<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XXV.</h2>
<p class="p2">That evening Dr. Hutton started, on his long
swift mare, for the Hall at Nowelhurst, where he
had promised to be. He kissed his Rosa many
times, and begged her pardon half as often, for all
the crimes that day committed. Her brother Ralph,
from Fordingbridge, who always slept there at short
notice, because the house was lonely, would be sure
to come (they knew) when the little boy Bob was
sent for him. Ralph Mohorn—poor Rosa rejoiced
in her rather uncommon patronymic, though perhaps
it means Cow–horn—Ralph Mohorn was only
too glad to come and sleep at Geopharmacy Lodge.
He was a fine, fresh–hearted fellow, only about
nineteen years old; his father held him hard at
home, and of course he launched out all the more
abroad. So he kicked up, as he expressed it, “the
devilʼs own dust” when he got to the Lodge,
ordered everything in the house for supper, with
a bottle of whisky afterwards—which he never<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</SPAN></span>
touched, only he liked the name of the thing—and
then a cardinal, or the biggest meerschaum to be
found in any of the cupboards. His pipe, however,
was not, like his grog, a phantom of the imagination;
for he really smoked it, and sat on three
chairs, while he “baited” Rosa, as he called it, with
all the bogeys in Christendom. It was so delicious
now to be able to throw her into a tremble, and
turn her cheeks every colour, and then recollect
that a few years since she had smacked his own
cheeks <i>ad libitum</i>. However, we have little to do
with him, and now he is a jolly farmer.</p>
<p>Rufus Hutton rode through Ringwood over the
low bridge where the rushes rustle everlastingly,
and the trout and dace for ever wag their pellucid
tails up stream. How all that water, spreading
loosely, wading over miles of meadows, growing
leagues of reed and rush, mistress of a world in
winter, how it all is content to creep through a
pair of little bridges—matter of such mystery, let
the Christchurch salmon solve it. Dr. Hutton went
gaily over—at least his mare went gaily—but he
was thinking (beyond his wont) of the business he
had in hand. He admired the pleasant old town
as he passed, and the still more pleasant waters;
but his mare, the favourite Polly, went on at her
usual swing, until they came to the long steep hill
towards the Picked Post. As he walked her up
the sharp parts of the rise, he began to ponder the
mysterious visit of those convivial strangers. It
was very plain that neither of them knew or cared<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</SPAN></span>
the turn of a trowel about the frank art of gardening;
that, of course, was only a sham; then what
did they really come for? Rufus, although from
childhood upwards he had been hospitable to his
own soul, that is to say, regarded himself with
genial approbation, was not by any means blindly
conceited, and could not suppose that his fame, for
anything except gardening, had spread through the
regions round about. So he felt that his visitors
had come, not for his sake, but their own. And it
was not long before he suspected that they wished
to obtain through him some insight, perhaps even
some influence, into and in the course of events
now toward at Nowelhurst Hall. They had altogether
avoided the subject; which made him the
more suspicious, for at present it was of course the
leading topic of the county.</p>
<p>However, as they were related to the family,
while he, Rufus Hutton, was not, it was not his
place to speak of the matter, but to let his guests
do as they liked about it. They had made him
promise, moreover, to dine with the Kettledrums
on the very earliest day he could fix—viz. the following
Wednesday—and there he was to meet Mr.
and Mrs. Corklemore. Was it possible that they
intended, and perhaps had been instructed, to subject
the guest on that occasion to more skilful
manipulation than that of their rude male fingers?</p>
<p>“Iʼll take Rosa with me”, said Rufus to himself;
“a woman sees a womanʼs game best; though Rosa,
thank Heaven, is not very Machiavellian. How very<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</SPAN></span>
odd, that neither of those men had the decency
to carry a bit of crape, out of respect for that
poor boy; and I, who am noway connected with
him, have been indued by my Roe with a hat–band”!</p>
<p>Shrewd as our friend Rufus was, he could not
be charged with low cunning, and never guessed
that those two men had donned the show of
mourning, and made the most of it round their
neighbourhood to impress people with their kinship
to the great Nowells of Nowelhurst, but that their
guardian angels had disarrayed them ere they
started, having no desire to set Rufus thinking
about their chance of succession. As the sharp
little doctor began to revolve all he had heard
about Corklemore, his mare came to the Burley–road
where they must leave the turnpike. Good
Polly struck into it, best foot foremost, and, as she
never would bear the curb well, her rider had quite
enough to do, in the gathering darkness, and on
that cross–country track, to attend to their common
safety.</p>
<p>She broke from the long stride of her trot into
a reaching canter, as the moon grew bright between
the trees, and the lane was barred with shadow.
