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<h2> CHAPTER III </h2>
<h3> THE WAR-PATH OF THE DOONES </h3>
<p>From Tiverton town to the town of Oare is a very long and painful road,
and in good truth the traveller must make his way, as the saying is; for
the way is still unmade, at least, on this side of Dulverton, although
there is less danger now than in the time of my schooling; for now a good
horse may go there without much cost of leaping, but when I was a boy the
spurs would fail, when needed most, by reason of the slough-cake. It is to
the credit of this age, and our advance upon fatherly ways, that now we
have laid down rods and fagots, and even stump-oaks here and there, so
that a man in good daylight need not sink, if he be quite sober. There is
nothing I have striven at more than doing my duty, way-warden over Exmoor.</p>
<p>But in those days, when I came from school (and good times they were, too,
full of a warmth and fine hearth-comfort, which now are dying out), it was
a sad and sorry business to find where lay the highway. We are taking now
to mark it off with a fence on either side, at least, when a town is
handy; but to me his seems of a high pretence, and a sort of landmark, and
channel for robbers, though well enough near London, where they have
earned a race-course.</p>
<p>We left the town of the two fords, which they say is the meaning of it,
very early in the morning, after lying one day to rest, as was demanded by
the nags, sore of foot and foundered. For my part, too, I was glad to
rest, having aches all over me, and very heavy bruises; and we lodged at
the sign of the White Horse Inn, in the street called Gold Street,
opposite where the souls are of John and Joan Greenway, set up in gold
letters, because we must take the homeward way at cockcrow of the morning.
Though still John Fry was dry with me of the reason of his coming, and
only told lies about father, and could not keep them agreeable, I hoped
for the best, as all boys will, especially after a victory. And I thought,
perhaps father had sent for me because he had a good harvest, and the rats
were bad in the corn-chamber.</p>
<p>It was high noon before we were got to Dulverton that day, near to which
town the river Exe and its big brother Barle have union. My mother had an
uncle living there, but we were not to visit his house this time, at which
I was somewhat astonished, since we needs must stop for at least two
hours, to bait our horses thorough well, before coming to the black
bogway. The bogs are very good in frost, except where the hot-springs
rise; but as yet there had been no frost this year, save just enough to
make the blackbirds look big in the morning. In a hearty black-frost they
look small, until the snow falls over them.</p>
<p>The road from Bampton to Dulverton had not been very delicate, yet nothing
to complain of much—no deeper, indeed, than the hocks of a horse,
except in the rotten places. The day was inclined to be mild and foggy,
and both nags sweated freely; but Peggy carrying little weight (for my
wardrobe was upon Smiler, and John Fry grumbling always), we could easily
keep in front, as far as you may hear a laugh.</p>
<p>John had been rather bitter with me, which methought was a mark of ill
taste at coming home for the holidays; and yet I made allowance for John,
because he had never been at school, and never would have chance to eat
fry upon condition of spelling it; therefore I rode on, thinking that he
was hard-set, like a saw, for his dinner, and would soften after
tooth-work. And yet at his most hungry times, when his mind was far gone
upon bacon, certes he seemed to check himself and look at me as if he were
sorry for little things coming over great.</p>
<p>But now, at Dulverton, we dined upon the rarest and choicest victuals that
ever I did taste. Even now, at my time of life, to think of it gives me
appetite, as once and awhile to think of my first love makes me love all
goodness. Hot mutton pasty was a thing I had often heard of from very
wealthy boys and men, who made a dessert of dinner; and to hear them talk
of it made my lips smack, and my ribs come inwards.</p>
<p>And now John Fry strode into the hostel, with the air and grace of a
short-legged man, and shouted as loud as if he was calling sheep upon
Exmoor,—</p>
<p>'Hot mooton pasty for twoo trarv'lers, at number vaive, in vaive minnits!
