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<h2> CHAPTER XXIII </h2>
<h3> A ROYAL INVITATION </h3>
<p>Although I had, for the most part, so very stout an appetite, that none
but mother saw any need of encouraging me to eat, I could only manage one
true good meal in a day, at the time I speak of. Mother was in despair at
this, and tempted me with the whole of the rack, and even talked of
sending to Porlock for a druggist who came there twice in a week; and
Annie spent all her time in cooking, and even Lizzie sang songs to me; for
she could sing very sweetly. But my conscience told me that Betty
Muxworthy had some reason upon her side.</p>
<p>'Latt the young ozebird aloun, zay I. Makk zuch ado about un, wi'
hogs'-puddens, and hock-bits, and lambs'-mate, and whaten bradd indade,
and brewers' ale avore dinner-time, and her not to zit wi' no winder aupen—draive
me mad 'e doo, the ov'ee, zuch a passel of voouls. Do 'un good to starve a
bit; and takk zome on's wackedness out ov un.'</p>
<p>But mother did not see it so; and she even sent for Nicholas Snowe to
bring his three daughters with him, and have ale and cake in the parlour,
and advise about what the bees were doing, and when a swarm might be
looked for. Being vexed about this and having to stop at home nearly half
the evening, I lost good manners so much as to ask him (even in our own
house!) what he meant by not mending the swing-hurdle where the Lynn
stream flows from our land into his, and which he is bound to maintain.
But he looked at me in a superior manner, and said, 'Business, young man,
in business time.'</p>
<p>I had other reason for being vexed with Farmer Nicholas just now, viz.
that I had heard a rumour, after church one Sunday—when most of all
we sorrow over the sins of one another—that Master Nicholas Snowe
had been seen to gaze tenderly at my mother, during a passage of the
sermon, wherein the parson spoke well and warmly about the duty of
Christian love. Now, putting one thing with another, about the bees, and
about some ducks, and a bullock with a broken knee-cap, I more than
suspected that Farmer Nicholas was casting sheep's eyes at my mother; not
only to save all further trouble in the matter of the hurdle, but to
override me altogether upon the difficult question of damming. And I knew
quite well that John Fry's wife never came to help at the washing without
declaring that it was a sin for a well-looking woman like mother, with
plenty to live on, and only three children, to keep all the farmers for
miles around so unsettled in their minds about her. Mother used to answer
'Oh fie, Mistress Fry! be good enough to mind your own business.' But we
always saw that she smoothed her apron, and did her hair up afterwards,
and that Mistress Fry went home at night with a cold pig's foot or a bowl
of dripping.</p>
<p>Therefore, on that very night, as I could not well speak to mother about
it, without seeming undutiful, after lighting the three young ladies—for
so in sooth they called themselves—all the way home with our
stable-lanthorn, I begged good leave of Farmer Nicholas (who had hung some
way behind us) to say a word in private to him, before he entered his own
house.</p>
<p>'Wi' all the plaisure in laife, my zon,' he answered very graciously,
thinking perhaps that I was prepared to speak concerning Sally.</p>
<p>'Now, Farmer Nicholas Snowe,' I said, scarce knowing how to begin it, 'you
must promise not to be vexed with me, for what I am going to say to you.'</p>
<p>'Vaxed wi' thee! Noo, noo, my lad. I 'ave a knowed thee too long for that.