Pricking nervously her ears at every flaw or rustle,
bending her neck to show her beauty, where the
light fell clear on the moor–top, then with a snort
of challenge plunging into the black of the hollows,
yet ready to jump the road and away, if her challenge
should be answered; bounding across the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</SPAN></span>
water–gulley and looking askance at a fern–shadow;
then saying to herself, “It is only the moon, child”,
and up the ascent half ashamed of herself; then
shaking her bridle with reassurance to think of
that mile of great danger flown by, and the mash
and the warm stable nearer, and the pleasure of
telling that great roan horse how brave she had
been in the moonlight——</p>
<p>“Goodness me! Whatʼs that”?</p>
<p>She leaped over road and roadside bank, and
into a heavy gorse–bush, and stood there quivering
from muzzle to tail in the intensity of terror. If
Rufus had not just foreseen her alarm, and gripped
her with all his power, he must have lain senseless
upon the road, spite of all his rough–riding in
India.</p>
<p>“Who–hoa, who–hoa, then, Polly, you little fool,
you are killing me! Canʼt you see itʼs only a
lady”?</p>
<p>Polly still backed into the bush, and her unlucky
rider, with every prickle running into him, could
see the whites of her eyes in the moonshine, as the
great orbs stood out with horror. Opposite to
them, and leaning against a stile which led to a
footpath, there stood a maiden dressed in black,
with the moonlight sheer upon her face. She took
no notice of anything; she had heard no sort of
footfall; she did not know of Pollyʼs capers, or
the danger she was causing. Her face, with the
hunterʼs moon upon it, would have been glorious
beauty, but for the broad rims under the eyes, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</SPAN></span>
the spectral paleness. One moment longer she
stared at the moon, as if questing for some one
gone thither, then turned away with a heavy sigh,
and went towards the Coffin Wood.</p>
<p>All this time Rufus Hutton was utterly blind to
romance, being scarified in the calf and thighs
beyond any human endurance. Polly backed
further and further away from the awful vision
before her—the wife of the horse–fiend at least—and
every fresh swerve sent a new lot of furze–pricks
into the peppery legs of Rufus.</p>
<p>“Hang it”! he cried, “here goes; no man with
a haʼporth of flesh in him could stand it any longer.
Thorn for thorn, Miss Polly”. He dashed his spurs
deep into her flanks, the spurs he had only worn
for show, and never dared to touch her with. For
a moment she trembled, and reared upright in
wrath worse than any horror; then away she went
like a storm of wind, headlong through trees and
bushes. It was all pure luck or Providence that
Rufus was not killed. He grasped her neck, and
lay flat upon it; he clung with his supple legs
around her; he called her his Polly, his darling
Polly, and begged her to consider herself. She
considered neither herself nor him, but dashed
through the wild wood, wilder herself, not knowing
light from darkness. Any low beech branch, any
scrag holly, even a trail of loose ivy, and man and
horse were done for. The lights of more than a
million stars flashed before Rufus Hutton, and he
made up his mind to die, and wondered how Rosa<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</SPAN></span>
would take it. Perhaps she would marry again,
and rear up another family who knew not the name
of Hutton; perhaps she would cry her eyes out.
Smack, a young branch took him in the face,
though he had one hand before it. “Go it
again”! he cried, with the pluck of a man despairing,
and then he rolled over and over, and dug for
himself a rabbit–hole of sand, and dead leaves, and
moss. There he lay on his back, and prayed, and
luckily let go the bridle.</p>
<p>The mare had fallen, and grovelled in the rotten
ground where the rabbits lived; then she got up
and shook herself, and the stirrups struck fire
beneath her, and she spread out all her legs, and
neighed for some horse to come and help her. She
could not go any further; she had vented her soul,
and must come to herself, like a lady after hysterics.
Presently she sniffed round a bit, and the grass
smelled crisp and dewy, and, after the hot corn and
musty hay, it was fresher than ice upon brandy.
