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<h2> CHAPTER XII </h2>
<h3> A MAN JUSTLY POPULAR </h3>
<p>Now although Mr. Faggus was so clever, and generous, and celebrated, I
know not whether, upon the whole, we were rather proud of him as a member
of our family, or inclined to be ashamed of him. And indeed I think that
the sway of the balance hung upon the company we were in. For instance,
with the boys at Brendon—for there is no village at Oare—I was
exceeding proud to talk of him, and would freely brag of my Cousin Tom.
But with the rich parsons of the neighbourhood, or the justices (who came
round now and then, and were glad to ride up to a warm farm-house), or
even the well-to-do tradesmen of Porlock—in a word, any settled
power, which was afraid of losing things—with all of them we were
very shy of claiming our kinship to that great outlaw.</p>
<p>And sure, I should pity, as well as condemn him though our ways in the
world were so different, knowing as I do his story; which knowledge,
methinks, would often lead us to let alone God's prerogative—judgment,
and hold by man's privilege—pity. Not that I would find excuse for
Tom's downright dishonesty, which was beyond doubt a disgrace to him, and
no credit to his kinsfolk; only that it came about without his meaning any
harm or seeing how he took to wrong; yet gradually knowing it. And now, to
save any further trouble, and to meet those who disparage him (without
allowance for the time or the crosses laid upon him), I will tell the
history of him, just as if he were not my cousin, and hoping to be heeded.
And I defy any man to say that a word of this is either false, or in any
way coloured by family. Much cause he had to be harsh with the world; and
yet all acknowledged him very pleasant, when a man gave up his money. And
often and often he paid the toll for the carriage coming after him,
because he had emptied their pockets, and would not add inconvenience. By
trade he had been a blacksmith, in the town of Northmolton, in Devonshire,
a rough rude place at the end of Exmoor, so that many people marvelled if
such a man was bred there. Not only could he read and write, but he had
solid substance; a piece of land worth a hundred pounds, and right of
common for two hundred sheep, and a score and a half of beasts, lifting up
or lying down. And being left an orphan (with all these cares upon him) he
began to work right early, and made such a fame at the shoeing of horses,
that the farriers of Barum were like to lose their custom. And indeed he
won a golden Jacobus for the best-shod nag in the north of Devon, and some
say that he never was forgiven.</p>
<p>As to that, I know no more, except that men are jealous. But whether it
were that, or not, he fell into bitter trouble within a month of his
victory; when his trade was growing upon him, and his sweetheart ready to
marry him. For he loved a maid of Southmolton (a currier's daughter I
think she was, and her name was Betsy Paramore), and her father had given
consent; and Tom Faggus, wishing to look his best, and be clean of course,
had a tailor at work upstairs for him, who had come all the way from
Exeter. And Betsy's things were ready too—for which they accused him
afterwards, as if he could help that—when suddenly, like a
thunderbolt, a lawyer's writ fell upon him.</p>
<p>This was the beginning of a law-suit with Sir Robert Bampfylde, a
gentleman of the neighbourhood, who tried to oust him from his common, and
drove his cattle and harassed them. And by that suit of law poor Tom was
ruined altogether, for Sir Robert could pay for much swearing; and then
all his goods and his farm were sold up, and even his smithery taken. But
he saddled his horse, before they could catch him, and rode away to
Southmolton, looking more like a madman than a good farrier, as the people
said who saw him. But when he arrived there, instead of comfort, they
showed him the face of the door alone; for the news of his loss was before
him, and Master Paramore was a sound, prudent man, and a high member of
the town council. It is said that they even gave him notice to pay for
Betsy's wedding-clothes, now that he was too poor to marry her. This may
be false, and indeed I doubt it; in the first place, because Southmolton
is a busy place for talking; and in the next, that I do not think the
action would have lain at law, especially as the maid lost nothing, but
used it all for her wedding next month with Dick Vellacott, of Mockham.</p>
<p>All this was very sore upon Tom; and he took it to heart so grievously,
that he said, as a better man might have said, being loose of mind and
property, 'The world hath preyed on me like a wolf. God help me now to
prey on the world.'</p>
<p>And in sooth it did seem, for a while, as if Providence were with him; for
he took rare toll on the highway, and his name was soon as good as gold
anywhere this side of Bristowe. He studied his business by night and by
day, with three horses all in hard work, until he had made a fine
reputation; and then it was competent to him to rest, and he had plenty
left for charity. And I ought to say for society too, for he truly loved
high society, treating squires and noblemen (who much affected his
company) to the very best fare of the hostel. And they say that once the
King's Justitiaries, being upon circuit, accepted his invitation,
declaring merrily that if never true bill had been found against him, mine
host should now be qualified to draw one. And so the landlords did; and he
always paid them handsomely, so that all of them were kind to him, and
contended for his visits. Let it be known in any township that Mr. Faggus