And thy veyther were my best friend, afore thee. Never wronged his
neighbours, never spak an unkind word, never had no maneness in him. Tuk a
vancy to a nice young 'ooman, and never kep her in doubt about it, though
there wadn't mooch to zettle on her. Spak his maind laike a man, he did,
and right happy he were wi' her. Ah, well a day! Ah, God knoweth best. I
never shall zee his laike again. And he were the best judge of a dung-heap
anywhere in this county.'</p>
<p>'Well, Master Snowe,' I answered him, 'it is very handsome of you to say
so. And now I am going to be like my father, I am going to speak my mind.'</p>
<p>'Raight there, lad; raight enough, I reckon. Us has had enough of
pralimbinary.'</p>
<p>'Then what I want to say is this—I won't have any one courting my
mother.'</p>
<p>'Coortin' of thy mother, lad?' cried Farmer Snowe, with as much amazement
as if the thing were impossible; 'why, who ever hath been dooin' of it?'</p>
<p>'Yes, courting of my mother, sir. And you know best who comes doing it.'</p>
<p>'Wull, wull! What will boys be up to next? Zhud a' thought herzelf wor the
proper judge. No thank 'ee, lad, no need of thy light. Know the wai to my
own door, at laste; and have a raight to goo there.' And he shut me out
without so much as offering me a drink of cider.</p>
<p>The next afternoon, when work was over, I had seen to the horses, for now
it was foolish to trust John Fry, because he had so many children, and his
wife had taken to scolding; and just as I was saying to myself that in
five days more my month would be done, and myself free to seek Lorna, a
man came riding up from the ford where the road goes through the Lynn
stream. As soon as I saw that it was not Tom Faggus, I went no farther to
meet him, counting that it must be some traveller bound for Brendon or
Cheriton, and likely enough he would come and beg for a draught of milk or
cider; and then on again, after asking the way.</p>
<p>But instead of that, he stopped at our gate, and stood up from his saddle,
and halloed as if he were somebody; and all the time he was flourishing a
white thing in the air, like the bands our parson weareth. So I crossed
the court-yard to speak with him.</p>
<p>'Service of the King!' he saith; 'service of our lord the King! Come
hither, thou great yokel, at risk of fine and imprisonment.'</p>
<p>Although not pleased with this, I went to him, as became a loyal man;
quite at my leisure, however, for there is no man born who can hurry me,
though I hasten for any woman.</p>
<p>'Plover Barrows farm!' said he; 'God only knows how tired I be. Is there
any where in this cursed county a cursed place called Plover Barrows farm?
For last twenty mile at least they told me 'twere only half a mile
farther, or only just round corner. Now tell me that, and I fain would
thwack thee if thou wert not thrice my size.'</p>
<p>'Sir,' I replied, 'you shall not have the trouble. This is Plover's
Barrows farm, and you are kindly welcome. Sheep's kidneys is for supper,
and the ale got bright from the tapping. But why do you think ill of us?
We like not to be cursed so.'</p>
<p>'Nay, I think no ill,' he said; 'sheep's kidneys is good, uncommon good,
if they do them without burning. But I be so galled in the saddle ten
days, and never a comely meal of it. And when they hear "King's service"
cried, they give me the worst of everything. All the way down from London,
I had a rogue of a fellow in front of me, eating the fat of the land
before me, and every one bowing down to him. He could go three miles to my
one though he never changed his horse. He might have robbed me at any
minute, if I had been worth the trouble. A red mare he rideth, strong in
the loins, and pointed quite small in the head. I shall live to see him
hanged yet.'</p>
<p>All this time he was riding across the straw of our courtyard, getting his
weary legs out of the leathers, and almost afraid to stand yet. A
coarse-grained, hard-faced man he was, some forty years of age or so, and
of middle height and stature. He was dressed in a dark brown riding suit,
none the better for Exmoor mud, but fitting him very differently from the
fashion of our tailors. Across the holsters lay his cloak, made of some
red skin, and shining from the sweating of the horse. As I looked down on
his stiff bright head-piece, small quick eyes and black needly beard, he
seemed to despise me (too much, as I thought) for a mere ignoramus and
country bumpkin.</p>
<p>'Annie, have down the cut ham,' I shouted, for my sister was come to the
door by chance, or because of the sound of a horse in the road, 'and cut a
few rashers of hung deer's meat. There is a gentleman come to sup, Annie.
And fetch the hops out of the tap with a skewer that it may run more
sparkling.'</p>
<p>'I wish I may go to a place never meant for me,' said my new friend, now
wiping his mouth with the sleeve of his brown riding coat, 'if ever I fell
among such good folk. You are the right sort, and no error therein. All
this shall go in your favour greatly, when I make deposition. At least, I
mean, if it be as good in the eating as in the hearing. 'Tis a supper
quite fit for Tom Faggus himself, the man who hath stolen my victuals so.
And that hung deer's meat, now is it of the red deer running wild in these
parts?'</p>
<p>'To be sure it is, sir,' I answered; 'where should we get any other?'</p>
<p>'Right, right, you are right, my son. I have heard that the flavour is
marvellous. Some of them came and scared me so, in the fog of the morning,
that I hungered for them ever since. Ha, ha, I saw their haunches. But the
young lady will not forget—art sure she will not forget it?'</p>
<p>'You may trust her to forget nothing, sir, that may tempt a guest to his
comfort.'</p>
<p>'In faith, then, I will leave my horse in your hands, and be off for it.
