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.. meta::
   :PG.Id: 46857
   :PG.Title: Sons of the Morning
   :PG.Released: 2014-09-14
   :PG.Rights: Public Domain
   :PG.Producer: Al Haines
   :DC.Creator: Eden Phillpotts
   :DC.Title: Sons of the Morning
   :DC.Language: en
   :DC.Created: 1900
   :coverpage: images/img-cover.jpg

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SONS OF THE MORNING
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      SONS
      OF THE MORNING

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      BY

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      EDEN PHILLPOTTS

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      \W. \J. GAGE & COMPANY LIMITED
      TORONTO.  

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      Entered according to Act of Parliament of Canada,
      in the office of the Minister of Agriculture,
      by W. J. GAGE & Co. (Limited), in the year
      one thousand nine hundred.

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      BY THE SAME AUTHOR

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      CHILDREN OF THE MIST
      LYING PROPHETS
      SOME EVERYDAY FOLKS
      THE HUMAN BOY

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      TO
      MY VALUED FRIEND

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      WILLIAM MORRIS COLLES

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      A SMALL TRIBUTE OF
      GREAT REGARD

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   CONTENTS

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   BOOK \I.

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   CHAPTER

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I.  `The Beech Tree`_
II.  `Bear Down Farm`_
III.  `A Wise Man and a Wise Woman`_
IV.  `The Kiss`_
V.  `Pagan Altars`_
VI.  `Anthemis Cotula`_
VII.  `A Badger's Earth`_
VIII.  `Out of the Mist`_
IX.  `The Warning`_
X.  `Three Angry Maids`_
XI.  `Partings`_
XII.  `The Definite Deed`_
XIII.  `Snow on Scor Hill`_
XIV.  `The Wisdom of Dr. Clack`_
XV.  `Sun Dance`_
XVI.  `A Shelf of Slate`_
XVII.  `Spring on Scor Hill`_
XVIII.  `Roses and Rosettes`_

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   BOOK II.

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I.  `The Seeds`_
II.  `Cherry Grepe's Sins`_
III.  `A Secret`_
IV.  `The Wisdom of Many`_
V.  `In Spring Moonlight`_
VI.  `Sorrow's Face`_
VII.  `Plots against an Orphan`_
VIII.  `A Necklace of Birds' Eggs`_
IX.  `An Old-time Prescription`_
X.  `Oil of Man`_
XI.  `A Clean Breast of it`_
XII.  `Light`_

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   BOOK III.

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I.  `Vanessa Io`_
II.  `The Meeting of the Men`_
III.  `Flags in the Wind`_
IV.  `Drifting`_
V.  `A Hunting Morning`_
VI.  `Love of Man`_
VII.  `Lapses`_
VIII.  `The Round Robin`_
IX.  `Red Dawn`_
X.  `A Man of Courage`_
XI.  `The Road to Peace`_
XII.  `Peace`_
XIII.  `A Sound of Suffering`_
XIV.  `From Words to Blows`_
XV.  `Watern Tor`_
XVI.  `Threnody`_

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   BOOK IV.

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I.  `The Passage of Two Years`_
II.  `No After-glow`_





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.. _`THE BEECH TREE`:

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   BOOK I.

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   SONS OF THE MORNING

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   CHAPTER I.

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   THE BEECH TREE

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Above unnumbered sisters she arose, an object
noteworthy even amid these aisles, where, spun
from the survival of the best endowed, fabrics of
ancient forest enveloped the foot-hills of the Moor and
belted heather and granite with great woodlands.  A
dapple of dull silver marked her ascension and glimmered
upwards through the masses of her robe.  From noble
girth of moss-grown trunk she sprang; her high top was
full of a silky summer song; while sunbeams played in
the meshes of her million leaves and cascades of amber
light, born from her ripening harvest, streamed over the
dark foliage.  She displayed in unusual perfection the
special symmetry of her kind, stood higher than her
neighbours, and fretted the blue above with pinnacles of
feathering arborescence, whose last, subtle expression, at
that altitude, escaped the eye.  Her midmost boughs
tended from the horizontal gradually downward, and
the nether branches, rippling to earth like a waterfall,
fashioned a bower or music-making dome of translucent
green around about the bole.  Within this arbour the
roots twisted down their dragon shapes into the dark,
sweet-scented earth, and fortified the beech against all
winds that blew.  So she stood, queen of the wold,
a creation loved by song-birds, a treasure-house for
squirrels, pigeons, and the pheasants that, at autumn-time,
strutted gorgeous in the copper lake of her fallen
leaves.  Beneath her now, cool and moist in twilight of
shadows, grew delicate melampyre that brought light
into the herbage, stood the wan seed-vessels of bygone
bluebells, and trailed grasses, with other soft, etiolate
things that had never known direct sunshine.  The
pale trunk was delicately wrought with paler lichens,
splashed and circled upon its bark; while mossy
boulders of granite, lying scattered within the
circumference of the tree's vastness, completed this modest
harmony of grey and silver, lemon and shadowed green.

Woodland roads wound at hand, and in a noontide
hour of late July these paths were barred and flooded
with golden sunlight; were flanked by trunks of gnarled
oak and wrinkled ash; were bridged with the far-flung
limbs of the former, whereon trailed and intertwined
festoons of ivy and wreaths of polypody fern that
mingled with tree mosses.  Through this spacious temple,
seen under avenues of many a pillar, sparkled falling
water where the sisters Teign, their separate journeys
done, murmured together and blended their crystal at an
ancient bridge.  Henceforth these two streams sweep
under hanging woods of larch and pine, by meadows,
orchards, homesteads, through the purple throat of oak
and fir-crowned Fingle, and so onwards, by way of open
vales, to their sad-coloured, heron-haunted estuary.
Hand in hand they run, here moving a mill-wheel, there
bringing sweet water to a hamlet, and ever singing their
changeful song.  The melody of them deepens, from its
first baby prattle at springs in Sittaford's stony bosom,
to the riotous roar of waterfalls below; lulls, from the
music reverberated in stony gorges, to a whisper amid
unechoing valleys and most placid pasture lands.
Finally salt winds with solemn message from the sea
welcome Teign; and mewing of gulls on shining
mud-flats; and the race and ripple of the tides, who
joyfully bring the little stream to that great Lover of all
rivers.

Leading from dingles on the eastern bank to interspaces
of more open glades beside the great beech tree,
a bridge, fashioned of oak saplings, still clothed with
bark and ash-coloured lichen, crossed the river; and, at
this sunlit moment, a woman stood upon it and a man
shook the frail structure from his standpoint on the
bank.  His purpose was to alarm the maiden if he
could; but she only laughed, and hastened across sure-footed.

Honor Endicott was two-and-twenty; of tall, slight
habit, and a healthy, brown complexion.  Her face
betrayed some confusion of characteristics.  In repose
the general effect suggested melancholy; but this
expression vanished when her eyes were lighted with
laughter or her lips parted in a smile.  Then the sad
cast of her features wholly disappeared and, as the sky
wakes at dawn or sunset, Honor was transfigured.
A beholder carried from her not the impression of
her more usual reserve, but the face, with its rather
untidy black hair, pale brown eyes and bright lips all
smile-lighted.  Happily she laughed often, from no vain
consciousness of her peculiar charm, but because she
possessed the gift of a humorous disposition, in the
modern acceptation of that word, and found the world,
albeit lonely and not devoid of grey days, yet well
stored with matter for laughter.  This sense, than
which heredity—that godmother, half fairy, half
fiend—can bestow no better treasure on man or woman, kept
the world sweet for Honor.  Her humour was no paltry
idiosyncrasy of mere joy in the ridiculous; but rather
a quality that helped her to taking of large views, that
lent a sense of just proportion in affairs, that tended
to tolerance and leavened with charity her outlook on
all things.  It also served to brighten and better an
existence, not indeed unhappy, but unusually lonely for
a young woman.

She held up a pretty brown hand, and shook her
head at the man.

"Christopher," she said, "supposing that your bridge
had broken, and I had tumbled in?"

"I should have saved you, without doubt—a delicious
experience."

"For you.  What a subject for a romance: you, the
last of your line; I, the last of mine, being swept to
death by old Teign!  And my farm would be desolate,
and your woods and hills and ancestral hall, all bundled
wretchedly into Chancery, or some such horrid place."

"On the contrary, I save you; I rescue you at great
personal peril, and we join hands and lands, and live
happily ever afterwards."

"There's a heron!  You frightened him with your folly."

The great bird ascended from a shallow, trailed his
thin legs over the water, then gathered speed, rose clear,
steered with heavy and laborious flight amid overhanging
boughs, and sought a lonelier hunting-ground
elsewhere.

"Brutes!  I always walk right on top of them when
I'm not carrying my gun.  I hate to think of the
number of young trout they eat."

"Plenty left to grow big and be caught all the same,"
said Honor, as she peeped down to watch grey shadows,
that sped up stream at sight of her and set little
sandclouds rising under the clear water where they
flashed away.

"Nothing like a Devon trout in the world, I think,"
she added.  "I caught a half-pounder in the Wallabrook
last night, just at the end of the evening rise, with that
fly, like a 'woolly bear' caterpillar, you gave me."

Christopher Yeoland nodded, well pleased.  He was
a broad and tall young man of thirty, and he walked
through woods and beside waters that had belonged
to his family for years without count.  Ardent in some
things, sanguine in all, and unconquerably lazy, he had
entered the world to find it entirely a problem.  Succeeding
upon several generations of shiftless and unpractical
ancestors—men of like metal with himself—he stood
the penniless possessor of a corner of Devon wherein
Nature had exhausted her loving resources.  He clung
to the involved home of his fathers, and dreamed of
retrieving the desperate position some day.  He lived
an open-air life, and spun courses of action, quite majestic
in their proportions, for the succour and restoration of
his property; but the taking of a definite step in any
direction seemed beyond his powers.  In theory he
swept to action and achievement, and, if words could
have done it, Godleigh had been freed from all
encumbrance thrice in every week; but practically Christopher
appeared content to live from hand to mouth at his old
manor house, to keep one horse in the huge stables,
two dogs in the kennels, a solitary old woman and one
man in his echoing and empty house, where, aforetime,
more than half a score of folk had bustled away their
busy lives.

Godleigh, or Godbold's Leigh, as it was first called
after its earliest Norman owner, may be identified
among the Domesday manors of Devon; but it is almost
beyond parallel to find possessions descending through
a line of commoners so unbroken as in this case.  To
Yeoland's ancestors, none of whom had ever been
ennobled, this place accrued soon after 1300 A.D.,
during the reign of the second Edward; but since that
period the original estate had been shorn of many acres,
and sad subdivisions and relinquishments from century
to century were also responsible for its diminution.
Now hill and valley immediately around Godleigh,
together with those tracts upon which stood the village
and church of Little Silver, with sundry outlying farms,
were all that survived of the former domain, and even
these pined under heavy mortgages held by remote
money-lending machines with whom Christopher's
father had been much concerned throughout the years
of his later life.  The present old fifteenth-century house,
built on foundations far more ancient, peeped, with grey
mullioned windows and twisted chimneys, from forest
of pine on a noble hill under the eastern ramparts of
Dartmoor.  Granite crowned this elevation, and Teign
turned about, like a silver ribbon, far beneath it.

Here the last of his line passed with Honor Endicott
beside the river, and she mourned presently that the
sole care of such noble woods rested with the Mother
only, and that never a forester came to remove the
dead or clear overgrowth of brake and thicket.

"Nature's so untidy," said Honor.

"She is," Yeoland admitted, "and she takes her own
time, which seems long from our point of view.  But
then there's no pay-day for her, thank God.  She doesn't
turn up on Saturdays for the pieces of silver and bite
them suspiciously, like some of your farm folk you lent
to help save my hay last week; and she consumes all
her own rubbish, which is a thing beyond human
ingenuity."

This man and woman had known each other from
early youth, and were now left by Chance in positions
curiously similar; for Honor Endicott was also an
orphan, also came of ancient Devon stock, and also
found her patrimony of Bear Down Farm—a large
property on the fringe of the Moor and chiefly under
grass—somewhat of a problem.  It was unencumbered,
but hungered for the spending of money.  Concerning
the Endicotts, who had dwelt there for many generations,
it need only be said that they were of yeoman
descent, dated from Tudor times, and had of late, like
many a kindred family all England over, sunk from
their former estate to the capacity of working farmers.

Honor, who had enjoyed educational privileges as
a result of some self-denial on the part of both of her
parents, now reigned mistress at "Endicott's," as Bear
Down Farm was commonly called.  At first sovereign
power proved a source of pleasure; now, blunted by
nearly a year of experience, her rule occasioned no
particular delight.

Presently Christopher led his companion beside the
great beech and pointed to a leafy tent beneath it.

"Come into my parlour!  I found this delicious place
yesterday, and I said to myself, 'Mistress Endicott
may take pleasure in such a spot as this.'  Here will
we sit—among the spiders with bodies like peas and
legs like hairs; and I'll make you laugh."

"It's late, Christopher."

"Never too late to laugh.  Just half one little hour.
What are thirty minutes to two independent people
who 'toil not, neither do they spin'—nor even knit, like
your uncle?  There—isn't it jolly comfortable?  Wish
the upholstery on some of my old-world furniture was
as complete.  By the way, you know that sofa thing
with dachshund legs and a general convulsed look
about it, as though the poor wretch had been stuffed
with something that was not suiting it?  Well, Doctor
Clack says that it's worth fifty pounds!  But he's such
a sanguine brute.  Yet this granite, with its moss
cushions, is softer than my own easy chair.  There are
no such springs as Nature's.  Look at heather, or a
tree branch in a gale of wind, or a——"

"Now don't begin again about Nature, Christo;
you've talked of nothing else since we started.  Make
me laugh if I'm to stop another minute."

"Well, I will.  I was looking through some musty
old odds and ends in our muniment-room last night and
reading about my forefathers.  And they did put me so
much in mind of the old governor.  Such muddlers—always
procrastinating and postponing and giving way,
and looking at life through the wrong end of the
telescope."

"I've heard my father say that Mr. Yeoland was such
a man."

"Yes; and money!  He never paid anything in his
life but the debt of Nature, dear old chap; and if
he could have found a way to make Nature take
something in the pound, he'd be here pouring his
wisdom into my ears yet."

"We're all bankrupts to her, I suppose."

"He only made one enemy in all his long life; and
that was himself."

Christopher reflected a moment, then laughed and
drew a paper from his pocket.

"That reminds me of what I set out on.  We are
most of us Yeolands much like the governor.  As
I tell you, I rummaged in the archives to kill an
hour, and found some remarkably ancient things,
ought to send them to Exeter Museum, or somewhere;
only it's such a bother.  Couldn't help laughing, though
it was a sort of Sardinian chuckle—on the wrong side
of my face.  We're always yielding up, or ceding, or
giving away, or losing something.  Here's a scrap I
copied from a paper dated 1330.  Listen!"

He smoothed his screed, looked to see that Honor
was attending, then read:—

"'Simon de Yeolandde, s. of John Geoffrey de
Yeolandde, gives to Bernard Faber and Alice his wife his
tenement at Throwle'—that's Throwley, of course
'*i.e.* my hall and my orchard called Cridland Barton, and
my herb garden, and my piece of land south of my hall,
and my piece of land north of my hall as far as
Cosdonne, and the reversion of the dowry his mother
Dyonisia holds.'  There—the grammar is rocky, but
the meaning clear enough.  Here's another—in 1373.
'Aylmer Yeolande'—we'd given away one of our 'd's' by
that time, you see—'Aylmer Yeolande releases to
William Corndone 4*d.* (four pence) of annual rent, and
to Johanna Wordel all his right in the hundred of
Exemynster.'  And here's just one more; then I'll shut
up.  In 1500 I find this: 'Suit between Dennys
Yeolandde'—we'd got our 'd' back again for a
while—'Gentleman, of Godbold's Leigh, and Jno. Prouze,
Knight, of Chaggeforde, as to right of lands in Waye
and Aller—excepting only 12*s.* (twelve shillings) of
chief rent, which Dennys Yeolandde hath; and the
right of comyn of pasture.'  Of course my kinsman
went to the wall, for the next entry shows him climbing
down and yielding at every point to the redoubtable
Sir John.  We're always fighting the Prouzes, and
generally getting the worst of it.  Then their marriage
settlements!  Poor love-stricken souls, they would have
given their silly heads away, like everything else, if they
could have unscrewed them!"

"So would you," said Honor Endicott.  "You laugh
at them; but you're a Yeoland to the marrow in your
bones—one of the old, stupid sort."

"I believe I must be.  The sixteenth and seventeenth
century chaps were made of harder stuff, and went to
the wars and got back much that their fathers had lost.
They built us into a firm folk again from being a feeble;
but of late we're thrown back to the old slack-twisted
stock, I fear."

"That's atavism," declared Honor learnedly.

"Whew!  What a word for a pretty mouth!"

"I was taught science of a milk-and-water sort at school."

"Smother science!  Look at me, Honor, and tell me
when you're going to answer my question.  'By our
native fountains and our kindred gods'; by all we love in
common, it's time you did.  A thousand years at least
I've waited, and you such a good sportswoman where
other things are concerned.  How can you treat a
Christian man worse than you'd treat a fish?"

She looked at his handsome, fair face, and lost sight
of the small chin and mouth before a broad, sun-tanned
forehead, curly hair, and blue eyes.

"You knew the answer, Christo, or you'd never have
been so patient."

"On the contrary, how can I know?  I hang on in a
storm of agony."

"You look a miserable wretch enough—such a
furrowed cheek—such a haggard gleam in your eyes."