So she looked through the trees, and saw only a
squirrel, which did not frighten her at all, because
she was used to rats. Then she brought her forelegs
well under her stomach, and stretched her long
neck downwards, and skimmed the wet blades with
her upper lip, and found them perfectly wholesome.
Every horse knows what she did then and there, to
a great extent, till she had spoiled her relish for
supper.</p>
<p>After that, she felt grateful and good, and it
repented her of the evil, and she whinnied about<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</SPAN></span>
for the master who had outraged her feelings so
deeply. She found him still insensible, on his back,
beneath a beech–tree, with six or seven rabbits, and
even a hare, come to see what the matter was.
Then Polly, who had got the bit out of her mouth,
gave him first a poke with it, and then nuzzled him
under the coat–collar, and blew into his whiskers as
she did at the chaff in her manger. She was beginning
to grieve and get very uneasy, taking care not
to step on him, and went round him ever so many
times, and whinnied into his ear, when either that,
or the dollop of grass half chewed which lay on his
countenance, revived the great spirit of Rufus
Hutton, and he opened his eyes and looked languidly.
He saw two immense black eyes full upon
him, tenderly touched by the moonlight, and he
felt a wet thing like a sponge poking away at his
nostrils.</p>
<p>“Polly”, he said, “oh, Polly dear, how could you
serve me so? What will your poor mistress say”?</p>
<p>Polly could neither recriminate nor defend herself;
so she only looked at him beseechingly, and
what she meant was, “Oh, do get up”.</p>
<p>So Rufus arose, and dusted himself, and kissed
Polly for forgiveness, and she, if she had only learned
how, would have stooped like a camel before him.
He mounted, with two or three groans for his back,
and left the mare to her own devices to find the
road again. It was very pretty to see in the moonlight
how carefully she went with him, not even
leaping the small water–courses, but feeling her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</SPAN></span>
footing through them. And so they got into the
forest–track, some half mile from where they had
left it; they saw the gleam of Bull Garnetʼs
windows, and knew the straight road to the Hall.</p>
<p>Sir Cradock Nowell did not appear. Of course
that was not expected; but kind John Rosedew
came up from the parsonage to keep Rufus Hutton
company. So the two had all the great dinner–table
to themselves entirely; John, as the old
friend, sat at the head, and the doctor sat by his
right hand. Although there were few men in the
world with the depth of mind, and variety, the
dainty turns of thought, the lacework infinitely
rich of original mind and old reading, which made
John Rosedewʼs company a forest for to wander in
and be amazed with pleasure; Rufus Hutton, sore
and stiff, and aching in the back, thought he had
rarely come across so very dry a parson.</p>
<p>John was not inclined to talk: he was thinking
of his Cradock, and he had a care of still sharper
tooth—what had happened to his Amy? He had
come up much against his wishes, only as a duty,
on that dreary Saturday night, just that Mr. Hutton,
who had been so very kind, might not think
himself neglected. John had dined four hours ago,
but that made no difference to him, for he seldom
knew when he <i>had</i> dined, and when he was expected
to do it. Nevertheless he was human, for he loved
his bit of supper.</p>
<p>Mr. Rosedew had laboured hard, but vainly, to
persuade Sir Cradock Nowell to send some or any<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</SPAN></span>
message to his luckless son. “No”, he replied,
“he did not wish to see him any more, or at any
rate not at present; it would be too painful to him.
Of course he was sorry for him, and only hoped he
was half as sorry for himself”. John Rosedew did
not dream as yet of the black idea working even
now in the lonely fatherʼs mind, gaining the more
on his better heart because he kept it secret. The
old man was impatient now even of the old friendʼs
company; he wanted to sit alone all day weaving
and unravelling some dark skein of evidence, and
as yet he was not so possessed of the devil as to
cease to feel ashamed of him. “Coarse language”!
cries some votary of our self–conscious euphemism.
But show me any plainer work of the father of
unbelief than want of faith in our fellow–creatures,
when we have proved and approved them; want of
faith in our own flesh and blood, with no cause for
it but the imputed temptation. It shall go hard
with poor old Sir Cradock, and none shall gainsay
his right to it.</p>
<p>Silence was a state of the air at once uncongenial
to Dr. Huttonʼs system and repugnant to all
his finest theories of digestion. For lo, how all
nature around us protests against the Trappists,
and the order of St. Benedict! See how the
cattle get together when they have dined in the
afternoon, and had their drink out of the river.
