<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0054" id="link2HCH0054"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER LIV </h2>
<h3> MUTUAL DISCOMFITURE </h3>
<p>It must not be supposed that I was altogether so thick-headed as Jeremy
would have made me out. But it is part of my character that I like other
people to think me slow, and to labour hard to enlighten me, while all the
time I can say to myself, 'This man is shallower than I am; it is pleasant
to see his shoals come up while he is sounding mine so!' Not that I would
so behave, God forbid, with anybody (be it man or woman) who in simple
heart approached me, with no gauge of intellect. But when the upper hand
is taken, upon the faith of one's patience, by a man of even smaller wits
(not that Jeremy was that, neither could he have lived to be thought so),
why, it naturally happens, that we knuckle under, with an ounce of
indignation.</p>
<p>Jeremy's tale would have moved me greatly both with sorrow and anger, even
without my guess at first, and now my firm belief, that the child of those
unlucky parents was indeed my Lorna. And as I thought of the lady's
troubles, and her faith in Providence, and her cruel, childless death, and
then imagined how my darling would be overcome to hear it, you may well
believe that my quick replies to Jeremy Stickles's banter were but as the
flourish of a drum to cover the sounds of pain.</p>
<p>For when he described the heavy coach and the persons in and upon it, and
the breaking down at Dulverton, and the place of their destination, as
well as the time and the weather, and the season of the year, my heart
began to burn within me, and my mind replaced the pictures, first of the
foreign lady's-maid by the pump caressing me, and then of the coach
struggling up the hill, and the beautiful dame, and the fine little boy,
with the white cockade in his hat; but most of all the little girl,
dark-haired and very lovely, and having even in those days the rich soft
look of Lorna.</p>
<p>But when he spoke of the necklace thrown over the head of the little
maiden, and of her disappearance, before my eyes arose at once the
flashing of the beacon-fire, the lonely moors embrowned with the light,
the tramp of the outlaw cavalcade, and the helpless child head-downward,
lying across the robber's saddle-bow.</p>
<p>Then I remembered my own mad shout of boyish indignation, and marvelled at
the strange long way by which the events of life come round. And while I
thought of my own return, and childish attempt to hide myself from sorrow
in the sawpit, and the agony of my mother's tears, it did not fail to
strike me as a thing of omen, that the selfsame day should be, both to my
darling and myself, the blackest and most miserable of all youthful days.</p>
<p>The King's Commissioner thought it wise, for some good reason of his own,
to conceal from me, for the present, the name of the poor lady supposed to
be Lorna's mother; and knowing that I could easily now discover it,
without him, I let that question abide awhile. Indeed I was half afraid to
hear it, remembering that the nobler and the wealthier she proved to be,
the smaller was my chance of winning such a wife for plain John Ridd. Not
that she would give me up: that I never dreamed of. But that others would
interfere; or indeed I myself might find it only honest to relinquish her.