"I say, now!  Of course I don't wear my heart on
my sleeve, or my awful suspense upon my face.  No,
I hide my sufferings, go on shaving and putting on my
best clothes every Sunday, and worshipping in church
and carrying the plate, and all the rest of the dreary
round.  Only the sunrises know of all I endure.  But
once refuse, and you'll see what despair can drive a man
to; say 'No' and I fling everything up and go off to
Australia, where lives the last relation I've got in the
world—an old gentleman in the 'back blocks,' or some
such dismal place."

"You must not dream of that.  Men have to work there."

"Then you'll do the only thing to stop me from such
an awful fate?  You'll take me for better for worse?
You'll join your fat lands to my lean ones?  You'll——"

"Don't," she said, rather bitterly, "don't laugh at me
and mine in the midst of a proposal of marriage.
Somehow it makes my blood run cold, though I'm not
sentimental.  Yet marriage—even with you—has a
serious side.  I want to think how serious.  We can't
go on laughing for ever."

"Why not?  You know the summing-up of a very
wise man after he'd devoted his life to philosophy?
Nothing is new, and nothing is true, and nothing
matters.  God bless my own—very own little brown
mouse of an Honor!  Somehow I had a sneaking hope
all along that you would say 'Yes'!"

"I haven't yet."

"Kiss me, and don't quibble at a moment like this.
You haven't kissed me since you were fifteen."

But Honor's humour for once deserted her.  She tried
to conjure thoughts proper to the moment and magnify
its solemnity; she made an effort, in some measure
pathetic, to feel more than she really felt.

"You'll be wise, clearest Christo; you'll think of me
and love me always and——"

"Anything—anything but work for you, sweet," he
said, hugging her to himself, and kissing her with a
boy's rapture.

"Oh, Christopher, don't say that!"

"Then I won't; I'll even work, if you can steel
yourself to the thought of such a spectacle as Christo
labouring with a sense of duty—like an ant with a grain
of corn.  God bless and bless and bless your dear little
warm heart and body, and soft hair and eyes and
everything!  Work for you!  You wait and see."

"I knew this was coming," she said a little drearily.
"Ever so long ago I saw it coming and heard it coming.
And I rehearsed my part over and over.  Yet the thing
itself is an anti-climax, Christo.  I should have said
'Yes' the second time you asked me."

"The first time, my pearl."

"Perhaps so.  It's like flat cider now."

"Don't say that.  We've been courting continuously,
if you look back, ever since we were children.  Then
you had dear little tails down your back—two of
them—and I used to get you birds' eggs and other useful
things.  When will you marry me, sweetheart?"

"Oh, I don't know," said Honor.  "When I can afford
a cake."

But there was a tear in her eye that he did not see.

"There speaks again my own brave, heroic Honor!
We will have a cake; but why should you pay for it?"

"I must—there's nobody else to do so.  You can't.
Come, it is time, and more than time, that I went home."

"Wait," he said; "on a great, historic occasion like the
present one marks the day with a white stone.  This spot
is henceforward sacred to every subsequent Yeoland or
Endicott.  It may become the shrine of family pilgrimages.
So I'll set a true lover's knot upon this venerable
beech bole, together with the initials H.E.—that's God's
feminine masterpiece—and C.A.Y.—that's Christopher
Aylmer Yeoland—not a divine inspiration, I grant you;
but a worthy, harmless child of Nature, taking him all
round.  Hark to my best-loved poet:—

   |  'And in the rind of every comely tree
   |  I'll carve thy name, and in that name kisse thee.'"
   |

He cut and chattered; then, his work completed, bid
Honor inspect the conventional bow with their united
initials staring white and naked from the bark.

"Nature will tone it down and make it pretty later
on," he said.

"I hope she will make you wise later on."

They departed then and wandered upward by a woodland
track to Godleigh.  His arm was round her; her head
rested against his shoulder, and her spirits rose a little.
They laughed together, each at the other's slight fancies;
and then a vision of death met them.  In a glade beside
the way, where honeysuckle hung pale lamps about the
altar of sacrifice, appeared a fallen cloud of feathers that
warmed from grey to golden-green.  There a hawk had
slain a woodpecker, and nothing remained of the victim
save the under-down and plumage, with his upper mandible
and a scattered feather or two from his crimson crest.

"That's unlucky," said Honor.

"Very—for the bird," admitted Christopher.  "Poor
beggar—I'm sorry.  I like the green woodpeckers.
They've such a sense of humour, and love a laugh as
well as I do myself."





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.. _`BEAR DOWN FARM`:

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   CHAPTER II.


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   BEAR DOWN FARM

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The lovers passed through Godleigh, and then,
entering the main road that ran from Little Silver
to those high regions above it, pursued their way by
Devonshire lanes whose lofty hedge-banks shut out all
view of the grass lands extending upon each side.  Here
and there, however, gates opened into the hayfields, and
from one, where two of Honor's ricks were slowly rising,
came hum of voices.  The scene was set in silver-green
wisps of hay; a sweet scent clung to the air; two horses
rested on the shady side of the rick; an elm or two
whispered into the haze of summer; and, hard by, sat
above half a dozen persons taking their midday meal
under the hedge.  Speech was hushed; the nearest men
touched their hats, and a girl dropped a curtsey as
Honor walked by at discreet distance from young
Yeoland.  And then, upon their passing, the haymakers
broke into a new subject with ready tongue.

A man, smartly attired and apparently not of the
working party, winked as Christopher and his lady
moved out of sight.

"'Tis a case for sartain sure," he said.

"Have been this many a day, if you ax me," answered
a young woman near him.  She wore a sun-bonnet of
faded blue, and a brown dress dragged up to her belt on
one side over a rusty red petticoat.

"They've been tinkering arter each other ever since
I can mind, an' I be nineteen," she added.

Another spoke.  He was a tall labourer, clad in
earth-colour, with a big nose, a long neck, large, sun-blistered
ears, and black hair.

"Might be a happy thing belike," he said; and to him
a smaller man replied—a man whose bristly beard was
nearly grey, whose frowning, dark eyes and high,
discontented forehead promised little amiability.

"'A happy thing'!  A happy fiddlestick, Henry
Collins!  Godleigh's sea-deep in debt, an' so much a
land of the Jews as Jerusalem's self, by all accounts.
An' missis—better her bide a maid all her days than
marry him, I reckon.  She's a jewel tu precious for the
likes of that gude-for-nothing.  An' I've my doubts,
but—Sally, give awver, will 'e, an' remember you'm a
grawed gal!"

This sudden exhortation Mr. Jonah Cramphorn cast
at his daughter, the maiden who had first spoken; and
necessity for such rebuke appeared in the fact that
Sally, a ripe and plump damsel, with red lips, grey eyes
and corn-coloured hair, was now pelting the youth
beside her with hay, while he returned the compliment
as best he could.

Gregory Libby, in his well-fitting garments with neat
gaiters and cap to match, though formerly a worker,
enjoyed holiday to-day for reasons now to appear.  He
was a mean type of man, with sandy locks, a slight
hare-lip, and a low forehead; but to Sally's eyes these
defects were not apparent.  Mr. Libby could sing
charming songs, and within the past week he was richer by a
legacy of five hundred pounds.  On the previous day he
had come back from London to Little Silver, and now,
still putting off his return to work, stood among the
folk of Bear Down and posed as a person of some
consequence.  Sally's conduct woke indignation elsewhere
than in her father's breast.  Mr. Henry Collins glared
at the grey figure of Gregory.  The big-nosed man was
a new hand at Bear Down; but one fortnight in the
company of Sally had served to enslave Henry's maiden
heart.  He was in love with Miss Cramphorn, but thus
far had hidden his secret.

Beside the rising hayrick, sitting in sunshine with
his face to the others, an old, bald labourer ate bread
and onions and drank from a little cider barrel.  His
countenance showed a marvellous network of wrinkles;
his scant hair, reduced to tufts above his ears, was very
white; his whiskers were also white, and his eyes, blue
as the summer sky, wore an expression of boyish
frankness.  His small, clean-shaved mouth was pursed like
a young child's.

"'Tis pity," he said, resuming the former topic, "'tis
pity as missis can't find a way to mate wi' her cousin,
Maister Myles Stapledon, him what be comin' to pay a
visit presently.  A snug man they say, an' a firm-footed—solid
every way in fact.  I mind last time he comed
here—more'n ten year ago.  A wise young youth even then."

"Ban't purty Miss Endicott's sort by the sound of
un," said Gregory Libby; then, accepting a drink of
cider from a horn mug which Sally brought him, he
drew forth a cigar from a yellow leather case.  This he
presently lighted, marched about, and puffed with great
show of satisfaction, not oblivious to the attention he
attracted.

"A strange fashion way to take tobacco," said the
ancient, who was called Churdles Ash.

"So it is then," assented Mr. Cramphorn; "an' what's
more, I ban't gwaine to allow 'tis a fit an' proper way
of smokin' for the likes of him.  What's five hunderd
pound when all's said?"

"'Twill blamed soon be five hunderd pence, if the
man's gwaine to broadcast it away 'pon fantastic machines
like them, as awnly gentlefolks have any business with,"
said Samuel Pinsent, another labourer, who passed for
a great wit, chiefly by reason of a Merry-Andrew power
to pull remarkable faces.  He was a red man with weak
eyes; and his fellows alleged him impervious to all
feminine attractions.

"For Sundays an' high rejoicings a cigar may pass
now an' again," argued Henry Collins.  "Not as I'm
saying a word for Greg Libby," he added in violent
haste, as he caught Sally's eye.  "He'm a puny twoad
an' always was—brass or no brass.  What do the likes
of him want wi' stiff collars 'pon week-days?  Let un
go back to his job, which was hedge-tacking, an' not
done tu well neither, most times."

"He'm the monkey as have seed the world," said old
Ash, lighting a black pipe and crossing his hands over
his stomach.

Mr. Collins mopped his forehead, and looked up from
where he sat.  Then he tightened the leather thongs
that fastened in his trousers below the knees and
answered as he did so—

"Seed the world!  Him!  I knaw what he seed.
He seed a cheap tailor in the Edgware Road, Paddington
way; an' he seed a wicked back street or two; an'
no doubt a theayter——"

"That'll do, if you please, Henery," said Mr. Cramphorn.
"Me an' Ash, as weern't born essterday, can
guess all the rest.  I ban't in nature suspicious——"

Then in his turn Jonah was interrupted.

"Ess fay, you be, my son," declared Mr. Ash.

"Anyway," answered the parent, darkly scowling, "I
see my darter pulling eyes at the fule an' I won't stand
it—wouldn't for twice five hunderd pound."

"No need to fright yourself," said Churdles Ash,
shaking his head.  "Libby's not a marryin' man—tu
selfish to marry while his auld mother's alive to slave
for him an' kiss the ground he walks on.  Besides,
there's your other darter—Margery.  He'm so set 'pon
wan as t'other; but 'tis all philandering, not business."

"He'll end by havin' a sore back anyways if I see
much more of it.  Sally to marry him indeed!  Shaw
me a purtier gal than Sally this side Exeter an' I'll give
'e a gawlden sovereign!"

"An' I'll give 'e another!" declared Mr. Collins.

At this moment Jonah's second daughter, together
with one Mrs. Loveys, housekeeper at Bear Down,
appeared.  The latter was an ample, elderly widow.
She had a capacious bosom, bare arms, and a most
kindly face.  Her late husband, Timothy Loveys, after
a lifetime of service at Endicott's, passed within a year
of his master; and upon his death Mr. Cramphorn had
won promotion and was now head man.  As for Margery,
a thin, long-faced girl, cast in mould more fragile than
her sister, she worked as dairymaid at the farm.  She
too was personable, but her slimmer contour, reserved
manner, and sharp tongue contrasted ill, in masculine
opinion, with Sally's physical exuberance and good
temper.

The women who now came to fetch empty utensils and
baskets stayed awhile, and Mrs. Loveys asked a question.

"An' what for be you offerin' gawlden sovereigns so
free, Henry Collins?" she inquired with a side glance.

"To find a purtier maiden than Sally, ma'am."

Margery laughed and blushed, with her eyes on Mr. Libby.

"What about missis?" she asked.

"Missis," answered Jonah, "be a lady.  She'm built
on a different pattern, though with like material.  No
disrespect to her, as I'd shed my life's blood for, but the
differ'nce betwixt she an' my Sally's the differ'nce
betwixt sunlight an' moonlight."

"Between a wind-flower an' a butivul, full-blawed
cabbage rose," hazarded Mr. Collins.

"Yet theer's them as would liefer have the windflower,"
said Margery, who secretly believed herself
very like her mistress, and dressed as near to Honor
as she dared.  Mrs. Loveys nodded approval of this
statement; Mr. Cramphorn stoutly questioned it.

"What d'you say, Churdles?" asked Pinsent; "or
be you tu auld to call home the maids you felt
kind-like towards in last century when you was full o' sap?"

"I say 'tis time to go to work," replied Mr. Ash,
who never answered a question involving difference of
opinion between his friends.  "Come, Collins, 'Thirty
Acres' to finish 'fore sundown, an' theer's full work
'pon it yet!  An' you, Tommy Bates; you fall to
sharpenin' the knives for the cutter, this minute!"

He rose, walked with spreading feet and bent back
across the road, then dipped down into a great field
on the other side.  There lay a machine-mower at the
edge of the shorn hay, to the nakedness of which still
rippled a russet ocean of standing grass.  Colourless
light passed in great waves over it; the lavender of
knautias, together with too-frequent gold of yellow
rattle, flashed in it; and the great expanse, viewed
remotely, glowed with dull fire of seeding sorrels.
Above, danced butterflies; within, the grasshoppers
maintained a ceaseless stridulation; and soon the
silvery knives were again purring at the cool heart
of the undergreen, while ripe grassheads, flowers,
sweet clovers, tottered and fell together in shining
lines, where Churdles Ash, most just embodiment of
Father Time, pursued his way, perched aloft behind
two old horses.  At each corner the jarring ceased a
moment, and the old man's thin voice addressed his
steeds; then an angle was turned, and he tinkled on
again under the dancing heat.  Elsewhere Tommy
Bates prepared another knife, and sharpened its
shark-like teeth with a file; Pinsent brought up a load of
hay from a further field; Cramphorn ascended one
rick, and took the harvest from the forks; while Sally
and Collins turned the drying grasses at hand, and
pursued the business of tossing them with dexterity
begotten from long practice.  Mr. Libby crept about
in the near neighbourhood of the girl, but conscious
that Jonah, from the high vantage of the rick, kept
sharp eyes upon her, adventured no horseplay, and
merely complimented her under his breath upon her
splendid arms.

.. vspace:: 2

Meanwhile, Christopher Yeoland had seen Honor to
her home and so departed.

Bear Down lay in the centre of hay lands
immediately beneath the Moor.  Above it stretched the
heather-clad undulations of Scor Hill, and beneath
subtended forest-hidden slopes.  The farm itself was
approached through a little avenue of sycamores, whose
foliage, though it fell and turned to sere, black-spotted
death sadly early in most autumns, yet made dimpled
play of cool shadow through summer days on the great
whitewashed barn beneath it.  Then, through a
grass-grown yard and the foundations of vanished buildings,
one reached a duck-pond set in rhododendrons, and a
little garden.  The house itself was a patchwork of
several generations, and its main fabric stood in shape
of a carpenter's mitre, whose inner faces fronted east
and south.  Each portion had its proper entrance, and
that pertaining to the frontage which faced dawn was
of the seventeenth century.  Here a spacious granite
doorway stood, on one side of whose portal there
appeared the initials "J.E.", set in a shield and standing
for one John Endicott, who had raised this stout pile in
the past; while on the other, a date, 1655, indicated the
year of its erection.  The fabric that looked southwards
was of a later period, yet each matched with the other
well enough, and time, with the eternal mists of the
Moor for his brush, already began to paint modern
stone and slate into tune with the harmonious warmth
of the more ancient wing.  Behind the farmhouse were
huddled a dairy, outbuildings, and various erections,
that made fair medley of rusty red tile, warm
brown wood-stack, and silver thatch.  A little lawn
rolled away from the granite walls of the farm front,
and the parterres, spread snugly in the angle of the
building, were set with rough quartz and gay under
old-world flowers.  Here throve in many-coloured,
many-scented joy martagon lilies—pale, purple, and
lemon—dark monkshoods, sweet-williams, sweet-sultans,
lavender, great purple poppies, snapdragons,
pansies, stocks, and flaming marigolds.  Along the
streamlet, coaxed hither from Scor Hill to feed the
farm, grew ferns and willow-herbs, wild geraniums of
varied sorts, wood strawberries, orpine, and other
country folks.  The garden was a happy hunting-ground
for little red calves, who wandered bleating
about it in the mists of early morning; and for
poultry, who laid their eggs in thickets of flowers,
scratched up dust-baths in the beds, and hatched out
many a clutch of chicks or ducklings under sheltered
corners.  Against the weathered forehead of its
seventeenth-century wing Endicott's displayed an ancient
cherry tree that annually shook forth umbels of snowy
blossom about the casements, and, later, jewelled these
granite walls or decorated the venerable inscription on
the lintel with ruby-red fruit seen twinkling through
green leaves.  Elsewhere ivy and honeysuckle and
everlasting pea climbed on a wooden trellis, and in one
sheltered nook stood a syringa and a great japonica,
whose scarlet brightened the cloud-coloured days of
early springtime, whose pomaceous harvest adorned
the spot in autumn.

Within doors the farm was fashioned on a generous
plan, and contained large, low-ceiled rooms approached
through one another by a method most disorderly and
ancient.  Once, in the heyday of Endicott prosperity,
these chambers had been much occupied; now, as
became practical farmers, the men—generation by
generation—had gradually drifted from the luxuries of
many dwelling-rooms.  Their wives and daughters
indeed struggled against this defection, but masculine
obstinacy won its way, until the huge and pleasant
kitchen began to be recognised as the house-place
also, while other apartments became associated with
Sunday, or with such ceremonious events as deaths and
marriages might represent.

