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<h2> CHAPTER XL </h2>
<h3> TWO FOOLS TOGETHER </h3>
<p>That story of John Fry's, instead of causing any amusement, gave us great
disquietude; not only because it showed that Tom Faggus could not resist
sudden temptation and the delight of wildness, but also that we greatly
feared lest the King's pardon might be annulled, and all his kindness
cancelled, by a reckless deed of that sort. It was true (as Annie insisted
continually, even with tears, to wear in her arguments) that Tom had not
brought away anything, except the warrants, which were of no use at all,
after receipt of the pardon; neither had he used any violence, except just
to frighten people; but could it be established, even towards
Christmas-time, that Tom had a right to give alms, right and left, out of
other people's money?</p>
<p>Dear Annie appeared to believe that it could; saying that if the rich
continually chose to forget the poor, a man who forced them to remember,
and so to do good to themselves and to others, was a public benefactor,
and entitled to every blessing. But I knew, and so Lizzie knew—John
Fry being now out of hearing—that this was not sound argument. For,
if it came to that, any man might take the King by the throat, and make
him cast away among the poor the money which he wanted sadly for Her Grace
the Duchess, and the beautiful Countess, of this, and of that. Lizzie, of
course, knew nothing about His Majesty's diversions, which were not fit
for a young maid's thoughts; but I now put the form of the argument as it
occurred to me.</p>
<p>Therefore I said, once for all (and both my sisters always listened when I
used the deep voice from my chest):</p>
<p>'Tom Faggus hath done wrong herein; wrong to himself, and to our Annie.
All he need have done was to show his pardon, and the magistrates would
have rejoiced with him. He might have led a most godly life, and have been
respected by everybody; and knowing how brave Tom is, I thought that he
would have done as much. Now if I were in love with a maid'—I put it
thus for the sake of poor Lizzie—'never would I so imperil my life,
and her fortune in life along with me, for the sake of a poor diversion. A
man's first duty is to the women, who are forced to hang upon him'—</p>
<p>'Oh, John, not that horrible word,' cried Annie, to my great surprise, and
serious interruption; 'oh, John, any word but that!' And she burst forth
crying terribly.</p>
<p>'What word, Lizzie? What does the wench mean?' I asked, in the saddest
vexation; seeing no good to ask Annie at all, for she carried on most
dreadfully.</p>
<p>'Don't you know, you stupid lout?' said Lizzie, completing my wonderment,
by the scorn of her quicker intelligence; 'if you don't know, axe about?'</p>
<p>And with that, I was forced to be content; for Lizzie took Annie in such a
manner (on purpose to vex me, as I could see) with her head drooping down,
and her hair coming over, and tears and sobs rising and falling, to boot,
without either order or reason, that seeing no good for a man to do (since
neither of them was Lorna), I even went out into the courtyard, and smoked
a pipe, and wondered what on earth is the meaning of women.</p>
<p>Now in this I was wrong and unreasonable (as all women will acknowledge);
but sometimes a man is so put out, by the way they take on about nothing,
that he really cannot help thinking, for at least a minute, that women are
a mistake for ever, and hence are for ever mistaken. Nevertheless I could
not see that any of these great thoughts and ideas applied at all to my
Lorna; but that she was a different being; not woman enough to do anything
bad, yet enough of a woman for man to adore.</p>
<p>And now a thing came to pass which tested my adoration pretty sharply,
inasmuch as I would far liefer faced Carver Doone and his father, nay,
even the roaring lion himself with his hoofs and flaming nostrils, than
have met, in cold blood, Sir Ensor Doone, the founder of all the colony,
and the fear of the very fiercest.</p>
<p>But that I was forced to do at this time, and in the manner following.