was taking his leisure at the inn, and straightway all the men flocked
thither to drink his health without outlay, and all the women to admire
him; while the children were set at the cross-roads to give warning of any
officers. One of his earliest meetings was with Sir Robert Bampfylde
himself, who was riding along the Barum road with only one serving-man
after him. Tom Faggus put a pistol to his head, being then obliged to be
violent, through want of reputation; while the serving-man pretended to be
along way round the corner. Then the baronet pulled out his purse, quite
trembling in the hurry of his politeness. Tom took the purse, and his
ring, and time-piece, and then handed them back with a very low bow,
saying that it was against all usage for him to rob a robber. Then he
turned to the unfaithful knave, and trounced him right well for his
cowardice, and stripped him of all his property.</p>
<p>But now Mr. Faggus kept only one horse, lest the Government should steal
them; and that one was the young mare Winnie. How he came by her he never
would tell, but I think that she was presented to him by a certain
Colonel, a lover of sport, and very clever in horseflesh, whose life Tom
had saved from some gamblers. When I have added that Faggus as yet had
never been guilty of bloodshed (for his eyes, and the click of his pistol
at first, and now his high reputation made all his wishes respected), and
that he never robbed a poor man, neither insulted a woman, but was very
good to the Church, and of hot patriotic opinions, and full of jest and
jollity, I have said as much as is fair for him, and shown why he was so
popular. Everybody cursed the Doones, who lived apart disdainfully. But
all good people liked Mr. Faggus—when he had not robbed them—and
many a poor sick man or woman blessed him for other people's money; and
all the hostlers, stable-boys, and tapsters entirely worshipped him.</p>
<p>I have been rather long, and perhaps tedious, in my account of him, lest
at any time hereafter his character should be misunderstood, and his good
name disparaged; whereas he was my second cousin, and the lover of my—But
let that bide. 'Tis a melancholy story.</p>
<p>He came again about three months afterwards, in the beginning of the
spring-time, and brought me a beautiful new carbine, having learned my
love of such things, and my great desire to shoot straight. But mother
would not let me have the gun, until he averred upon his honour that he
had bought it honestly. And so he had, no doubt, so far as it is honest to
buy with money acquired rampantly. Scarce could I stop to make my bullets
in the mould which came along with it, but must be off to the Quarry Hill,
and new target I had made there. And he taught me then how to ride bright
Winnie, who was grown since I had seen her, but remembered me most kindly.
After making much of Annie, who had a wondrous liking for him—and he
said he was her godfather, but God knows how he could have been, unless
they confirmed him precociously—away he went, and young Winnie's
sides shone like a cherry by candlelight.</p>
<p>Now I feel that of those boyish days I have little more to tell, because
everything went quietly, as the world for the most part does with us. I
began to work at the farm in earnest, and tried to help my mother, and
when I remembered Lorna Doone, it seemed no more than the thought of a
dream, which I could hardly call to mind. Now who cares to know how many
bushels of wheat we grew to the acre, or how the cattle milched till we
ate them, or what the turn of the seasons was? But my stupid self seemed
like to be the biggest of all the cattle; for having much to look after
the sheep, and being always in kind appetite, I grew four inches longer in
every year of my farming, and a matter of two inches wider; until there
was no man of my size to be seen elsewhere upon Exmoor. Let that pass:
what odds to any how tall or wide I be? There is no Doone's door at
Plover's Barrows and if there were I could never go through it. They vexed
me so much about my size, long before I had completed it, girding at me
with paltry jokes whose wit was good only to stay at home, that I grew
shame-faced about the matter, and feared to encounter a looking-glass. But
mother was very proud, and said she never could have too much of me.</p>
<p>The worst of all to make me ashamed of bearing my head so high—a
thing I saw no way to help, for I never could hang my chin down, and my
back was like a gatepost whenever I tried to bend it—the worst of
all was our little Eliza, who never could come to a size herself, though
she had the wine from the Sacrament at Easter and Allhallowmas, only to be
small and skinny, sharp, and clever crookedly. Not that her body was out
of the straight (being too small for that perhaps), but that her wit was
full of corners, jagged, and strange, and uncomfortable. You never could
tell what she might say next; and I like not that kind of women. Now God
forgive me for talking so of my own father's daughter, and so much the
more by reason that my father could not help it. The right way is to face
the matter, and then be sorry for every one. My mother fell grievously on
a slide, which John Fry had made nigh the apple-room door, and hidden with
straw from the stable, to cover his own great idleness. My father laid
John's nose on the ice, and kept him warm in spite of it; but it was too
late for Eliza. She was born next day with more mind than body—the
worst thing that can befall a man.</p>
<p>But Annie, my other sister, was now a fine fair girl, beautiful to behold.