Dish un up in the tin with the grahvy, zame as I hardered last Tuesday.'</p>
<p>Of course it did not come in five minutes, nor yet in ten or twenty; but
that made it all the better when it came to the real presence; and the
smell of it was enough to make an empty man thank God for the room there
was inside him. Fifty years have passed me quicker than the taste of that
gravy.</p>
<p>It is the manner of all good boys to be careless of apparel, and take no
pride in adornment. Good lack, if I see a boy make to do about the fit of
his crumpler, and the creasing of his breeches, and desire to be shod for
comeliness rather than for use, I cannot 'scape the mark that God took
thought to make a girl of him. Not so when they grow older, and court the
regard of the maidens; then may the bravery pass from the inside to the
outside of them; and no bigger fools are they, even then, than their
fathers were before them. But God forbid any man to be a fool to love, and
be loved, as I have been. Else would he have prevented it.</p>
<p>When the mutton pasty was done, and Peggy and Smiler had dined well also,
out I went to wash at the pump, being a lover of soap and water, at all
risk, except of my dinner. And John Fry, who cared very little to wash,
save Sabbath days in his own soap, and who had kept me from the pump by
threatening loss of the dish, out he came in a satisfied manner, with a
piece of quill in his hand, to lean against a door-post, and listen to the
horses feeding, and have his teeth ready for supper.</p>
<p>Then a lady's-maid came out, and the sun was on her face, and she turned
round to go back again; but put a better face upon it, and gave a trip and
hitched her dress, and looked at the sun full body, lest the hostlers
should laugh that she was losing her complexion. With a long Italian glass
in her fingers very daintily, she came up to the pump in the middle of the
yard, where I was running the water off all my head and shoulders, and
arms, and some of my breast even, and though I had glimpsed her through
the sprinkle, it gave me quite a turn to see her, child as I was, in my
open aspect. But she looked at me, no whit abashed, making a baby of me,
no doubt, as a woman of thirty will do, even with a very big boy when they
catch him on a hayrick, and she said to me in a brazen manner, as if I had
been nobody, while I was shrinking behind the pump, and craving to get my
shirt on, 'Good leetle boy, come hither to me. Fine heaven! how blue your
eyes are, and your skin like snow; but some naughty man has beaten it
black. Oh, leetle boy, let me feel it. Ah, how then it must have hurt you!
There now, and you shall love me.'</p>
<p>All this time she was touching my breast, here and there, very lightly,
with her delicate brown fingers, and I understood from her voice and
manner that she was not of this country, but a foreigner by extraction.
And then I was not so shy of her, because I could talk better English than
she; and yet I longed for my jerkin, but liked not to be rude to her.</p>
<p>'If you please, madam, I must go. John Fry is waiting by the tapster's
door, and Peggy neighing to me. If you please, we must get home to-night;
and father will be waiting for me this side of the telling-house.'</p>
<p>'There, there, you shall go, leetle dear, and perhaps I will go after you.