Almost to the farm walls each year there rippled
some hundreds of acres of grass, for no other form of
agriculture served the turn so well at that high altitude.
Roots and corn they grew, but only to the extent of
their own requirements.  Of stock Bear Down boasted
much too little; hay was the staple commodity, and at
this busy season Honor watched the heavens with a
farmer's eye, and personally inspected the undergrass,
its density and texture, in every field.

A late, cold spring had thrown back the principal
harvest somewhat during the year in question; yet it
promised well notwithstanding.  Mr. Cramphorn alone
declared himself disappointed; but seldom had a crop
been known to satisfy him, and his sustained discontent
throughout the procession of the seasons counted for
nothing.

Honor, despite education and reasonable gift of
common sense, never wholly pleased her parents.  Her
father largely lacked humour in his outlook, and he
had passed doubly sad: in the knowledge that the name
of Endicott must vanish from Bear Down upon the
marriage or decease of his daughter, and in the dark
fear that one so fond of laughter would never make
a farmer.  Indeed, his dying hope had been that the
weight of supreme control might steady the girl to
gravity.

Now, Christopher gone, Honor entered her house,
and proceeded into the kitchen.  A little separate
parlour she had, but particular reasons led to the
spending of much time in the larger apartment.  Nor
was this an ordinary kitchen.  You are to imagine,
rather, a spacious, lofty, and comfortable dwelling-room;
a place snug against the bitter draughts which
often bulged up the carpets and screamed in the
windows throughout the farm; a chamber warm in
winter, in summer cool.  Peat fires glowed upon its
cavernous and open hearth, and, like Vesta's sacred
brands, they never wholly died by night or day.  Above
the fireplace a granite mantel-shelf supported shining
metal-ware—brass candlesticks and tin receptacles
polished to splendour; a pair of old stirrups were
nailed against the wall, with a rack of guns—mostly
antique muzzle-loaders; while elsewhere, suspended in
a pattern, there hung a dozen pair of sheep-shears.
Oak beams supported the roof, and from them depended
hams in canvas bags.  At one corner, flanked by two
bright warming-pans, stood a lofty clock with a green
dial-plate and ornate case of venerable date; and about
its feet there ranged cream-pans at this moment, the
crust of whose contents matched the apricot tone of
kitchen walls and made splendid contrast with the
blue-stone floor where sunlight brightened it.  The outer
doorstone had yielded to innumerable steel-shod boots;
it was worn clean through at the centre, and a square
of granite had been inserted upon the softer stone.
Beside the fire stood a brown leathern screen, and
beneath the window, where light, falling through the
leaves of many geraniums, was cooled to a pale green,
there stretched a settle.

The kitchen was full of sound.  A wire-haired fox-terrier
pup worried a bit of rabbit-skin under the table,
and growled and tumbled and gurgled to his heart's
content; crickets, in dark caves and crannies behind
the hearth, maintained a cheerful chorus; and from
behind the screen came tapping of wooden needles,
where sat an old man knitting yarn.

"Honor at last," he said, as he heard her feet.

"Yes, uncle Mark; and late I'm afraid."

"I didn't wait for you.  The dinner is on the table.
What has kept you?"

"Christo has been asking me to marry him again."

"But that's an everyday amusement of his, so I've
heard you say."

"Uncle, I'm going to."

The needles stopped for one brief moment; then they
tapped on again.

"Well, well!  Almost a pity you didn't wait a little longer."

"I know what's in your head—Myles Stapledon."

"He was.  I confess to it."

"If only you could see his photograph, dearest.  Oh
so cold, hard, inscrutable!"

"I remember him as a boy—self-contained and
old-fashioned I grant you.  But sober-minded youths often
take life too seriously at the start.  There's a sort of
men—the best sort—who grow younger as they grow
older.  Mrs. Loveys told me that the picture he sent
you makes a handsome chap of Myles."

"Handsome—yes, very—like something carved out
of stone."

The blind man was silent for a moment; then he said—

"This shows the folly of building castles in the air
for other folks to live in.  Anyway you must make him
welcome during his visit, Honor, for there are many
reasons why you should.  The farm and the mill, once
his father's, down Tavistock way, have passed out of his
hands now.  He is free; he has capital; he wants an
investment.  At least you'll treat him as a kinsman;
while as to the possibilities about Bear Down, Myles will
very quickly find those out for himself if he's a practical
man, as I guess."

"You don't congratulate me on Christo," she said petulantly.

"I hardly seem able to take it seriously yet."

Honor turned away with impatience.  Her uncle's
attitude to the engagement was almost her own, allowing
for difference of standpoint; and the discovery first
made her uncomfortable, then angry.  But she was too
proud to discuss the matter or reveal her discomposure.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A WISE MAN AND A WISE WOMAN`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER III.


.. class:: center medium bold

   A WISE MAN AND A WISE WOMAN

.. vspace:: 2

Mr. Scobell, the Vicar of Little Silver, often
said, concerning Mark Endicott, that he was as
much the spiritual father of the hamlet as its parson.
Herein he stated no more than the truth, for the blind
man stood as a sort of perpetual palliative of human
trouble at Bear Down; in his obscure, night-foundered
passage through the world, he had soothed much sorrow
and brought comfort to not a few sad, primitive hearts
in the bosoms of man and maid.  He was seventy years
old and knew trouble himself; for, born to the glory of
light, he had been blind since the age of thirty, about
which period the accident of a bursting gun destroyed
his right eye.  The other, by sympathetic action, soon
became darkened also; and Mark Endicott endured the
full storm-centre of such a loss, in that he was a man of
the fields, who had depended for his life's joy on rapid
movement under the sky; on sporting; on the companionship
of horse and dog and those, like himself, whose lives
were knit up in country pursuits.  He had dwelt at Bear
Down before the catastrophe, with his elder brother,
Honor Endicott's father; and, after the affliction, Mark
still remained at the farm.  He was a bachelor, possessed
small means sufficient for his needs, and, when the world
was changed for him, cast anchor for life in the scene of
his early activities.  Before eclipse the man had been of
a jovial, genial sort, wholly occupied with the business of
his simple pleasures, quite content to remain poor; since
loss of sight he had fallen in upon himself and developed
mentally to an extent not to have been predicted from
survey of his sunlit youth.  Forty years of darkness
indeed ripened Mark Endicott into an original thinker, a
man whose estimate of life's treasures and solutions of its
problems were broad-based, tolerant, and just.  If stoical,
his philosophy was yet marked by that latter reverence
for humanity and patience with its manifold frailties
that wove courses of golden light into the decaying
fabric of the porch, and wakened a dying splendour in
those solemn and austere galleries ere the sun set upon
their grey ruins for ever.  Epictetus and Antonine were
names unknown to him, yet by his own blind road he
had groped to some of their lucid outlook, to that
forbearance, fearless courage, contempt of trifles and
ruthless self-estimate an emperor learned from a slave and
practised from the lofty standpoint of his throne.  Mark
Endicott appraised his own conduct in a spirit that had
been morbid exhibited by any other than a blind man;
yet in him this merciless introspection was proper and
wholesome.  The death of his sight was the birth of his
mind, or at least the first step towards his intellectual
education.  Seeing, the man had probably gone down
to his grave unconsidered and with his existence scarcely
justified; but blind, he had accomplished a career of
usefulness, had carved for himself an enduring
monument in the hearts of rustic men and women.  He was
generally serious, though not particularly grave, and he
could tolerate laughter in others though he had little
mind to it himself.  His niece represented his highest
interest and possessed all his love.  Her happiness was
his own, and amongst his regrets not the least centred
in the knowledge that he understood her so little.
Mark's own active participation in affairs extended not
far beyond speech.  He sat behind his leathern screen,
busied his hands with knitting great woollen comforters
for the fishermen of Brixham, and held a sort of modest
open court.  Often, during the long hours when he was
quite alone, he broke the monotony of silence by talking
to himself or repeating passages, both sacred and
secular, from works that gave him satisfaction.  Such
were his reflections that listeners never heard any ill of
themselves, though it was whispered that more than one
eavesdropper had overheard Mr. Endicott speak to the
point.  His quick ear sometimes revealed to him the
presence of an individual; and, on such occasions, the
blind man either uttered a truth for that particular
listener's private guidance, or published an opinion,
using him as the intelligencer.  It is to be noted also
that Mark Endicott oftentimes slipped into the
vernacular when talking with the country people—a
circumstance that set them at ease and enabled him to
impart much homely force to his utterances.  Finally
of him it may be said that in person he was tall and
broad, that he had big features, grizzled hair, which
he wore rather long, and a great grey beard that fell
to the last button of his waistcoat.  His eyes were
not disfigured though obviously without power of sight.

Honor made a hearty meal and then departed to
continue preparations for her cousin's visit.  In two
days' time he was arriving from Tavistock, to spend
a period of uncertain duration at Bear Down.  The
bright afternoon waned; the shadows lengthened; then
there came a knock at the outer door of the kitchen
and Henry Collins entered.  He had long been
seeking for an opportunity to speak in private with
Mr. Endicott; and now his face brightened from its usual
vacuity to find that Mark was alone.

"Could I have half a word, maister, the place bein' empty?"

"You're Collins, the new man, are you not?"

"Ess, sir; Henery Collins at your sarvice; an' hearin'
tell you'm ready to give your ripe judgment wheer 'tis
axed an' doan't grudge wisdom more'n a cloud grudges
rain, I made so bold—ess, I made that bold like as
to—as to——"

"What is it?  Don't waste breath in vain words.  If
I can give you a bit of advice, it's yours; an' take it or
leave it as you mind to."

"I'll take it for sure.  'Tis this then: I be a man o'
big bones an' big appetite, an' do handle my share o'
vittles braavely; but I do allus get that cruel hot when
I eat—to every pore as you might say—which swelterin'
be a curse to me—an' a painful sight for a female,
'specially if theer's like to be anything 'twixt you an'
she in the way of keepin' comp'ny.  An' if theer ban't
no offence, I'd ax 'e what I should take for't."

Mr. Endicott smiled.

"Take less, my son; an' don't swallow every mouthful
as if the devil was arter you.  Eat your meat an' sup
your drink slow."

"Ban't a calamity as caan't be cured, you reckon?"

"Nothing at all but greediness.  Watch how your
betters take their food an' see how the women eat.
'Tis only gluttony in you.  Remember you're a man,
not a pig; then 'twill come right."

Mr. Collins was greatly gratified.

"I'm sure I thank 'e wi' all my heart, maister; for
'twould be a sorry thing if such a ill-convenience
should come between me an' a bowerly maid like Sally
Cramphorn, the out-door girl."

"So it would then," assented the elder kindly; "but
no need—no need at all."

Collins repeated his sense of obligation and withdrew;
while elsewhere that identical young woman who now
began to distract the lethargic solidity of his inner life
was herself seeking advice upon a deep matter touching
heart's desire.  Soon after five o'clock Sally escaped
from the supervision of her jealous parent, and started
upon a private and particular errand through leafy
lanes that led northerly from the farm and skirted the
Moor in that direction.  Presently she turned to the
left, where a gate marked the boundaries of common
land and arrested cattle from straying on to the roads.
Here, dipping into a little tunnel of living green, where
hazels met over a watercourse, Sally proceeded by a
moist and muddy short cut to her goal.  It was a
cottage that rose all alone at a point where the Moor
rippled down to its hinder wall and a wilderness of
furze and water-meadow, laced with rivulets and dotted
with the feathers of geese, extended in front.  A dead
fir tree stood on one side of the cot, and the low
breast-work of granite and peat that separated a little garden
from the waste without was very strangely decked with
the vertebræ of a bygone ox.  The bones squatted
imp-like in a row there—a spectacle of some awe to those
who knew the significance of the spot.  Upon the door
were nailed many horse-shoes, and walls of red earth
or cob, painted with whitewash and crowned by
venerable and moss-grown thatch, formed the fabric of the
cottage.  Upon fine days this mural surface displayed
much magic of varied colour; it shone cool in grey
dawns, hot at noon, delicate rose and red gold under
such brief gleams of sunset light as the Moor's ragged
mane permitted to reach it.  Stone-crops wove mellow
tints into the rotting thatch above, and the moss
cushions of dark and shining green were sometimes
brushed and subdued by a haze or orange veil thrown
over them by the colour of their ripe seed-vessels.  In
the garden grew many herbs, knowledge of whose
potency their owner alone possessed, and at one corner
arose the golden spires of great mullein—a flower
aforetime called "hag's taper" and associated with
witches and their mystic doings.  Here the tall plant
towered, like a streak of flame, above pale, widespread,
woolly leaves; and it was held a sign and token of this
wise woman's garden, for when the mullein flowered
she had proclaimed that her herbs and simples were
most potent.  Then would such of her own generation
as remained visit ancient Charity Grepe in her
stronghold; while to her also came, with shamefaced secrecy,
young men and maidens, often under cover of darkness,
or in the lonely hour of winter twilights.

"Cherry," as old Charity was most frequently called,
had openly been dubbed a witch in times past.  She
recollected an experience, now near fifty years behind
her, when rough hands had forced open her jaws to seek
those five black spots observed upon the roof of a right
witch's mouth; she knew also that the same diabolic
imprint is visible upon the feet of swine, and that it
indicated the point where unnumbered demons, upon
Christ's command, once entered into Gadara's ill-omened
herd.  Since then, from a notoriety wholly sinister, she
had acquired more seemly renown until, in the year of
grace 1870, being at that date some five or six years
older than the century, Mother Grepe enjoyed mingled
reputation.  Some held her a white witch, others still
declared that she was a black one.  Be that as it may,
the old woman created a measure of interest in the
most sceptical, and, like the rest of her vanishing class,
stood as a storehouse of unwritten lumber and oral
tradition handed on through generations, from mother
to daughter, from father to son.  The possessor and
remembrancer of strange formularies and exorcisms, she
would repeat the same upon proper occasion, but only
after a solemn assurance from those who heard her that
they would not commit her incantations to any sort of
writing.  In her judgment all virtue instantly departed
from the written word.

At this season of her late autumn, the gammer was
entering upon frosty times, for, under pressure of church
and school, the world began to view her accomplishments
with indifference.  Yet the uncultured so far
bowed to custom and a lustre handed down through
half a century as to credit Cherry with some vague
measure of vaguer power.  Little Silver called her the
"wise woman," and granted her all due credit for skill
in those frank arts that pretend to no superhuman
attribute.  It is certain that she was familiar with the
officinal herbs of the field.  She could charm the secrets
and soothing essences from coriander and anise and
dill—with other of the umbel-bearing wild folk, whose
bodies are often poison, whose seeds are little caskets
holding carminative and anodyne.  Of local plants she
grew in her garden those most desirable, and there
flourished peppermint, mother-o'-thyme, marjoram, and
numerous other aromatic weeds.  With these materials
the old woman made shift to live, and exacted trifling
sums from the mothers of Little Silver by preparing
cordials for sick children; from the small farmers and
credulous owners of live stock, by furnishing boluses for
beasts.

Sally Cramphorn, however, had come on other business
and about a widely different sort of potion.  She
was among those who respected Cherry's darker
accomplishments, and her father himself—a man not prone to
praise his fellow-creatures—openly confessed to firm
belief in Mother Grepe's unusual powers.

The old woman was in her garden when Sally arrived.
It had needed sharp scrutiny to observe much promise
of wisdom about her.  She was brown, wrinkled and
shrivelled, yet exhibited abundant vitality and spoke in
a voice that seemed musical because one expected the
reverse.  Her eyes alone challenged a second glance.
They were black, and flashed in the twilight.  Dame
Grepe's visitor, a stranger to shyness, soon explained
the nature of the thing desired.  With blushes, but
complete self-possession in all other respects, she spoke.

"'Tis 'bout the matter of a husband, Cherry; an'
you'm so wise, I lay you knaw it wi'out my tellin' you."

"Ess—you be wife-auld in body; but what about
the thinking part of 'e, Sally Cramphorn?  Anyway
I wonder you dare let your mind go gadding arter a
male, seeing what fashion o' man your faither is."

Sally pouted.

"That's the very reason for it I reckon.  What gal
can be happy in a home like mine?"

"A man quick to think evil—your faither—a vain
man—a man as scowls at shadows an' sees gunpowder
treason hid behind every hedge—poor fule!"

"So he do then; an' ban't very nice for a grawed
woman like me.  If I lifts my eye to a chap's face,
he thinks I be gwaine to run away from un; an' there
ban't a man in Little Silver, from Squire Yeoland to
the cowboy at the farm, as he've got a tender word for."

"I knaw, I knaw.  Come in the house."

Sally followed the old woman into her cottage, and
spoke as she did so.

"It's hard come to think on it, 'cause I'm no more
against a husband than any other gal.  'Tis awnly that
they'm feared of the sound 'pon theer tongues as gals
won't awn up honest they'd sooner have husbands than
not.  Look at missis—she'll find herself a happy wife
bimebye if squire do count for anything."

"Be they much together?"

"Ess fay—allus!"

The old woman shook her head.

"A nature, hers, born to trouble as the sparks fly
upwards.  Fine metal, but easy to crack by fire.  She
comed to me wance—years agone—comed half in jest,
half in earnest; an' I tawld her strange things to her
fortune tu—things as'll mean gert changes an' more
sorrow than joy when all's acted an' done.  Full, fair
share of gude an' bad—evil an' balm—an' her very well
content to creep under the green grass an' rest her
head 'pon the airth come fulness of time."

"Lor, mother!  You do make me all awver creepy-crawly
to hear tell such dreadful things," declared Miss
Cramphorn.

"No need for you to fear.  You'm coarser clay,
Sally, an' won't get no thinner for love of a man.  An'
why should 'e?  Pray for a fixed mind; an' doan't,
when the man comes beggin', begin weighing the
blemishes of un or doubtin' your awn heart."

