself considered Prince Rupert's order to be beyond all
+ reason, and given only in the heat of his anger at De Ruyter having thus
+ escaped him, and felt that it was very likely to cost the lives of all on
+ board the <i>Fan Fan</i>. However, there was nothing to do but to carry it
+ out. It seemed to him that the boatswain's simile was a very apt one, and
+ that, although the spectacle of the <i>Fan Fan</i> worrying the great
+ Dutch battle-ship might be an amusing one to the English spectators, it
+ was likely to be a very serious adventure for her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Ruyter's ship, which was in the rear of all the other Dutch vessels,
+ was but a mile distant when the <i>Fan Fan</i> started, and as the wind
+ was so light that it scarce filled her sails, the yacht approached her
+ rapidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are within half a mile now, your honour," the boatswain said. "I
+ should say we had better go no nearer if we don't want to be blown out of
+ the water."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; I think we may as well stop rowing now, and get the guns to work.
+ There are only those two cannon in her stern ports which can touch us
+ here. She will scarcely come up in the wind to give us a broadside. She is
+ moving so slowly through the water that it would take her a long time to
+ come round, and De Ruyter would feel ashamed to bring his great flag-ship
+ round to crush such a tiny foe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boatswain went forward to the guns, round which the men, after laying
+ in their oars, clustered in great glee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now," he said, "you have got to make those two guns in the stern your
+ mark. Try and send your shots through the port-holes. It will be a waste
+ to fire them at the hull, for the balls would not penetrate the thick
+ timber that she is built of. Remember, the straighter you aim the more
+ chance there is that the Dutch won't hit us. Men don't stop to aim very
+ straight when they are expecting a shot among them every second. We will
+ fire alternately, and one gun is not to fire until the other is loaded
+ again. I will lay the first gun myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a good shot, and the crew cheered as they saw the splinters fly at
+ the edge of the port-hole. Shot after shot was fired with varying success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Dutch made no reply, and seemed to ignore the presence of their tiny
+ foe. The crew were, for the most part, busy aloft repairing damages, and
+ after half an hour's firing, without eliciting a reply, the boatswain went
+ aft to Cyril, and suggested that they should now aim at the spars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A lucky shot might do a good deal of damage, sir," he said. "The weather
+ is fine enough at present, but there is no saying when a change may come,
+ and if we could weaken one of the main spars it might be the means of her
+ being blown ashore, should the wind spring up in the right direction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril assented, and fire was now directed at the masts. A few ropes were
+ cut away, but no serious damage was effected until a shot struck one of
+ the halliard blocks of the spanker, and the sail at once ran down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It has taken a big bit out of the mast, too," the boatswain called
+ exultingly to Cyril. "I think that will rouse the Dutchmen up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A minute later it was evident that the shot had at least had that effect.
+ Two puffs of smoke spirted out from the stern of the Dutch flagship, and,
+ simultaneously with the roar of the guns, came the hum of two heavy shot
+ flying overhead. Delighted at having excited the Dutchmen's wrath at last,
+ the crew of the <i>Fan Fan</i> took off their hats and gave a loud cheer,
+ and then, more earnestly than before, settled down to work; their guns
+ aimed now, as at first, at the port-holes. Four or five shots were
+ discharged from each of the little guns before the Dutch were ready again.
+ Then came the thundering reports. The <i>Fan Fan's</i> topmast was carried
+ away by one of the shot, but the other went wide. Two or three men were
+ told to cut away the wreckage, and the rest continued their fire. One of
+ the next shots of the enemy was better directed. It struck the deck close
+ to the foot of the mast, committed great havoc in Cyril's cabin, and
+ passed out through the stern below the water-line. Cyril leapt down the
+ companion as he heard the crash, shouting to the boatswain to follow him.
+ The water was coming through the hole in a great jet. Cyril seized a
+ pillow and&mdash;stuffed it into the shot-hole, being drenched from head
+ to foot in the operation. One of the sailors had followed the boatswain,
+ and Cyril called him to his assistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Get out the oars at once," he said to the boatswain. "Another shot like
+ this and she will go down. Get a piece cut off a spar and make a plug.
+ There is no holding this pillow in its place, and the water comes in fast
+ still."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sailor took Cyril's post while he ran up on deck and assisted in
+ cutting the plug; this was roughly shaped to the size of the hole, and
+ then driven in. It stopped the rush of the water, but a good deal still
+ leaked through.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time this was done the <i>Fan Fan</i> had considerably increased
+ her distance from De Ruyter. Four or five more shots were fired from the
+ Dutch ship. The last of these struck the mast ten feet above the deck,
+ bringing it down with a crash. Fortunately, none of the crew were hurt,
+ and, dropping the oars, they hauled the mast alongside, cut the sail from
+ its fastening to the hoops and gaff, and then severed the shrouds and
+ allowed the mast to drift away, while they again settled themselves to the
+ oars. Although every man rowed his hardest, the <i>Fan Fan</i> was half
+ full of water before she reached the Fleet, which was two miles astern of
+ them when they first began to row.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well done, <i>Fan Fan</i>!" Prince Rupert shouted, as the little craft
+ came alongside. "Have you suffered any damage besides your spars? I see
+ you are low in the water."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We were shot through our stern, sir; we put in a plug, but the water
+ comes in still. Will you send a carpenter on board? For I don't think she
+ will float many minutes longer unless we get the hole better stopped."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince gave some orders to an officer standing by him. The latter
+ called two or three sailors and bade them bring some short lengths of
+ thick hawser, while a strong party were set to reeve tackle to the
+ mainyard. As soon as the hawsers, each thirty feet in length, were
+ brought, they were dropped on to the deck of the <i>Fan Fan</i>, and the
+ officer told the crew to pass them under her, one near each end, and to
+ knot the hawsers. By the time this was done, two strong tackles were
+ lowered and fixed to the hawsers, and the crew ordered to come up on to
+ the ship. The tackles were then manned and hauled on by strong parties,
+ and the <i>Fan Fan</i> was gradually raised. The boatswain went below
+ again and knocked out the plug, and, as the little yacht was hoisted up,
+ the water ran out of it. As soon as the hole was above the water-level,
+ the tackle at the bow was gradually slackened off until she lay with her
+ fore-part in the water, which came some distance up her deck. The
+ carpenter then slung himself over the stern, and nailed, first a piece of
+ tarred canvas, and then a square of plank, over the hole. Then the stern
+ tackle was eased off, and the <i>Fan Fan</i> floated on a level keel. Her
+ crew went down to her again, and, in half an hour, pumped her free of
+ water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time, the results of the victory were known. On the English side,
+ the <i>Resolution</i> was the only ship lost, she having been burnt by a
+ Dutch fire-ship; three English captains, and about three hundred men were
+ killed. On the other hand, the Dutch lost twenty ships, four admirals, a
+ great many of their captains, and some four thousand men. It was, indeed,
+ the greatest and most complete victory gained throughout the war. Many of
+ the British ships had suffered a good deal, that which carried the Duke's
+ flag most of all, for it had been so battered in the fight with De Ruyter
+ that the Duke and Prince Rupert had been obliged to leave her, and to
+ hoist their flags upon another man-of-war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning the Fleet sailed to Schonevelt, which was the usual <i>rendezvous</i>
+ of the Dutch Fleet, and there remained some time, altogether undisturbed
+ by the enemy. The <i>Fan Fan</i> was here thoroughly repaired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On July 29th they sailed for Ulic, where they arrived on August 7th, the
+ wind being contrary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Learning that there was a large fleet of merchantmen lying between the
+ islands of Ulic and Schelling, guarded by but two men-of-war, and that
+ there were rich magazines of goods on these islands, it was determined to
+ attack them. Four small frigates, of a slight draught of water, and five
+ fire-ships, were selected for the attack, together with the boats of the
+ Fleet, manned by nine hundred men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the evening of the 8th, Cyril was ordered to go, in the <i>Fan Fan</i>,
+ to reconnoitre the position of the Dutch. He did not sail until after
+ nightfall, and, on reaching the passage between the islands, he lowered
+ his sails, got out his oars, and drifted with the tide silently down
+ through the Dutch merchant fleet, where no watch seemed to be kept, and in
+ the morning carried the news to Sir Robert Holmes, the commander of the
+ expedition, who had anchored a league from the entrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had sounded the passage as he went through, and it was found that
+ two of the frigates could not enter it. These were left at the anchorage,
+ and, on arriving at the mouth of the harbour, the <i>Tiger</i>, Sir Robert
+ Holmes's flagship, was also obliged to anchor, and he came on board the <i>Fan
+ Fan</i>, on which he hoisted his flag. The captains of the other ships
+ came on board, and it was arranged that the <i>Pembroke</i>, which had but
+ a small draught of water, should enter at once with the five fire-ships.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attack was completely successful. Two of the fire-ships grappled with
+ the men-of-war and burnt them, while three great merchantmen were
+ destroyed by the others. Then the boats dashed into the fleet, and, with
+ the exception of four or five merchantmen and four privateers, who took
+ refuge in a creek, defended by a battery, the whole of the hundred and
+ seventy merchantmen, the smallest of which was not less than 200 tons
+ burden, and all heavily laden, were burned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day, Sir Robert Holmes landed eleven companies of troops on the
+ Island of Schonevelt and burnt Bandaris, its principal town, with its
+ magazines and store-houses, causing a loss to the Dutch, according to
+ their own admission, of six million guilders. This, and the loss of the
+ great Fleet, inflicted a very heavy blow upon the commerce of Holland. The
+ <i>Fan Fan</i> had been hit again by a shot from one of the batteries,
+ and, on her rejoining the Fleet, Prince Rupert determined to send her to
+ England so that she could be thoroughly repaired and fitted out again.
