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<h2> CHAPTER XXX </h2>
<h3> INLAND OPINION </h3>
<p>Whatever may be said, it does seem hard, from a wholly disinterested point
of view, that so many mighty men, with swift ships, armed with villainous
saltpetre and sharp steel, should have set their keen faces all together
and at once to nip, defeat, and destroy as with a blow, liberal and
well-conceived proceedings, which they had long regarded with a larger
mind. Every one who had been led to embark soundly and kindly in this
branch of trade felt it as an outrage and a special instance of his own
peculiar bad luck that suddenly the officers should become so active. For
long success had encouraged enterprise; men who had made a noble profit
nobly yearned to treble it; and commerce, having shaken off her shackles,
flapped her wings and began to crow; so at least she had been declared to
do at a public banquet given by the Mayor of Malton, and attended by a
large grain factor, who was known as a wholesale purveyor of illicit
goods.</p>
<p>This man, Thomas Rideout, long had been the head-master of the smuggling
school. The poor sea-faring men could not find money to buy, or even hire,
the craft (with heavy deposit against forfeiture) which the breadth and
turbulence of the North Sea made needful for such ventures. Across the
narrow English Channel an open lobster boat might run, in common summer
weather, without much risk of life or goods. Smooth water, sandy coves,
and shelfy landings tempted comfortable jobs; and any man owning a boat
that would carry a sail as big as a shawl might smuggle, with heed of the
weather, and audacity. It is said that once upon the Sussex coast a band
of haymakers, when the rick was done, and their wages in hand on a
Saturday night, laid hold of a stout boat on the beach, pushed off to sea
in tipsy faith of luck, and hit upon Dieppe with a set-fair breeze, having
only a fisherman's boy for guide. There on the Sunday they heartily
enjoyed the hospitality of the natives; and the dawn of Tuesday beheld
them rapt in domestic bliss and breakfast, with their money invested in
old Cognac; and glad would they have been to make such hay every season.
But in Yorkshire a good solid capital was needed to carry on free
importation. Without broad bottoms and deep sides, the long and turbulent
and often foggy voyage, and the rocky landing, could scarcely be attempted
by sane folk; well-to-do people found the money, and jeopardized neither
their own bodies, consciences, nor good repute. And perhaps this fact had
more to do with the comparative mildness of the men than difference of
race, superior culture, or a loftier mould of mind; for what man will
fight for his employer's goods with the ferocity inspired by his own? A
thorough good ducking, or a tow behind a boat, was the utmost penalty
generally exacted by the victors from the vanquished.</p>
<p>Now, however, it seemed too likely that harder measures must be meted. The
long success of that daring Lyth, and the large scale of his operations,
had compelled the authorities to stir at last. They began by setting a
high price upon him, and severely reprimanding Carroway, who had long been
doing his best in vain, and becoming flurried, did it more vainly still;
and now they had sent the sharp Nettlebones down, who boasted largely, but
as yet without result. The smugglers, however, were aware of added peril,
and raised their wages accordingly.</p>
<p>When the pending great venture was resolved upon, as a noble finish to the
season, Thomas Rideout would intrust it to no one but Robin Lyth himself;
and the bold young mariner stipulated that after succeeding he should be
free, and started in some more lawful business. For Dr. Upround,
possessing as he did great influence with Robin, and shocked as he was by
what Carroway had said, refused to have anything more to do with his most
distinguished parishioner until he should forsake his ways. And for this
he must not be thought narrow-minded, strait-laced, or unduly dignified.