"Never, I won't—and my heart's fixed; an' I be so
much in love as a gal can be an' hide it, Cherry."

"I knaw, I knaw.  'Tis Greg Libby you wants,"
answered the sibyl, who had observed certain
hay-makers some hours earlier in the day.

"Ess, I do then, though you'm the awnly living sawl
as knaws it."

"Doan't he knaw it?"

"Not a blink of it.  He'm a wonnerful, dandified
man since he come from Lunnon."

"Be he gwaine to do any more work?"

"Not so long as his clothes bide flam-new, I reckon.
Ban't no call for un to.  An' I love un very much, an'
do truly think he loves me, Cherry.  An', in such things,
a little comin'-on spirit in the man's like to save the
maid much heart-burnin'; an' I minded how you helped
she as was Thirza Foster, in the matter of Michael
Maybridge, her husband now.  'Tis pity Gregory should
bide dumb along of his backward disposition."

"A love drink you're arter!  Who believes in all
that now?"

"I mind how you made Maybridge speak, whether
or no, an' I'll give 'e half-a-crown for same thing what
you gived Thirza."

It was growing dusk.  Gammer Grepe preserved
silence a moment, then rose and lighted a candle.

"Half-a-crown!  An' I've had gawld for less than
that!  Yet times change, an' them as believed believe
no more.  It all lies theer.  If you believe, the thing
have power; if not, 'tis vain to use it."

"I do b'lieve like gospel, I assure 'e.  Who wouldn't
arter Thirza?"

"Then give me your money an' do what I bid."

She took the silver, spat upon it, raised her hand,
and pointed out of the window.

"Do 'e see thicky plant in the garden theer, wi'
flowers, like to tired eyes, starin' out of the dimpsy
light?  'Tis a herb o' power.  You'll find un grawin'
wild on rubbish heaps an' waste places."

She pointed where a clump of wild chamomile rose
with daisy-like blossoms pallid in the twilight.

"Ess, mother."

Then the wise woman mouthed solemn directions,
which Sally listened to as solemnly.

"Pick you that—twenty-five stalks—at the new
moon.  Then pluck off the flowers an' cast 'em in the
river; but the stalks take home-along an' boil 'em in
three parts of half a pint o' spring watter.  Fling stalks
away but keep the gude boiled out of 'em, an' add
to it a drop more watter caught up in your thimble
from a place wheer forget-me-not do graw.  Then put
the whole in a li'l bottle, an' say Lard's Prayer awver it
thrice; and, come fust ripe chance, give it to the man
to drink mixed in tea or cider, but not beer nor other
liquor."

With the ease of an artist Cherry improvised this
twaddle on the spot, and the girl, all ears and eyes,
expressed great thankfulness for such a potent charm,
bid the gammer farewell, and hastened away.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE KISS`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER IV.


.. class:: center medium bold

   THE KISS

.. vspace:: 2

Some days later Christopher Yeoland was returning
from the village of Throwley to Little Silver, by a
road that winds along the flank of the Moor.  He carried
a basket in which reposed a young collie pup.  Himself
he wanted no such thing, but the little beast came of
notable stock, possessed a special value, and seemed
worthy of Honor.  Among those delights represented
by his engagement was the facility it afforded for giving
of presents.  He had already sketched on paper the
designs of many engagement rings.  A circle of gold
with diamonds and emeralds in it was his vague
intention; while his visions of how he should come at
such a jewel were still more doubtful.  This man
possessed great power in the direction of dreams, in
projecting the shadows of pleasant things and winning
happiness from these conceits despite their improbability.
Love of beauty was a characteristic in him, but
otherwise he could not be described as sensual.  Beauty
he adored; yet delight of the eye appeared to suffice
him.  His attitude towards the opposite sex is
illustrated by an event now to be described.

The day was done and the hour of rest had come
upon the workers.  Labouring folk moved through the
long July twilight upon their own concerns, as private
pleasure or business led them; and now, under the huge
shadow of the Moor, there unfolded a little drama, slight
enough, yet reflecting sensibly upon the future concerns
of those who played in the scene.  Christopher Yeoland,
his mind quite full of Honor, overtook Sally Cramphorn
in the valley, and being upon friendly terms with all the
countryside, marched awhile beside her.  He allowed no
social differences at any time to obtain between him and
a pretty face.  Sally was good to see, and as for Yeoland,
of late days, chiefly by reason of an exceeding honour
that the mistress of Bear Down had done him, he felt
pliable, even reverential before all things feminine, for
her dear sake.  He was not of that sort who find all other
women sink into shadows after the unutterable One has
joined her fate with his for evermore; but, contrariwise,
the possession of Honor heightened his interest in her
sex.  He might have been likened to a bee, that indeed
loved clover before all else, yet did not disdain a
foxglove or purple lupin upon occasion.  So he walked
beside Sally and contemplated her proportions with
pleasure, watched her throat work and the rosy light
leap to her cheek as he praised her.

In Sally's heart was a wish that Greg Libby might
see her with such a courtier; but unfortunately a very
different person did so.  Mr. Cramphorn, with an ancient
muzzle-loading gun at full-cock and a fox-terrier under
the furzes ahead of him, was engaged in stalking rabbits
a few hundred yards distant.  His keen eye, now turning
suddenly, rested upon his daughter.  He recognised her
by her walk and carriage; but her companion, in that
he bore a basket, deceived Mr. Cramphorn.  Full of
suspicion and growling dire threats in his throat, Jonah
forgot the rabbits for this nobler game.  He began
stalking the man and woman, skulked along behind the
hazels at the common edge, and presently, after feats of
great and unnecessary agility, found himself snugly
hidden in a lofty hedge immediately beneath which his
daughter and her escort must presently pass.

Meanwhile, she strolled along and soon recovered her
self-possession, for Yeoland was in no sense awe-inspiring.
The young woman had now come from securing a
priceless thimbleful of water that bathed the roots of
forget-me-nots.  She carried this magic liquid concealed
in a little phial; the rest of the ingredients were hidden
at home; and she hoped that night to brew the philtre
destined for Mr. Libby.

"Sally," said Christopher, "I'll tell you a great piece
of news.  No, I won't; you must guess it."

She looked up at him with a knowing smile on her
red mouth.

"You'm gwaine to marry missis, sir—be that it?"

"You gimlet of a girl!  But, no, you never guessed—I'm
positive you didn't.  Somebody told you; Miss
Endicott herself, perhaps."

"None told me.  I guessed it."

"How jolly of you!  I like you for guessing, Sally.
It was a compliment to us."

"I doan't knaw what you mean by that, sir."

"No matter.  You will some day, and feel extremely
flattered if people congratulate you before you've told
them.  If you simply adore one girl, Sally, you love
them all!"

"Gude Lard!  Ban't so along wi' us.  If we'm sweet
in wan plaace, we'm shy in t'others."

"Only one man in the world for you, then?"

"Ess—awnly wan."

"He's a lucky chap.  Mind that I know all about it
in good time, Sally.  You shall have a fine wedding
present, I promise you—whatever you like, in fact."

"Things ban't come to that yet; though thank you
kindly, sir, I'm sure."

"Well, they will."

"He haven't axed ezacally yet."

"Ass!  Fool!  Dolt!  But perhaps he's in mortal
fear of you—frightened to speak and not able to trust
his pen.  You're too good for him, Sally, and he knows it."

"I be his awn order in life, for that matter."

"I see, I see; it's this hidden flame burning in you
that made you so quick to find out our secret.  I love
you for it!  I love every pretty face in Devonshire,
because my lady is pretty; and every young woman on
Dartmoor, because my lady is young.  Can you
understand that?"

"No, I caan't," confessed Sally.  "'Tis fulishness."

"Not at all.  At this moment I could positively hug
you—not disrespectfully, you know, but just out of
love—for Miss Endicott."

"It do make a man dangerous seemin'ly—this gert
love of a lady."

"Not at all.  Far from it.  It draws his claws.  He
goes in chains.  Did anybody ever dare to hug you,
Sally?"

"No fay!  Should like to have seed 'em!"

"You wouldn't have minded one though?"

"Caan't say, as he never offered to."

"D'you mean he's never even kissed you, Sally?"

"Wance he axed if he might."

"'Axed'!  And of course you said 'No' like any
other girl would?"

"Ess, I did."

"Fancy asking!"

"What should he have done then?"

It was a dangerous inquiry on Miss Cramphorn's
part, and it is within the bounds of possibility that she
knew it.  Had she been aware that her sole parent was
glaring, like an angry monkey, from a point in the
hedge within six yards of her, Sally had scarcely put
that disingenuous problem.  The answer came instantly.
Honor's pup fell headlong into the road and greeted
its descent with a yell; like lightning a pair of
tweed-clad arms were round Sally, and a rough, amber-coloured
moustache against her lips.

"Sir—give awver!  How dare 'e!  What be doin' of?
You'm squeezin' me—oh——!"

There was a crash in the hedge, the bark of a dog
and the oath of a man.  Then Christopher felt himself
suddenly seized by the collar and dragged backwards.
He turned red as the sunset, swore in his turn, then
realised that no less a personage than Jonah Cramphorn
had been witness to his folly.  Trembling with rage,
Bear Down's head man accosted the squire of Little
Silver.

"You!  You to call yourself a gen'leman!  Out 'pon
'e—to rape a gal under her faither's awn eyes!  By God,
'tis time your wicked thread was cut an' Yeolands did
cease out of the land!  Small wonder they'm come
down to——"

"Shut your mouth, you fool!" retorted Christopher
savagely.  "How dare you lay a finger upon me?  I'll
have you up for breaking other people's hedges, and,
what's more, I've a mind to give you a damned good
hiding myself."

"You tell like that, you hookem-snivey young
blackguard!  I'd crack your blasted bones like a bad
egg—an' gude riddance tu!  Ban't she my awn darter, an'
wasn't you carneying an' cuddlin' of her in broad day?
'Struth!  I could spit blood to think such things can
happen!  An' me to be threatened by you!  You'll
hide me—eh?  Thank your stars I didn't shoot 'e.  An'
if I'd slayed the pair of 'e 'twouldn't have been no gert
loss to clean-livin' folks!"

"I'm ashamed of you, Cramphorn—reading evil into
everything that happens," said Yeoland calmly.

"God stiffen it!  Hear him!  Hear him!  Preachin'
my duty to me.  You lewd, stalled ox, for two pins——"

"Put that gun down or I'll break it over your head!"
answered Christopher; but the other, now a mere
maniac, shaking and dancing with passion, refused.
Whereupon Yeoland rushed at him, twisted the gun
out of his hands, and threw it upon the ground.  The
next moment Jonah had hit his enemy in the face with
a big fist; Christopher struck back, Sally screamed, and
Cramphorn spit blood in earnest.  Then they closed,
and Jonah's dog, grasping the fact that his master was
in difficulties, and needed assistance, very properly
fastened on one of Yeoland's leathern leggings and hung
there, as both men tumbled into the road.

The girl wrung her hands, lifted her voice and
screamed to the only being visible—a man with a cart
of peat outlined against the sunset on the heather
ridges of the Moor.  But he was a mile distant and
quite beyond reach of poor Sally's frantic appeal.  Then
both combatants rose, and Cramphorn, returning to
battle, got knocked off his feet again.  At the same
moment a man came round the corner of the road, and
mended his steps upon hearing a frenzied announcement
that two fellow-creatures were killing each other.
A moment later he hastened between the combatants,
took a hard blow or two from both, swept Christopher
aside with no particular difficulty, and saved the elder
from further punishment.

Sally wept, thanked God, and went to minister to
her parent; while the new-comer, in a passionless voice
that contrasted strangely with the rapidity of his actions,
accosted Yeoland.

"What is this?  Don't you know better than to
strike a man old enough to be your father?"

"Mind your own business," gasped Christopher,
brushing the dust off himself and examining a wound
in his wrist.

"It's anybody's business, surely."

The other did not answer.  His passion was rapidly
cooling to shame.  He scanned the speaker and wished
that they might be alone together.  The man was tall,
very heavily built, one who would naturally move with
a long and tardy stride.  His recent energy was the
result of circumstances and an action most unusual.
He still breathed deep upon it.

"I'm sure you'll regret what has happened in a
calmer moment, and pardon me for helping you to
your senses," he said.

"So he shall regret it, I'll take my dying oath to
that," spluttered Mr. Cramphorn.  "Idle, lecherous,
cold-hearted, hot-blooded beast as he be."

"Get cool," said the stranger, "and don't use foul
language.  There are remedies for most evils.  If he's
wronged you, you can have the law of him.  Put some
cold water on his head."

Sally, to whom the last remark was addressed, dipped
her apron in the brook by the wayside, but Mr. Cramphorn
waved her off.

"Get out o' my sight, you easy minx!  To think that
any cheel o' mine would let strange men put theer arms
around her in broad day!"

"I'm entirely to blame—my fault altogether—not
hers," said Christopher.  "I felt in a cuddling mood,"
he added frankly.  "I wouldn't have hurt a hair of her
head, and she knows it.  Why should it be worse to
kiss a pretty girl than to smell a pretty flower?  Tell
me that."

"Theer's devil's talk for 'e!" gurgled Jonah.

"You miserable old ass—but I'm sorry—heartily
sorry.  Forgive me, and go to Doctor Clack and get a
soothing something.  And if I've hurt your gun I'll
buy you a new one."

"Likely as I'd have any dealin's wi' a son of Belial
Beelzebub same as you be!  I'll put the law to work
against 'e, that's what I'll do; an' us'll see if a woman
be at the mercy of every gen'leman, so-called, as loafs
'pon the land because he'm tu idle to work!"

"That'll do.  Now go off about your business, Cramphorn,
and let us have no more nonsense.  We ought
both to be ashamed of ourselves, and I'm sure I am.
As a Christian man, you must forgive me; I'm sure, as
a Christian girl, Sally will."

"Leave her alone, will 'e!  I won't have her name
on your tongue.  Us'll see if folks can break the laws;
us'll see——"

He strode off, pulling his daughter by the hand,
and entirely forgetting his gun beside the way; but
after the irate father had departed, Yeoland recovered
his weapon and found it unhurt.  He then picked up
Honor's pup, and overtook the stranger who was
proceeding in the direction of Little Silver.

"How came you to get that man into such a white
heat?" the latter asked him.

"Well, I kissed his daughter; and he was behind the
hedge at the critical point and saw me."

"Ah!"

"I'm a chap who wouldn't hurt a fly, you know.
But I'm particularly happy about some private affairs
just at present, and—well, my lightness of heart took
that turn."

The other did not smile, but looked at Christopher
curiously.

"You said a strange thing just now," he remarked,
in a deep voice, with slow, dragging accents.  "You
declared that to kiss a girl was no worse than to smell
a flower.  That seemed a new idea to me."

Yeoland opined that it might well be so.  This was
no woman's man.

"I believe it's true, all the same," he answered.

"Isn't there a lack of respect to women in the idea?"

The speaker stood over Christopher by two inches.
His face had a cold comeliness.  His features were large,
regular, and finely modelled; his complexion was dark;
his eyes were grey; he wore a moustache but no other
hair upon his face.  A great solidity, slowness, and
phlegm marked his movements and utterances, and his
handsome countenance was something of a mask, not
from practised simulation or deliberate drilling of feature,
but by the accident of flesh.  A high forehead neither
declared nor denied intellect by its shape; the man in
fact showed but little of himself externally.  One might,
however, have predicted a strenuous temperament and
suspected probable lack of humour from a peculiar sort of
gravity of face.  His eyes were evidently of exceptional
keenness; his speech was marked by an uncertainty in
choice of words that denoted he was habitually taciturn;
his manner suggested one who kept much of his own
company and lived a lonely life—either from necessity
or choice.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`PAGAN ALTARS`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER V.


.. class:: center medium bold

   PAGAN ALTARS

.. vspace:: 2

The men proceeded together, and Christopher's
companion made himself known by a chance
question.  He inquired the way to Bear Down, whereupon
Yeoland, aware that a kinsman of the Endicotts
was expected, guessed that this must be he.

"You're Myles Stapledon then?"

"I am.  I walked from Okehampton to get a glimpse
of the Moor.  Came by way of the Belstones and
Cosdon—a glorious scene—more spacious in some
respects than my native wilds down West."

"You like scenery?  Then you'll be joyful here.  If
Honor had known you were walking, I'll dare swear she
would have tramped out to meet you; still, thank the
Lord she didn't."

"You know her well to speak of her by her Christian
name," said Stapledon slowly.

Christopher was but two years younger than his
companion, but one had guessed that a decade separated
them.

"Know her!  Know Honor!  I should rather think
I did know her.  She's my sun and moon and stars.  I
suppose she hoped to tell you the great news herself,
and now I've babbled it.  Engaged—she and I—and
I'm the happiest man in all the South of England."

"I congratulate you.  My cousin promised to be a
pretty woman—just a dinky maid in short frocks when
last I saw her.  And your name——?"

"My name is Yeoland."

"The Squire of Godleigh, of course?"

"That proud personage; and there lies Endicott's—under
the wind-blown sycamores where the whitewash
peeps out.  Your luggage is there before you, no doubt.
This is my way: to the left.  You go to the right, pass
that farm there on your left, follow the road and so,
after about five minutes, find yourself in the presence of
the Queen of the Moor.  Good-bye.  We shall meet again."

"Good-bye, and thank you."

Stapledon moved onwards; then he heard a man
running and Christopher overtook him.

"One moment.  I thought I'd ask you not to mention
that scrimmage on the hillside.  Honor would quite
understand my performance, but she'd be pained to
think I had struck or been struck by that lout, and
perhaps—-well.  She'll hear of it, for Cramphorn and
his daughter are Bear Down people, but——"

"Not from me, rest assured."