+ Cyril's orders were to take her to Chatham, and to hand her over to the
+ dockyard authorities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not think the Dutch will come out and fight us again this autumn,
+ Sir Cyril, so you can take your ease in London as it pleases you. We are
+ now halfway through August, and it will probably be at least a month after
+ your arrival before the <i>Fan Fan</i> is fit for sea again. It may be a
+ good deal longer than that, for they are busy upon the repairs of the
+ ships sent home after the battle, and will hardly take any hands off these
+ to put on to the <i>Fan Fan</i>. In October we shall all be coming home
+ again, so that, until next spring, it is hardly likely that there will be
+ aught doing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril accordingly returned to London. The wind was contrary, and it was
+ not until the last day of August that he dropped anchor in the Medway.
+ After spending a night at Chatham, he posted up to London the next
+ morning, and, finding convenient chambers in the Savoy, he installed
+ himself there, and then proceeded to the house of the Earl of Wisbech, to
+ whom he was the bearer of a letter from his son. Finding that the Earl and
+ his family were down at his place near Sevenoaks, he went into the City,
+ and spent the evening at Captain Dave's, having ordered his servant to
+ pack a small valise, and bring it with the two horses in the morning. He
+ had gone to bed but an hour when he was awoke by John Wilkes knocking at
+ his door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is a great fire burning not far off, Sir Cyril. A man who ran past
+ told me it was in Pudding Lane, at the top of Fish Street. The Captain is
+ getting up, and is going out to see it; for, with such dry weather as we
+ have been having, there is no saying how far it may go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril sprang out of his bed and dressed. Captain Dave, accustomed to slip
+ on his clothes in a hurry, was waiting for him, and, with John Wilkes,
+ they sallied out. There was a broad glare of light in the sky, and the
+ bells of many of the churches were ringing out the fire-alarm. As they
+ passed, many people put their heads out from windows and asked where the
+ fire was. In five minutes they approached the scene. A dozen houses were
+ blazing fiercely, while, from those near, the inhabitants were busily
+ removing their valuables. The Fire Companies, with their buckets, were
+ already at work, and lines of men were formed down to the river and were
+ passing along buckets from hand to hand. Well-nigh half the water was
+ spilt, however, before it arrived at the fire, and, in the face of such a
+ body of flame, it seemed to make no impression whatever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They might as well attempt to pump out a leaky ship with a child's
+ squirt," the Captain said. "The fire will burn itself out, and we must
+ pray heaven that the wind drops altogether; 'tis not strong, but it will
+ suffice to carry the flames across these narrow streets. 'Tis lucky that
+ it is from the east, so there is little fear that it will travel in our
+ direction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They learnt that the fire had begun in the house of Faryner, the King's
+ baker, though none knew how it had got alight. It was not long before the
+ flames leapt across the lane, five or six houses catching fire almost at
+ the same moment. A cry of dismay broke from the crowd, and the fright of
+ the neighbours increased. Half-clad women hurried from their houses,
+ carrying their babes, and dragging their younger children out. Men
+ staggered along with trunks of clothing and valuables. Many wrung their
+ hands helplessly, while the City Watch guarded the streets leading to
+ Pudding Lane, so as to prevent thieves and vagabonds from taking advantage
+ of the confusion to plunder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With great rapidity the flames spread from house to house. A portion of
+ Fish Street was already invaded, and the Church of St. Magnus in danger.
+ The fears of the people increased in proportion to the advance of the
+ conflagration. The whole neighbourhood was now alarmed, and, in all the
+ streets round, people were beginning to remove their goods. The river
+ seemed to be regarded by all as the safest place of refuge. The boats from
+ the various landing-places had already come up, and these were doing a
+ thriving trade by taking the frightened people, with what goods they
+ carried, to lighters and ships moored in the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lines of men passing buckets had long since broken up, it being too
+ evident that their efforts were not of the slightest avail. The wind had,
+ in the last two hours, rapidly increased in strength, and was carrying the
+ burning embers far and wide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril and his companions had, after satisfying their first curiosity, set
+ to work to assist the fugitives, by aiding them to carry down their goods
+ to the waterside. Cyril was now between eighteen and nineteen, and had
+ grown into a powerful, young fellow, having, since he recovered from the
+ Plague, grown fast and widened out greatly. He was able to shoulder heavy
+ trunks, and to carry them down without difficulty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By six o'clock, however, all were exhausted by their labours, and Captain
+ Dave's proposal, that they should go back and get breakfast and have a
+ wash, was at once agreed to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this time the greater part of Fish Street was in flames, the Church of
+ St. Magnus had fallen, and the flames had spread to many of the streets
+ and alleys running west. The houses on the Bridge were blazing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, father, what is the news?" Nellie exclaimed, as they entered. "What
+ have you been doing? You are all blackened, like the men who carry out the
+ coals from the ships. I never saw such figures."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have been helping people to carry their goods down to the water,
+ Nellie. The news is bad. The fire is a terrible one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That we can see, father. Mother and I were at the window for hours after
+ you left, and the whole sky seemed ablaze. Do you think that there is any
+ danger of its coming here?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The wind is taking the flames the other way, Nellie, but in spite of that
+ I think that there is danger. The heat is so great that the houses catch
+ on this side, and we saw, as we came back, that it had travelled
+ eastwards. Truly, I believe that if the wind keeps on as it is at present,
+ the whole City will be destroyed. However, we will have a wash first and
+ then some breakfast, of which we are sorely in need. Then we can talk over
+ what had best be done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little was said during breakfast. The apprentices had already been out,
+ and so excited were they at the scenes they had witnessed that they had
+ difficulty in preserving their usual quiet and submissive demeanour.
+ Captain Dave was wearied with his unwonted exertions. Mrs. Dowsett and
+ Nellie both looked pale and anxious, and Cyril and John Wilkes were
+ oppressed by the terrible scene of destruction and the widespread misery
+ they had witnessed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When breakfast was over, Captain Dave ordered the apprentices on no
+ account to leave the premises. They were to put up the shutters at once,
+ and then to await orders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you think we had better do, Cyril?" he said, when the boys had
+ left the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should say that you had certainly better go on board a ship, Captain
+ Dave. There is time to move now quietly, and to get many things taken on
+ board, but if there were a swift change of wind the flames would come down
+ so suddenly that you would have no time to save anything. Do you know of a
+ captain who would receive you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly; I know of half a dozen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then the first thing is to secure a boat before they are all taken up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will go down to the stairs at once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then I should say, John, you had better go off with Captain Dave, and, as
+ soon as he has arranged with one of the captains, come back to shore. Let
+ the waterman lie off in the stream, for if the flames come this way there
+ will be a rush for boats, and people will not stop to ask to whom they
+ belong. It will be better still to take one of the apprentices with you,
+ leave him at the stairs till you return, and then tie up to a ship till we
+ hail him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That will be the best plan," Captain Dave said. "Now, wife, you and
+ Nellie and the maid had best set to work at once packing up all your best
+ clothes and such other things as you may think most valuable. We shall
+ have time, I hope, to make many trips."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "While you are away, I will go along the street and see whether the fire
+ is making any way in this direction," Cyril said. "Of course if it's
+ coming slowly you will have time to take away a great many things. And we
+ may even hope that it may not come here at all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taking one of the apprentices, Captain Dave and John at once started for
+ the waterside, while Cyril made his way westward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Already, people were bringing down their goods from most of the houses.