Donʼt they flip their tails, and snuffle, and grunt at
their own fine sentiments, and all the while they
are chewing the cud take stock of one another?<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</SPAN></span>
Donʼt they discuss the asilus and œstrum, the last
news of the rinderpest, and the fly called by some
the cow–dab, and donʼt they abuse the festuca
tribe, and the dyspepsia of the sorrel? Is the
thrush mute when he has bolted his worm, or the
robin over his spiderʼs eggs?</p>
<p>So Rufus looked through his glass of port,
which he took merely as a corrective to the sherry
of the morning, cocked one eye first, and then the
other, and loosed the golden bands of speech.</p>
<p>“Uncommonly pretty girls, Mr. Rosedew, all
about this neighbourhood”.</p>
<p>“Very likely, Dr. Hutton; I see many pleasant
faces; but I am no judge of beauty”. He leaned
back with an absent air, just as if he knew nothing
about it. And all the while he was saying to
himself, “Pretty girls indeed! Is there one of
them like my Amy”?</p>
<p>“A beautiful girl I saw to–night. But I donʼt
wish to see much more beauty in that way. Nearly
cost me my life, I know. You are up in the
classics so: what is it we used to read at school?—Helene,
Helenaus, Helip—something—teterrima
belli causa fuit. Upon my word, I havenʼt talked
so much Latin and Greek—have another glass of
port, just for company; the dry vintage of ’34
canʼt hurt anybody”. John Rosedew took another
glass, for his spirits were low, and the wine was
good, and the parson felt then that he ought to
have more confidence in God. Then he brought
his mind to bear on the matter, and listened very<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</SPAN></span>
attentively while the doctor described, with a rush
of warm language and plenteous exaggeration, the
fright of his mare at that mournful vision, the
vision itself, and the consequences.</p>
<p>“Sir, you must have ridden like a Centaur, or
like Alexander. What will Mrs. Hutton say?
But are you sure that she leaped an oak–tree”?</p>
<p>“Perfectly certain”, said Rufus, gravely, “clean
through the fork of the branches, and the acorns
rattled upon my hat, like the hail of the Himalaya”.</p>
<p>“Remarkable! Most remarkable”!</p>
<p>“But you have not told me yet”, continued Dr.
Hutton, “although I am sure that you know, who
the beautiful young lady is”.</p>
<p>“From your description, and the place, though
I have not heard that they are in mourning, I
think it must have been Miss Garnet”.</p>
<p>“Miss Garnet! What Miss Garnet? Not
Bull Garnetʼs daughter? I never heard that he
had one”.</p>
<p>“Yes, he has, and a very nice girl. My Amy
knows a little of her. But he does not allow her
to visit much, and is most repressive to her. Unwise,
in my opinion; not the way to treat a daughter;
one should have confidence in her, as I have
in my dear child”.</p>
<p>“Oh, you have confidence in Miss Rosedew;
and she goes out whenever she likes, I suppose”?</p>
<p>“Of course she does”, said the simple John,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</SPAN></span>
wondering at the question; “that is, of course,
whenever it is right for her”.</p>
<p>“Of which, I suppose, she herself is the judge”.</p>
<p>“Why, no, not altogether. Her aunt has a
voice in the matter always, and a very potent
one”.</p>
<p>“And, of course, Miss Rosedew, managed upon
such enlightened principles, never attempts to
deceive you”?</p>
<p>“Amy! my Amy deceive me”! The rector
turned pale at the very idea. “But these questions
are surely unusual from a gentleman whom I have
known for so very short a time. I am entitled, in
turn, to ask your reason for putting them”. Mr.
Rosedew, never suspecting indignities, could look
very dignified.</p>
<p>“Iʼm in for it now”, thought Rufus Hutton;
“what a fool I am! I fancied the old fellow had
no <i>nous</i>, except for Latin and Greek”.</p>
<p>Strange to say, the old fellow had <i>nous</i> enough
to notice his hesitation. John Rosedew got up
from his chair, and stood looking at Rufus Hutton.</p>
<p>“Sir, I will thank you to tell me exactly what
you mean about my daughter”.</p>
<p>“Nothing at all, Mr. Rosedew. What do you
suppose I <i>should</i> mean”?</p>
<p>“You <i>should</i> mean nothing at all, sir. But I
believe that you <i>do</i> mean something. And, please
God, I will have it out of you”. Rufus Hutton
said afterwards that he had two great frights that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</SPAN></span>
evening, and he believed the last was the worst.