That last thought was a dreadful blow, and took my breath away from me.</p>
<p>Jeremy Stickles was quite decided—and of course the discovery being
his, he had a right to be so—that not a word of all these things
must be imparted to Lorna herself, or even to my mother, or any one
whatever. 'Keep it tight as wax, my lad,' he cried, with a wink of great
expression; 'this belongs to me, mind; and the credit, ay, and the
premium, and the right of discount, are altogether mine. It would have
taken you fifty years to put two and two together so, as I did, like a
clap of thunder. Ah, God has given some men brains; and others have good
farms and money, and a certain skill in the lower beasts. Each must use
his special talent. You work your farm: I work my brains. In the end, my
lad, I shall beat you.'</p>
<p>'Then, Jeremy, what a fool you must be, if you cudgel your brains to make
money of this, to open the barn-door to me, and show me all your
threshing.'</p>
<p>'Not a whit, my son. Quite the opposite. Two men always thresh better than
one. And here I have you bound to use your flail, one two, with mine, and
yet in strictest honour bound not to bushel up, till I tell you.'</p>
<p>'But,' said I, being much amused by a Londoner's brave, yet uncertain, use
of simplest rural metaphors, for he had wholly forgotten the winnowing:
'surely if I bushel up, even when you tell me, I must take half-measure.'</p>
<p>'So you shall, my boy,' he answered, 'if we can only cheat those
confounded knaves of Equity. You shall take the beauty, my son, and the
elegance, and the love, and all that—and, my boy, I will take the
money.'</p>
<p>This he said in a way so dry, and yet so richly unctuous, that being
gifted somehow by God, with a kind of sense of queerness, I fell back in
my chair, and laughed, though the underside of my laugh was tears.</p>
<p>'Now, Jeremy, how if I refuse to keep this half as tight as wax. You bound
me to no such partnership, before you told the story; and I am not sure,
by any means, of your right to do so afterwards.'</p>
<p>'Tush!' he replied: 'I know you too well, to look for meanness in you. If
from pure goodwill, John Ridd, and anxiety to relieve you, I made no
condition precedent, you are not the man to take advantage, as a lawyer
might. I do not even want your promise. As sure as I hold this glass, and
drink your health and love in another drop (forced on me by pathetic
words), so surely will you be bound to me, until I do release you. Tush! I
know men well by this time: a mere look of trust from one is worth
another's ten thousand oaths.'</p>
<p>'Jeremy, you are right,' I answered; 'at least as regards the issue.
Although perhaps you were not right in leading me into a bargain like
this, without my own consent or knowledge. But supposing that we should
both be shot in this grand attack on the valley (for I mean to go with you
now, heart and soul), is Lorna to remain untold of that which changes all
her life?'</p>
<p>'Both shot!' cried Jeremy Stickles: 'my goodness, boy, talk not like that!
And those Doones are cursed good shots too. Nay, nay, the yellows shall go
in front; we attack on the Somerset side, I think. I from a hill will
reconnoitre, as behoves a general, you shall stick behind a tree, if we
can only find one big enough to hide you. You and I to be shot, John Ridd,
with all this inferior food for powder anxious to be devoured?'</p>
<p>I laughed, for I knew his cool hardihood, and never-flinching courage; and
sooth to say no coward would have dared to talk like that.</p>
<p>'But when one comes to think of it,' he continued, smiling at himself;
'some provision should be made for even that unpleasant chance. I will
leave the whole in writing, with orders to be opened, etc., etc.—Now
no more of that, my boy; a cigarro after schnapps, and go to meet my
yellow boys.'</p>
<p>His 'yellow boys,' as he called the Somersetshire trained bands, were even
now coming down the valley from the London Road, as every one since I went
up to town, grandly entitled the lane to the moors. There was one good
point about these men, that having no discipline at all, they made
pretence to none whatever. Nay, rather they ridiculed the thing, as below
men of any spirit. On the other hand, Master Stickles's troopers looked
down on these native fellows from a height which I hope they may never
tumble, for it would break the necks of all of them.</p>
<p>Now these fine natives came along, singing, for their very lives, a song
the like of which set down here would oust my book from modest people, and
make everybody say, 'this man never can have loved Lorna.' Therefore, the
less of that the better; only I thought, 'what a difference from the
goodly psalms of the ale house!'</p>
<p>Having finished their canticle, which contained more mirth than melody,
they drew themselves up, in a sort of way supposed by them to be military,
each man with heel and elbow struck into those of his neighbour, and
saluted the King's Commissioner. 'Why, where are your officers?' asked
Master Stickles; 'how is it that you have no officers?' Upon this there
arose a general grin, and a knowing look passed along their faces, even up
to the man by the gatepost. 'Are you going to tell me, or not,' said
Jeremy, 'what is become of your officers?'</p>
<p>'Plaise zur,' said one little fellow at last, being nodded at by the rest
to speak, in right of his known eloquence; 'hus tould Harfizers, as a wor
no nade of un, now King's man hiszell wor coom, a puppose vor to command
us laike.'</p>
<p>'And do you mean to say, you villains,' cried Jeremy, scarce knowing
whether to laugh, or to swear, or what to do; 'that your officers took
their dismissal thus, and let you come on without them?'</p>
<p>'What could 'em do?' asked the little man, with reason certainly on his
side: 'hus zent 'em about their business, and they was glad enough to
goo.'</p>
<p>'Well!' said poor Jeremy, turning to me; 'a pretty state of things, John!