I could look at her by the fireside, for an hour together, when I was not
too sleepy, and think of my dear father. And she would do the same thing
by me, only wait the between of the blazes. Her hair was done up in a knot
behind, but some would fall over her shoulders; and the dancing of the
light was sweet to see through a man's eyelashes. There never was a face
that showed the light or the shadow of feeling, as if the heart were sun
to it, more than our dear Annie's did. To look at her carefully, you might
think that she was not dwelling on anything; and then she would know you
were looking at her, and those eyes would tell all about it. God knows
that I try to be simple enough, to keep to His meaning in me, and not make
the worst of His children. Yet often have I been put to shame, and ready
to bite my tongue off, after speaking amiss of anybody, and letting out my
littleness, when suddenly mine eyes have met the pure soft gaze of Annie.</p>
<p>As for the Doones, they were thriving still, and no one to come against
them; except indeed by word of mouth, to which they lent no heed whatever.
Complaints were made from time to time, both in high and low quarters (as
the rank might be of the people robbed), and once or twice in the highest
of all, to wit, the King himself. But His Majesty made a good joke about
it (not meaning any harm, I doubt), and was so much pleased with himself
thereupon, that he quite forgave the mischief. Moreover, the main
authorities were a long way off; and the Chancellor had no cattle on
Exmoor; and as for my lord the Chief Justice, some rogue had taken his
silver spoons; whereupon his lordship swore that never another man would
he hang until he had that one by the neck. Therefore the Doones went on as
they listed, and none saw fit to meddle with them. For the only man who
would have dared to come to close quarters with them, that is to say Tom
Faggus, himself was a quarry for the law, if ever it should be unhooded.
Moreover, he had transferred his business to the neighbourhood of Wantage,
in the county of Berks, where he found the climate drier, also good downs
and commons excellent for galloping, and richer yeomen than ours be, and
better roads to rob them on.</p>
<p>Some folk, who had wiser attended to their own affairs, said that I (being
sizeable now, and able to shoot not badly) ought to do something against
those Doones, and show what I was made of. But for a time I was very
bashful, shaking when called upon suddenly, and blushing as deep as a
maiden; for my strength was not come upon me, and mayhap I had grown in
front of it. And again, though I loved my father still, and would fire at
a word about him, I saw not how it would do him good for me to harm his
injurers. Some races are of revengeful kind, and will for years pursue
their wrong, and sacrifice this world and the next for a moment's foul
satisfaction, but methinks this comes of some black blood, perverted and
never purified. And I doubt but men of true English birth are stouter than
so to be twisted, though some of the women may take that turn, if their
own life runs unkindly.</p>
<p>Let that pass—I am never good at talking of things beyond me. All I
know is, that if I had met the Doone who had killed my father, I would
gladly have thrashed him black and blue, supposing I were able; but would
never have fired a gun at him, unless he began that game with me, or fell
upon more of my family, or were violent among women. And to do them
justice, my mother and Annie were equally kind and gentle, but Eliza would
flame and grow white with contempt, and not trust herself to speak to us.</p>
<p>Now a strange thing came to pass that winter, when I was twenty-one years
old, a very strange thing, which affrighted the rest, and made me feel
uncomfortable. Not that there was anything in it, to do harm to any one,
only that none could explain it, except by attributing it to the devil.