Half the pleasure of the mouth is in the nose beforehand. But stay, almost
I forgot my business, in the hurry which thy tongue hath spread through my
lately despairing belly. Hungry I am, and sore of body, from my heels
right upward, and sorest in front of my doublet, yet may I not rest nor
bite barley-bread, until I have seen and touched John Ridd. God grant that
he be not far away; I must eat my saddle, if it be so.'</p>
<p>'Have no fear, good sir,' I answered; 'you have seen and touched John
Ridd. I am he, and not one likely to go beneath a bushel.'</p>
<p>'It would take a large bushel to hold thee, John Ridd. In the name of the
King, His Majesty, Charles the Second, these presents!'</p>
<p>He touched me with the white thing which I had first seen him waving, and
which I now beheld to be sheepskin, such as they call parchment. It was
tied across with cord, and fastened down in every corner with unsightly
dabs of wax. By order of the messenger (for I was over-frightened now to
think of doing anything), I broke enough of seals to keep an Easter ghost
from rising; and there I saw my name in large; God grant such another
shock may never befall me in my old age.</p>
<p>'Read, my son; read, thou great fool, if indeed thou canst read,' said the
officer to encourage me; 'there is nothing to kill thee, boy, and my
supper will be spoiling. Stare not at me so, thou fool; thou art big
enough to eat me; read, read, read.'</p>
<p>'If you please, sir, what is your name?' I asked; though why I asked him I
know not, except from fear of witchcraft.</p>
<p>'Jeremy Stickles is my name, lad, nothing more than a poor apparitor of
the worshipful Court of King's Bench. And at this moment a starving one,
and no supper for me unless thou wilt read.'</p>
<p>Being compelled in this way, I read pretty nigh as follows; not that I
give the whole of it, but only the gist and the emphasis,—</p>
<p>'To our good subject, John Ridd, etc.'—describing me ever so much
better than I knew myself—'by these presents, greeting. These are to
require thee, in the name of our lord the King, to appear in person before
the Right Worshipful, the Justices of His Majesty's Bench at Westminster,
laying aside all thine own business, and there to deliver such evidence as
is within thy cognisance, touching certain matters whereby the peace of
our said lord the King, and the well-being of this realm, is, are, or
otherwise may be impeached, impugned, imperilled, or otherwise
detrimented. As witness these presents.' And then there were four seals,
and then a signature I could not make out, only that it began with a J,
and ended with some other writing, done almost in a circle. Underneath was
added in a different handwriting 'Charges will be borne. The matter is
full urgent.'</p>
<p>The messenger watched me, while I read so much as I could read of it; and
he seemed well pleased with my surprise, because he had expected it. Then,
not knowing what else to do, I looked again at the cover, and on the top
of it I saw, 'Ride, Ride, Ride! On His Gracious Majesty's business; spur
and spare not.'</p>
<p>It may be supposed by all who know me, that I was taken hereupon with such
a giddiness in my head and noisiness in my ears, that I was forced to hold
by the crook driven in below the thatch for holding of the hay-rakes.
There was scarcely any sense left in me, only that the thing was come by
power of Mother Melldrum, because I despised her warning, and had again
sought Lorna. But the officer was grieved for me, and the danger to his
supper.</p>
<p>'My son, be not afraid,' he said; 'we are not going to skin thee. Only
thou tell all the truth, and it shall be—but never mind, I will tell
thee all about it, and how to come out harmless, if I find thy victuals
good, and no delay in serving them.'</p>
<p>'We do our best, sir, without bargain,' said I, 'to please our visitors.'</p>
<p>But when my mother saw that parchment (for we could not keep it from her)
she fell away into her favourite bed of stock gilly-flowers, which she had
been tending; and when we brought her round again, did nothing but exclaim
against the wickedness of the age and people. 'It was useless to tell her;
she knew what it was, and so should all the parish know. The King had
heard what her son was, how sober, and quiet, and diligent, and the
strongest young man in England; and being himself such a reprobate—God
forgive her for saying so—he could never rest till he got poor
Johnny, and made him as dissolute as himself. And if he did that'—here
mother went off into a fit of crying; and Annie minded her face, while
Lizzie saw that her gown was in comely order.</p>
<p>But the character of the King improved, when Master Jeremy Stickles (being
really moved by the look of it, and no bad man after all) laid it clearly
before my mother that the King on his throne was unhappy, until he had
seen John Ridd. That the fame of John had gone so far, and his size, and
all his virtues—that verily by the God who made him, the King was
overcome with it.</p>
<p>Then mother lay back in her garden chair, and smiled upon the whole of us,
and most of all on Jeremy; looking only shyly on me, and speaking through
some break of tears. 'His Majesty shall have my John; His Majesty is very
good: but only for a fortnight. I want no titles for him. Johnny is enough
for me; and Master John for the working men.'</p>
<p>Now though my mother was so willing that I should go to London, expecting
great promotion and high glory for me, I myself was deeply gone into the
pit of sorrow. For what would Lorna think of me? Here was the long month
just expired, after worlds of waiting; there would be her lovely self,
peeping softly down the glen, and fearing to encourage me; yet there would
be nobody else, and what an insult to her! Dwelling upon this, and seeing
no chance of escape from it, I could not find one wink of sleep; though
Jeremy Stickles (who slept close by) snored loud enough to spare me some.