His wife quite agreed with him, and indeed had urged it as the only proper
course; for her motherly mind was uneasy about the impulsive nature of
Janetta; and chess-men to her were dolls, without even the merit of
encouraging the needle. Therefore, with a deep sigh, the worthy magistrate
put away his board—which came out again next day—and did his
best to endure for a night the arithmetical torture of cribbage; while he
found himself supported by a sense of duty, and capable of preaching hard
at Carroway if he would only come for it on Sunday.</p>
<p>From that perhaps an officer of revenue may abstain, through the pressure
of his duty and his purity of conscience; but a man of less correctness
must behave more strictly. Therefore, when a gentleman of vigorous aspect,
resolute step, and successful-looking forehead marched into church the
next Sunday morning, showed himself into a prominent position, and hung
his hat against a leading pillar, after putting his mouth into it, as if
for prayer, but scarcely long enough to say “Amen,” behind other hats low
whispers passed that here was the great financier of free trade, the
Chancellor of the Exchequer of smuggling, the celebrated Master Rideout.</p>
<p>That conclusion was shared by the rector, whose heart immediately burned
within him to have at this man, whom he had met before and suspiciously
glanced at in Weighing Lane, as an interloper in his parish. Probably this
was the very man whom Robin Lyth served too faithfully; and the chances
were that the great operations now known to be pending had brought him
hither, spying out all Flamborough. The corruption of fish-folk, the
beguiling of women with foreign silks and laces, and of men with brandy,
the seduction of Robin from lawful commerce, and even the loss of his own
pet pastime, were to be laid at this man's door. While donning his
surplice, Dr. Upround revolved these things with gentle indignation,
quickened, as soon as he found himself in white, by clerical and
theological zeal. These feelings impelled him to produce a creaking of the
heavy vestry door, a well-known signal for his daughter to slip out of the
chancel pew and come to him.</p>
<p>“Now, papa, what is it?” cried that quick young lady; “that miserable
Methodist that ruined your boots, has he got the impudence to come again?
Oh, please do say so, and show me where he is; after church nobody shall
stop me—”</p>
<p>“Janetta, you quite forget where you are, as well as my present condition.
Be off like a good girl, as quick as you can, and bring No. 27 of my own
handwriting—'Render unto Caesar'—and put my hat upon it. My
desire is that Billyjack should not know that a change has been made in my
subject of discourse.”</p>
<p>“Papa, I see; it shall be done to perfection, while Billyjack is at his
very loudest roar in the chorus of the anthem. But do tell me who it is;
or how can I enjoy it? And lemon drops—lemon drops—”</p>
<p>“Janetta, I must have some very serious talk with you. Now don't be vexed,
darling; you are a thoroughly good girl, only thoughtless and careless;
and remember, dear, church is not a place for high spirits.”</p>
<p>The rector, as behooved him, kissed his child behind the vestry door, to
soothe all sting, and then he strode forth toward the reading-desk; and
the tuning of fiddles sank to deferential scrape.</p>
<p>It was not at all a common thing, as one might know, for Widow Precious to
be able to escape from casks and taps, and the frying pan of eggs demanded
by some half-drowned fisherman, also the reckoning of notches on the bench
for the pints of the week unpaid for, and then to put herself into her two
best gowns (which she wore in the winter, one over the other—a plan
to be highly commended to ladies who never can have dress enough), and so
to enjoy, without losing a penny, the warmth of the neighborhood of a
congregation. In the afternoon she could hardly ever do it, even if she
had so wished, with knowledge that this was common people's time; so if
she went at all, it must—in spite of the difference of length—be
managed in the morning. And this very morning here she was, earnest,
humble, and devout, with both the tap keys in her pocket, and turning the
leaves with a smack of her thumb, not only to show her learning, but to
get the sweet approval of the rector's pew.</p>
<p>Now if the good rector had sent for this lady, instead of his daughter
Janetta, the sermon which he brought would have been the one to preach,
and that about Caesar might have stopped at home; for no sooner did the
widow begin to look about, taking in the congregation with a dignified
eye, and nodding to her solvent customers, than the wrath of perplexity
began to gather on her goodly countenance. To see that distinguished
stranger was to know him ever afterward; his power of eating, and of
paying, had endeared his memory; and for him to put up at any other house
were foul shame to the “Cod Fish.”</p>
<p>“Hath a' put up his beastie?” she whispered to her eldest daughter, who
came in late.</p>
<p>“Naa, naa, no beastie,” the child replied, and the widow's relish of her
thumb was gone; for, sooth to say, no Master Rideout, nor any other patron
of free trade was here, but Geoffrey Mordacks, of York city, general
factor, and universal agent.</p>
<p>It was beautiful to see how Dr. Upround, firmly delivering his text, and
stoutly determined to spare nobody, even insisted in the present case upon
looking at the man he meant to hit, because he was not his parishioner.