I have taken much love of you. But the baroness is hard to me. How far you
call it now to the bank of the sea at Wash—Wash—'</p>
<p>'At Watchett, likely you mean, madam. Oh, a very long way, and the roads
as soft as the road to Oare.'</p>
<p>'Oh-ah, oh-ah—I shall remember; that is the place where my leetle
boy live, and some day I will come seek for him. Now make the pump to
flow, my dear, and give me the good water. The baroness will not touch
unless a nebule be formed outside the glass.'</p>
<p>I did not know what she meant by that; yet I pumped for her very heartily,
and marvelled to see her for fifty times throw the water away in the
trough, as if it was not good enough. At last the water suited her, with a
likeness of fog outside the glass, and the gleam of a crystal under it,
and then she made a curtsey to me, in a sort of mocking manner, holding
the long glass by the foot, not to take the cloud off; and then she wanted
to kiss me; but I was out of breath, and have always been shy of that
work, except when I come to offer it; and so I ducked under the
pump-handle, and she knocked her chin on the knob of it; and the hostlers
came out, and asked whether they would do as well.</p>
<p>Upon this, she retreated up the yard, with a certain dark dignity, and a
foreign way of walking, which stopped them at once from going farther,
because it was so different from the fashion of their sweethearts. One
with another they hung back, where half a cart-load of hay was, and they
looked to be sure that she would not turn round; and then each one laughed
at the rest of them.</p>
<p>Now, up to the end of Dulverton town, on the northward side of it, where
the two new pig-sties be, the Oare folk and the Watchett folk must trudge
on together, until we come to a broken cross, where a murdered man lies
buried. Peggy and Smiler went up the hill, as if nothing could be too much
for them, after the beans they had eaten, and suddenly turning a corner of
trees, we happened upon a great coach and six horses labouring very
heavily. John Fry rode on with his hat in his hand, as became him towards
the quality; but I was amazed to that degree, that I left my cap on my
head, and drew bridle without knowing it.</p>
<p>For in the front seat of the coach, which was half-way open, being of the
city-make, and the day in want of air, sate the foreign lady, who had met
me at the pump and offered to salute me. By her side was a little girl,
dark-haired and very wonderful, with a wealthy softness on her, as if she
must have her own way. I could not look at her for two glances, and she
did not look at me for one, being such a little child, and busy with the
hedges. But in the honourable place sate a handsome lady, very warmly
dressed, and sweetly delicate of colour. And close to her was a lively
child, two or it may be three years old, bearing a white cockade in his
hat, and staring at all and everybody. Now, he saw Peggy, and took such a
liking to her, that the lady his mother—if so she were—was
forced to look at my pony and me. And, to tell the truth, although I am
not of those who adore the high folk, she looked at us very kindly, and
with a sweetness rarely found in the women who milk the cows for us.</p>
<p>Then I took off my cap to the beautiful lady, without asking wherefore;
and she put up her hand and kissed it to me, thinking, perhaps, that I
looked like a gentle and good little boy; for folk always called me
innocent, though God knows I never was that. But now the foreign lady, or
lady's maid, as it might be, who had been busy with little dark eyes,
turned upon all this going-on, and looked me straight in the face. I was
about to salute her, at a distance, indeed, and not with the nicety she
had offered to me, but, strange to say, she stared at my eyes as if she
had never seen me before, neither wished to see me again. At this I was so
startled, such things beings out of my knowledge, that I startled Peggy
also with the muscle of my legs, and she being fresh from stable, and the
mire scraped off with cask-hoop, broke away so suddenly that I could do no
more than turn round and lower my cap, now five months old, to the
beautiful lady. Soon I overtook John Fry, and asked him all about them,
and how it was that we had missed their starting from the hostel. But John
would never talk much till after a gallon of cider; and all that I could
win out of him was that they were 'murdering Papishers,' and little he
cared to do with them, or the devil, as they came from. And a good thing
for me, and a providence, that I was gone down Dulverton town to buy
sweetstuff for Annie, else my stupid head would have gone astray with
their great out-coming.</p>
<p>We saw no more of them after that, but turned into the sideway; and soon
had the fill of our hands and eyes to look to our own going. For the road
got worse and worse, until there was none at all, and perhaps the purest
thing it could do was to be ashamed to show itself. But we pushed on as
best we might, with doubt of reaching home any time, except by special
grace of God.</p>
<p>The fog came down upon the moors as thick as ever I saw it; and there was
no sound of any sort, nor a breath of wind to guide us. The little stubby
trees that stand here and there, like bushes with a wooden leg to them,
were drizzled with a mess of wet, and hung their points with dropping.