The weather was very mild and open, and scarcely any snow fell; at any
rate, none lay on the ground, even for an hour, in the highest part of
Exmoor; a thing which I knew not before nor since, as long as I can
remember. But the nights were wonderfully dark, as though with no stars in
the heaven; and all day long the mists were rolling upon the hills and
down them, as if the whole land were a wash-house. The moorland was full
of snipes and teal, and curlews flying and crying, and lapwings flapping
heavily, and ravens hovering round dead sheep; yet no redshanks nor
dottrell, and scarce any golden plovers (of which we have great store
generally) but vast lonely birds, that cried at night, and moved the whole
air with their pinions; yet no man ever saw them. It was dismal as well as
dangerous now for any man to go fowling (which of late I loved much in the
winter) because the fog would come down so thick that the pan of the gun
was reeking, and the fowl out of sight ere the powder kindled, and then
the sound of the piece was so dead, that the shooter feared harm, and
glanced over his shoulder. But the danger of course was far less in this
than in losing of the track, and falling into the mires, or over the brim
of a precipice.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, I must needs go out, being young and very stupid, and feared
of being afraid; a fear which a wise man has long cast by, having learned
of the manifold dangers which ever and ever encompass us. And beside this
folly and wildness of youth, perchance there was something, I know not
what, of the joy we have in uncertainty. Mother, in fear of my missing
home—though for that matter, I could smell supper, when hungry,
through a hundred land-yards of fog—my dear mother, who thought of
me ten times for one thought about herself, gave orders to ring the great
sheep-bell, which hung above the pigeon-cote, every ten minutes of the
day, and the sound came through the plaits of fog, and I was vexed about
it, like the letters of a copy-book. It reminded me, too, of Blundell's
bell, and the grief to go into school again.</p>
<p>But during those two months of fog (for we had it all the winter), the
saddest and the heaviest thing was to stand beside the sea. To be upon the
beach yourself, and see the long waves coming in; to know that they are
long waves, but only see a piece of them; and to hear them lifting
roundly, swelling over smooth green rocks, plashing down in the hollow
corners, but bearing on all the same as ever, soft and sleek and
sorrowful, till their little noise is over.</p>
<p>One old man who lived at Lynmouth, seeking to be buried there, having been
more than half over the world, though shy to speak about it, and fain to
come home to his birthplace, this old Will Watcombe (who dwelt by the
water) said that our strange winter arose from a thing he called the
'Gulf-stream', rushing up Channel suddenly. He said it was hot water,
almost fit for a man to shave with, and it threw all our cold water out,
and ruined the fish and the spawning-time, and a cold spring would come
after it. I was fond of going to Lynmouth on Sunday to hear this old man
talk, for sometimes he would discourse with me, when nobody else could
move him. He told me that this powerful flood set in upon our west so hard
sometimes once in ten years, and sometimes not for fifty, and the Lord
only knew the sense of it; but that when it came, therewith came warmth
and clouds, and fog, and moisture, and nuts, and fruit, and even shells;
and all the tides were thrown abroad. As for nuts he winked awhile, and
chewed a piece of tobacco; yet did I not comprehend him. Only afterwards I
heard that nuts with liquid kernels came, travelling on the Gulf stream;
for never before was known so much foreign cordial landed upon our coast,
floating ashore by mistake in the fog, and (what with the tossing and the
mist) too much astray to learn its duty.</p>
<p>Folk, who are ever too prone to talk, said that Will Watcombe himself knew
better than anybody else about this drift of the Gulf-stream, and the
places where it would come ashore, and the caves that took the in-draught.
But De Whichehalse, our great magistrate, certified that there was no
proof of unlawful importation; neither good cause to suspect it, at a time
of Christian charity. And we knew that it was a foul thing for some
quarrymen to say that night after night they had been digging a new cellar
at Ley Manor to hold the little marks of respect found in the caverns at
high-water weed. Let that be, it is none of my business to speak evil of
dignities; duly we common people joked of the 'Gulp-stream,' as we called
it.</p>
<p>But the thing which astonished and frightened us so, was not, I do assure
you, the landing of foreign spirits, nor the loom of a lugger at twilight
in the gloom of the winter moonrise. That which made as crouch in by the
fire, or draw the bed-clothes over us, and try to think of something else,
was a strange mysterious sound.</p>
<p>At grey of night, when the sun was gone, and no red in the west remained,
neither were stars forthcoming, suddenly a wailing voice rose along the
valleys, and a sound in the air, as of people running. It mattered not
whether you stood on the moor, or crouched behind rocks away from it, or
down among reedy places; all as one the sound would come, now from the
heart of the earth beneath, now overhead bearing down on you. And then
there was rushing of something by, and melancholy laughter, and the hair
of a man would stand on end before he could reason properly.</p>
<p>God, in His mercy, knows that I am stupid enough for any man, and very
slow of impression, nor ever could bring myself to believe that our Father
would let the evil one get the upper hand of us. But when I had heard that
sound three times, in the lonely gloom of the evening fog, and the cold
that followed the lines of air, I was loath to go abroad by night, even so
far as the stables, and loved the light of a candle more, and the glow of
a fire with company.</p>
<p>There were many stories about it, of course, all over the breadth of the
moorland. But those who had heard it most often declared that it must be
the wail of a woman's voice, and the rustle of robes fleeing horribly, and
fiends in the fog going after her. To that, however, I paid no heed, when
anybody was with me; only we drew more close together, and barred the
doors at sunset.</p>
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