+ Some acted as if they believed that if they took the goods out of the
+ houses they would be safe, and great piles of articles of all kinds almost
+ blocked the road. Weeping women and frightened children sat on these piles
+ as if to guard them. Some stood at their doors wringing their hands
+ helplessly; others were already starting eastward laden with bundles and
+ boxes, occasionally looking round as if to bid farewell to their homes.
+ Many of the men seemed even more confused and frightened than the women,
+ running hither and thither without purpose, shouting, gesticulating, and
+ seeming almost distraught with fear and grief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had not gone far when he saw that the houses on both sides of the
+ street, at the further end, were already in flames. He was obliged to
+ advance with great caution, for many people were recklessly throwing goods
+ of all kinds from the windows, regardless of whom they might fall upon,
+ and without thought of how they were to be carried away. He went on until
+ close to the fire, and stood for a time watching. The noise was
+ bewildering. Mingled with the roar of the flames, the crackling of
+ woodwork, and the heavy crashes that told of the fall of roofs or walls,
+ was the clang of the alarm-bells, shouts, cries, and screams. The fire
+ spread steadily, but with none of the rapidity with which he had seen it
+ fly along from house to house on the other side of the conflagration. The
+ houses, however, were largely composed of wood. The balconies generally
+ caught first, and the fire crept along under the roofs, and sometimes a
+ shower of tiles, and a burst of flames, showed that it had advanced there,
+ while the lower portion of the house was still intact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is it coming, Cyril?" Mrs. Dowsett asked, when he returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is coming steadily," he said, "and can be stopped by nothing short of
+ a miracle. Can I help you in any way?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," she said; "we have packed as many things as can possibly be carried.
+ It is well that your things are all at your lodging, Cyril, and beyond the
+ risk of this danger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It would have mattered little about them," he said. "I could have
+ replaced them easily enough. That is but a question of money. And now, in
+ the first place, I will get the trunks and bundles you have packed
+ downstairs. That will save time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Assisted by the apprentice and Nellie, Cyril got all the things
+ downstairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How long have we, do you think?" Nellie asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should say that in three hours the fire will be here," he said. "It may
+ be checked a little at the cross lanes; but I fear that three hours is all
+ we can hope for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as they had finished taking down the trunks, Captain Dave and John
+ Wilkes arrived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have arranged the affair," the former said. "My old friend, Dick
+ Watson, will take us in his ship; she lies but a hundred yards from the
+ stairs. Now, get on your mantle and hood, Nellie, and bring your mother
+ and maid down."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three women were soon at the foot of the stairs, and Mrs. Dowsett's
+ face showed signs of tears; but, though pale, she was quiet and calm, and
+ the servant, a stout wench, had gained confidence from her mistress's
+ example. As soon as they were ready, the three men each shouldered a
+ trunk. The servant and the apprentice carried one between them. Mrs.
+ Dowsett and her daughter took as many bundles as they could carry. It was
+ but five minutes' walk down to the stairs. The boat was lying twenty yards
+ out in the stream, fastened up to a lighter, with the apprentice and
+ waterman on board. It came at once alongside, and in five minutes they
+ reached the <i>Good Venture</i>. As soon as the women had ascended the
+ accommodation ladder, some sailors ran down and helped to carry up the
+ trunks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Empty them all out in the cabin," Captain Dave said to his wife; "we will
+ take them back with us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as he had seen the ladies into the cabin, Captain Watson called
+ his son Frank, who was his chief mate, and half a dozen of his men. These
+ carried the boxes, as fast as they were emptied, down into the boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We will all go ashore together," he said to Captain Dave. "I was a fool
+ not to think of it before. We will soon make light work of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as they reached the house, some of the sailors were sent off with
+ the remaining trunks and bundles, while the others carried upstairs those
+ they had brought, and quickly emptied into them the remaining contents of
+ the drawers and linen press. So quickly and steadily did the work go on,
+ that no less than six trips were made to the <i>Good Venture</i> in the
+ next three hours, and at the end of that time almost everything portable
+ had been carried away, including several pieces of valuable furniture, and
+ a large number of objects brought home by Captain Dave from his various
+ voyages. The last journey, indeed, was devoted to saving some of the most
+ valuable contents of the store. Captain Dave, delighted at having saved so
+ much, would not have thought of taking more, but Captain Watson would not
+ hear of this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is time for one more trip, old friend," he said, "and there are
+ many things in your store that are worth more than their weight in silver.
+ I will take my other two hands this time, and, with the eight men and our
+ five selves, we shall be able to bring a good load."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trunks were therefore this time packed with ship's instruments, and
+ brass fittings of all kinds, to the full weight that could be carried. All
+ hands then set to work, and, in a very short time, a great proportion of
+ the portable goods were carried from the store-house into an arched cellar
+ beneath it. By the time that they were ready to start there were but six
+ houses between them and the fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish we had another three hours before us," Captain Watson said. "It
+ goes to one's heart to leave all this new rope and sail cloth, good
+ blocks, and other things, to be burnt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There have been better things than that burnt to-day, Watson. Few men
+ have saved as much as I have, thanks to your assistance and that of these
+ stout sailors of yours. Why, the contents of these twelve boxes are worth
+ as much as the whole of the goods remaining."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sailors' loads were so heavy that they had to help each other to get
+ them upon their shoulders, and the other five were scarcely less weighted;
+ and, short as was the distance, all had to rest several times on the way
+ to the stairs, setting their burdens upon window-sills, or upon boxes
+ scattered in the streets. One of the ship's boats had, after the first
+ trip, taken the place of the light wherry, but even this was weighted down
+ to the gunwale when the men and the goods were all on board. After the
+ first two trips, the contents of the boxes had been emptied on deck, and
+ by the time the last arrived the three women had packed away in the empty
+ cabins all the clothing, linen, and other articles, that had been taken
+ below. Captain Watson ordered a stiff glass of grog to be given to each of
+ the sailors, and then went down with the others into the main cabin, where
+ the steward had already laid the table for a meal, and poured out five
+ tumblers of wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have not had so tough a job since I was before the mast," he said.