"A thousand thanks.  You might mention that you
met me returning from Throwley and that the pup
is a gem.  I'll bring it along some time or other to-morrow."

Again they separated, and such is the character
often-times exhibited in a man's method of walking, that
appreciation of each had been possible from study of
his gait.  Stapledon appeared to move slowly, but his
stride was tremendous and in reality he walked at four
miles an hour; the other, albeit his step looked brisk,
never maintained any regularity in it.  He stopped to
pat a bruised knee, wandered from one side of the road
to the other, and presently climbed the hedge to get a
sight of Bear Down, with hope that Honor might be
seen in her garden.

But at that moment the mistress of Endicott's was
welcoming her cousin.  They greeted one another
heartily and spoke awhile together.  Then, when Myles
had ascended to the room prepared for him, Mr. Endicott
listened to his niece's description of the new arrival.

"Better far than his photograph," she said.  "More
expression, but too big.  He's a tremendous man; yet
very kind, I should think, and not proud.  Almost
humble and most austere in dress.  No rings or scarf
pin—just grey everything.  He looks older than I
thought, and his voice is so curiously deep that it makes
little things in the room rattle.  We were in the parlour
for two minutes, and every time he spoke he vibrated
one particular bass note of the piano until I grew quite
nervous.  He has very kind eyes—slate-coloured.  I
should say he was extremely easy to please."

"A fine open-air voice, certainly, and a good grip to
his hand," said the blind man.

"Yet no tact, I fear," criticised Honor.  "Fancy
beginning about poor old Bear Down wanting attention,
and hoping that he might put some money into it
before he had been in the house five minutes!"

"Nervousness.  Perhaps you surprised him."

But, later in the day, Myles endeavoured to repair
a clumsiness he had been conscious of at the time, and,
after collecting his thoughts—honestly somewhat
unsettled by the sight of Honor, who had leapt from lanky
girl to beautiful woman since last he saw her—his
first words were a hearty congratulation upon the
engagement.

"Endicott's stock is very nearly as old, but there's a
social difference," he said bluntly.  "'Tis a very good
match for you, I hope.  You'll live at Godleigh, of
course?"

"It's all a long, long way off, cousin; and I'm sure I
cannot guess how you come to know anything at all
about it," said Honor.

Then the traveller told her, beginning his narrative
at the point where he had asked Christopher the road
to Bear Down.  He concluded with a friendly word.

"Handsome he is, for certain, with the wind and the
sun on his cheek; and a man of his own ideas, I judge;
an original man.  I wish you joy, Honor, if I may call
you Honor."

"What nonsense!  Of course.  And I'm glad you
like my Christo, because then you'll like me too, I hope.
We have very much in common really.  We see things
alike, live alike, laugh alike.  He has a wonderful sense
of humour; it teaches him to look at the world from
the outside."

"A mighty unwholesome, unnatural attitude for any
man," said Mark Endicott.

"Yet hardly from the outside either, if he's so human
as to want a wife?" asked Honor's cousin.

"He wants a wife," she answered calmly, "to take
the seat next him at the theatre, to walk beside him
through the picture-gallery, to compare notes with, to
laugh with at the fun of the fair, as he calls it."

Mr. Endicott's needles tapped impatiently.

"Vain talk, vain talk," he said.

"It may be vain, uncle, but it's none the less true,"
she answered.  "If I do not know Christopher, who
does?  The companionship of a congenial spirit is the
idea in his mind—perhaps in mine too.  He's a laughing
philosopher, and so platonic, so abstracted, that if
he had found a man friend, instead of a woman, he
would have been just as content to swear eternal
friendship and invite the man to sit and watch the
great play with him and laugh away their lives together."

"I hope you don't know Mr. Yeoland as well as you
imagine, Honor," said Mark Endicott.

"You misjudge him really, I expect," ventured Myles,
his thoughts upon a recent incident.  "Think what it
would be to one of active and jovial mind to sit and
look on at life and take no part."

"'Look on!'" burst out the blind man.  "Only God
Almighty looks on; and not even He, come to think
of it, for He's pulling the strings."

"Not so," said Myles; "not so, Uncle Endicott.  He
put us on the stage, I grant you; and will take us off
again when our part is done.  But we're moved from
inside, not driven from out.  We play our lives ourselves,
and the wrong step at the entrance—the faulty speech—the
good deed—the bad—they all come from inside—all
build up the part.  Free-will is the only sort of freedom
a created thing with conscious intelligence can have.
There's no choice about the theatre or the play; but
neither man nor God dictates to me how I enact my
character."

Mark Endicott reflected.  He was a stout Christian,
and, like an old war-horse, he smelt battle in this
utterance, and rejoiced.  It was left for Honor to fill
the silence.

"It's all a puppet-show, say what you will, cousin,"
she summed up; "and anybody can see the strings
that move nine dolls out of ten.  A puppet-show, and
a few of us pay too little for our seats at it; but most
of us pay too much.  And you need not argue with
me, because I know I'm right, and here is Mrs. Loveys
to say that supper's ready."

.. vspace:: 2

A week later it was practically determined that
Myles should concern himself with Bear Down; but
the man still remained as unknown to Honor as in the
moment of their first meeting.  His money interested
her not at all; his character presented a problem which
attracted her considerably during those scanty hours
she found heart to spend away from her lover.  It
happened that Christopher having departed on a sudden
inspiration to Newton Races, Honor Endicott and her
cousin set out together for an excursion of pleasure
upon the high Moor.

The day was one in August, and hot sunshine
brooded with glowing and misty light on hills and
valleys, on rivers and woods, on farm lands and wide-spread
shorn grasses, where the last silver-green ribbons
of dried hay, stretching forth in parallel and winding
waves, like tide-marks upon great sands, awaited the
wain.  Stapledon walked beside Honor's pony, and
together they passed upwards to the heather, beside
an old wall whose motley fabric glimmered sun-kissed
through a blue shimmer of flowers, and faded into a
perspective all silvery with lichens, broken with brown,
thirsty mosses, many grasses, and the little pale pagodas
of navelwort.  Beech trees crowned the granite, and the
whisper of their leaves was echoed by a brook that
murmured unseen in a hollow upon the other side of
the road.  Here Dartmoor stretched forth a finger,
scattered stone, and sowed bracken and furze, heather
and rush and the little flowers that love stream-sides.

The travellers climbed awhile, then Myles stopped at
a gate in the old wall and Honor drew up her pony.
For a moment there was no sound but the gentle
crick-crick-crick from bursting seed-pods of the greater gorse,
where they scattered their treasure at the touch of the
sun.  Then the rider spoke.

"How fond you are of leaning upon gates, Myles!"

He smiled.

"I know I am.  I've learned more from looking
over gates than from most books.  You take Nature
by surprise that way and win many a pretty secret
from her."

The girl stared as at a revelation.  Thus far she had
scarcely penetrated under her cousin's exterior.  He was
very fond of dumb animals and very solicitous for them;
but more of him she had not gleaned until the present.

"Do you really care for wild things—birds, beasts,
weeds?  I never guessed that.  How interesting!  So
does Christo.  And he loves the dawn as much as you do."

"We have often met at cock-light.  It is a bond we
have—the love of the morning hour.  But don't you like
Nature too?"

"Not madly, I'm afraid.  I admire her general effects.
But I'm a little frightened of her at heart and I cringe
to her in her gracious moods.  Christo's always poking
about into her affairs and wanting to know the meaning
of curious things; but he's much too lazy to learn."

"There's nothing so good as to follow Nature and
find out a little about her methods in hedges and
ditches, where she'll let you."

"You surprise me.  I should have thought men and
women were much more interesting than rabbits and
wild flowers."

"You cannot get so near to them," he answered; "at
least, I cannot.  I haven't that touch that opens hearts.
I wish I had.  People draw the blinds down, I always
think, before me.  Either so, or I'm more than common
dense.  Yet everybody has the greater part of himself
or herself hidden, I suppose; everybody has one little
chamber he wouldn't open to God if he could help it."

"Are you a Christian, Myles?  But don't answer if
you would rather not."

"Why, it makes a man's heart warm by night or by
day to think of the Founder of that faith."

Again Honor was surprised.

"I like to hear you say so," she answered.  "D'you
know I believe that we think nearly alike—with a
difference.  Christ is much dearer to me than the great
awful God of the Universe.  He was so good to women
and little children; but the Almighty I can only see in
Nature—relentless, unforgiving, always ready to punish
a slip, always demon-quick to see a mistake and visit
the sins of the fathers on the children.  Nature's the
stern image of a stern God to me—a thing no more to
be blamed than the lightning, but as much to be feared.
Christ knew how to forgive and weep for others, how
to heal body and soul.  The tenderness of Him!  And
He fought Nature and conquered her; brought life
where she had willed death; health where she had sent
sickness; stilled her passion on blue Galilee; turned her
water into wine."

"You can credit all that?"

"As easily as I can credit a power kinder than Nature,
and stronger.  Yes, I believe.  It is a great comfort to
believe; and Christopher does too."

"A beautiful religion," said Myles; "especially for
women.  They do well to love One who raised them
out of the dust and set them up.  Besides, there is their
general mistiness on the subject of justice.  Christianity
repels me here, draws me there.  It is child's meat, with
its sugar-plums and whips for the good and naughty; it
is higher than the stars in its humanity."

"You don't believe in hell, of course?"

"No—or in heaven either.  That is a lack in me—a
sorrowful limitation."

"Yet, if heaven exists, God being just, the man whose
life qualifies him for it has got to go there.  That's a
comforting thought for those who love you, Myles."

The word struck a deep note.  He started and looked
at her.

"How kind to think of that!  How good and generous
of you to say it!"

The voice of him sent an emotion through Honor,
and, according to her custom when moved beyond
common, she fell back upon laughter.

"Why, we're getting quite confidential, you and I!
But here's the Moor at last."

They stood upon Scor Hill and surveyed their
subsequent way, where it passed on before.  Beneath
swelled and subtended a mighty valley in the lap of
stone-crowned hills—a rare expanse of multitudinous
browns.  Through every tone of auburn and russet, sepia
and cinnamon, tan and dark chocolate of the peat
cuttings, these colour harmonies spread and undulated
in many planes.  From the warmth and richness of
velvet under sunshine they passed into the chill of
far-flung cloud-shadows, that painted the Moor with
slowly-moving sobriety and robbed her bosom of its
jewels, her streamlets of their silver.  Teign wound
below, entered the valley far away under little cliffs
of yellow gravel, then, by sinuous courses, through a
mosaic of dusky peat, ripe rushes, and green banks
overlaid with heather, passed where steep medley and
tanglement of motionless boulders awakened its volume
to a wilder music.  Here, above this chaos of huge and
moss-grown rocks, scarlet harvests of rowan flung a flame
along the gorges; grey granite swam into the
grey-green of the sallows; luxuriant concourse of flowers
and ferns rippled to the brown lips of the river; and
terraces of tumbling water crowned all that unutterable
opulence of summer-clad dingle with spouts, with
threads, with broad, thundering cataracts of foaming
light.  Here Iris twinkled in a mist that steamed above
the apron of mossy-margined falls; here tree shadows
restrained the sunlight, yet suffered chance arrows of
pure amber to pierce some tremulous pool.

Each kiss of the Mother wakened long miles of earth
into some rare hue, where the Moor colours spread
enormous in their breadth, clarity, and volume.  They
rolled and rippled together; they twined and
intertwined and parted again; they limned new harmonies
from the union of rush and heath and naked stone;
they chimed into fresh combinations of earth and air
and sunshine; they won something from the sky
outspread above them, and wove the summer blue into
their secret fabrics, even as the sea does.  Between
dispersed tracts of the brake fern and heather, and
amid walls of piled stone, that stretched threadlike over
the Moor, there lay dark or naked spaces brushed with
green—theatres of past spring fires; rough cart roads
sprawled to the right and left; sheep tracks and the
courses of distant rivulets seamed the hills; while peat
ridges streaked the valleys, together with evidences of
those vanished generations who streamed for metal
upon this spacious spot in the spacious times.  Beyond,
towards the heart of the Moor, there arose Sittaford's
crown; to the west ranged Watern's castles; and
northerly an enormous shoulder of Cosdon climbed
heaven until the opaline hazes of that noontide hour
softened its heroic outlines and something dimmed the
mighty shadows cast upon its slopes.  Light winds
fanned the mane of Honor's pony and brought with
them the woolly jangle of a sheep-bell, the bellow of
distant kine, the little, long-drawn, lonely tinkle of a
golden bird upon a golden furze.

"The Moor," said Honor; and as she spoke a shade
lifted off the face of the man beside her, a trouble faded
from his eyes.

"Yes, the Moor—the great, candid, undissembling
home of sweet air, sweet water, sweet space."

"And death and desolation in winter, and hidden
skeletons under the quaking bogs."

"It is an animate God to me notwithstanding."

She shivered slightly and set her pony in motion.

"What a God!  Where will it lead you?"

"I cannot tell; yet I trust.  Nature is more than the
mere art of God, as men have called it.  That is why I
must live with it, why I cannot mew myself in bricks
and mortar.  Here's God's best in this sort—the dearest
sort I know—the Moor—spread out for me to see and
hear and touch and tread all the days of my life.  This
is more than His expression—it is Him.  Nothing can
be greater—not high mountains, or eternal snows, or
calling oceans.  Nothing can be greater to me, because
I too am of all this—spun of it, born of it, bred on it,
a brother of the granite and the mist and the lonely
flower.  Do you understand?"

"I understand that this desert is no desert to you,
Myles.  Yet what a faith!  What a certainty!"

"Better than nothing at all."

"Anything is better than that.  Our best certainties
are only straws thrown to the drowning—if we think as
you do."

"Bars of lead rather.  They help to sink us the
quicker.  We know much—but not the truth of
anything that matters."

"You will some day, Myles."

"Yes, too late, if your faith and its whips and
sugarplums are true, Honor."

"The life of the Moor is so short," she said, suddenly
changing the subject.  "Now it is just trembling out
into the yearly splendour of the ling; then, that done,
it will go to sleep again for month upon month—lying
dry, sere, dead, save for the mournful singing of rains
and winds.  The austerity and sternness of it!"

"Tonic to toughen mental fibres."

"I'm not so philosophical.  I feel the cold in winter,
the heat in summer.  Come, let us cross Teign and
wind away round Batworthy to Kes Tor.  There are
alignments and hut circles and ruins of human homes
there—granite all, but they spell men and women.  I
can tolerate them.  They cheer me.  Only sheep
haunt them now—those ruins—but people dwelt there
once; Damnonian babies were born there, and wild
mothers sang cradle songs and logged little children in
wolf-skin cradles and dreamed golden dreams for them."

"Nature was kind to those early folk."

"Kind!  Not kinder than I to my cattle."

"They were happier than you and I, nevertheless.
Happier, because nearer the other end of her chain.
They had less intelligence, less capacity for suffering."

"That's a theory of Christopher's.  He often wishes
that he had been born thousands of years ago."

"Not since you promised to marry him," said Myles,
with unusual quickness of mind.

"Perhaps not; but he's a savage really.  He declares
that too much work is done in the world—too much
cutting and tunnelling and probing and tearing Nature's
heart out.  He vows that the great Mother must hate
man and resent his hideous activity and lament his
creation."

"One can imagine such a thing."

"And Christo says there is a deal of nonsense talked
about the dignity of work.  He got that out of a book,
I believe, and took the trouble to remember it because
the theory suited his own lazy creed so perfectly."

For once Myles Stapledon laughed.

"I do admire him: a natural man, loving the wine of
life.  We have more in common than you might think,
for all that I'm no sportsman.  I respect any man who
will rise with the birds for sheer love of a fair dawn."

"Your rule of conduct is so much more strenuous, so
much sterner and greyer," she said, "The cold rain
and the shriek of east winds in ill-hung doors are
nothing to you.  They really hurt him."

"Temperament.  Yet I think our paths lead the same way."

Honor laughed in her turn.

"If they do," she declared, "there are a great many
more turnpike gates on your road than upon Christopher's."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`ANTHEMIS COTULA`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER VI.


.. class:: center medium bold

   ANTHEMIS COTULA

.. vspace:: 2

As Myles Stapledon proceeded at the stirrup of his
cousin their conversation became more trifling,
for the girl talked and the man was well content to
listen.  She entertained him with a humorous
commentary on the life of the Moor-edge and the people
who went to compose it.  She pointed to stately roofs
bowered in forests and expatiated on the mushroom
folk who dwelt beneath them.

"My Christo is not good enough for these!  I'm a
mere farmeress, and wouldn't count, though I do trace
my ancestors back to Tudor times.  Yet you might
have supposed a Yeoland could dare to breathe the
same air as Brown, Jones, and Robinson.  Don't you
think so?  What are these great men?"

"Successful," he said, not perceiving that she spoke
ironically.

"Ah! the god Success!"

"Don't blame them.  Money's the only power in the
world now.  Birth can't give splendid entertainments
and pose as patron of the local institutions and be
useful generally and scatter gold—if it has no gold to
scatter.  The old order changes, because those that
represent it are mostly bankrupt.  But money has
always been the first power.  Now it has changed
hands—that's all the difference.  A few generations of
idleness and behold! the red blood has got all the
money; the blue blood has none."

"Poor blue blood!"

"They are nothing to you—these people.  They pay
proper suit and service to the god that made them;
they know the power of money, the futility of birth.
What is the present use of old families if they represent
nothing but bygone memories and musty parchments?
Rank is a marketable commodity to be bought and
sold—a thing as interesting and desirable to many as
old china or any other fad of the wealthy.  That they
can understand, but poor commoners!—why, it isn't
business.  Don't you see?"

"Christo's ancestors were a power in the land before
this sort of people were invented."