When I went up one morning to look for my seven rooks' nests, behold there
were but six to be seen; for the topmost of them all was gone, and the
most conspicuous. I looked, and looked, and rubbed my eyes, and turned to
try them by other sights; and then I looked again; yes, there could be no
doubt about it; the signal was made for me to come, because my love was in
danger. For me to enter the valley now, during the broad daylight, could
have brought no comfort, but only harm to the maiden, and certain death to
myself. Yet it was more than I could do to keep altogether at distance;
therefore I ran to the nearest place where I could remain unseen, and
watched the glen from the wooded height, for hours and hours, impatiently.</p>
<p>However, no impatience of mine made any difference in the scene upon which
I was gazing. In the part of the valley which I could see, there was
nothing moving, except the water, and a few stolen cows, going sadly
along, as if knowing that they had no honest right there. It sank very
heavily into my heart, with all the beds of dead leaves around it, and
there was nothing I cared to do, except blow on my fingers, and long for
more wit.</p>
<p>For a frost was beginning, which made a great difference to Lorna and to
myself, I trow; as well as to all the five million people who dwell in
this island of England; such a frost as never I saw before,* neither hope
ever to see again; a time when it was impossible to milk a cow for
icicles, or for a man to shave some of his beard (as I liked to do for
Lorna's sake, because she was so smooth) without blunting his razor on
hard gray ice. No man could 'keep yatt' (as we say), even though he
abandoned his work altogether, and thumped himself, all on the chest and
the front, till his frozen hands would have been bleeding except for the
cold that kept still all his veins.</p>
<p>* If John Ridd lived until the year 1740 (as so strong a man<br/>
was bound to do), he must have seen almost a harder frost;<br/>
and perhaps it put an end to him; for then he would be some<br/>
fourscore years old. But tradition makes him 'keep yatt,'<br/>
as he says, up to fivescore years.—ED.<br/></p>
<p>However, at present there was no frost, although for a fortnight
threatening; and I was too young to know the meaning of the way the dead
leaves hung, and the worm-casts prickling like women's combs, and the
leaden tone upon everything, and the dead weight of the sky. Will
Watcombe, the old man at Lynmouth, who had been half over the world
almost, and who talked so much of the Gulf-stream, had (as I afterwards
called to mind) foretold a very bitter winter this year. But no one would
listen to him because there were not so many hips and haws as usual;
whereas we have all learned from our grandfathers that Providence never
sends very hard winters, without having furnished a large supply of
berries for the birds to feed upon.</p>
<p>It was lucky for me, while I waited here, that our very best sheep-dog,
old Watch, had chosen to accompany me that day. For otherwise I must have
had no dinner, being unpersuaded, even by that, to quit my survey of the
valley. However, by aid of poor Watch, I contrived to obtain a supply of
food; for I sent him home with a note to Annie fastened upon his chest;
and in less than an hour back he came, proud enough to wag his tail off,
with his tongue hanging out from the speed of his journey, and a large
lump of bread and of bacon fastened in a napkin around his neck. I had not
told my sister, of course, what was toward; for why should I make her
anxious?</p>
<p>When it grew towards dark, I was just beginning to prepare for my circuit
around the hills; but suddenly Watch gave a long low growl; I kept myself
close as possible, and ordered the dog to be silent, and presently saw a
short figure approaching from a thickly-wooded hollow on the left side of
my hiding-place. It was the same figure I had seen once before in the
moonlight, at Plover's Barrows; and proved, to my great delight, to be the
little maid Gwenny Carfax. She started a moment, at seeing me, but more
with surprise than fear; and then she laid both her hands upon mine, as if
she had known me for twenty years.</p>
<p>'Young man,' she said, 'you must come with me. I was gwain' all the way to
fetch thee. Old man be dying; and her can't die, or at least her won't,
without first considering thee.'</p>
<p>'Considering me!' I cried; 'what can Sir Ensor Doone want with considering
me? Has Mistress Lorna told him?'</p>
<p>'All concerning thee, and thy doings; when she knowed old man were so near
his end. That vexed he was about thy low blood, a' thought her would come
to life again, on purpose for to bate 'ee. But after all, there can't be
scarcely such bad luck as that. Now, if her strook thee, thou must take
it; there be no denaying of un. Fire I have seen afore, hot and red, and
raging; but I never seen cold fire afore, and it maketh me burn and
shiver.'</p>
<p>And in truth, it made me both burn and shiver, to know that I must either
go straight to the presence of Sir Ensor Doone, or give up Lorna, once for
all, and rightly be despised by her. For the first time of my life, I
thought that she had not acted fairly. Why not leave the old man in peace,
without vexing him about my affair? But presently I saw again that in this
matter she was right; that she could not receive the old man's blessing
(supposing that he had one to give, which even a worse man might suppose),
while she deceived him about herself, and the life she had undertaken.</p>
<p>Therefore, with great misgiving of myself, but no ill thought of my
darling, I sent Watch home, and followed Gwenny; who led me along very
rapidly, with her short broad form gliding down the hollow, from which she
had first appeared. Here at the bottom, she entered a thicket of gray ash