The sermon was eloquent, and even trenchant. The necessity of duties was
urged most sternly; if not of directly Divine institution (though learned
parallels were adduced which almost proved them to be so), yet to every
decent Christian citizen they were synonymous with duty. To defy or elude
them, for the sake of paltry gain, was a dark crime recoiling on the
criminal; and the preacher drew a contrast between such guilty ways and
the innocent path of the fisherman. Neither did he even relent and
comfort, according to his custom, toward the end; that part was there, but
he left it out; and the only consolation for any poor smuggler in all the
discourse was the final Amen.</p>
<p>But to the rector's great amazement, and inward indignation, the object of
his sermon seemed to take it as a personal compliment. Mr. Mordacks not
only failed to wince, but finding himself particularly fixed by the gaze
of the eloquent divine, concluded that it was from his superior
intelligence, and visible gifts of appreciation. Delighted with this—for
he was not free from vanity—what did he do but return the
compliment, not indecorously, but nodding very gently, as much as to say,
“That was very good indeed, you were quite right, sir, in addressing that
to me; you perceive that it is far above these common people. I never
heard a better sermon.”</p>
<p>“What a hardened rogue you are!” thought Dr. Upround; “how feebly and
incapably I must have put it! If you ever come again, you shall have my
Ahab sermon.”</p>
<p>But the clergyman was still more astonished a very few minutes afterward.
For, as he passed out of the church-yard gate, receiving, with his wife
and daughter, the kindly salute of the parish, the same tall stranger
stood before him, with a face as hard as a statue's, and, making a short,
quick flourish with his hat, begged for the honor of shaking his hand.</p>
<p>“Sir, it is to thank you for the very finest sermon I ever had the
privilege of hearing. My name is Mordacks, and I flatter nobody—except
myself—that I know a good thing when I get it.”</p>
<p>“Sir, I am obliged to you,” said Dr. Upround, stiffly, and not without
suspicion of being bantered, so dry was the stranger's countenance, and
his manner so peculiar; “and if I have been enabled to say a good word in
season, and its season lasts, it will be a source of satisfaction to me.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I fear there are many smugglers here. But I am no revenue officer,
as your congregation seemed to think. May I call upon business to-morrow,
sir? Thank you; then may I say ten o'clock—your time of beginning,
as I hear? Mordacks is my name, sir, of York city, not unfavorably known
there. Ladies, my duty to you!”</p>
<p>“What an extraordinary man, my dear!” Mrs. Upround exclaimed, with some
ingratitude, after the beautiful bow she had received. “He may talk as he
likes, but he must be a smuggler. He said that he was not an officer; that
shows it, for they always run into the opposite extreme. You have
converted him, my dear; and I am sure that we ought to be so much obliged
to him. If he comes to-morrow morning to give up all his lace, do try to
remember how my little all has been ruined in the wash, and I am sick of
working at it.”</p>
<p>“My dear, he is no smuggler. I begin to recollect. He was down here in the
summer, and I made a great mistake. I took him for Rideout; and I did the
same to-day. When I see him to-morrow, I shall beg his pardon. One gets so
hurried in the vestry always; they are so impatient with their fiddles! A
great deal of it was Janetta's fault.”</p>
<p>“It always is my fault, papa, somehow or other,” the young lady answered,
with a faultless smile: and so they went home to the early Sunday dinner.</p>
<p>“Papa, I am in such a state of excitement; I am quite unfit to go to
church this afternoon,” Miss Upround exclaimed, as they set forth again.
“You may put me in stocks made out of hassocks—you may rope me to
the Flodden Field man's monument, of the ominous name of 'Constable;' but
whatever you do, I shall never attend; and I feel that it is so sinful.”</p>
<p>“Janetta, your mamma has that feeling sometimes; for instance, she has it
this afternoon; and there is a good deal to be said for it. But I fear
that it would grow with indulgence.”</p>
<p>“I can firmly fancy that it never would; though one can not be sure
without trying. Suppose that I were to try it just once, and let you know
how it feels at tea-time?”</p>
<p>“My dear, we are quite round the corner of the lane. The example would be
too shocking.”</p>
<p>“Now don't you make any excuses, papa. Only one woman can have seen us
yet; and she is so blind she will think it was her fault. May I go? Quick,
before any one else comes.”</p>
<p>“If you are quite sure, Janetta, of being in a frame of mind which unfits
you for the worship of your Maker—”</p>
<p>“As sure as a pike-staff, dear papa.”</p>
<p>“Then, by all means, go before anybody sees you, for whom it might be
undesirable; and correct your thoughts, and endeavor to get into a
befitting state of mind by tea-time.”</p>
<p>“Certainly, papa. I will go down on the stones, and look at the sea. That
always makes me better; because it is so large and so uncomfortable.”</p>
<p>The rector went on to do his duty, by himself. A narrow-minded man might
have shaken solemn head, even if he had allowed such dereliction. But Dr.