Threescore cobblers, and farming men, plasterers, tailors, and
kettles-to-mend; and not a man to keep order among them, except my blessed
self, John! And I trow there is not one among them could hit all in-door
flying. The Doones will make riddles of all of us.'</p>
<p>However, he had better hopes when the sons of Devon appeared, as they did
in about an hour's time; fine fellows, and eager to prove themselves.
These had not discarded their officers, but marched in good obedience to
them, and were quite prepared to fight the men of Somerset (if need be) in
addition to the Doones. And there was scarcely a man among them but could
have trounced three of the yellow men, and would have done it gladly too,
in honour of the red facings.</p>
<p>'Do you mean to suppose, Master Jeremy Stickles,' said I, looking on with
amazement, beholding also all our maidens at the upstair windows
wondering; 'that we, my mother a widow woman, and I a young man of small
estate, can keep and support all these precious fellows, both yellow ones,
and red ones, until they have taken the Doone Glen?'</p>
<p>'God forbid it, my son!' he replied, laying a finger upon his lip: 'Nay,
nay, I am not of the shabby order, when I have the strings of government.
Kill your sheep at famine prices, and knead your bread at a figure
expressing the rigours of last winter. Let Annie make out the bill every
day, and I at night will double it. You may take my word for it, Master
John, this spring-harvest shall bring you in three times as much as last
autumn's did. If they cheated you in town, my lad, you shall have your
change in the country. Take thy bill, and write down quickly.'</p>
<p>However this did not meet my views of what an honest man should do; and I
went to consult my mother about it, as all the accounts would be made in
her name.</p>
<p>Dear mother thought that if the King paid only half again as much as other
people would have to pay, it would be perhaps the proper thing; the half
being due for loyalty: and here she quoted an ancient saying,—</p>
<p>The King and his staff. Be a man and a half:</p>
<p>which, according to her judgment, ruled beyond dispute the law of the
present question. To argue with her after that (which she brought up with
such triumph) would have been worse than useless. Therefore I just told
Annie to make the bills at a third below the current market prices; so
that the upshot would be fair. She promised me honestly that she would;
but with a twinkle in her bright blue eyes, which she must have caught
from Tom Faggus. It always has appeared to me that stern and downright
honesty upon money matters is a thing not understood of women; be they as
good as good can be.</p>
<p>The yellows and the reds together numbered a hundred and twenty men, most
of whom slept in our barns and stacks; and besides these we had fifteen
troopers of the regular army. You may suppose that all the country was
turned upside down about it; and the folk who came to see them drill—by
no means a needless exercise—were a greater plague than the
soldiers. The officers too of the Devonshire hand were such a torment to
us, that we almost wished their men had dismissed them, as the Somerset
troop had done with theirs. For we could not keep them out of our house,
being all young men of good family, and therefore not to be met with bars.