Wherever the butt-end of a hedgerow came up from the hollow ground, like
the withers of a horse, holes of splash were pocked and pimpled in the
yellow sand of coneys, or under the dwarf tree's ovens. But soon it was
too dark to see that, or anything else, I may say, except the creases in
the dusk, where prisoned light crept up the valleys.</p>
<p>After awhile even that was gone, and no other comfort left us except to
see our horses' heads jogging to their footsteps, and the dark ground pass
below us, lighter where the wet was; and then the splash, foot after foot,
more clever than we can do it, and the orderly jerk of the tail, and the
smell of what a horse is.</p>
<p>John Fry was bowing forward with sleep upon his saddle, and now I could no
longer see the frizzle of wet upon his beard—for he had a very brave
one, of a bright red colour, and trimmed into a whale-oil knot, because he
was newly married—although that comb of hair had been a subject of
some wonder to me, whether I, in God's good time, should have the like of
that, handsomely set with shining beads, small above and large below, from
the weeping of the heaven. But still I could see the jog of his hat—a
Sunday hat with a top to it—and some of his shoulder bowed out in
the mist, so that one could say 'Hold up, John,' when Smiler put his foot
in. 'Mercy of God! where be us now?' said John Fry, waking suddenly; 'us
ought to have passed hold hash, Jan. Zeen it on the road, have 'ee?'</p>
<p>'No indeed, John; no old ash. Nor nothing else to my knowing; nor heard
nothing, save thee snoring.'</p>
<p>'Watt a vule thee must be then, Jan; and me myzell no better. Harken, lad,
harken!'</p>
<p>We drew our horses up and listened, through the thickness of the air, and
with our hands laid to our ears. At first there was nothing to hear,
except the panting of the horses and the trickle of the eaving drops from
our head-covers and clothing, and the soft sounds of the lonely night,
that make us feel, and try not to think. Then there came a mellow noise,
very low and mournsome, not a sound to be afraid of, but to long to know
the meaning, with a soft rise of the hair. Three times it came and went
again, as the shaking of a thread might pass away into the distance; and
then I touched John Fry to know that there was something near me.</p>
<p>'Doon't 'e be a vule, Jan! Vaine moozick as iver I 'eer. God bless the man
as made un doo it.'</p>
<p>'Have they hanged one of the Doones then, John?'</p>
<p>'Hush, lad; niver talk laike o' thiccy. Hang a Doone! God knoweth, the
King would hang pretty quick if her did.'</p>
<p>'Then who is it in the chains, John?'</p>
<p>I felt my spirit rise as I asked; for now I had crossed Exmoor so often as
to hope that the people sometimes deserved it, and think that it might be
a lesson to the rogues who unjustly loved the mutton they were never born
to. But, of course, they were born to hanging, when they set themselves so
high.</p>
<p>'It be nawbody,' said John, 'vor us to make a fush about. Belong to
t'other zide o' the moor, and come staling shape to our zide. Red Jem
Hannaford his name. Thank God for him to be hanged, lad; and good cess to
his soul for craikin' zo.'</p>
<p>So the sound of the quiet swinging led us very modestly, as it came and
went on the wind, loud and low pretty regularly, even as far as the foot
of the gibbet where the four cross-ways are.</p>
<p>'Vamous job this here,' cried John, looking up to be sure of it, because
there were so many; 'here be my own nick on the post. Red Jem, too, and no
doubt of him; he do hang so handsome like, and his ribs up laike a horse
a'most. God bless them as discoovered the way to make a rogue so useful.