Upround knew that the girl was good, and he never put strain upon her
honesty. So away she sped by a lonely little foot-path, where nobody could
take from her contagion of bad morals; and avoiding the incline of boats,
she made off nicely for the quiet outer bay, and there, upon a shelfy
rock, she sat and breathed the sea.</p>
<p>Flamborough, excellent place as it is, and delightful, and full of
interest for people who do not live there, is apt to grow dull perhaps for
spirited youth, in the scanty and foggy winter light. There is not so very
much of that choice product generally called “society” by a man who has a
house to let in an eligible neighborhood, and by ladies who do not heed
their own. Moreover, it is vexatious not to have more rogues to talk
about.</p>
<p>That scarcity may be less lamentable now, being one that takes care to
redress itself, and perhaps any amateur purchaser of fish may find rogues
enough now for his interest. But the rector's daughter pined for neither
society nor scandal: she had plenty of interest in her life, and in
pleasing other people, whenever she could do it with pleasure to herself,
and that was nearly always. Her present ailment was not languor,
weariness, or dullness, but rather the want of such things; which we long
for when they happen to be scarce, and declare them to be our first need,
under the sweet name of repose.</p>
<p>Her mind was a little disturbed by rumors, wonders, and uncertainty. She
was not at all in love with Robin Lyth, and laughed at his vanity quite as
much as she admired his gallantry. She looked upon him also as of lower
rank, kindly patronized by her father, but not to be treated as upon an
equal footing. He might be of any rank, for all that was known; but he
must be taken to belong to those who had brought him up and fed him.
Janetta was a lively girl, of quick perception and some discretion, though
she often talked much nonsense. She was rather proud of her position, and
somewhat disdainful of uneducated folk; though (thanks to her father) Lyth
was not one of these. Possibly love (if she had felt it) would have swept
away such barriers; but Robin was grateful to his patron, and, knowing his
own place in life, would rightly have thought it a mean return to attempt
to inveigle the daughter. So they liked one another—but nothing
more. It was not, therefore, for his sake only, but for her father's, and
that of the place, that Miss Upround now was anxious. For days and days
she had watched the sea with unusual forebodings, knowing that a great
importation was toward, and pretty sure to lead to blows, after so much
preparation. With feminine zeal, she detested poor Carroway, whom she
regarded as a tyrant and a spy; and she would have clapped her hands at
beholding the three cruisers run upon a shoal, and there stick fast. And
as for King George, she had never believed that he was the proper King of
England. There were many stanch Jacobites still in Yorkshire, and
especially the bright young ladies.</p>
<p>To-night, at least, the coast was likely to be uninvaded. Smugglers, even
if their own forces would make breach upon the day of rest, durst not
outrage the piety of the land, which would only deal with kegs in-doors.
The coast-guard, being for the most part southerns, splashed about as
usual—a far more heinous sin against the Word of God than smuggling.
