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<h2> CHAPTER V </h2>
<h3> AN ILLEGAL SETTLEMENT </h3>
<p>Good folk who dwell in a lawful land, if any such there be, may for want
of exploration, judge our neighbourhood harshly, unless the whole truth is
set before them. In bar of such prejudice, many of us ask leave to explain
how and why it was the robbers came to that head in the midst of us. We
would rather not have had it so, God knows as well as anybody; but it grew
upon us gently, in the following manner. Only let all who read observe
that here I enter many things which came to my knowledge in later years.</p>
<p>In or about the year of our Lord 1640, when all the troubles of England
were swelling to an outburst, great estates in the North country were
suddenly confiscated, through some feud of families and strong influence
at Court, and the owners were turned upon the world, and might think
themselves lucky to save their necks. These estates were in co-heirship,
joint tenancy I think they called it, although I know not the meaning,
only so that if either tenant died, the other living, all would come to
the live one in spite of any testament.</p>
<p>One of the joint owners was Sir Ensor Doone, a gentleman of brisk
intellect; and the other owner was his cousin, the Earl of Lorne and
Dykemont.</p>
<p>Lord Lorne was some years the elder of his cousin, Ensor Doone, and was
making suit to gain severance of the cumbersome joint tenancy by any fair
apportionment, when suddenly this blow fell on them by wiles and woman's
meddling; and instead of dividing the land, they were divided from it.</p>
<p>The nobleman was still well-to-do, though crippled in his expenditure; but
as for the cousin, he was left a beggar, with many to beg from him. He
thought that the other had wronged him, and that all the trouble of law
befell through his unjust petition. Many friends advised him to make
interest at Court; for having done no harm whatever, and being a good
Catholic, which Lord Lorne was not, he would be sure to find hearing
there, and probably some favour. But he, like a very hot-brained man,
although he had long been married to the daughter of his cousin (whom he
liked none the more for that), would have nothing to say to any attempt at
making a patch of it, but drove away with his wife and sons, and the
relics of his money, swearing hard at everybody. In this he may have been
quite wrong; probably, perhaps, he was so; but I am not convinced at all
but what most of us would have done the same.</p>
<p>Some say that, in the bitterness of that wrong and outrage, he slew a
gentleman of the Court, whom he supposed to have borne a hand in the
plundering of his fortunes. Others say that he bearded King Charles the
First himself, in a manner beyond forgiveness. One thing, at any rate, is
sure—Sir Ensor was attainted, and made a felon outlaw, through some
violent deed ensuing upon his dispossession.</p>
<p>He had searched in many quarters for somebody to help him, and with good
warrant for hoping it, inasmuch as he, in lucky days, had been open-handed
and cousinly to all who begged advice of him. But now all these provided
him with plenty of good advice indeed, and great assurance of feeling, but
not a movement of leg, or lip, or purse-string in his favour. All good
people of either persuasion, royalty or commonalty, knowing his
kitchen-range to be cold, no longer would play turnspit. And this, it may
be, seared his heart more than loss of land and fame.</p>
<p>In great despair at last, he resolved to settle in some outlandish part,
where none could be found to know him; and so, in an evil day for us, he
came to the West of England. Not that our part of the world is at all
outlandish, according to my view of it (for I never found a better one),
but that it was known to be rugged, and large, and desolate. And here,
when he had discovered a place which seemed almost to be made for him, so
withdrawn, so self-defended, and uneasy of access, some of the
country-folk around brought him little offerings—a side of bacon, a
keg of cider, hung mutton, or a brisket of venison; so that for a little
while he was very honest. But when the newness of his coming began to wear
away, and our good folk were apt to think that even a gentleman ought to
work or pay other men for doing it, and many farmers were grown weary of
manners without discourse to them, and all cried out to one another how
unfair it was that owning such a fertile valley young men would not spade
or plough by reason of noble lineage—then the young Doones growing
up took things they would not ask for.</p>
<p>And here let me, as a solid man, owner of five hundred acres (whether
fenced or otherwise, and that is my own business), churchwarden also of
this parish (until I go to the churchyard), and proud to be called the
parson's friend—for a better man I never knew with tobacco and
strong waters, nor one who could read the lessons so well and he has been
at Blundell's too—once for all let me declare, that I am a
thorough-going Church-and-State man, and Royalist, without any mistake
about it. And this I lay down, because some people judging a sausage by
the skin, may take in evil part my little glosses of style and glibness,
and the mottled nature of my remarks and cracks now and then on the
frying-pan. I assure them I am good inside, and not a bit of rue in me;
only queer knots, as of marjoram, and a stupid manner of bursting.</p>
<p>There was not more than a dozen of them, counting a few retainers who
still held by Sir Ensor; but soon they grew and multiplied in a manner
surprising to think of. Whether it was the venison, which we call a
strengthening victual, or whether it was the Exmoor mutton, or the keen
soft air of the moorlands, anyhow the Doones increased much faster than
their honesty. At first they had brought some ladies with them, of good
repute with charity; and then, as time went on, they added to their stock
by carrying. They carried off many good farmers' daughters, who were sadly
displeased at first; but took to them kindly after awhile, and made a new
home in their babies. For women, as it seems to me, like strong men more
than weak ones, feeling that they need some staunchness, something to hold
fast by.</p>
<p>And of all the men in our country, although we are of a thick-set breed,
you scarce could find one in three-score fit to be placed among the
Doones, without looking no more than a tailor. Like enough, we could meet
them man for man (if we chose all around the crown and the skirts of
Exmoor), and show them what a cross-buttock means, because we are so
stuggy; but in regard of stature, comeliness, and bearing, no woman would
look twice at us. Not but what I myself, John Ridd, and one or two I know
of—but it becomes me best not to talk of that, although my hair is
gray.</p>
<p>Perhaps their den might well have been stormed, and themselves driven out
of the forest, if honest people had only agreed to begin with them at once
when first they took to plundering. But having respect for their good
birth, and pity for their misfortunes, and perhaps a little admiration at
the justice of God, that robbed men now were robbers, the squires, and
farmers, and shepherds, at first did nothing more than grumble gently, or
even make a laugh of it, each in the case of others. After awhile they
found the matter gone too far for laughter, as violence and deadly outrage
stained the hand of robbery, until every woman clutched her child, and
every man turned pale at the very name of Doone. For the sons and
grandsons of Sir Ensor grew up in foul liberty, and haughtiness, and
hatred, to utter scorn of God and man, and brutality towards dumb animals.