For I felt myself to be, as it were, in a place of some importance; in a
situation of trust, I may say; and bound not to depart from it. For who
could tell what the King might have to say to me about the Doones—and
I felt that they were at the bottom of this strange appearance—or
what His Majesty might think, if after receiving a message from him
(trusty under so many seals) I were to violate his faith in me as a
churchwarden's son, and falsely spread his words abroad?</p>
<p>Perhaps I was not wise in building such a wall of scruples. Nevertheless,
all that was there, and weighed upon me heavily. And at last I made up my
mind to this, that even Lorna must not know the reason of my going,
neither anything about it; but that she might know I was gone a long way
from home, and perhaps be sorry for it. Now how was I to let her know even
that much of the matter, without breaking compact?</p>
<p>Puzzling on this, I fell asleep, after the proper time to get up; nor was
I to be seen at breakfast time; and mother (being quite strange to that)
was very uneasy about it. But Master Stickles assured her that the King's
writ often had that effect, and the symptom was a good one.</p>
<p>'Now, Master Stickles, when must we start?' I asked him, as he lounged in
the yard gazing at our turkey poults picking and running in the sun to the
tune of their father's gobble. 'Your horse was greatly foundered, sir, and
is hardly fit for the road to-day; and Smiler was sledding yesterday all
up the higher Cleve; and none of the rest can carry me.'</p>
<p>'In a few more years,' replied the King's officer, contemplating me with
much satisfaction; ''twill be a cruelty to any horse to put thee on his
back, John.'</p>
<p>Master Stickles, by this time, was quite familiar with us, calling me
'Jack,' and Eliza 'Lizzie,' and what I liked the least of all, our pretty
Annie 'Nancy.'</p>
<p>'That will be as God pleases, sir,' I answered him, rather sharply; 'and
the horse that suffers will not be thine. But I wish to know when we must
start upon our long travel to London town. I perceive that the matter is
of great despatch and urgency.'</p>
<p>'To be sure, so it is, my son. But I see a yearling turkey there, him I
mean with the hop in his walk, who (if I know aught of fowls) would roast
well to-morrow. Thy mother must have preparation: it is no more than
reasonable. Now, have that turkey killed to-night (for his fatness makes
me long for him), and we will have him for dinner to-morrow, with,
perhaps, one of his brethren; and a few more collops of red deer's flesh
for supper, and then on the Friday morning, with the grace of God, we will
set our faces to the road, upon His Majesty's business.'</p>
<p>'Nay, but good sir,' I asked with some trembling, so eager was I to see
Lorna; 'if His Majesty's business will keep till Friday, may it not keep
until Monday? We have a litter of sucking-pigs, excellently choice and
white, six weeks old, come Friday. There be too many for the sow, and one
of them needeth roasting. Think you not it would be a pity to leave the
women to carve it?'</p>
<p>'My son Jack,' replied Master Stickles, 'never was I in such quarters yet:
and God forbid that I should be so unthankful to Him as to hurry away. And
now I think on it, Friday is not a day upon which pious people love to
commence an enterprise. I will choose the young pig to-morrow at noon, at
which time they are wont to gambol; and we will celebrate his birthday by
carving him on Friday. After that we will gird our loins, and set forth
early on Saturday.'</p>
<p>Now this was little better to me than if we had set forth at once. Sunday
being the very first day upon which it would be honourable for me to enter
Glen Doone. But though I tried every possible means with Master Jeremy
Stickles, offering him the choice for dinner of every beast that was on
the farm, he durst not put off our departure later than the Saturday. And
nothing else but love of us and of our hospitality would have so persuaded
him to remain with us till then. Therefore now my only chance of seeing
Lorna, before I went, lay in watching from the cliff and espying her, or a
signal from her.</p>
<p>This, however, I did in vain, until my eyes were weary and often would
delude themselves with hope of what they ached for. But though I lay
hidden behind the trees upon the crest of the stony fall, and waited so
quiet that the rabbits and squirrels played around me, and even the
keen-eyed weasel took me for a trunk of wood—it was all as one; no
cast of colour changed the white stone, whose whiteness now was hateful to
me; nor did wreath or skirt of maiden break the loneliness of the vale.</p>
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