+ "What say you, Captain Dave?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It has been a hard morning's work, indeed, Watson, and, in truth, I feel
+ fairly spent. But though weary in body I am cheerful in heart. It seemed
+ to me at breakfast-time that we should save little beyond what we stood
+ in, and now I have rescued well-nigh everything valuable that I have. I
+ should have grieved greatly had I lost all those mementos that it took me
+ nigh thirty years to gather, and those pieces of furniture that belonged
+ to my father I would not have lost for any money. Truly, it has been a
+ noble salvage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Dowsett and Nellie now joined them. They had quite recovered their
+ spirits, and were delighted at the unexpected rescue of so many things
+ precious to them, and Captain Watson was overwhelmed by their thanks for
+ what he had done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the meal was over they sat quietly talking for a time, and then
+ Cyril proposed that they should row up the river and see what progress the
+ fire was making above the Bridge. Mrs. Dowsett, however, was too much
+ fatigued by her sleepless night and the troubles and emotions of the
+ morning to care about going. Captain Dave said that he was too stiff to do
+ anything but sit quiet and smoke a pipe, and that he would superintend the
+ getting of their things on deck a little ship-shape. Nellie embraced the
+ offer eagerly, and young Watson, who was a well-built and handsome fellow,
+ with a pleasant face and manner, said that he would go, and would take a
+ couple of hands to row. The tide had just turned to run up when they set
+ out. Cyril asked the first mate to steer, and he sat on one side of him
+ and Nellie on the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will have to mind your oars, lads," Frank Watson said. "The river is
+ crowded with boats."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They crossed over to the Southwark side, as it would have been dangerous
+ to pass under the arches above which the houses were burning. The flames,
+ however, had not spread right across the bridge, for the houses were built
+ only over the piers, and the openings at the arches had checked the
+ flames, and at these points numbers of men were drawing water in buckets
+ and throwing it over the fronts of the houses, or passing them, by ropes,
+ to other men on the roofs, which were kept deluged with water. Hundreds of
+ willing hands were engaged in the work, for the sight of the tremendous
+ fire on the opposite bank filled people with terror lest the flames should
+ cross the bridge and spread to the south side of the river. The warehouses
+ and wharves on the bank were black with spectators, who looked with
+ astonishment and awe at the terrible scene of destruction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not until they passed under the bridge that the full extent of the
+ conflagration was visible. The fire had made its way some distance along
+ Thames Street, and had spread far up into the City. Gracechurch Street and
+ Lombard Street were in flames, and indeed the fire seemed to have extended
+ a long distance further; but the smoke was so dense, that it was difficult
+ to make out the precise point that it had reached. The river was a
+ wonderful sight. It was crowded with boats and lighters, all piled up with
+ goods, while along the quays from Dowgate to the Temple, crowds of people
+ were engaged in placing what goods they had saved on board lighters and
+ other craft. Many of those in the boats seemed altogether helpless and
+ undecided as to what had best be done, and drifted along with the tide,
+ but the best part were making either for the marshes at Lambeth or the
+ fields at Millbank, there to land their goods, the owners of the boats
+ refusing to keep them long on board, as they desired to return by the next
+ tide to fetch away other cargoes, being able to obtain any price they
+ chose to demand for their services.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the boats were floating goods and wreckage of all kinds, charred
+ timber that had fallen from the houses on the bridge, and from the
+ warehouses by the quays, bales of goods, articles of furniture, bedding,
+ and other matters. At times, a sudden change of wind drove a dense smoke
+ across the water, flakes of burning embers and papers causing great
+ confusion among the boats, and threatening to set the piles of goods on
+ fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Frank Watson's suggestion, they landed at the Temple, after having been
+ some two hours on the river. Going up into Fleet Street, they found a
+ stream of carts and other vehicles proceeding westward, all piled with
+ furniture and goods, mostly of a valuable kind. The pavements were
+ well-nigh blocked with people, all journeying in the same direction, laden
+ with their belongings. With difficulty they made their way East as far as
+ St. Paul's. The farther end of Cheapside was already in flames, and they
+ learnt that the fire had extended as far as Moorfields. It was said that
+ efforts had been made to pull down houses and so check its progress, but
+ that there was no order or method, and that no benefit was gained by the
+ work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After looking on at the scene for some time, they returned to Fleet
+ Street. Frank Watson went down with Nellie to the boat, while Cyril went
+ to his lodgings in the Savoy. Here he found his servant anxiously awaiting
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did not bring the horses this morning, sir," he said. "I heard that
+ there was a great fire, and went on foot as far as I could get, but,
+ finding that I could not pass, I thought it best to come back here and
+ await your return."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quite right, Reuben; you could not have got the horses to me unless you
+ had ridden round the walls and come in at Aldgate, and they would have
+ been useless had you brought them. The house at which I stayed last night
+ is already burnt to the ground. You had better stay here for the present,
+ I think. There is no fear of the fire extending beyond the City. Should
+ you find that it does so, pack my clothes in the valises, take the horses
+ down to Sevenoaks, and remain at the Earl's until you hear from me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having arranged this, Cyril went down to the Savoy stairs, where he found
+ the boat waiting for him, and then they rowed back to London Bridge,
+ where, the force of the tide being now abated, they were able to row
+ through and get to the <i>Good Venture</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had but little sleep that night. Gradually the fire worked its way
+ eastward until it was abreast of them. The roaring and crackling of the
+ flames was prodigious. Here and there the glare was diversified by columns
+ of a deeper red glow, showing where warehouses, filled with pitch, tar,
+ and oil, were in flames. The heavy crashes of falling buildings were
+ almost incessant. Occasionally they saw a church tower or steeple, that
+ had stood for a time black against the glowing sky, become suddenly
+ wreathed in flames, and, after burning for a time, fall with a crash that
+ could be plainly heard above the general roar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Surely such a fire was never seen before!" Captain Dave said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not since Rome was burnt, I should think," Cyril replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How long was that ago, Cyril? I don't remember hearing about it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Tis fifteen hundred years or so since then, Captain Dave; but the
+ greater part of the city was destroyed, and Rome was then many times
+ bigger than London. It burnt for three days."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, this is bad enough," Captain Watson said. "Even here the heat is
+ well-nigh too great to face. Frank, you had better call the crew up and
+ get all the sails off the yards. Were a burning flake to fall on them we
+ might find it difficult to extinguish them. When they have done that, let
+ the men get all the buckets filled with water and ranged on the deck; and
+ it will be as well to get a couple of hands in the boat and let them chuck
+ water against this side. We shall have all the paint blistered off before
+ morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the night passed. Occasionally they went below for a short time, but
+ they found it impossible to sleep, and were soon up again, and felt it a
+ relief when the morning began to break.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII &mdash; AFTER THE FIRE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Daylight brought little alleviation to the horrors of the scene. The
+ flames were less vivid, but a dense pall of smoke overhung the sky. As
+ soon as they had breakfasted, Captain Watson, his son, Captain Dowsett,
+ Nellie, and Cyril took their places in the boat, and were rowed up the
+ river. An exclamation burst from them all as they saw how fast the flames
+ had travelled since the previous evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "St. Paul's is on fire!" Cyril exclaimed. "See! there are flames bursting
+ through its roof. I think, Captain Watson, if you will put me ashore at
+ the Temple, I will make my way to Whitehall, and report myself there. I
+ may be of use."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will do that," Captain Watson said. "Then I will row back to the ship
+ again. We must leave a couple of hands on board, in case some of these
+ burning flakes should set anything alight. We will land with the rest, and
+ do what we can to help these poor women and children."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will stay on board and take command, if you like, Watson," Captain Dave
+ said. "You ought to have some one there, and I have not recovered from
+ yesterday's work, and should be of little use ashore."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well, Dowsett. That will certainly be best; but I think it will be
+ prudent, before we leave, to run out a kedge with forty or fifty fathoms
+ of cable towards the middle of the stream, and then veer out the cable on
+ her anchor so as to let her ride thirty fathoms or so farther out. We left
+ six men sluicing her side and deck, but it certainly would be prudent to
+ get her out a bit farther. Even here, the heat is as much as we can
+ stand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as Cyril had landed, he hurried up into Fleet Street. He had just
+ reached Temple Bar when he saw a party of horsemen making their way
+ through the carts. A hearty cheer greeted them from the crowd, who hoped
+ that the presence of the King&mdash;for it was Charles who rode in front&mdash;was
+ a sign that vigorous steps were about to be taken to check the progress of
+ the flames. Beside the King rode the Duke of Albemarle, and following were
+ a number of other gentlemen and officers. Cyril made his way through the
+ crowd to the side of the Duke's horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can I be of any possible use, my Lord Duke?" he asked, doffing his hat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, Sir Cyril, it is you, is it? I have not seen you since you bearded De
+ Ruyter in the <i>Fan Fan</i>. Yes, you can be of use. We have five hundred
+ sailors and dockyard men behind; they have just arrived from Chatham, and
+ a thousand more have landed below the Bridge to fight the flames on that
+ side. Keep by me now, and, when we decide where to set to work, I will put
+ you under the orders of Captain Warncliffe, who has charge of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they reached the bottom of Fleet Street, the fire was halfway down
+ Ludgate Hill, and it was decided to begin operations along the bottom of
+ the Fleet Valley. The dockyard men and sailors were brought up, and
+ following them were some carts laden with kegs of powder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Warncliffe," Lord Albemarle said, as the officer came up at the head of
+ them, "Sir Cyril Shenstone is anxious to help. You know him by repute, and
+ you can trust him in any dangerous business. You had better tell off
+ twenty men under him. You have only to tell him what you want done, and
+ you can rely upon its being done thoroughly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sailors were soon at work along the line of the Fleet Ditch. All
+ carried axes, and with these they chopped down the principal beams of the
+ small houses clustered by the Ditch, and so weakened them that a small