And having now three lovely maidens (for even Lizzie might be called so,
when she cared to please), mother and I were at wit's ends, on account of
those blessed officers. I never got a wink of sleep; they came whistling
under the window so; and directly I went out to chase them, there was
nothing but a cat to see.</p>
<p>Therefore all of us were right glad (except perhaps Farmer Snowe, from
whom we had bought some victuals at rare price), when Jeremy Stickles gave
orders to march, and we began to try to do it. A good deal of boasting
went overhead, as our men defiled along the lane; and the thick broad
patins of pennywort jutted out between the stones, ready to heal their
bruises. The parish choir came part of the way, and the singing-loft from
Countisbury; and they kept our soldiers' spirits up with some of the most
pugnacious Psalms. Parson Bowden marched ahead, leading all our van and
file, as against the Papists; and promising to go with us, till we came to
bullet distance. Therefore we marched bravely on, and children came to
look at us. And I wondered where Uncle Reuben was, who ought to have led
the culverins (whereof we had no less than three), if Stickles could only
have found him; and then I thought of little Ruth; and without any fault
on my part, my heart went down within me.</p>
<p>The culverins were laid on bark; and all our horses pulling them, and
looking round every now and then, with their ears curved up like a
squirrel'd nut, and their noses tossing anxiously, to know what sort of
plough it was man had been pleased to put behind them—man, whose
endless whims and wildness they could never understand, any more than they
could satisfy. However, they pulled their very best—as all our
horses always do—and the culverins went up the hill, without smack
of whip, or swearing. It had been arranged, very justly, no doubt, and
quite in keeping with the spirit of the Constitution, but as it proved not
too wisely, that either body of men should act in its own county only. So
when we reached the top of the hill, the sons of Devon marched on, and
across the track leading into Doone-gate, so as to fetch round the western
side, and attack with their culverin from the cliffs, whence the sentry
had challenged me on the night of my passing the entrance. Meanwhile the
yellow lads were to stay upon the eastern highland, whence Uncle Reuben
and myself had reconnoitred so long ago; and whence I had leaped into the
valley at the time of the great snow-drifts. And here they were not to
show themselves; but keep their culverin in the woods, until their cousins
of Devon appeared on the opposite parapet of the glen.</p>
<p>The third culverin was entrusted to the fifteen troopers; who, with ten
picked soldiers from either trained hand, making in all five-and-thirty
men, were to assault the Doone-gate itself, while the outlaws were placed
between two fires from the eastern cliff and the western. And with this
force went Jeremy Stickles, and with it went myself, as knowing more about
the passage than any other stranger did. Therefore, if I have put it
clearly, as I strive to do, you will see that the Doones must repulse at
once three simultaneous attacks, from an army numbering in the whole one
hundred and thirty-five men, not including the Devonshire officers; fifty
men on each side, I mean, and thirty-five at the head of the valley.</p>
<p>The tactics of this grand campaign appeared to me so clever, and
beautifully ordered, that I commended Colonel Stickles, as everybody now
called him, for his great ability and mastery of the art of war. He
admitted that he deserved high praise; but said that he was not by any
means equally certain of success, so large a proportion of his forces
being only a raw militia, brave enough no doubt for anything, when they
saw their way to it; but knowing little of gunnery, and wholly unused to
be shot at. Whereas all the Doones were practised marksmen, being
compelled when lads (like the Balearic slingers) to strike down their
meals before tasting them. And then Colonel Stickles asked me, whether I
myself could stand fire; he knew that I was not a coward, but this was a
different question. I told him that I had been shot at, once or twice
before; but nevertheless disliked it, as much as almost anything. Upon
that he said that I would do; for that when a man got over the first blush
of diffidence, he soon began to look upon it as a puff of destiny.</p>
<p>I wish I could only tell what happened, in the battle of that day,
especially as nearly all the people round these parts, who never saw
gun-fire in it, have gotten the tale so much amiss; and some of them will
even stand in front of my own hearth, and contradict me to the teeth;
although at the time they were not born, nor their fathers put into
breeches. But in truth, I cannot tell, exactly, even the part in which I
helped, how then can I be expected, time by time, to lay before you, all
the little ins and outs of places, where I myself was not? Only I can
contradict things, which I know could not have been; and what I plainly
saw should not be controverted in my own house.</p>