There was only one good thing about them, if indeed it were good, to wit,
their faith to one another, and truth to their wild eyry. But this only
made them feared the more, so certain was the revenge they wreaked upon
any who dared to strike a Doone. One night, some ten years ere I was born,
when they were sacking a rich man's house not very far from Minehead, a
shot was fired at them in the dark, of which they took little notice, and
only one of them knew that any harm was done. But when they were well on
the homeward road, not having slain either man or woman, or even burned a
house down, one of their number fell from his saddle, and died without so
much as a groan. The youth had been struck, but would not complain, and
perhaps took little heed of the wound, while he was bleeding inwardly. His
brothers and cousins laid him softly on a bank of whortle-berries, and
just rode back to the lonely hamlet where he had taken his death-wound. No
man nor woman was left in the morning, nor house for any to dwell in, only
a child with its reason gone.*</p>
<p>*This vile deed was done, beyond all doubt.<br/></p>
<p>This affair made prudent people find more reason to let them alone than to
meddle with them; and now they had so entrenched themselves, and waxed so
strong in number, that nothing less than a troop of soldiers could wisely
enter their premises; and even so it might turn out ill, as perchance we
shall see by-and-by.</p>
<p>For not to mention the strength of the place, which I shall describe in
its proper order when I come to visit it, there was not one among them but
was a mighty man, straight and tall, and wide, and fit to lift four
hundredweight. If son or grandson of old Doone, or one of the northern
retainers, failed at the age of twenty, while standing on his naked feet
to touch with his forehead the lintel of Sir Ensor's door, and to fill the
door frame with his shoulders from sidepost even to sidepost, he was led
away to the narrow pass which made their valley so desperate, and thrust
from the crown with ignominy, to get his own living honestly. Now, the
measure of that doorway is, or rather was, I ought to say, six feet and
one inch lengthwise, and two feet all but two inches taken crossways in
the clear. Yet I not only have heard but know, being so closely mixed with
them, that no descendant of old Sir Ensor, neither relative of his
(except, indeed, the Counsellor, who was kept by them for his wisdom), and
no more than two of their following ever failed of that test, and relapsed
to the difficult ways of honesty.</p>
<p>Not that I think anything great of a standard the like of that: for if
they had set me in that door-frame at the age of twenty, it is like enough
that I should have walked away with it on my shoulders, though I was not
come to my full strength then: only I am speaking now of the average size
of our neighbourhood, and the Doones were far beyond that. Moreover, they
were taught to shoot with a heavy carbine so delicately and wisely, that
even a boy could pass a ball through a rabbit's head at the distance of
fourscore yards. Some people may think nought of this, being in practice
with longer shots from the tongue than from the shoulder; nevertheless, to
do as above is, to my ignorance, very good work, if you can be sure to do
it. Not one word do I believe of Robin Hood splitting peeled wands at
seven-score yards, and such like. Whoever wrote such stories knew not how
slippery a peeled wand is, even if one could hit it, and how it gives to
the onset. Now, let him stick one in the ground, and take his bow and
arrow at it, ten yards away, or even five.</p>
<p>Now, after all this which I have written, and all the rest which a reader
will see, being quicker of mind than I am (who leave more than half behind
me, like a man sowing wheat, with his dinner laid in the ditch too near
his dog), it is much but what you will understand the Doones far better
than I did, or do even to this moment; and therefore none will doubt when
I tell them that our good justiciaries feared to make an ado, or hold any
public inquiry about my dear father's death. They would all have had to
ride home that night, and who could say what might betide them. Least said
soonest mended, because less chance of breaking.</p>
<p>So we buried him quietly—all except my mother, indeed, for she could
not keep silence—in the sloping little churchyard of Oare, as meek a
place as need be, with the Lynn brook down below it. There is not much of
company there for anybody's tombstone, because the parish spreads so far
in woods and moors without dwelling-house. If we bury one man in three
years, or even a woman or child, we talk about it for three months, and
say it must be our turn next, and scarcely grow accustomed to it until
another goes.</p>
<p>Annie was not allowed to come, because she cried so terribly; but she ran
to the window, and saw it all, mooing there like a little calf, so
frightened and so left alone. As for Eliza, she came with me, one on each
side of mother, and not a tear was in her eyes, but sudden starts of
wonder, and a new thing to be looked at unwillingly, yet curiously. Poor
little thing! she was very clever, the only one of our family—thank
God for the same—but none the more for that guessed she what it is
to lose a father.</p>
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