+ charge of powder easily brought them down. In many places they met with
+ fierce opposition from the owners, who, still clinging to the faint hope
+ that something might occur to stop the progress of the fire before it
+ reached their abodes, raised vain protestations against the destruction of
+ their houses. All day the men worked unceasingly, but in vain. Driven by
+ the fierce wind, the flames swept down the opposite slope, leapt over the
+ space strewn with rubbish and beams, and began to climb Fleet Street and
+ Holborn Hill and the dense mass of houses between them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fight was renewed higher up. Beer and bread and cheese were obtained
+ from the taverns, and served out to the workmen, and these kept at their
+ task all night. Towards morning the wind had fallen somewhat. The open
+ spaces of the Temple favoured the defenders; the houses to east of it were
+ blown up, and, late in the afternoon, the progress of the flames at this
+ spot was checked. As soon as it was felt that there was no longer any fear
+ of its further advance here, the exhausted men, who had, for twenty-four
+ hours, laboured, half suffocated by the blinding smoke and by the dust
+ made by their own work, threw themselves down on the grass of the Temple
+ Gardens and slept. At midnight they were roused by their officers, and
+ proceeded to assist their comrades, who had been battling with the flames
+ on the other side of Fleet Street. They found that these too had been
+ successful; the flames had swept up to Fetter Lane, but the houses on the
+ west side had been demolished, and although, at one or two points, the
+ fallen beams caught fire, they were speedily extinguished. Halfway up
+ Fetter Lane the houses stood on both sides uninjured, for a large open
+ space round St. Andrew's, Holborn, had aided the defenders in their
+ efforts to check the flames. North of Holborn the fire had spread but
+ little, and that only among the poorer houses in Fleet Valley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ascending the hill, they found that, while the flames had overleapt the
+ City wall from Ludgate to Newgate in its progress west, the wall had
+ proved an effective barrier from the sharp corner behind Christchurch up
+ to Aldersgate and thence up to Cripplegate, which was the farthest limit
+ reached by the fire to the north. To the east, the City had fared better.
+ By the river, indeed, the destruction was complete as far as the Tower.
+ Mark Lane, however, stood, and north of this the line of destruction swept
+ westward to Leaden Hall, a massive structure at the entrance to the street
+ that took its name from it, and proved a bulwark against the flames. From
+ this point, the line of devastated ground swept round by the eastern end
+ of Throgmorton Street to the northern end of Basinghall Street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril remained with the sailors for two days longer, during which time
+ they were kept at work beating out the embers of the fire. In this they
+ were aided by a heavy fall of rain, which put an end to all fear of the
+ flames springing up again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There can be no need for you to remain longer with us, Sir Cyril,"
+ Captain Warncliffe said, at the end of the second day. "I shall have
+ pleasure in reporting to the Duke of Albemarle the good services that you
+ have rendered. Doubtless we shall remain on duty here for some time, for
+ we may have, for aught I know, to aid in the clearing away of some of the
+ ruins; but, at any rate, there can be no occasion for you to stay longer
+ with us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril afterwards learnt that the sailors and dockyard men were, on the
+ following day, sent back to Chatham. The fire had rendered so great a
+ number of men homeless and without means of subsistence, that there was an
+ abundant force on hand for the clearing away of ruins. Great numbers were
+ employed by the authorities, while many of the merchants and traders
+ engaged parties to clear away the ruins of their dwellings, in order to
+ get at the cellars below, in which they had, as soon as the danger from
+ fire was perceived, stowed away the main bulk of their goods. As soon as
+ he was released from duty, Cyril made his way to the Tower, and, hiring a
+ boat, was rowed to the <i>Good Venture</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shipping presented a singular appearance, their sides being blistered,
+ and in many places completely stripped of their paint, while in some cases
+ the spars were scorched, and the sails burnt away. There was lively
+ satisfaction at his appearance, as he stepped on to the deck of the <i>Good
+ Venture</i>, for, until he did so, he had been unrecognised, so begrimed
+ with smoke and dust was he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have been wondering about you," Captain Dave said, as he shook him by
+ the hand, "but I can scarce say we had become uneasy. We learnt that a
+ large body of seamen and others were at work blowing up houses, and as you
+ had gone to offer your services we doubted not that you were employed with
+ them. Truly you must have been having a rough time of it, for not only are
+ you dirtier than any scavenger, but you look utterly worn out and
+ fatigued."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was up-hill work the first twenty-four hours, for we worked
+ unceasingly, and worked hard, too, I can assure you, and that well-nigh
+ smothered with smoke and dust. Since then, our work has been more easy,
+ but no less dirty. In the three days I have not had twelve hours' sleep
+ altogether."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will get a tub of hot water placed in your cabin," Captain Watson said,
+ "and should advise you, when you get out from it, to turn into your bunk
+ at once. No one shall go near you in the morning until you wake of your
+ own accord."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril was, however, down to breakfast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now tell us all about the fire," Nellie said, when they had finished the
+ meal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have nothing to tell you, for I know nothing," Cyril replied. "Our work
+ was simply pulling down and blowing up houses. I had scarce time so much
+ as to look at the fire. However, as I have since been working all round
+ its course, I can tell you exactly how far it spread."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he brought his story to a conclusion, he said,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now, Captain Dave, what are you thinking of doing?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the first place, I am going ashore to look at the old house. As soon
+ as I can get men, I shall clear the ground, and begin to rebuild it. I
+ have enough laid by to start me again. I should be like a fish out of
+ water with nothing to see to. I have the most valuable part of my stock
+ still on hand here on deck, and if the cellar has proved staunch my loss
+ in goods will be small indeed, for the anchors and chains in the yard will
+ have suffered no damage. But even if the cellar has caved in, and its
+ contents are destroyed, and if, when I have rebuilt my house, I find I
+ have not enough left to replenish my stock, I am sure that I can get
+ credit from the rope- and sail-makers, and iron-masters with whom I deal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not trouble yourself about that, Captain Dave," Cyril said. "You came
+ to my help last time, and it will be my turn this time. I am sure that I
+ shall have no difficulty in getting any monies that may be required from
+ Mr. Goldsworthy, and there is nothing that will give me more pleasure than
+ to see you established again in the place that was the first where I ever
+ felt I had a home."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope that it will not be needed, lad," Captain Dave said, shaking his
+ hand warmly, "but if it should, I will not hesitate to accept your offer
+ in the spirit in which it is made, and thus add one more to the
+ obligations that I am under to you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril went ashore with Captain Dave and John Wilkes. The wall of the yard
+ was, of course, uninjured, but the gate was burnt down. The store-house,
+ which was of wood, had entirely disappeared, and the back wall of the
+ house had fallen over it and the yard. The entrance to the cellar,
+ therefore, could not be seen, and, as yet, the heat from the fallen bricks
+ was too great to attempt to clear them away to get at it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night, however, it rained heavily, and in the morning Captain Watson
+ took a party of sailors ashore, and these succeeded in clearing away the
+ rubbish sufficiently to get to the entrance of the cellar. The door was
+ covered by an iron plate, and although the wood behind this was charred it
+ had not caught fire, and on getting it open it was found that the contents
+ of the cellar were uninjured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to prevent marauders from getting at it before preparations could
+ be made for rebuilding, the rubbish was again thrown in so as to
+ completely conceal the entrance. On returning on board there was a
+ consultation on the future, held in the cabin. Captain Dave at once said
+ that he and John Wilkes must remain in town to make arrangements for the
+ rebuilding and to watch the performance of the work. Cyril warmly pressed
+ Mrs. Dowsett and Nellie to come down with him to Norfolk until the house
+ was ready to receive them, but both were in favour of remaining in London,
+ and it was settled that, next day, they should go down to Stepney, hire a
+ house and store-room there, and remove thither their goods on board the
+ ship, and the contents of the cellar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was some little difficulty in getting a house, as so many were
+ seeking for lodgings, but at last they came upon a widow who was willing
+ to let a house, upon the proviso that she was allowed to retain one room
+ for her own occupation. This being settled, Cyril that evening returned to
+ his lodging, and the next day rode down to Norfolk. There he remained
+ until the middle of May, when he received a letter from Captain Dave,
+ saying that his house was finished, and that they should move into it in a
+ fortnight, and that they all earnestly hoped he would be present. As he
+ had already been thinking of going up to London for a time, he decided to
+ accept the invitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time he had made the acquaintance of all the surrounding gentry,
+ and felt perfectly at home at Upmead. He rode frequently into Norwich,
+ and, whenever he did so, paid a visit to Mr. Harvey, whose wife had died
+ in January, never having completely recovered from the shock that she had
+ received in London. Mr. Harvey himself had aged much; he still took a
+ great interest in the welfare of the tenants of Upmead, and in Cyril's
+ proposals for the improvement of their homes, and was pleased to see how
+ earnestly he had taken up the duties of his new life. He spoke
+ occasionally of his son, of whose death he felt convinced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have never been able to obtain any news of him," he often said, "and
+ assuredly I should have heard of him had he been alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It would ease my mind to know the truth," he said, one day. "It troubles
+ me to think that, if alive, he is assuredly pursuing evil courses, and
+ that he will probably end his days on a gallows. That he will repent, and
+ turn to better courses, I have now no hope whatever. Unless he be living
+ by roguery, he would, long ere this, have written, professing repentance,
+ even if he did not feel it, and begging for assistance. It troubles me
+ much that I can find out nothing for certain of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Would it be a relief to you to know surely that he was dead?" Cyril
+ asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would rather know that he was dead than feel, as I do, that if alive,
+ he is going on sinning. One can mourn for the dead as David mourned for
+ Absalom, and trust that their sins may be forgiven them; but, uncertain as
+ I am of his death, I cannot so mourn, since it may be that he still
+ lives."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then, sir, I am in a position to set your mind at rest. I have known for
+ a long time that he died of the Plague, but I have kept it from you,
+ thinking that it was best you should still think that he might be living.