Good-naight to thee, Jem, my lad; and not break thy drames with the
craikin'.'</p>
<p>John Fry shook his bridle-arm, and smote upon Smiler merrily, as he jogged
into the homeward track from the guiding of the body. But I was sorry for
Red Jem, and wanted to know more about him, and whether he might not have
avoided this miserable end, and what his wife and children thought of it,
if, indeed, he had any.</p>
<p>But John would talk no more about it; and perhaps he was moved with a
lonesome feeling, as the creaking sound came after us.</p>
<p>'Hould thee tongue, lad,' he said sharply; 'us be naigh the Doone-track
now, two maile from Dunkery Beacon hill, the haighest place of Hexmoor. So
happen they be abroad to-naight, us must crawl on our belly-places, boy.'</p>
<p>I knew at once what he meant—those bloody Doones of Bagworthy, the
awe of all Devon and Somerset, outlaws, traitors, murderers. My little
legs began to tremble to and fro upon Peggy's sides, as I heard the dead
robber in chains behind us, and thought of the live ones still in front.</p>
<p>'But, John,' I whispered warily, sidling close to his saddle-bow; 'dear
John, you don't think they will see us in such a fog as this?'</p>
<p>'Never God made vog as could stop their eyesen,' he whispered in answer,
fearfully; 'here us be by the hollow ground. Zober, lad, goo zober now, if
thee wish to see thy moother.'</p>
<p>For I was inclined, in the manner of boys, to make a run of the danger,
and cross the Doone-track at full speed; to rush for it, and be done with
it. But even then I wondered why he talked of my mother so, and said not a
word of father.</p>
<p>We were come to a long deep 'goyal,' as they call it on Exmoor, a word
whose fountain and origin I have nothing to do with. Only I know that when
little boys laughed at me at Tiverton, for talking about a 'goyal,' a big
boy clouted them on the head, and said that it was in Homer, and meant the
hollow of the hand. And another time a Welshman told me that it must be
something like the thing they call a 'pant' in those parts. Still I know
what it means well enough—to wit, a long trough among wild hills,
falling towards the plain country, rounded at the bottom, perhaps, and
stiff, more than steep, at the sides of it. Whether it be straight or
crooked, makes no difference to it.</p>
<p>We rode very carefully down our side, and through the soft grass at the
bottom, and all the while we listened as if the air was a
speaking-trumpet. Then gladly we breasted our nags to the rise, and were
coming to the comb of it, when I heard something, and caught John's arm,
and he bent his hand to the shape of his ear. It was the sound of horses'
feet knocking up through splashy ground, as if the bottom sucked them.
Then a grunting of weary men, and the lifting noise of stirrups, and
sometimes the clank of iron mixed with the wheezy croning of leather and
the blowing of hairy nostrils.</p>
<p>'God's sake, Jack, slip round her belly, and let her go where she wull.'</p>
<p>As John Fry whispered, so I did, for he was off Smiler by this time; but
our two pads were too fagged to go far, and began to nose about and crop,
sniffing more than they need have done. I crept to John's side very
softly, with the bridle on my arm.</p>
<p>'Let goo braidle; let goo, lad. Plaise God they take them for
forest-ponies, or they'll zend a bullet through us.'</p>
<p>I saw what he meant, and let go the bridle; for now the mist was rolling
off, and we were against the sky-line to the dark cavalcade below us. John
lay on the ground by a barrow of heather, where a little gullet was, and I
crept to him, afraid of the noise I made in dragging my legs along, and
the creak of my cord breeches. John bleated like a sheep to cover it—a
sheep very cold and trembling.</p>
<p>Then just as the foremost horseman passed, scarce twenty yards below us, a
puff of wind came up the glen, and the fog rolled off before it. And
suddenly a strong red light, cast by the cloud-weight downwards, spread
like fingers over the moorland, opened the alleys of darkness, and hung on
the steel of the riders.</p>
<p>'Dunkery Beacon,' whispered John, so close into my ear, that I felt his
lips and teeth ashake; 'dursn't fire it now except to show the Doones way
home again, since the naight as they went up and throwed the watchmen atop
of it. Why, wutt be 'bout, lad? God's sake—'</p>
<p>For I could keep still no longer, but wriggled away from his arm, and
along the little gullet, still going flat on my breast and thighs, until I
was under a grey patch of stone, with a fringe of dry fern round it; there
I lay, scarce twenty feet above the heads of the riders, and I feared to
draw my breath, though prone to do it with wonder.</p>
<p>For now the beacon was rushing up, in a fiery storm to heaven, and the
form of its flame came and went in the folds, and the heavy sky was
hovering. All around it was hung with red, deep in twisted columns, and
then a giant beard of fire streamed throughout the darkness. The sullen
hills were flanked with light, and the valleys chined with shadow, and all
the sombrous moors between awoke in furrowed anger.</p>
<p>But most of all the flinging fire leaped into the rocky mouth of the glen
below me, where the horsemen passed in silence, scarcely deigning to look
round. Heavy men and large of stature, reckless how they bore their guns,
or how they sate their horses, with leathern jerkins, and long boots, and
iron plates on breast and head, plunder heaped behind their saddles, and
flagons slung in front of them; I counted more than thirty pass, like
clouds upon red sunset. Some had carcasses of sheep swinging with their
skins on, others had deer, and one had a child flung across his
saddle-bow. Whether the child were dead, or alive, was more than I could
tell, only it hung head downwards there, and must take the chance of it.