"They *were* invented.  If you look back far enough,
you'll see that plenty of your ancient houses sprang from
just this sort of people.  Only their way to power and
prosperity was more romantic then.  Now they merely
risk their health and eyesight grubbing for half a
lifetime at desks in offices or in a bad climate; then they
risked their lives under some Devon Drake or Raleigh
upon unknown seas, or the field of battle.  Our present
methods of fortune-making are just as romantic really,
only it will take another age, that looks at this from
a bird's-eye point of view, to see it.  Every dog has
his day, and romance always means yesterday.  It is
summed up in that.  I'll wager the neglect of the
wealthy doesn't worry Yeoland."

"No, he laughs."

"They are too sordid to understand a man living his
life and content to do so.  It isn't business."

Honor laughed.

"No—they have the advantage of him there.  Yet
I do wish he wasn't so lazy."

But Stapledon felt that he could not speak upon that
question, so the subject dropped.

They had now left the Moor and were descending to
the valley and the river below.  A magpie, like a great
black and white butterfly, passed with slow flutter
before them; there was a drone and gleam of shining
insects in the air; and upon the sunny hedge-banks
many oaks dripped with the fat sweetness of the
aphides until the steep way beneath was darkened in
patches as though by rain.

"D'you hear them?" asked Honor.  "The twin
Teigns!  They meet at the bridge beneath us.  They
know they are going to meet, and they begin to purr
and sing to one another.  They will rush into each
other's arms in a minute.  I love to see them do it."

Forward went her surefooted pony, and Myles,
striding now on one side, now upon the other, with his
eyes in the rich fabric of the hedges, fell a little way
behind.  When he caught his cousin up again she saw
that he had been picking wild flowers.  A smile
trembled on her lips, for the little blossoms looked out
of place—almost ridiculous—in this stolid man's great
hand.  Honor thought there was a pathetic appeal in
the eyes of the summer speedwells and dog-roses, a
righteous indignation in the bristling locks of the
ragged-robins that he held; but, assuming that the
bouquet was designed for her, she concealed her
amusement.  Then her mind ranged to another aspect of this
action, and she found the man's simplicity appeal to
her.  He did not offer Honor the flowers, but added
others to them; named each hedge blossom; showed
with frank interest how the seeds of the wood-sorrels
sprang away and scattered at a touch; appeared entirely
interested by the unconsidered business and beauty of
a Devon lane.  These concerns, so trivial to Honor's
eye, clearly wakened in Stapledon an interest and
enthusiasm as keen as any pertaining to humanity.

They proceeded through the valley woods, past the
great beech of the proposal, whose secret inscription
was discreetly turned away from the high road, and then
travelled towards Chagford, hard by the ancient mill of
Holy Street—once a happy haunt of artists, to-day
denied to all men.  Here Honor pointed out the broken
head of an old religious relic that formed part of a
hedge upon their right hand.

"Market Cross," she said.  "It used to be in Chagford
until a worthy clergyman rescued it and set it here."

The fragment was of similar character to the granite
round about it and shared with the component wall a
decoration of mosses, fern, nettle, ivy, and brambles.
Upon the stone itself was a rough incised cross, and the
whole appeared to occupy this humble place with peaceful
propriety.  Myles viewed the fragment closely, then,
moved by an idea, thrust his bouquet between its arms
and passed on.

"I thought they were for me," said Honor.

"No," he answered.  "I picked them without a
particular object."

They went forward again, traversed Chagford Bridge,
and so, by dell and hamlet, hill and valley, returned
towards Little Silver and began to breast the great
acclivity to Bear Down.

At the foot of this steep climb one Doctor Courteney
Clack met them.  He was a plump, genial soul of
five-and-forty, and love of sport with lack of ambition
combined to anchor him in this remote region.  He
had little to do and so much the more leisure for rod
and horse.  But to-day he was walking, and his round,
clean-shorn face showed him to be remarkably warm.

"Not at the races, Doctor?  How extraordinary!"

"Sheer evil fortune, Miss Endicott.  A most
inconsiderate young person."

"Mrs. Ford?"

"Exactly so.  Nature has no sympathy with sportsmen.
Christo is to tell me everything.  He also has
charge of a five-pound note.  So I enjoy the sport in
spirit."

Hurried footsteps interrupted the conversation, and a
boy was seen running at top speed down the hill.

"It's Tommy Bates from home!" cried Honor.
"What on earth does he want to go at that pace for?"

"Me probably," said Doctor Clack.  "Nobody ever
runs in Little Silver, unless it's to my house."

The medical man was right, and Tommy announced
that a labourer had fallen suddenly sick in the hayfield
and appeared about to perish.

"Sunstroke for certain," declared the medical man.
"If it's not asking too much, Miss Endicott, I would
suggest that I borrowed your pony.  It will take me up
the hill a great deal faster than I can walk, and time
may be precious."

Honor immediately dismounted, and Doctor Clack,
with great entertainment to himself, sat side-saddle, and
uttering a wild whoop sent the astounded pony at the
hill in a manner both unfamiliar and undignified.  He
was soon out of sight; and Tommy, after winning back
his breath, explained the nature of the disaster and
gave the name of the sufferer.

An hour earlier in the day, those workers of Bear
Down already seen, were assembled about their dinner
beside the majestic bulk of the last rick.  All was now
gathered in and the evening would see conclusion of a
most satisfactory hay-harvesting.  With their bread and
onions, cheese and cold puddings the labourers
speculated upon the worth of the crop.

"I'm thinking 'twill go in part to fat the pocket of a
lazy man," said Henry Collins, who knew of the recent
scene between Christopher Yeoland and Mr. Cramphorn,
and had his reasons for ingratiating the latter.

"Lazy an' worse.  Look at my eye!" growled Jonah.
"If it weren't for missis, I'd have laid him in clink afore
now—vicious rip as he is!  He'll never trouble Satan to
find him a job.  Born to the gallows like as not."

He dropped his voice and turned to Churdles Ash.

"I seen Cherry Grepe," he said.  "She's took my
money to be even with un.  I didn't ax no questions,
but 'twill go hard with un afore very long."

Mr. Ash pursed his lips, which were indeed always
pursed from the fact of there being no teeth to mention
behind them.  He did not answer Jonah's dark news,
but spoke upon the main question.

"Come to think of it, a honest scarecrow do more
work in the world than him," he declared.

"No more gude than a bowldacious auld dog-fox,"
said Henry Collins.

"Worse," replied Jonah.  "Such things as foxes an'
other varmints be the creation of the Lard to keep
the likes of Christopher Yeoland out o' mischief.  But
him—the man hisself—what can you say of wan as
have got a sawl to save, an' behaves like a awver-fed
beast?"

"A butivul soarin' sawl," assented Samuel Pinsent.
"But wheer do it soar to?  To kissin' honest gals on
the highways by all accounts."

Mr. Cramphorn's dark visage wrinkled and twisted
and contracted.

"Blast the viper!  But I gived un a hard stroke here
an' theer, I warn 'e.  Might have killed un in my gert
wrath, but for t'other.  Walloped un to the truth of
music I did—philandering beast!  'Tis pearls afore
swine, missis to mate with him."

"Fegs!  You'm right theer.  I've said afore an' I'll
say again that she should have bided longer an' tried
for her cousin.  He'm worth ten of t'other chitterin'
magpie; an' ban't feared o' work neither," declared
Mr. Ash.

"Wait!" murmured Jonah darkly and with mystery
in his voice.  Then he whispered behind his hand to
the ancient.  "Cherry Grepe had a gawlden
half-sovereign!  I knaw what's in that woman, if she's
pleased to let it out.  Bide an' see.  An' her didn't burn
the chap in a wax image stuffed with pins for nought!
'That'll do the trick presently,'[#] her said.  So wait an'
watch, Churdles, same as I be doin'."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: noindent small

[#] Presently = immediately.

.. vspace:: 2

Mr. Ash looked uneasy, but answered nothing.  Then
came a sudden interruption.

Sally was serving at the cider barrel and had just
poured out a horn of sweet refreshment for a thirsty
man.  It was Mr. Libby, who, in working clothes to-day,
had condescended to manual labour once more.  Time
being an object with the hay, Mr. Cramphorn offered
the youth a week's employment, so, much to the secret
satisfaction of one who loved him, Mr. Libby became
enrolled.  Now the supreme moment was at hand, and
while Sally laughed, her heart throbbed in a mighty
flutter and beat painfully against a little bottle in her
bosom.  It contained the philtre, now to be exhibited on
the cold heart of Gregory.  Danger indeed lurked in
this act, but Sally felt steeled to it and well prepared
to hazard any reasonable risk.  Only the previous
evening she had seen Mr. Libby and her sister very close
together in the gloaming.  Moreover, her father had
babbled far and near of the incident on the moorland
road, and certain men and women, to her furious
indignation, had not hesitated to hint that only an
unmaidenly and coming-on spirit could culminate in such
tribulation.

Now she passed for one instant behind the rick, drew
forth the phial, took out its cork with her teeth and
poured the potion into Mr. Libby's horn of cider.
Gregory, his holiday airs and graces set aside, thanked
the girl, gave a grateful grunt of anticipation, and
drained the beaker at a draught.

"That's better!" he said.  Then he smacked his
lips and spat.  "Theer's a funny tang to it tu.  'Twas
from the cask—eh?"

"Ess, of course; wheer should it be from?" said
Sally.  Then she fluttered away, scarcely seeing where
she walked.

The boy, Tommy Bates, was sitting beside Libby,
and a moment later he spoke.

"Lard, Greg! what's tuke 'e?  You'm starin' like a
sheep."

"Doan't knaw, ezacally.  I'm—I'm——"

"You'm gone dough-colour, an' theer's perspiration
come out 'pon 'e so big as peas!" cried candid Tommy.

"I'm bad—mortal bad—'struth, I be dyin' I b'lieve!
'Tis here it's took me."

He clapped his hands to his stomach, rolled over on
the ground and groaned, while his companion hastened
to cry the catastrophe.

"Greg Libby's struck down!  He'm thrawin' his life
up, an' wrigglin' an' twistin' like a gashly worm!"

"Ah, I seed un wi'out his hat," said Mr. Ash calmly.

"A bit naish an' soft, I reckon; comes o' not standin'
to work," spoke Henry Collins contemptuously.

"Or might be tu much cider," suggested Pinsent.

Without undue haste they strolled over to the sufferer.
His head was in Sally's lap, and she screamed that he
was passing away before their eyes.

"Put the poll of un off your apern, will 'e!" snapped
Mr. Cramphorn.  "Give awver hollerin', an' get on your
legs, an' run home to Mrs. Loveys for the brandy.  The
man's took a fit seemin'ly.  An' you, Bates, slip it down
the hill for Doctor Clack.  Loose his shirt to the throat,
Collins, and drag un in the shade."

Jonah's orders were complied with, and soon, brandy
bottle in hand, Mrs. Loveys hastened to the hay field
with Sally sobbing behind her.  But meantime Nature
had assisted Mr. Libby to evade the potion, and a little
brandy soon revived his shattered system.  He was
sitting up with his back against the hayrick describing
his sensations to an interested audience when Doctor
Clack arrived.  The physician, who loved well the sound
of his own voice, lectured on the recumbent Libby as
soon as he had learnt particulars.

"First let me assure you all that he's in no danger—none
at all," he began.  "Nature is more skilful, more
quick-witted, more resourceful than the most learned
amongst us.  Even I, beside Nature, am as nothing.  I
should have ordered an emetic.  Behold!  Nature
anticipates me and takes all the necessary steps.  Really
one might have suspected a case of *Colica Damnoniensis*—which
doesn't mean a damned stomach-ache, as you
might imagine, having no Latin, but merely 'Devonshire
Colic'—an old-time complaint—old as cider in fact—but
long since vanished.  It was caused by the presence
of deleterious substances, or, as you would describe it
more simply, dirt, in the apple-juice; and those eminent
men, Doctor John Huxham and Sir George Baker,
arrived at the conclusion some hundred years ago that
the ailment arose from presence of lead in the cider
vats.  Nowadays such things cannot happen; therefore,
to return to our friend here, we must seek elsewhere
for an explanation of his collapse.  Whatever he was
unfortunate or unwise enough to partake of has happily
been rejected by that learned organ, the human stomach—so
often wiser than the human head—and my presence
ceases to be longer necessary.  A little more brandy
and water and our friend will be quite equal to walking
home."

Myles and Honor had now reached the scene, and
the mistress of Endicott's insisted that a cart should
convey Gregory to his mother.  The unconscious victim
of love therefore departed making the most of his
sufferings.

Sally also withdrew from the toil of the day, retired
to her little bedroom in Mr. Cramphorn's cottage near
Bear Down, and wept without intermission for a space
of time not exceeding two hours.  She then cheered
up and speculated hopefully upon the future.

To explain these matters it need only be said that,
like many a better botanist before her, the girl had
mistaken one herb of the field for another, and, instead
of gathering innocent wild chamomile, collected good
store of mayweed—a plant so exactly like the first to
outward seeming that only most skilled eyes detect the
differences between them.  Thus, instead of receiving
the beneficent and innocuous *Matricaria chamomilla*,
Mr. Libby's stomach had been stormed by baleful
*Anthemis cotula*, with the results recorded.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A BADGER'S EARTH`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER VII.


.. class:: center medium bold

   A BADGER'S EARTH

.. vspace:: 2

While Myles Stapledon played a busy part at
the farm and found ample outlet for his small
capital, ample occupation for his energies, Honor roamed
dreaming through the August days with Christopher.
As for Myles, he was a practical farmer and soon
discovered what Mark Endicott had anticipated, that no
mean possibilities lurked in Bear Down.  The place
indeed cried out for spending of money and increase of
stock, but it promised adequate return upon outlay—a
return at least reasonable viewed from the present
low estate and reduced capabilities of English land.
Stapledon was not hungry for any immediate or amazing
profit, but Endicott's seemed certain to produce a fair
interest upon the two thousand pounds he embarked
there; he liked the farm and he was satisfied.  At his
cousin's particular desire, Myles stayed to see the money
spent according to his will.  Some of it went in building;
and bygone beauties of old ripe thatches and cob walls
that crumbled their native red through many coats of
mellow whitewash, now vanished, yielding place to
bricks, blue slates, and staring iron.  A new atmosphere
moved over the stagnation of Endicott's and the blind
man settled into a great content.

The mistress had other matters to fill her thoughts,
and, as the autumn approached, private concerns wholly
occupied her.  For Honor was more frank with herself
than is possible to a soul that lacks humour; and a
problem now rose ahead of her beyond the solution
of days and nights; a mystery that developed, deepened,
heightened, until it became a distraction and a trouble.
Yet there was laughter in it, but of a sub-acid sort,
neither wholesome nor pleasant.

Once in position of proud possessor, Christopher
Yeoland exhibited no further alarm and but little
apparent eagerness in the matter of his united future with
Honor.  Marriage appeared to be the last thing in his
thought, and the temperament of the man at this crisis
became visible and offered matter of comment for the
most cursory observers.  The fact of delay suited Honor
well enough in reality, for she had little intention or
desire to marry immediately, but that Christopher
should be of this mind piqued her.  His perfect
equanimity before the prospect of an indefinite
engagement secretly made Honor somewhat indignant.  It
did not become her lover in her eyes.  He was not
indifferent, that she knew; he was not cold, that she
hoped; but his temper in this perfect readiness to
postpone matrimony showed him to Honor in a new
sidelight.  Naturally enough she did not understand the
trait, though it was characteristic; and her discomfort
existed in a vague sense that his attitude, so much
the reverse of a compliment to her, must have been
awakened by some deficiency in herself.  That the
imperfection lay in him she did not imagine; that his
love was a little anæmic in a positive direction she
could not be supposed to suspect.  Intellectually at
least Christopher always sufficed, and Honor's
uneasiness usually evaporated when in his company, though
it was prone to take shape and substance again when
absent from him.  He always spoke of marriage as a
remote goal—wholly desirable indeed—but approached
by such pleasant ways that most rambling and desultory
progress thereto was best; and, though entirely of his
mind, it is a fact that the girl felt fluctuations of
absolute annoyance that this should be his mind.

From which cause sprang secret laughter, that was
born of fretfulness, that died in a frown.

Other trouble, of a sort widely different, also appeared
upon Honor's horizon.  After a period of supreme
command, to find another enjoying almost like share of
obedience and service at Bear Down seemed strange.
But with absolute unconsciousness Myles Stapledon
soon blundered into a prominence at Endicott's second
only to her own.  Nor was his position even second in
some directions.  Labouring folk follow a strong will by
instinct, and Myles was striking such a dominant note
of energy, activity, despatch in affairs, that the little
community came presently to regard him as the new
controller of its fortunes.  Stapledon's name was upon
the lips of the people more often than Honor's; even
Jonah Cramphorn, whose noblest qualities appeared in
a doglike and devout fidelity to the mistress, found
Myles filling his mind as often as the busy new-comer
filled his eye.  At such times, in common with Churdles
Ash and any other who might have enough imagination
to regret an impossibility, Jonah mourned that it was
Yeoland rather than Stapledon who had won his
mistress's heart.

But the latter, full of business and loving work as
only those love it who have devoted life thereto,
overlooked the delicacy of his position at various minor
points; and with sole purpose to save his cousin trouble
he took much upon himself.  It was sufficient that she
said nothing and Mark Endicott approved.  Once he
offered to pay the hands at the accustomed hour of noon
on Saturday; whereupon Honor blushed, and, becoming
aware that he had hurt her, Myles expressed contrition
with the utmost humility and heaped blame upon his
blunder.

"It was only to save you trouble," he concluded.

"I know it; you are always doing so," she answered
without irony.  "But pay-day—that's the farmer's work."

Her answer, though not intended to do anything of
the sort, forcibly reminded Myles that he had but a
limited interest in Bear Down.