<p>Now we five-and-thirty men lay back a little way round the corner, in the
hollow of the track which leads to the strong Doone-gate. Our culverin was
in amongst us, loaded now to the muzzle, and it was not comfortable to
know that it might go off at any time. Although the yeomanry were not come
(according to arrangement), some of us had horses there; besides the
horses who dragged the cannon, and now were sniffing at it. And there were
plenty of spectators to mind these horses for us, as soon as we should
charge; inasmuch as all our friends and neighbours, who had so keenly
prepared for the battle, now resolved to take no part, but look on, and
praise the winners.</p>
<p>At last we heard the loud bang-bang, which proved that Devon and Somerset
were pouring their indignation hot into the den of malefactors, or at
least so we supposed; therefore at double quick march we advanced round
the bend of the cliff which had hidden us, hoping to find the gate
undefended, and to blow down all barriers with the fire of our cannon. And
indeed it seemed likely at first to be so, for the wild and mountainous
gorge of rock appeared to be all in pure loneliness, except where the
coloured coats of our soldiers, and their metal trappings, shone with the
sun behind them. Therefore we shouted a loud hurrah, as for an easy
victory.</p>
<p>But while the sound of our cheer rang back among the crags above us, a
shrill clear whistle cleft the air for a single moment, and then a dozen
carbines bellowed, and all among us flew murderous lead. Several of our
men rolled over, but the rest rushed on like Britons, Jeremy and myself in
front, while we heard the horses plunging at the loaded gun behind us.
'Now, my lads,' cried Jeremy, 'one dash, and we are beyond them!' For he
saw that the foe was overhead in the gallery of brushwood.</p>
<p>Our men with a brave shout answered him, for his courage was fine example;
and we leaped in under the feet of the foe, before they could load their
guns again. But here, when the foremost among us were past, an awful crash
rang behind us, with the shrieks of men, and the din of metal, and the
horrible screaming of horses. The trunk of the tree had been launched
overhead, and crashed into the very midst of us. Our cannon was under it,
so were two men, and a horse with his poor back broken. Another horse
vainly struggled to rise, with his thigh-bone smashed and protruding.</p>
<p>Now I lost all presence of mind at this, for I loved both those good
horses, and shouting for any to follow me, dashed headlong into the
cavern. Some five or six men came after me, the foremost of whom was
Jeremy, when a storm of shot whistled and patted around me, with a blaze
of light and a thunderous roar. On I leaped, like a madman, and pounced on
one gunner, and hurled him across his culverin; but the others had fled,
and a heavy oak door fell to with a bang, behind them. So utterly were my
senses gone, and naught but strength remaining, that I caught up the
cannon with both hands, and dashed it, breech-first, at the doorway. The
solid oak burst with the blow, and the gun stuck fast, like a builder's
putlog.</p>
<p>But here I looked round in vain for any one to come and follow up my
success. The scanty light showed me no figure moving through the length of
the tunnel behind me; only a heavy groan or two went to my heart, and
chilled it. So I hurried back to seek Jeremy, fearing that he must be
smitten down.</p>
<p>And so indeed I found him, as well as three other poor fellows, struck by
the charge of the culverin, which had passed so close beside me. Two of
the four were as dead as stones, and growing cold already, but Jeremy and
the other could manage to groan, just now and then. So I turned my
attention to them, and thought no more of fighting.</p>
<p>Having so many wounded men, and so many dead among us, we loitered at the
cavern's mouth, and looked at one another, wishing only for somebody to
come and take command of us. But no one came; and I was griefed so much
about poor Jeremy, besides being wholly unused to any violence of
bloodshed, that I could only keep his head up, and try to stop him from
bleeding. And he looked up at me pitifully, being perhaps in a haze of
thought, as a calf looks at a butcher.</p>
<p>The shot had taken him in the mouth; about that no doubt could be, for two
of his teeth were in his beard, and one of his lips was wanting. I laid
his shattered face on my breast, and nursed him, as a woman might. But he
looked at me with a jerk at this; and I saw that he wanted coolness.</p>
<p>While here we stayed, quite out of danger (for the fellows from the
gallery could by no means shoot us, even if they remained there, and the
oaken door whence the others fled was blocked up by the culverin), a boy
who had no business there (being in fact our clerk's apprentice to the art
of shoe-making) came round the corner upon us in the manner which boys,
and only boys, can use with grace and freedom; that is to say, with a
sudden rush, and a sidelong step, and an impudence,—</p>
<p>'Got the worst of it!' cried the boy; 'better be off all of you.