They had got the child, a very young one, for the sake of the dress, no
doubt, which they could not stop to pull off from it; for the dress shone
bright, where the fire struck it, as if with gold and jewels. I longed in
my heart to know most sadly what they would do with the little thing, and
whether they would eat it.</p>
<p>It touched me so to see that child, a prey among those vultures, that in
my foolish rage and burning I stood up and shouted to them leaping on a
rock, and raving out of all possession. Two of them turned round, and one
set his carbine at me, but the other said it was but a pixie, and bade him
keep his powder. Little they knew, and less thought I, that the pixie then
before them would dance their castle down one day.</p>
<p>John Fry, who in the spring of fright had brought himself down from
Smiler's side, as if he were dipped in oil, now came up to me, all risk
being over, cross, and stiff, and aching sorely from his wet couch of
heather.</p>
<p>'Small thanks to thee, Jan, as my new waife bain't a widder. And who be
you to zupport of her, and her son, if she have one? Zarve thee right if I
was to chuck thee down into the Doone-track. Zim thee'll come to un,
zooner or later, if this be the zample of thee.'</p>
<p>And that was all he had to say, instead of thanking God! For if ever born
man was in a fright, and ready to thank God for anything, the name of that
man was John Fry not more than five minutes agone.</p>
<p>However, I answered nothing at all, except to be ashamed of myself; and
soon we found Peggy and Smiler in company, well embarked on the homeward
road, and victualling where the grass was good. Right glad they were to
see us again—not for the pleasure of carrying, but because a horse
(like a woman) lacks, and is better without, self-reliance.</p>
<p>My father never came to meet us, at either side of the telling-house,
neither at the crooked post, nor even at home-linhay although the dogs
kept such a noise that he must have heard us. Home-side of the linhay, and
under the ashen hedge-row, where father taught me to catch blackbirds, all
at once my heart went down, and all my breast was hollow. There was not
even the lanthorn light on the peg against the cow's house, and nobody
said 'Hold your noise!' to the dogs, or shouted 'Here our Jack is!'</p>
<p>I looked at the posts of the gate, in the dark, because they were tall,
like father, and then at the door of the harness-room, where he used to
smoke his pipe and sing. Then I thought he had guests perhaps—people
lost upon the moors—whom he could not leave unkindly, even for his
son's sake. And yet about that I was jealous, and ready to be vexed with
him, when he should begin to make much of me. And I felt in my pocket for
the new pipe which I had brought him from Tiverton, and said to myself,
'He shall not have it until to-morrow morning.'</p>
<p>Woe is me! I cannot tell. How I knew I know not now—only that I
slunk away, without a tear, or thought of weeping, and hid me in a
saw-pit. There the timber, over-head, came like streaks across me; and all
I wanted was to lack, and none to tell me anything.</p>
<p>By-and-by, a noise came down, as of woman's weeping; and there my mother
and sister were, choking and holding together. Although they were my
dearest loves, I could not bear to look at them, until they seemed to want
my help, and put their hands before their eyes.</p>
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