"Be frank," he said.  "I'm such a thick-skinned fool
that I may have blundered before and hurt you and
never known it.  Do not suffer me to do so again,
Honor.  I'm only very jealous for you and all that is
yours."

"You are a great deal too kind to me, Myles, and have
done more than I can find words to thank you for.
You are the good genius here.  I don't like to think of
the loneliness we shall feel when you go from us."

"I'm not going yet awhile, I promise you," he answered.

Honor indeed appreciated her cousin's goodness fully,
and, after this incident, had no more occasion to deplore
his tact.  She only spoke truth when affirming regret at
the possibility of his departure.  Her earliest sensations
of oppression in his society had passed upon their walk
over the Moor.  From that moment the woman began to
understand him and appreciate the strenuous simplicity
of him.  Sometimes he looked almost pathetic in his
negations and his lonely and forlorn attitude towards
the things of Hope; at others he rose into a being
impressive, by that loneliness—a rare spirit who, upon
"inbred loyalty unto Virtue, could serve her without
a livery," and without a wage.  Thus seen he interested
Honor's intellect, and she speculated upon the strength
of his armour if Chance called upon him to prove it.
Not seldom she found herself in moods when a walk
and a talk with Myles invigorated her; and she told her
heart that such conversations made her return to
Christopher with the greater zest, as an olive will reveal the
delicate shades of flavour in fine wine.  She assured
herself of this fact repeatedly, until the reiteration of the
idea caused her conscience to suspect its truth.  She
wilfully shut her eyes to its absurdity for a month, then
changed her simile.  Now she fancied that Christopher
and Myles must impart an intellectual complement to
one another, in that their qualities differed so extremely.

The result of this attitude was inevitable upon a
woman of Honor's temperament.  Comparison being
impossible, she began to contrast the two men.  One
could be nothing to her; the other she had promised to
marry; and even in the midst of her critical analysis
she blamed herself, not without reason, in that her love
for Christopher had no power to blind her.  She asked
herself bitterly what an affection was worth that could
thus dwell in cold blood upon a lover's weaknesses.  She
answered herself that it was Christopher's own fault.
She felt glad that he was what he was.  His defects
looked lovable; and only in the rather chilly daylight
thrown by Stapledon's characteristics did Christo's
blemishes appear at all.  Then Honor grew very angry
with herself, but tried to believe that her anger was
directed against Myles.  She flew upon him savagely to
tear him to pieces; she strove furiously, pitilessly to
strip him to his soul; but she was just between the
ebullitions of anger, and, after her hurricane onset, the
lacerated figure of her cousin still stood a man.  He was
difficult to belittle or disparage by the nature of him.
One may trample a flower-bed into unlovely ruin in
a moment; to rob a lichen-clad rock of its particular
beauty is a harder and a lengthier task.  Granted that
the man was ponderous and lacking in laughter, he
could yet be kind and gentle to all; granted that he
appeared oppressed with the necessity of setting a good
example to the world, yet he was in earnest, of
self-denying and simple habit, one who apparently practised
nothing he did not preach.  She turned impatiently
away from the picture of such admirable qualities; she
told herself that he was little better than a savage
in some aspects, a prig in all the rest.  Yet Honor
Endicott had lived too close to Nature to make the
mistake of any lengthened self-deception.  Myles was
living a life that would wear, as against an existence
which even her green experience of the world whispered
was irrational; and though the shrewdness of Stapledon
appeared a drab and unlovely compound beside
Christopher's sparkling philosophy, yet Honor knew which
stood for the juster views of life and conduct.  One
represented a grey twilight, clear and calm if wholly
lacking any splendid height of hue; the other promised
wide contrasts, tropical sunshine, and probable tempests.
Not a little in the sobriety of the first picture attracted
her; but she was none the less well pleased to think that
she had already decided for the second.  Herein she
followed instinct, for her nature was of the sort that
needed variable weather if intellectual health was to be
her portion.

Yet these dissimilar men, as chance willed it, proved
excellent friends, and, from the incident of their first
meeting, grew into a sufficiently warm comradeship.
Myles found himself gasping a dozen times a day before
the audacities of Christopher.  Sometimes indeed he
suspected Yeoland's jewels of being paste; sometimes
he marvelled how a professed Christian could propound
certain theories; sometimes also he suspected that the
Squire of Godleigh spoke truer than he knew.
Christopher, for his part, welcomed the farmer, as he had
welcomed any man whose destiny it was to lighten
Honor's anxiety.  That the new-comer was putting a
couple of thousand pounds into Endicott's proved
passport sufficient to Yeoland's esteem.  Moreover, he liked
Myles for other reasons.  They met often in the fields
and high places at dawn, and from standpoints widely
different they both approached Nature with love.
Christopher took a telescopic survey, delighted in
wide harmonies, great shadows, upheavals of cloud,
storms, sunsets, rivers overflowing and the magic of the
mist.  He knew the name of nothing and shrank from
scientific approach to natural objects—to bird or bud or
berry; but he affected all the wild animate and
inanimate life of his woods and rivers; he was reluctant
to interfere with anything; he hated the mournful echo
of a woodman's axe in spring, though each dull
reverberation promised a guinea for his empty purse.
Stapledon, on the contrary, while not dead to spacious
manifestations of force, was also microscopic.  He missed
much that the other was quick to glean, but gained an
intimate knowledge of matters radical, and, being
introspective, dug deeper lessons out of Devon hedgerows
and the economy of Dartmoor bogs than Yeoland
gathered from the procession of all the seasons as
displayed in pomp and glory under the banner of the sun.

On a day when as yet no shadow had risen between
them; when as yet Myles contemplated his cousin's
engagement without uneasiness, and Christopher enjoyed
the other's ingenuous commentary upon Honor's rare
beauty of mind and body, they walked together at
sunset on the high lands of Godleigh.  Above the pine
trees that encircled Yeoland's home and rose behind
it, an offshoot from the Moor extended.  Deep slopes of
fern and grass, mountain ash and blackthorn, draped the
sides of this elevation, and upon the crown of a little
hill, sharing the same with wild ridges and boulders
of stone, spread ruins and lay foundations of a building
that had almost vanished.  A single turret still stood,
ceiled with the sky, carpeted with grass; and all round
about a glory of purple heather fledged the granite, the
evening scent of the bracken rose, flames of sunset fire
touched stones and tree-tops, and burnt into the huge
side of distant Cosdon Beacon, until that mountain was
turned into a mist of gold.

"There would be a grand sky if we were on the Moor
to-night," said Christopher; "not one of the clear,
cloudless sort—as clean and uneventful as a saint's
record—but what I call a human sunset—full of smudged
splendour and gorgeous blots and tottering ruins, with
live fire streaming out of the black abysses and an awful
scarlet pall flung out to cover the great red-hot heart of
the sun as he dips and dips."

"A sunset always means to-morrow to me."

"You're a farmer.  Nothing ever means to-morrow to me."

"I can't believe that, Yeoland—not now that you've
won Honor."

Christopher did not answer, but walked on where
many an acre of fern spread over the southern face
of the slope.

"Here you are," he said presently, indicating a burrow
and a pile of mould.  "Tommy Bates found it when he
was here picking sloes and told me about it.  I won't be
sure it isn't a fox myself; though he declares the earth
to be a badger's."

"Yes, I think that dead white grass means a badger.
He brought it up from the valley."

"Then Tommy was right and I'm glad, for any
distinguished stranger is welcome on my ground.  What
does the brute eat?"

"Roots and beech mast for choice.  But he's carnivorous
to the extent of an occasional frog or beetle;
and I'm afraid he wouldn't pass a partridge's nest if
there were eggs in it."

"That's a black mark against the beggar, but I'll
pretend I don't know it."

They strolled forward and Myles kept his eyes
upon the ground, while Christopher watched the sunset.

"It's a singular puzzle, the things that make a man
melancholy," said the latter suddenly.  "Once I had
a theory that any perfect thing, no matter what, must
produce sadness in the human mind, simply out of its
perfection."

"A country life would be a pretty miserable business
if that was so—with the perfect at the door of our eyes
and ears all day long."

"Then I discovered that it depended on other
considerations.  Love of life is concerned with it.  Youth
saddens nobody; but age must.  Our love of life wakes
our sorrow for the old who are going out of it.  'Tis
the difference between a bud and a withered blossom.
Sunrise makes no man sad.  That's why you love it,
and love to be in it, as I do.  The blush of dawn is
like the warm cheek of a waking child—lovely; but
sunset is a dying thing.  There's sadness in that, and
the more beautiful, the more sad."

"I cannot see anything to call sad in one or other."

"No, I suppose you can't; you've got such a devilish
well-balanced mind."

A faint shadow of annoyance if not absolute contempt
lurked in the tones of the speech; but Stapledon
failed to see it.

"I wish I had," he answered.  "There are plenty of
things in Nature that make a man sad—sounds, sights,
glimpses of the eternal battle under the eternal beauty.
But sadness is weakness, say what you will.  There's
nothing to be sentimental about really.  It's because
we apply our rule of thumb to her; it's because we try
to measure her wide methods by our own opinions on
right and justice that we find her unjust.  I told Honor
something of this; but she agrees with you that Nature's
quite beyond apology, and won't be convinced."

"You've told her so many things lately—opened her
eyes, I'm sure, in so many directions.  She's as solemn
as an owl sometimes when I'm with her.  Certainly she
doesn't laugh as often as she used to."

Myles was much startled.

"Don't say that; don't say that.  She's not meant to
take sober views—not yet—not yet.  She's living
sunlight—the embodiment of laughter, and all the world's
a funny picture-book to her still.  To think I should
have paid for the pleasure she's brought me by
lessening her own!  I hope you're utterly wrong, Yeoland.
This is a very unquieting thought."

The man spoke much faster than usual, and with
such evident concern that Christopher endeavoured to
diminish the force of his speech.

"Perhaps I'm mistaken, as you say; perhaps the
reason is that we are now definitely engaged.  That
may have induced gravity.  Of course it is a solemn
thing for an intelligent girl to cast in her lot with a
pauper."

But Myles would not be distracted from the main issue.

"Her laughter is characteristic—marvellously musical—part
of herself, like bells are part of a fair church.
Think of making a belfry dumb by a deliberate act!
Honor should always be smiling.  A little sister of the
spring she seems to me, and her laughter goes to my
heart like a lark's song, for there's unconscious praise of
God in it."

Yeoland glanced at the other.

"You can be sentimental too, then?"

"Not that, but I can be sad, and I am now.  A man
may well be so to think he has bated by one smile the
happiness of Honor."

"Sorry I mentioned it."

"I'm glad.  It was a great fault in me.  I will try
desperately to amend.  I'm a dull dog, but I'll——"

"Don't, my dear chap.  Don't do anything whatever.
Be yourself, or you won't keep her respect.  She hates
shams.  I would change too if I could.  But she'd be
down on me in a second if I attempted any reformation.
The truth is we're both bursting with different good
and brilliant qualities—you and I—and poor Honor is
dazzled."

Stapledon did not laugh; he only experienced a
great desire to be alone.

"Are you going to wait for the badger?" he asked, as
they turned and retraced their way.

"Good Lord, no!  Are you?"

"Certainly.  It's only a matter of hours at most.  I
can sit silent in the fern with my eyes on the earth.
I thought you wanted to see him."

"Not an atom.  It's enough for me that he's here in
snug quarters.  My lord badger will show at moonrise,
I expect.  You'd better come down to the house and
have a drink after the manifestation."

He tramped away; his footfall faded to a whisper in
the fern; and Myles, reaching a place from which the
aperture below was visible, settled himself and took a
pipe from his pocket from habit, but did not load or
light it.  He had an oriental capacity for waiting, and
his patience it was that had won much of his curious
knowledge.  A few hours more or less under the stars
on a fine summer night were nothing but a pleasure to
him.  Rather did he welcome the pending vigil, for he
desired to think, and he knew that a man may do so
to best purpose in the air.

Once out of sight Christopher also stopped awhile
and sat down upon a rock with his face uplifted.  The
rosy sky was paling, and already a little galaxy of
lights afar off marked the village of Chagford, where
it stood upon its own proper elevation under the
Moor.  Thus placed, in opposition to the vanished
sun, detail appeared most clearly along the eastern hills
and valleys.  Cot, hamlet, white winding road stood
forth upon the expanse, and while Christopher Yeoland
watched the dwindling definition on earth there ascended
a vast and misty shield of pearl into the fading sky.
Through parallel bands of grey, like a faint ghost,
it stole upwards into a rosy after-glow.  Then the
clouds faded, and died, and wakened again at the
touch of the moon, as she arose with heightened glory
and diminished girth, to wield a sceptre of silver over
sleep.  There descended then the great silence of
such places, the silence that only country dwellers
understand, the silence that can fret urban nerves into
absolute suffering.  Bedewed fern-fronds gathered light,
and flung it like rain across the gloom, and brought
far-reaching peace and contentment to the mind of
Christopher.  He dreamed dreams; he rose in spirit
through the moony mist—a dimensionless, imponderable,
spirit thing, ready to lose himself in one drop
of diamond dew, hungry to fill high heaven and hug
the round moon to his heart.  For a little season he
rejoiced in the trance of that hushed hour; then the
moment of intoxication vanished, and he rose slowly
and went his way.

The other man, after long waiting, was also rewarded.
From beneath him, where he sat, there came at last a
sound and a snuffling.  The badger appeared, and the
moonlight touched his little eyes and gleamed along his
amber side-streaks as he put up his nose, sniffed the air
with suspicion, stretched himself, scratched himself, then
paddled silently away upon his nightly business through
the aisles of the fern.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`OUT OF THE MIST`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER VIII.


.. class:: center medium bold

   OUT OF THE MIST

.. vspace:: 2

The calm awakened of moonlight, as quickly died,
and Christopher Yeoland found himself in some
uneasiness when he thought of his love.  Whereon he
based this irritation would have been difficult to
determine, but a variety of small annoyances conspired to
build it.  These trifles, separately, laughter could blow
away at a breath, but combined they grew into a shadow
not easily dispelled.  Already the name of Myles had
oftener sounded upon Honor's lips than seemed
necessary, even when Stapledon's position and importance at
Bear Down were allowed; and now her name similarly
echoed and re-echoed in the utterances of her cousin.
Still Christopher smiled in thought.

"It's the novelty of him after me.  I'm a mere
rollicking, irresponsible brook—only good to drink
from or fish in—for ideas; he's a useful, dreary
canal—a most valuable contrivance—smooth, placid, not to say
flat.  Well, well, I must shake Honor up; I must——"

He reflected and debated upon various courses
though immediate marriage was not included amongst
them.  But a fortnight later the situation had developed.

Honor and Christopher were riding together over the
Moor; and, albeit the physical conditions promised fair
enough until sunset-time, when both man and woman
turned homewards very happy, yet each had grown
miserable before the end, and they parted in anger
upon the heathery wastes where northern Teign and
Wallabrook wind underneath Scor Hill.  For the
weather of the high land and the weather of their
minds simultaneously changed, and across both there
passed a cloud.  Over against the sunset, creeping
magically as she is wont to creep, from the bosom of
the Moor and the dark ways of unseen water, arose
the Mist Mother.  She appeared suddenly against the
blue above, spread forth diaphanous draperies, twined
her pearly arms among the stocks and stones and old,
wind-bent bushes of the waste.  Catching a radiance
from the westering sun, she draped the grey heads
of granite tors in cowls of gold; she rose and fell;
she appeared and vanished; she stole forward
suddenly; she wreathed curly tendrils of vapour over
sedge and stone, green, quaking bog, still waters, and
the peat cuttings that burnt red-hot under the level
rays of the sun.  Great solitary flakes of the mist,
shining with ineffable lustre of light, lessened the
sobriety of the heath; and upon their dazzling hearts,
where they suddenly merged and spread in opposition
to the sun on the slope of western-facing hills, there
trembled out a spectral misty circle—a huge halo of
colourless light drawn upon the glimmering moisture.
Within it, a whitethorn stood bathed in a fiery glow
without candescence; and from beneath the tree some
wild creature—hare or fox—moved away silently and
vanished under the curtain, while a curlew cried
overhead invisible.  The riders reined up and watched
the luminous frolics of the Mist, where she played
thus naked, like an innocent savage thing, before them.

"These are the moments when I seem to glimpse
antique life through the grey—wolf-skins and dark
human skins, coarse faces, black hair, bead-bright eyes,
strange speech, the glimmer of tents or rush thatches
through the mist.  These, and the bark of dogs,
laughter of women, tinkle of stone on stone, where
some Damnonian hunter fabricates his flints and grunts
of the wood-bears and the way to kill them."

"Always dreaming, dearest.  I wonder what you
would have done in those days?  Did the Damnonians
have Christos too?"

"Undoubtedly.  I should have been a bard, or a
tribal prophet, or something important and easy.  I
should have dreamed dreams, and told fortunes, and
imparted a certain cultured flavour to the lodge.  I
should have been their oracle very likely—nice easy
work being an oracle.  In it you'll find the first dawn
of the future art of criticism."

"Creation is better than criticism."

"That's your cousin, I'll swear!  The very ring of
him.  No doubt he thinks so.  Yet what can be more
futile than unskilful creation?  For that matter the
awful amount of time that's wasted in all sorts of
futile work."

"You're certainly sincere.  You practise the virtues
of laziness as well as preach them," said Honor without
amusement.

"I do; but there's not that old note of admiration at
my theories in your voice of late, my angel girl."

"No, Christo; I'm beginning to doubt, in a fleeting
sort of way, if your gospel is quite the inspired thing
you fancy it."

"Treason!  You live too much in the atmosphere
of honest toil, sweetheart.  And there's hardly a
butterfly left now to correct your impressions."

"No; they are all starving under leaves, poor things."