+ He fell dead beside me on the very day that I sickened of the Plague, and,
+ indeed, it was from him that I took it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Harvey remained silent for a minute or two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Tis better so," he said solemnly. "The sins of youth may be forgiven,
+ but, had he lived, his whole course might have been wicked. How know you
+ that it was he who gave you the Plague?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I met him in the street. He was tottering in his walk, and, as he came
+ up, he stumbled, and grasped me to save himself. I held him for a moment,
+ and then he slipped from my arms and fell on the pavement, and died."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Harvey looked keenly at Cyril, and was about to ask a question, but
+ checked himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is dead," he said. "God rest his soul, and forgive him his sins!
+ Henceforth I shall strive to forget that he ever lived to manhood, and
+ seek to remember him as he was when a child."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he held out his hand to Cyril, to signify that he would fain be
+ alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On arriving in London, Cyril took up his abode at his former lodgings, and
+ the next day at twelve o'clock, the hour appointed in a letter he found
+ awaiting him on his arrival, he arrived in Tower Street, having ridden
+ through the City. An army of workmen, who had come up from all parts of
+ the country, were engaged in rebuilding the town. In the main
+ thoroughfares many of the houses were already finished, and the shops
+ re-opened. In other parts less progress had been made, as the traders were
+ naturally most anxious to resume their business, and most able to pay for
+ speed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Dave's was one of the first houses completed in Tower Street, but
+ there were many others far advanced in progress. The front differed
+ materially from that of the old house, in which each story had projected
+ beyond the one below it. Inside, however, there was but little change in
+ its appearance, except that the rooms were somewhat more lofty, and that
+ there were no heavy beams across the ceilings. Captain Dave and his family
+ had moved in that morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It does not look quite like the old place," Mrs. Dowsett said, after the
+ first greetings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not quite," Cyril agreed. "The new furniture, of course, gives it a
+ different appearance as yet; but one will soon get accustomed to that, and
+ you will quickly make it home-like again. I see you have the bits of
+ furniture you saved in their old corners."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; and it will make a great difference when they get all my curiosities
+ up in their places again," Captain Dave put in. "We pulled them down
+ anyhow, and some of them will want glueing up a bit. And so your fighting
+ is over, Cyril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, it looks like it. The Dutch have evidently had enough of it. They
+ asked for peace, and as both parties consented to the King of Sweden being
+ mediator, and our representatives and those of Holland are now settling
+ affairs at Breda, peace may be considered as finally settled. We have only
+ two small squadrons now afloat; the rest are all snugly laid up. I trust
+ that there is no chance of another war between the two nations for years
+ to come."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope not, Cyril. But De Witte is a crafty knave, and is ever in close
+ alliance with Louis. Were it not for French influence the Prince of Orange
+ would soon oust him from the head of affairs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should think he would not have any power for mischief in the future,"
+ Cyril said. "It was he who brought on the last war, and, although it has
+ cost us much, it has cost the Dutch very much more, and the loss of her
+ commerce has well-nigh brought Holland to ruin. Besides, the last victory
+ we won must have lowered their national pride greatly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have not heard the reports that are about, then?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I have heard no news whatever. It takes a long time for it to travel
+ down to Norwich, and I have seen no one since I came up to town last
+ night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, there is a report that a Dutch Fleet of eighty sail has put to sea.
+ It may be that 'tis but bravado to show that, though they have begged for
+ peace, 'tis not because they are in no condition to fight. I know not how
+ this may be, but it is certain that for the last three days the Naval
+ people have been very busy, and that powder is being sent down to Chatham.
+ As for the Fleet, small as it is, it is doubtful whether it would fight,
+ for the men are in a veritable state of mutiny, having received no pay for
+ many months. Moreover, several ships were but yesterday bought by
+ Government, for what purpose it is not known, but it is conjectured they
+ are meant for fire-ships."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot but think that it is, as you say, a mere piece of bravado on the
+ part of the Dutch, Captain Dave. They could never be so treacherous as to
+ attack us when peace is well-nigh concluded, but, hurt as their pride must
+ be by the defeat we gave them, it is not unnatural they should wish to
+ show that they can still put a brave fleet on the seas, and are not driven
+ to make peace because they could not, if need be, continue the war."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now I have a piece of news for you. We are going to have a wedding
+ here before long."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am right glad to hear it," Cyril said heartily. "And who is the happy
+ man, Nellie?" he asked, turning towards where she had been standing the
+ moment before. But Nellie had fled the moment her father had opened his
+ lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is Frank Watson," her father said. "A right good lad; and her mother
+ and I are well pleased with her choice."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought that he was very attentive the few days we were on board his
+ father's ship," Cyril said. "I am not surprised to hear the news."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They have been two voyages since then, and while the <i>Good Venture</i>
+ was in the Pool, Master Frank spent most of his time down at Stepney, and
+ it was settled a fortnight since. My old friend Watson is as pleased as I
+ am. And the best part of the business is that Frank is going to give up
+ the sea and become my partner. His father owns the <i>Good Venture</i>,
+ and, being a careful man, has laid by a round sum, and he settled to give
+ him fifteen hundred pounds, which he will put into the business."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is a capital plan, Captain Dave. It will be an excellent thing for
+ you to have so young and active a partner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Watson has bought the house down at Stepney that we have been living in,
+ and Frank and Nellie are going to settle there, and Watson will make it
+ his headquarters when his ship is in port, and will, I have no doubt, take
+ up his moorings there, when he gives up the sea. The wedding is to be in a
+ fortnight's time, for Watson has set his heart on seeing them spliced
+ before he sails again, and I see no reason for delay. You must come to the
+ wedding, of course, Cyril. Indeed, I don't think Nellie would consent to
+ be married if you were not there. The girl has often spoken of you lately.