The parson never dreamed that any man could be
afraid of him, except it were a liar, and he looked
upon Rufus contemptuously. The man of the
world was nothing before the man of truth.</p>
<p>“Mr. Rosedew”, said Rufus, recovering himself,
“your conduct is very extraordinary; and (you will
excuse my saying it) more violent than becomes
a man of your position and character”.</p>
<p>“No violence becomes any man, whatever his
position. I am sorry if I have been violent”.</p>
<p>“You have indeed”, said Rufus, pushing his
advantage: a generous man would have said, “No,
you havenʼt”, at seeing the parsonʼs distress, and
so would Rufus have said, if he had happened to
be in the right; “so violent, Mr. Rosedew, that I
believe you almost frightened me”.</p>
<p>“Dear me”! said John, reflecting, “and he has
just leaped an oak–tree! I must have been very
bad”.</p>
<p>“Donʼt mention it, my dear sir, I entreat you
say no more about it. We all know what a father
is”. And Rufus Hutton, who did not yet, but
expected to know in some three months, grew very
large, and felt himself able to patronise the rector.
“Mr. Rosedew, I as well am to blame. I am
thoughtless, sir, very thoughtless, or rather I should
say too thoughtful; I am too fond of seeing round
a corner, which I have always been famous for.
Sir, a man who possesses this power, this gift, this—I
donʼt know the word for it, but I have no<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</SPAN></span>
doubt you do—that man is apt to—I mean
to—— ”</p>
<p>“Knock his head against a wall”? suggested the
parson, in all good faith.</p>
<p>“No, you mistake me; I donʼt mean that at all;
I mean that a man with this extraordinary foresight,
which none can understand except those
who are gifted with it, is liable sometimes, is
amenable—I mean to—to—— ”</p>
<p>“See double. Ah, yes, I can quite understand
it”. John Rosedew shut his eyes, and felt up for
a disquisition, yet wanted to hear of his daughter.</p>
<p>“No, my dear sir, no. It is something very far
from anything so commonplace as that. What I
mean is—only I cannot express it, because you
interrupt me so—that a man may have this faculty,
this insight, this perception, which saves him from
taking offence where none whatever is meant, and
yet, as it were by some obliquity of the vision, may
seem, in some measure, to see the wrong individual”.
Here Rufus felt like the dwarf Alypius,
when he had stodged Iamblichus.</p>
<p>“That is an interesting question, and reminds
me of the state of <i>ἀῤῥεψία</i> as described in the life
of Pyrrho by Diogenes Laertius; whose errors, if
I may venture to say it, have been made too much
of by the great Isaac Casaubon, then scarcely
mature of judgment. It will give me the greatest
pleasure to go into that question with you. But
not just now. I am thrown out so sadly, and my
memory fails me”—John Rosedew had fancied<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</SPAN></span>
this, by–the–by, ever since he was thirty years old—“only
tell me one thing, Dr. Hutton, and I am
very sorry for my violence; you meant no harm
about my daughter”? Here the grey–haired man,
with the mighty forehead, opened his clear blue
eyes, and looked down upon Rufus beseechingly.</p>
<p>“Upon my honour as a gentleman, I mean no
harm whatever. I made the greatest mistake, and
I see the mistake I made”.</p>
<p>“Will you tell me, sir, what it was? Just to
ease my mind. I am sure that you will”.</p>
<p>“No, I must not tell you now, until I have
worked the matter out. You will thank me for
not doing so. But I apologise most heartily. I
feel extremely uncomfortable. No claret, sir, but
the port, if you please. I was famous, in India,
for my nerve; but now it seems to be failing me”.</p>
<p>Rufus, as we now perceive, had fully discovered
his mistake, and was trying to trace the consequences.
The beautiful girl whom he saw in the
wood, that evening, with Clayton Nowell, was not
our Amy at all, but Mr. Garnetʼs daughter.
He knew the face, though changed and white,
when it frightened his mare in the moonlight;
and, little time as he had to think, it struck him
then as very strange that Miss Rosedew should be
there. Bull Garnetʼs cottage, on the other hand,
was quite handy in the hollow.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="break">
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