It is the manner of Yorkshiremen to think for themselves, with boldness,
in the way they are brought up to: and they made it a point of serious
doubt whether the orders of the king himself could set aside the Fourth
Commandment, though his arms were over it.</p>
<p>Dr. Upround's daughter, as she watched the sea, felt sure that, even if
the goods were ready, no attempt at landing would be made that night,
though something might be done in the morning. But even that was not very
likely, because (as seemed to be widely known) the venture was a very
large one, and the landers would require a whole night's work to get
entirely through with it.</p>
<p>“I wish it was over, one way or the other,” she kept on saying to herself,
as she gazed at the dark, weary lifting of the sea; “it keeps one
unsettled as the waves themselves. Sunday always makes me feel restless,
because there is so little to do. It is wicked, I suppose; but how can I
help it? Why, there is a boat, I do declare! Well, even a boat is welcome,
just to break this gray monotony. What boat can it be? None of ours, of
course. And what can they want with our Church Cave? I hope they
understand its dangers.”</p>
<p>Although the wind was not upon the shore, and no long rollers were setting
in, short, uncomfortable, clumsy waves were lolloping under the steep gray
cliffs, and casting up splashes of white here and there. To enter that
cave is a risky thing, except at very favorable times, and even then some
experience is needed, for the rocks around it are like knives, and the
boat must generally be backed in, with more use of fender and hook than of
oars. But the people in the boat seemed to understand all that. There were
two men rowing, and one steering with an oar, and a fourth standing up, as
if to give directions; though in truth he knew nothing about it, but hated
even to seem to play second fiddle.</p>
<p>“What a strange thing!” Janetta thought, as she drew behind a rock, that
they might not see her, “I could almost declare that the man standing up
is that most extraordinary gentleman papa preached quite the wrong sermon
at. Truly he deserves the Ahab one, for spying our caves out on a Sunday.
He must be a smuggler, after all, or a very crafty agent of the Revenue.
Well, I never! That old man steering, as sure as I live, is Robin
Cockscroft, by the scarlet handkerchief round his head. Oh, Robin! Robin!
could I ever have believed that you would break the Sabbath so? But the
boat is not Robin's. What boat can it be? I have not staid away from
church for nothing. One of the men rowing has got no legs, when the boat
goes up and down. It must be that villain of a tipsy Joe, who used to keep
the 'Monument.' I heard that he was come back again, to stump for his beer
as usual: and his son, that sings like the big church bell, and has such a
very fine face and one leg—why, he is the man that pulls the other
oar. Was there ever such a boat-load? But they know what they are doing.”</p>
<p>Truly it was, as the young lady said, an extraordinary boat's crew. Old
Robin Cockscroft, with a fringe of silver hair escaping from the crimson
silk, which he valued so much more than it, and his face still grand (in
spite of wrinkles and some weakness of the eyes), keenly understanding
every wave, its character, temper, and complexity of influence, as only a
man can understand who has for his life stood over them. Then tugging at
the oars, or rather dipping them with a short well-practiced plunge, and
very little toil of body, two ancient sailors, one considerably older than
the other, inasmuch as he was his father, yet chips alike from a sturdy
block, and fitted up with jury-stumps. Old Joe pulled rather the better
oar, and called his son “a one-legged fiddler” when he missed the dip of
wave; while Mordacks stood with his legs apart, and playing the easy part
of critic, had his sneers at both of them. But they let him gibe to his
liking; because they knew their work, and he did not. And, upon the whole,
they went merrily.</p>
<p>The only one with any doubt concerning the issue of the job was the one
who knew most about it, and that was Robin Cockscroft. He doubted not
about want of strength, or skill, or discipline of his oars, but because
the boat was not Flamburian, but borrowed from a collier round the Head.
No Flamborough boat would ever think of putting to sea on a Sunday, unless
it were to save human life; and it seemed to him that no strange boat
could find her way into the native caves. He doubted also whether, even
with the pressure of strong motive put upon him, which was not of money,
it was a godly thing on his part to be steering in his Sunday clothes; and
he feared to hear of it thereafter. But being in for it, he must do his
utmost.</p>
<p>With genuine skill and solid patience, the entrance of the cave was made,
and the boat was lost to Janetta's view. She as well was lost in the
deeper cavern of great wonder, and waited long, and much desired to wait
even longer, to see them issue forth again, and learn what they could have
been after. But the mist out of which they had come, and inside of which
they would rather have remained perhaps, now thickened over land and sea,
and groping dreamily for something to lay hold of, found a solid stay and
rest-hold in the jagged headlands here. Here, accordingly, the coilings of
the wandering forms began to slide into strait layers, and soft settlement
of vapor. Loops of hanging moisture marked the hollows of the land-front,
or the alleys of the waning light; and then the mass abandoned outline,
fused its shades to pulp, and melted into one great blur of rain. Janetta
thought of her Sunday frock, forgot the boat, and sped away for home.</p>
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