+ You see, now that she really knows what love is, and has a quiet, happy
+ life to look forward to, she feels more than ever the service you did her,
+ and the escape she had. She told the whole story to Frank before she said
+ yes, when he asked her to be his wife, and, of course, he liked her no
+ less for it, though I think it would go hard with that fellow if he ever
+ met him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The fellow died of the Plague, Captain Dave. His last action was to try
+ and revenge himself on me by giving me the infection, for, meeting me in
+ the streets, he threw his arms round me and exclaimed, 'I have given you
+ the Plague!' They were the last words he ever spoke, for he gave a hideous
+ laugh, and then dropped down dead. However, he spoke truly, for that night
+ I sickened of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then your kindness to Nellie well-nigh cost you your life," Mrs. Dowsett
+ said, laying her hand on his shoulder, while the tears stood in her eyes.
+ "And you never told us this before!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was nothing to tell," Cyril replied. "If I had not caught it from
+ him, I should have, doubtless, taken it from someone else, for I was
+ constantly in the way of it, and could hardly have hoped to escape an
+ attack. Now, Captain Dave, let us go downstairs, and see the store."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "John Wilkes and the two boys are at work there," the Captain said, as he
+ went downstairs, "and we open our doors tomorrow. I have hurried on the
+ house as fast as possible, and as no others in my business have yet
+ opened, I look to do a thriving trade at once. Watson will send all his
+ friends here, and as there is scarce a captain who goes in or out of port
+ but knows Frank, I consider that our new partner will greatly extend the
+ business."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Watson and Frank came in at supper-time, and, after spending a
+ pleasant evening, Cyril returned to his lodgings in the Strand. The next
+ day he was walking near Whitehall when a carriage dashed out at full
+ speed, and, as it came along, he caught sight of the Duke of Albemarle,
+ who looked in a state of strange confusion. His wig was awry, his coat was
+ off, and his face was flushed and excited. As his eye fell on Cyril, he
+ shouted out to the postillions to stop. As they pulled up, he shouted,&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jump in, Sir Cyril! Jump in, for your life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Astonished at this address, Cyril ran to the door, opened it, and jumped
+ in, and the Duke shouted to the postillions to go on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you think, sir?&mdash;what do you think?" roared the Duke. "Those
+ treacherous scoundrels, the Dutch, have appeared with a great Fleet of
+ seventy men-of-war, besides fire-ships, off Sheerness, this morning at
+ daybreak, and have taken the place, and Chatham lies open to them. We have
+ been bamboozled and tricked. While the villains were pretending they were
+ all for peace, they have been secretly fitting out, and there they are at
+ Sheerness. A mounted messenger brought in the news, but ten minutes ago."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have they taken Sheerness, sir?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; there were but six guns mounted on the fort, and no preparations
+ made. The ships that were there did nothing. The rascals are in mutiny&mdash;and
+ small wonder, when they can get no pay; the money voted for them being
+ wasted by the Court. It is enough to drive one wild with vexation, and,
+ had I my will, there are a dozen men, whose names are the foremost in the
+ country, whom I would hang up with my own hands. The wind is from the
+ east, and if they go straight up the Medway they may be there this
+ afternoon, and have the whole of our ships at their mercy. It is enough to
+ make Blake turn in his grave that such an indignity should be offered us,
+ though it be but the outcome of treachery on the part of the Dutch, and of
+ gross negligence on ours. But if they give us a day or two to prepare, we
+ will, at least, give them something to do before they can carry out their
+ design, and, if one could but rely on the sailors, we might even beat them
+ off; but it is doubtful whether the knaves will fight. The forts are
+ unfinished, though the money was voted for them three years since. And all
+ this is not the worst of it, for, after they have taken Chatham, there is
+ naught to prevent their coming up to London. We have had plague and we
+ have had fire, and to be bombarded by the Dutchmen would be the crowning
+ blow, and it would be like to bring about another revolution in England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They posted down to Chatham as fast as the horses could gallop. The
+ instant the news had arrived, the Duke had sent off a man, on horseback,
+ to order horses to be in readiness to change at each posting station. Not
+ a minute, therefore, was lost. In a little over two hours from the time of
+ leaving Whitehall, they drove into the dockyard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where is Sir Edward Spragge?" the Duke shouted, as he leapt from the
+ carriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He has gone down to the new forts, your Grace," an officer replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have a gig prepared at once, without the loss of a moment," the Duke
+ said. "What is being done?" he asked another officer, as the first ran
+ off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Edward has taken four frigates down to the narrow part of the river,
+ sir, and preparations have been made for placing a great chain there.
+ Several of the ships are being towed out into the river, and are to be
+ sunk in the passage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Any news of the Dutch having left Sheerness?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, sir; a shallop rowed up at noon, but was chased back again by one of
+ our pinnaces."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is better than I had hoped. Come, come, we shall make a fight for it
+ yet," and he strode away towards the landing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shall I accompany you, sir?" Cyril asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes. There is nothing for you to do until we see exactly how things
+ stand. I shall use you as my staff officer&mdash;that is, if you are
+ willing, Sir Cyril. I have carried you off without asking whether you
+ consented or no; but, knowing your spirit and quickness, I felt sure you
+ would be of use."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am at your service altogether," Cyril said, "and am glad indeed that
+ your Grace encountered me, for I should have been truly sorry to have been
+ idle at such a time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An eight-oared gig was already at the stairs, and they were rowed rapidly
+ down the river. They stopped at Upnor Castle, and found that Major Scott,
+ who was in command there, was hard at work mounting cannon and putting the
+ place in a posture of defence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will have more men from London by to-morrow night, at the latest,"
+ the Duke said, "and powder and shot in abundance was sent off yesterday.
+ We passed a train on our way down, and I told them to push on with all
+ speed. As the Dutch have not moved yet, they cannot be here until the
+ afternoon of to-morrow, and, like enough, will not attack until next day,
+ for they must come slowly, or they will lose some of their ships on the
+ sands. We will try to get up a battery opposite, so as to aid you with a
+ cross fire. I am going down to see Sir Edward Spragge now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taking their places in the boat again, they rowed round the horseshoe
+ curve down to Gillingham, and then along to the spot where the frigates
+ were moored. At the sharp bend lower down here the Duke found the Admiral,
+ and they held a long consultation together. It was agreed that the chain
+ should be placed somewhat higher up, where a lightly-armed battery on
+ either side would afford some assistance, that behind the chain the three
+ ships, the <i>Matthias</i>, the <i>Unity</i>, and the <i>Charles V.</i>,
+ all prizes taken from the Dutch, should be moored, and that the <i>Jonathan</i>
+ and <i>Fort of Honinggen</i>&mdash;also a Dutch prize&mdash;should be also
+ posted there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having arranged this, the Duke was rowed back to Chatham, there to see
+ about getting some of the great ships removed from their moorings off
+ Gillingham, up the river. To his fury, he found that, of all the eighteen
+ hundred men employed in the yard, not more than half a dozen had remained
+ at their work, the rest being, like all the townsmen, occupied in removing
+ their goods in great haste. Even the frigates that were armed had but a
+ third, at most, of their crews on board, so many having deserted owing to
+ the backwardness of their pay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night, Sir W. Coventry, Sir W. Penn, Lord Brounker, and other
+ officers and officials of the Admiralty, came down from London. Some of
+ these, especially Lord Brounker, had a hot time of it with the Duke, who
+ rated them roundly for the state of things which prevailed, telling the
+ latter that he was the main cause of all the misfortunes that might occur,
+ owing to his having dismantled and disarmed all the great ships. In spite
+ of the efforts of all these officers, but little could be done, owing to
+ the want of hands, and to the refusal of the dockyard men, and most of the
+ sailors, to do anything. A small battery of sandbags was, however, erected
+ opposite Upnor, and a few guns placed in position there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several ships were sunk in the channel above Upnor, and a few of those
+ lying off Gillingham were towed up. Little help was sent down from London,
+ for the efforts of the authorities were directed wholly to the defence of