stubs and black holly, with rocks around it gnarled with roots, and hung
with masks of ivy. Here in a dark and lonely corner, with a pixie ring
before it, she came to a narrow door, very brown and solid, looking like a
trunk of wood at a little distance. This she opened, without a key, by
stooping down and pressing it, where the threshold met the jamb; and then
she ran in very nimbly, but I was forced to be bent in two, and even so
without comfort. The passage was close and difficult, and as dark as any
black pitch; but it was not long (be it as it might), and in that there
was some comfort. We came out soon at the other end, and were at the top
of Doone valley. In the chilly dusk air, it looked most untempting,
especially during that state of mind under which I was labouring. As we
crossed towards the Captain's house, we met a couple of great Doones
lounging by the waterside. Gwenny said something to them, and although
they stared very hard at me, they let me pass without hindrance. It is not
too much to say that when the little maid opened Sir Ensor's door, my
heart thumped, quite as much with terror as with hope of Lorna's presence.</p>
<p>But in a moment the fear was gone, for Lorna was trembling in my arms, and
my courage rose to comfort her. The darling feared, beyond all things
else, lest I should be offended with her for what she had said to her
grandfather, and for dragging me into his presence; but I told her almost
a falsehood (the first, and the last, that ever I did tell her), to wit,
that I cared not that much—and showed her the tip of my thumb as I
said it—for old Sir Ensor, and all his wrath, so long as I had his
granddaughter's love.</p>
<p>Now I tried to think this as I said it, so as to save it from being a lie;
but somehow or other it did not answer, and I was vexed with myself both
ways. But Lorna took me by the hand as bravely as she could, and led me
into a little passage where I could hear the river moaning and the
branches rustling.</p>
<p>Here I passed as long a minute as fear ever cheated time of, saying to
myself continually that there was nothing to be frightened at, yet growing
more and more afraid by reason of so reasoning. At last my Lorna came back
very pale, as I saw by the candle she carried, and whispered, 'Now be
patient, dearest. Never mind what he says to you; neither attempt to
answer him. Look at him gently and steadfastly, and, if you can, with some
show of reverence; but above all things, no compassion; it drives him
almost mad. Now come; walk very quietly.'</p>
<p>She led me into a cold, dark room, rough and very gloomy, although with
two candles burning. I took little heed of the things in it, though I
marked that the window was open. That which I heeded was an old man, very
stern and comely, with death upon his countenance; yet not lying in his
bed, but set upright in a chair, with a loose red cloak thrown over him.
Upon this his white hair fell, and his pallid fingers lay in a ghastly
fashion without a sign of life or movement or of the power that kept him
up; all rigid, calm, and relentless. Only in his great black eyes, fixed
upon me solemnly, all the power of his body dwelt, all the life of his
soul was burning.</p>
<p>I could not look at him very nicely, being afeared of the death in his
face, and most afeared to show it. And to tell the truth, my poor blue
eyes fell away from the blackness of his, as if it had been my
coffin-plate. Therefore I made a low obeisance, and tried not to shiver.
Only I groaned that Lorna thought it good manners to leave us two
together.</p>
<p>'Ah,' said the old man, and his voice seemed to come from a cavern of
skeletons; 'are you that great John Ridd?'</p>
<p>'John Ridd is my name, your honour,' was all that I could answer; 'and I
hope your worship is better.'</p>
<p>'Child, have you sense enough to know what you have been doing?'</p>
<p>'Yes, I knew right well,' I answered, 'that I have set mine eyes far above
my rank.'</p>
<p>'Are you ignorant that Lorna Doone is born of the oldest families
remaining in North Europe?'</p>
<p>'I was ignorant of that, your worship; yet I knew of her high descent from
the Doones of Bagworthy.'</p>
<p>The old man's eyes, like fire, probed me whether I was jesting; then
perceiving how grave I was, and thinking that I could not laugh (as many
people suppose of me), he took on himself to make good the deficiency with
a very bitter smile.</p>
<p>'And know you of your own low descent from the Ridds of Oare?'</p>
<p>'Sir,' I answered, being as yet unaccustomed to this style of speech, 'the
Ridds, of Oare, have been honest men twice as long as the Doones have been
rogues.'</p>
<p>'I would not answer for that, John,' Sir Ensor replied, very quietly, when
I expected fury. 'If it be so, thy family is the very oldest in Europe.
Now hearken to me, boy, or clown, or honest fool, or whatever thou art;
hearken to an old man's words, who has not many hours to live. There is
nothing in this world to fear, nothing to revere or trust, nothing even to
hope for; least of all, is there aught to love.'</p>
<p>'I hope your worship is not quite right,' I answered, with great
misgivings; 'else it is a sad mistake for anybody to live, sir.'</p>
<p>'Therefore,' he continued, as if I had never spoken, 'though it may seem
hard for a week or two, like the loss of any other toy, I deprive you of
nothing, but add to your comfort, and (if there be such a thing) to your
happiness, when I forbid you ever to see that foolish child again. All
marriage is a wretched farce, even when man and wife belong to the same
rank of life, have temper well assorted, similar likes and dislikes, and
about the same pittance of mind. But when they are not so matched, the
farce would become a long, dull tragedy, if anything were worth lamenting.