Zoomerzett and Devon a vighting; and the Doones have drashed 'em both.
Maister Ridd, even thee be drashed.'</p>
<p>We few, who yet remained of the force which was to have won the
Doone-gate, gazed at one another, like so many fools, and nothing more.
For we still had some faint hopes of winning the day, and recovering our
reputation, by means of what the other men might have done without us. And
we could not understand at all how Devonshire and Somerset, being embarked
in the same cause, should be fighting with one another.</p>
<p>Finding nothing more to be done in the way of carrying on the war, we laid
poor Master Stickles and two more of the wounded upon the carriage of bark
and hurdles, whereon our gun had lain; and we rolled the gun into the
river, and harnessed the horses yet alive, and put the others out of their
pain, and sadly wended homewards, feeling ourselves to be thoroughly
beaten, yet ready to maintain that it was no fault of ours whatever. And
in this opinion the women joined, being only too glad and thankful to see
us home alive again.</p>
<p>Now, this enterprise having failed so, I prefer not to dwell too long upon
it; only just to show the mischief which lay at the root of the failure.
And this mischief was the vile jealousy betwixt red and yellow uniform.
Now I try to speak impartially, belonging no more to Somerset than I do to
Devonshire, living upon the borders, and born of either county. The tale
was told me by one side first; and then quite to a different tune by the
other; and then by both together, with very hot words of reviling, and a
desire to fight it out again. And putting this with that, the truth
appears to be as follows:—</p>
<p>The men of Devon, who bore red facings, had a long way to go round the
hills, before they could get into due position on the western side of the
Doone Glen. And knowing that their cousins in yellow would claim the whole
of the glory, if allowed to be first with the firing, these worthy fellows
waited not to take good aim with their cannons, seeing the others about to
shoot; but fettled it anyhow on the slope, pointing in a general
direction; and trusting in God for aimworthiness, laid the rope to the
breech, and fired. Now as Providence ordained it, the shot, which was a
casual mixture of anything considered hard—for instance, jug-bottoms
and knobs of doors—the whole of this pernicious dose came scattering
and shattering among the unfortunate yellow men upon the opposite cliff;
killing one and wounding two.</p>
<p>Now what did the men of Somerset do, but instead of waiting for their
friends to send round and beg pardon, train their gun full mouth upon
them, and with a vicious meaning shoot. Not only this, but they loudly
cheered, when they saw four or five red coats lie low; for which savage
feeling not even the remarks of the Devonshire men concerning their coats
could entirely excuse them. Now I need not tell the rest of it, for the
tale makes a man discontented. Enough that both sides waxed hotter and
hotter with the fire of destruction. And but that the gorge of the cliffs
lay between, very few would have lived to tell of it; for our western
blood becomes stiff and firm, when churned with the sense of wrong in it.</p>
<p>At last the Doones (who must have laughed at the thunder passing overhead)
recalling their men from the gallery, issued out of Gwenny's gate (which
had been wholly overlooked) and fell on the rear of the Somerset men, and
slew four beside their cannon. Then while the survivors ran away, the
outlaws took the hot culverin, and rolled it down into their valley. Thus,
of the three guns set forth that morning, only one ever came home again,
and that was the gun of the Devonshire men, who dragged it home
themselves, with the view of making a boast about it.</p>
<p>This was a melancholy end of our brave setting out, and everybody blamed
every one else; and several of us wanted to have the whole thing over
again, as then we must have righted it. But upon one point all agreed, by
some reason not clear to me, that the root of the evil was to be found in
the way Parson Bowden went up the hill, with his hat on, and no cassock.</p>
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