+ the Thames. The train-bands were all under arms, fire-ships were being
+ fitted out and sent down to Gravesend, and batteries erected there and at
+ Tilbury, while several ships were sunk in the channel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Dutch remained at Sheerness from the 7th to the 12th, and had it not
+ been for the misconduct of the men, Chatham could have been put into a
+ good state for defence. As it was, but little could be effected; and when,
+ on the 12th, the Dutch Fleet were seen coming up the river, the chances of
+ successful resistance were small.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fight commenced by a Dutch frigate, commanded by Captain Brakell,
+ advancing against the chain. Carried up by a strong tide and east wind the
+ ship struck it with such force that it at once gave way. The English
+ frigates, but weakly manned, could offer but slight resistance, and the <i>Jonathan</i>
+ was boarded and captured by Brakell. Following his frigate were a host of
+ fire-ships, which at once grappled with the defenders. The <i>Matthias,
+ Unity, Charles V.</i>, and <i>Fort of Honinggen</i> were speedily in
+ flames. The light batteries on the shore were silenced by the guns of the
+ Fleet, which then anchored. The next day, six of their men-of-war, with
+ five fire-ships, advanced, exchanged broadsides, as they went along, with
+ the <i>Royal Oak</i> and presently engaged Upnor. They were received with
+ so hot a fire from the Castle, and from the battery opposite, where Sir
+ Edward Spragge had stationed himself, that, after a time, they gave up the
+ design of ascending to the dockyard, which at that time occupied a
+ position higher up the river than at present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tide was beginning to slacken, and they doubtless feared that a number
+ of fire-barges might be launched at them did they venture higher up. On
+ the way back, they launched a fire-ship at the <i>Royal Oak</i>, which was
+ commanded by Captain Douglas. The flames speedily communicated to the
+ ship, and the crew took to the boats and rowed ashore. Captain Douglas
+ refused to leave his vessel, and perished in the flames. The report given
+ by the six men-of-war decided the Dutch not to attempt anything further
+ against Chatham. On the 14th, they set fire to the hulks, the <i>Loyal
+ London</i> and the <i>Great James</i>, and carried off the hulk of the <i>Royal
+ Charles</i>, after the English had twice tried to destroy her by fire. As
+ this was the ship in which the Duke of Albemarle, then General Monk, had
+ brought the King over to England from Holland, her capture was considered
+ a special triumph for the Dutch and a special dishonour to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke of Albemarle had left Chatham before the Dutch came up. As the
+ want of crews prevented his being of any use there, and he saw that Sir
+ Edward Spragge would do all that was possible in defence of the place, he
+ posted back to London, where his presence was urgently required, a
+ complete panic reigning. Crowds assembled at Whitehall, and insulted the
+ King and his ministers as the cause of the present misfortunes, while at
+ Deptford and Wapping, the sailors and their wives paraded the streets,
+ shouting that the ill-treatment of our sailors had brought these things
+ about, and so hostile were their manifestations that the officials of the
+ Admiralty scarce dared show themselves in the streets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril had remained at Chatham, the Duke having recommended him to Sir
+ Edward Spragge, and he, with some other gentlemen and a few sailors, had
+ manned the battery opposite Upnor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great proportion of the Dutch ships were still at the Nore, as it
+ would have been dangerous to have hazarded so great a fleet in the narrow
+ water of the Medway. As it was, two of their men-of-war, on the way back
+ from Chatham, ran ashore, and had to be burnt. They had also six
+ fire-ships burnt, and lost over a hundred and fifty men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leaving Admiral Van Ness with part of the Fleet in the mouth of the
+ Thames, De Ruyter sailed first for Harwich, where he attempted to land
+ with sixteen hundred men in boats, supported by the guns of the Fleet. The
+ boats, however, failed to effect a landing, being beaten off, with
+ considerable loss, by the county Militia; and Ruyter then sailed for
+ Portsmouth, where he also failed. He then went west to Torbay, where he
+ was likewise repulsed, and then returned to the mouth of the Thames.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On July 23rd, Van Ness, with twenty-five men-of-war, sailed up the Hope,
+ where Sir Edward Spragge had now hoisted his flag on board a squadron of
+ eighteen ships, of whom five were frigates and the rest fire-ships. A
+ sharp engagement ensued, but the wind was very light, and the English, by
+ towing their fire-ships, managed to lay them alongside the Dutch
+ fire-ships, and destroyed twelve of these with a loss of only six English
+ ships. But, the wind then rising, Sir Edward retired from the Hope to
+ Gravesend, where he was protected by the guns at Tilbury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day, being joined by Sir Joseph Jordan, with a few small ships,
+ he took the offensive, and destroyed the last fire-ship that the Dutch had
+ left, and compelled the men-of-war to retire. Sir Edward followed them
+ with his little squadron, and Van Ness, as he retired down the river, was
+ met by five frigates and fourteen fire-ships from Harwich. These boldly
+ attacked him. Two of the Dutch men-of-war narrowly escaped being burnt,
+ another was forced ashore and greatly damaged, and the whole of the Dutch
+ Fleet was compelled to bear away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While these events had been happening in the Thames, the negotiations at
+ Breda had continued, and, just as the Dutch retreated, the news came that
+ Peace had been signed. The Dutch, on their side, were satisfied with the
+ success with which they had closed the war, while England was, at the
+ moment, unable to continue it, and the King, seeing the intense
+ unpopularity that had been excited against him by the affair at Chatham,
+ was glad to ratify the Peace, especially as we thereby retained possession
+ of several islands we had taken in the West Indies from the Dutch, and it
+ was manifest that Spain was preparing to join the coalition of France and
+ Holland against us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Peace concluded under such circumstances was naturally but a short one.
+ When the war was renewed, three years later, the French were in alliance
+ with us, and, after several more desperate battles, in which no great
+ advantages were gained on either side, the Dutch were so exhausted and
+ impoverished by the loss of trade, that a final Peace was arranged on
+ terms far more advantageous to us than those secured by the Treaty of
+ 1667. The De Wittes, the authors of the previous wars, had both been
+ killed in a popular tumult. The Prince of Orange was at the head of the
+ State, and the fact that France and Spain were both hostile to Holland had
+ reawakened the feeling of England in favour of the Protestant Republic,
+ and the friendship between the two nations has never since been broken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyril took no part in the last war against the Dutch. He, like the
+ majority of the nation, was opposed to it, and, although willing to give
+ his life in defence of his country when attacked, felt it by no means his
+ duty to do so when we were aiding the designs of France in crushing a
+ brave enemy. Such was in fact the result of the war; for although peace
+ was made on even terms, the wars of Holland with England and the ruin
+ caused to her trade thereby, inflicted a blow upon the Republic from which
+ she never recovered. From being the great rival of England, both on the
+ sea and in her foreign commerce, her prosperity and power dwindled until
+ she ceased altogether to be a factor in European affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the Peace of Breda was signed, Cyril went down to Upmead, where, for
+ the next four years, he devoted himself to the management of his estate.
+ His friendship with Mr. Harvey grew closer and warmer, until the latter
+ came to consider him in really the light of a son; and when he died, in
+ 1681, it was found that his will was unaltered, and that, with the
+ exception of legacies to many of his old employés at his factory, the
+ whole of his property was left to Cyril. The latter received a good offer
+ for the tanyard, and, upon an estate next to his own coming shortly
+ afterwards into the market, he purchased it, and thus the Upmead estates
+ became as extensive as they had been before the time of his ancestor, who
+ had so seriously diminished them during the reign of Elizabeth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His friendship with the family of the Earl of Wisbech had remained
+ unaltered, and he had every year paid them a visit, either at Wisbech or
+ at Sevenoaks. A year after Mr. Harvey's death, he married Dorothy, who had
+ previously refused several flattering offers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Dave and his wife lived to a good old age. The business had
+ largely increased, owing to the energy of their son-in-law, who had, with
+ his wife and children, taken up his abode in the next house to theirs,
+ which had been bought to meet the extension of their business. John
+ Wilkes, at the death of Captain Dave, declined Cyril's pressing offer to
+ make his home with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It would never do, Sir Cyril," he said. "I should be miserable out of the
+ sight of ships, and without a place where I could meet seafaring men, and
+ smoke my pipe, and listen to their yarns."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He therefore remained with Frank Watson, nominally in charge of the
+ stores, but doing, in fact, as little as he chose until, long past the
+ allotted age of man, he passed quietly away.
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>