There, I have reasoned enough with you; I am not in the habit of
reasoning. Though I have little confidence in man's honour, I have some
reliance in woman's pride. You will pledge your word in Lorna's presence
never to see or to seek her again; never even to think of her more. Now
call her, for I am weary.'</p>
<p>He kept his great eyes fixed upon me with their icy fire (as if he scorned
both life and death), and on his haughty lips some slight amusement at my
trouble; and then he raised one hand (as if I were a poor dumb creature),
and pointed to the door. Although my heart rebelled and kindled at his
proud disdain, I could not disobey him freely; but made a low salute, and
went straightway in search of Lorna.</p>
<p>I found my love (or not my love; according as now she should behave; for I
was very desperate, being put upon so sadly); Lorna Doone was crying
softly at a little window, and listening to the river's grief. I laid my
heavy arm around her, not with any air of claiming or of forcing her
thoughts to me, but only just to comfort her, and ask what she was
thinking of. To my arm she made no answer, neither to my seeking eyes; but
to my heart, once for all, she spoke with her own upon it. Not a word, nor
sound between us; not even a kiss was interchanged; but man, or maid, who
has ever loved hath learned our understanding.</p>
<p>Therefore it came to pass, that we saw fit to enter Sir Ensor's room in
the following manner. Lorna, with her right hand swallowed entirely by the
palm of mine, and her waist retired from view by means of my left arm. All
one side of her hair came down, in a way to be remembered, upon the left
and fairest part of my favourite otter-skin waistcoat; and her head as
well would have lain there doubtless, but for the danger of walking so. I,
for my part, was too far gone to lag behind in the matter; but carried my
love bravely, fearing neither death nor hell, while she abode beside me.</p>
<p>Old Sir Ensor looked much astonished. For forty years he had been obeyed
and feared by all around him; and he knew that I had feared him vastly,
before I got hold of Lorna. And indeed I was still afraid of him; only for
loving Lorna so, and having to protect her.</p>
<p>Then I made him a bow, to the very best of all I had learned both at
Tiverton and in London; after that I waited for him to begin, as became
his age and rank in life.</p>
<p>'Ye two fools!' he said at last, with a depth of contempt which no words
may express; 'ye two fools!'</p>
<p>'May it please your worship,' I answered softly; 'maybe we are not such
fools as we look. But though we be, we are well content, so long as we may
be two fools together.'</p>
<p>'Why, John,' said the old man, with a spark, as of smiling in his eyes;
'thou art not altogether the clumsy yokel, and the clod, I took thee for.'</p>
<p>'Oh, no, grandfather; oh, dear grandfather,' cried Lorna, with such zeal
and flashing, that her hands went forward; 'nobody knows what John Ridd
is, because he is so modest. I mean, nobody except me, dear.' And here she
turned to me again, and rose upon tiptoe, and kissed me.</p>
<p>'I have seen a little o' the world,' said the old man, while I was half
ashamed, although so proud of Lorna; 'but this is beyond all I have seen,
and nearly all I have heard of. It is more fit for southern climates than
for the fogs of Exmoor.'</p>
<p>'It is fit for all the world, your worship; with your honour's good leave,
and will,' I answered in humility, being still ashamed of it; 'when it
happens so to people, there is nothing that can stop it, sir.'</p>
<p>Now Sir Ensor Doone was leaning back upon his brown chair-rail, which was
built like a triangle, as in old farmhouses (from one of which it had
come, no doubt, free from expense or gratitude); and as I spoke he coughed
a little; and he sighed a good deal more; and perhaps his dying heart
desired to open time again, with such a lift of warmth and hope as he
descried in our eyes, and arms. I could not understand him then; any more
than a baby playing with his grandfather's spectacles; nevertheless I
wondered whether, at his time of life, or rather on the brink of death, he
was thinking of his youth and pride.</p>
<p>'Fools you are; be fools for ever,' said Sir Ensor Doone, at last; while
we feared to break his thoughts, but let each other know our own, with
little ways of pressure; 'it is the best thing I can wish you; boy and
girl, be boy and girl, until you have grandchildren.'</p>
<p>Partly in bitterness he spoke, and partly in pure weariness, and then he
turned so as not to see us; and his white hair fell, like a shroud, around
him.</p>
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