"Exactly—dying game; and the self-righteous ant
is counting his stores—or is it the squirrel, or the
dormouse?  I know something or other hoards all the
summer through to prolong his useless existence."

Honor did not answer.  Then her lover suddenly
remembered Myles, and his forehead wrinkled for a
moment.

"Of course I'm not blind, Honor," he proceeded, in
an altered tone.  "I've seen the change these many
days, and levelled a guess at the reason.  Sobersides
makes me look a weakling.  Unfortunately he's such a
real good chap I cannot be cross with him."

"Why should you be cross with anybody?"

"That's the question.  You're the answer.  I'm—I'm
not exactly all I was to you.  Don't clamour.  It's
true, and you know it's true.  You're so exacting, so
unrestful, so grave by fits lately.  And he—he's always
on your tongue too.  You didn't know that, but it's the
case.  Natural perhaps—a strong personality, and so
forth—yet—yet——"

"What nonsense this is, Christopher!"

"Of course it is.  But you don't laugh.  You never
do laugh now.  My own sober conviction is this;
Stapledon's in love with you and doesn't know it.
Don't fall off your pony."

"Christopher!  You've no right, or reason, or shadow
of a shade for saying such a ridiculous thing."

"There's that in your voice convinces me at this
moment."

"Doesn't he know we're engaged?  Would such a
man allow himself for an instant——?"

"Of course he wouldn't.  That's just what I argue,
isn't it?  He stops on here because he doesn't know
what's happened to him yet, poor devil.  When he
finds out, he'll probably fly."

"You judge others by yourself, my dearest.  Love!
Why, he works too hard to waste his thoughts on any
woman whatsoever.  Never was a mind so seldom in
the clouds."

"In the clouds—no; but on the earth—on the earth,
and at your elbow."

"He's nothing of the kind."

"Well, then, you're always at his.  Such a busy,
bustling couple!  I'm sure you're enough to make the
very singing birds ashamed.  When is he going?"

"When his money is laid out to his liking, I suppose.
Not yet awhile, I hope."

"You don't want him to go?"

"Certainly I don't; why should I?"

"You admire him in a way?"

"In a great many ways.  He's a restful man.  There's
a beautiful simplicity about his thoughts; and——"

"And he works?"

"You're trying to make me cross, Christo; but I
don't think you will again."

"Ah!  I have to thank him for that too!  He's
making you see how small it is to be cross with me.
He's enlarging your mind, lifting it to the stars, burying
it in the bogs, teaching you all about rainbows and
tadpoles.  He'll soak the sunshine out of your life if
you're not careful; and then you'll grow as self-contained
and sensible and perfect as he is."

"After which you won't want me any more, I suppose?"

"No—then you'd only be fit for—well, for him."

"I don't love you in these sneering moods, Christo.
Why cannot you speak plainly?  You've got some
imaginary grievance.  What is it?"

"I never said so.  But—well, I have.  I honestly
believe I'm jealous—jealous of this superior man."

"You child!"

"There it is!  It's come to that.  I wasn't a child
in your eyes a month ago.  But I shall be called an
infant in arms at this rate in another month."

"He can't help being a sensible, far-seeing man, any
more than you can help being a——"

"Fool—say it; don't hesitate.  Well, what then?"

Honor, despite her recent assertion, could still be
angry with Christopher, because she loved him better
than anything in the world.  Her face flushed; she
gathered her reins sharply.

"Then," she answered, "there's nothing more to be
said—excepting that I'm a little tired of you to-day.
We've seen too much of one another lately."

"Or too much of somebody else."

She wheeled away abruptly and galloped off, leaving
him with the last word.  One of her dogs, a big collie,
stood irresolute, his left forepaw up, his eyes all doubt.
Then he bent his great back like a bow, and bounded
after his mistress; but Yeoland did not attempt to
follow.  He watched his lady awhile, and, when she
was a quarter of a mile ahead, proceeded homewards.

She had chosen a winding way back to Bear Down,
and he must pass the farm before she could return to it.

The man was perfectly calm to outward seeming, but
he shook his head once or twice—shook it at his own
folly.

"Poor little lass!" he said to himself.
"Impatient—impatient—why?  Because I was impatient, no doubt.
Let me see—our first real quarrel since we were
engaged."

As he went down the hill past Honor's home, a
sudden fancy held him, and, acting upon it, he
dismounted, hitched up his horse, and strolled round to the
back of the house in hope that he might win a private
word or two with Mark Endicott.  Chance favoured
him.  Tea drinking was done, and the still, lonely hour
following on that meal prevailed in the great kitchen.
Without, spangled fowls clucked their last remarks for
the day, and fluttered, with clumsy effort, to their perches
in a great holly tree, where they roosted.  At the open
door a block, a bill-hook, and a leathern gauntlet lay
beside a pile of split wood where Sally Cramphorn
had been working; and upon the block a robin sat
and sang.

Christopher lifted the latch and walked through a
short passage to find Honor's uncle alone in the kitchen
and talking to himself by snatches.

"Forgive me, Mr. Endicott," he said, breaking in
upon the monologue; "I've no right to upset your
reveries in this fashion, but I was passing and wanted
a dozen words."

"And welcome, Yeoland.  We've missed you at the
Sunday supper of late weeks.  How is it with you?"

"Oh, all right.  Only just now I want to exchange
ideas—impressions.  You love my Honor better than
anybody else in the world but myself.  And love makes
one jolly quick—sensitive—foolishly so perhaps.  I didn't
think it was in me to be sensitive; yet I find I am."

"Speak your mind, and I'll go on with my knitting—never
blind man's holiday if you are a blind man, you know."

"You're like all the rest in this hive, always busy.  I
wonder if the drones blush when they're caught stealing
honey?"

"Haven't much time for blushing.  Yet 'tis certain
that never drone stole sweeter honey than you have—if
you are a drone."

"I'm coming to that.  But the honey first.  Frankly
now, have you noticed any change in Honor of late
days—since—well, within the last month or two."

Mr. Endicott reflected before making any answer, and
tapped his needles slowly.

"There is a change," he said at length.

"She's restless," continued Christopher; "won't have
her laugh out—stops in the middle, as if she suddenly
remembered she was in church or somewhere.  How
d'you account for it?"

"She's grown a bit more strenuous since her
engagement—more alive to the working-day side of things."

"Not lasting, I hope?"

"Please God, yes.  She won't be any less happy."

"Of course Myles Stapledon's responsible.  Yet how
has he done it?  You say you're glad to see Honor
more serious-minded.  Well, that means you would
have made her so before now, if you could.  You failed
to change her in all these years; he has succeeded in
clouding her life somehow within the space of two
months.  How can you explain that?"

"You're asking pithy questions, my son.  And, by
the voice of you, I'm inclined to reckon you're as likely
to know the answers to them as I am.  Maybe more
likely.  You're a man in love, and that quickens the
wits of even the dullest clod who ever sat sighing on a
gate, eating his turnip and finding it tasteless.  I loved
a maid once, too; but 'tis so far off."

"Well, there's something not wholly right in this.
And they ought to know it."

"Certainly they don't—don't guess it or dream it.
But leave that.  Now you.  You must tackle yourself.
The remedy lies with you.  This thing has made you
think, at any rate."

"Well, yes.  Honor isn't so satisfied with me as of
old, somehow.  Of course that's natural, but——"

"She loves you a thousand times better than you love
yourself."

"And still isn't exactly happy in me."

"Are you happy in yourself?  She's very well satisfied
with you—worships the ground you walk on, as the saying
is—but that's not to say she's satisfied with your life.
And more am I, or anybody that cares about you.  And
more are you."

"Well, well; but Myles Stapledon—this dear, good
chap.  He's a—what?  Why, a magnifying glass for
people to see me in—upside down."

"He thinks very little about you, I fancy."

"He's succeeded in making me feel a fool, anyhow;
and that's unpleasant.  Tell me what to do, Mr. Endicott.
Where shall I begin?"

"Begin to be a man, Yeoland.  That's what a woman
wants in her husband—wants it unconsciously before
everything.  A man—self-contained, resolute—a figure
strong enough to lean upon in storm and stress."

"Stapledon is a man."

"He is, emphatically.  He knows where he is going,
and the road.  He gets unity into his life, method into
his to-morrows."

"To-morrow's always all right.  It's to-day that
bothers me so infernally."

"Ah! and yesterday must make you feel sick every
time you think of it, if you've any conscience."

"I know there isn't much to show.  Yet it seems
such a poor compliment to the wonderful world to
waste your time in grubbing meanly with your back to
her.  At best we can only get a few jewelled glimpses
through these clay gates that we live behind.  Then
down comes the night, when no man may work or play.
And we shall be an awfully long time dead.  And what's
the sum of a life's labour after all?"

"Get work," said Mark, "and drop that twaddle.
Healthy work's the first law of Nature, no matter what
wise men may say or poets sing.  Liberty!  It's a
Jack-o'-lantern.  There's no created thing can be free.
Doing His will—all, all.  Root and branch, berry and
bud, feathered and furred creatures—all working to live
complete.  The lily does toil; and if you could see the
double fringe of her roots above the bulb and under
it—as I can well mind when I had eyes and loved the
garden—you'd know it was so.  There's no good thing
in all the world got without labour at the back of it.
Think what goes to build a flash of lightning—you that
love storms.  But the lightning's not free neither.  And
the Almighty's self works harder than all His worlds put
together."

"Well, I'll do something definite.  I think I'll write a
book about birds.  Tell me, does Honor speak much of
her cousin?"

"She does."

"Yet if she knew—if she only knew.  Why, God's
light! she'd wither and lose her sap and grow old in
two years with Stapledon.  I know it, in the very heart
of me, and I'd stake my life on it against all the
prophets.  There's that in close contact with him would
freeze and kill such as Honor.  Yes, kill her, for it's
a vital part of her would suffer.  Some fascination has
sprung up from the contrast between us; and it has
charmed her.  She's bewitched.  And yet—be frank,
Mr. Endicott—do you believe that Stapledon is the
husband for Honor?  You've thought about it, naturally,
because, before she and I were engaged, you told
me that you hoped they might make a match for their
own sakes and the farm's.  Now what do you say?
Would you, knowing her only less well than I do, wish
that she could change?"

The other was silent.

"You would, then?"

"If I would," answered old Endicott, "I shouldn't
have hesitated to say so.  It's because I wouldn't that I
was dumb."

"You wouldn't?  That's a great weight off my mind, then."

"I mean no praise for you.  I should like to chop
you and Stapledon small, mix you, and mould you
again.  Yet what folly!  Then she'd look at neither, for
certain."

"Such a salad wouldn't be delectable.  But thank you
for heartening me.  I'm the husband for your niece.  I
know it—sure as I'm a Christian.  And she knew it
a month ago; and she'll know it again a month hence, I
pray, even if she's forgotten it for the moment.  Now
I'll clear out, and leave you with your thoughts."

"So you've quarrelled with her?"

"No, no, no; she quarrelled with me, very properly,
very justly; then she left me in disgrace, and I came to
you, hoping for a grain of comfort.  I'm a poor prattler,
you know—one who cannot hide my little dish of misery
out of sight, but must always parade it if I suspect a
sympathetic nature in man or woman.  Good-bye again."

So Christopher departed, mounted his horse, and
trotted home in most amiable mood.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE WARNING`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER IX.


.. class:: center medium bold

   THE WARNING

.. vspace:: 2

There was a custom of ancient standing at Bear
Down Farm.  On working days the family supped
together in a small chamber lying off the kitchen, and
left the latter apartment to the hands; but upon Sunday
night all the household partook at the same table, and
it was rumoured and believed that, during a period of
two hundred years, the reigning head of Endicott's had
never failed to preside at this repast, when in residence.
Moreover, the very dishes changed not.  A cold sirloin
of beef, a potato salad, and a rabbit pie were the
foundations of the feast; and after them followed fruit tarts,
excepting in the spring, with bread and cheese, cider
and small beer.

Two days after Honor's quarrel with Christopher,
while yet they continued unreconciled, there fell a
Sunday supper at which the little band then playing its
part in the history of Endicott's was assembled about a
laden board.  But matters of moment were astir; a
wave of excitement passed over the work folk, and
Myles, who sat near the head of the table on Honor's
left, observed a simultaneous movement, a whispering
and a nodding.  There were present Mr. Cramphorn and
his daughters, who dwelt in a cottage hard by the farm;
Churdles Ash, Henry Collins, the red-haired humorist
Pinsent, and the boy Tommy Bates.  Mrs. Loveys took
the bottom of the table; Mark Endicott sat beside his
niece, at her right hand.

A hush fell upon the company before the shadow of
some great pending event.  The clatter of crockery,
the tinkle of knives and forks ceased.  Then Myles
whispered to Honor that a speech was about to be
delivered, and she, setting down her hands, smiled with
bright inquiry upon Mr. Cramphorn, who had risen to
his feet, and was darting uncomfortable glances about
him from beneath black brows.

"D'you want to tell me anything, Cramphorn?" she
inquired.

"Ma'am, I do," he answered.  "By rights 'tis the
dooty of Churdles Ash, but he'm an ancient piece
wi'out gert store o' words best o' times, an' none for a
moment such as this; so he've axed me to speak
instead, 'cause it do bring him a wambliness of the
innards to do or say ought as may draw the public
eye upon un.  'Tis like this, mistress, we of Endicott's,
here assembled to supper, do desire to give 'e joy of
your marriage contract when it comes to be; an' us
hopes to a man as it may fall out for the best.  Idden
for us to say no more'n that; an' what we think an'
what we doan't think ban't no business but our awn.
Though your gude pleasure be ours, I do assure 'e; an'
the lot of us would do all man or woman can do to
lighten your heart in this vale o' weariness.  An' I'm
sure we wants for you to be a happy woman, wife,
mother, an' widow—all in due an' proper season, 'cordin'
to the laws o' Nature an' the will o' God.  An' so sez
Churdles Ash, an' me, an' Mrs. Loveys, an' my darters,
an' t'others.  An' us have ordained to give e' a li'l
momentum of the happy day, awnly theer's no search in'
hurry by the look of it, so as to that—it being Henery
Collins his thought—us have resolved to bide till the
banns be axed out.  'Cause theer's many a slip 'twixt
the cup an' the lip, 'cordin' to a wise sayin' of old.  An'
so I'll sit down wishin' gude fortune to all at
Endicott's—fields, an' things,[#] an' folk."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: noindent small

[#] Things = stock.

.. vspace:: 2

Mr. Cramphorn and his friends had been aware of
Honor's engagement for three months; but the bucolic
mind is before all things deliberate.  It required that
space of time and many long-winded, wearisome arguments
to decide when and how an official cognisance of
the great fact might best be taken.

The mistress of Bear Down briefly thanked everybody,
with a smile on her lip and a tear in her eye;
while the men and women gazed stolidly upon her as
she expressed her gratitude for their kindly wishes.
When she had spoken, Mr. Cramphorn, Collins, and
Churdles Ash hit the table with their knife-handles
once or twice, and the subject was instantly dismissed.
Save in the mistress and her uncle, this incident struck
not one visible spark of emotion upon anybody present.
All ate heartily, then Honor Endicott withdrew to
her parlour; Mrs. Loveys and Cramphorn's daughters
cleared the table.

The men then lighted their pipes; Mark Endicott
returned to his chair behind the leathern screen; the
deep settle absorbed Churdles Ash and another; Jonah
took a seat beside the peat fire, which he mended
with a huge "scad" or two from the corner; and the
customary Sunday night convention, with the blind
man as president or arbiter, according to the tone of
the discussion, was entered upon.  Sometimes matters
progressed harmoniously and sleepily enough; on other
occasions, and always at the instance of Mr. Cramphorn,
whose many opinions and scanty information not seldom
awoke an active and polemical spirit, the argument was
conducted with extreme acerbity—a circumstance
inevitable when opposing minds endeavour to express
ideas or shades of thought beyond the reach of their
limited vocabularies.

To-night the wind blew hard from the west and
growled in the chimney, while the peat beneath glowed
to its fiery heart under a dancing aurora of blue flame,
and half a dozen pipes sent forth crooked columns of
smoke to the ceiling.  Mr. Cramphorn, by virtue of the
public part he had already taken in the evening's
ceremonial, was minded to rate himself and his
accomplishments with more than usual generosity.  For once
his suspicious forehead had lifted somewhat off his
eyebrows, and the consciousness of great deeds performed
with credit cast him into a spirit of complaisance.
He lightly rallied Churdles Ash upon the old man's
modesty; then, thrusting his mouth into the necessary
figure, blew a perfect ring of smoke, and spat through
it into the fire with great comfort and contentment.

Gaffer Ash replied in a tone of resignation.

"As to that," he said, "some's got words and some
hasn't.  For my paart, I ban't sorry as I can't use 'em,
for I've always thanked God as I was born so humble
that I could live through my days without never being
called 'pon to say what I think o' things in general an'
the men an' women round about."

"Least said soonest mended," commented Pinsent.

"Ess fay!  'Tis the chaps as have got to talk I be
sorry for—the public warriors and Parliament men an'
such like.  They sweat o' nights, I reckon; for they
be 'feared to talk now an' again, I'll wager, an' be still
worse 'feared to hold theer peace."

"You're pretty right, Ash," said Mr. Endicott.  "It
takes a brave man to keep his mouth shut and not care
whether he's misunderstood or no.  But 'tis a bleating
age—a drum-beating age o' clash and clatter.  Why,
the very members of Parliament get too jaded to follow
their great business with sober minds.  If a man don't
pepper his speeches with mountebank fun, they call him
a dull dog, and won't listen to him.  All the world's
dropping into play-acting—that's the truth of it."

"I didn't make no jokes howsoever when I turned
my speech 'fore supper," declared Mr. Cramphorn;
"an' I'm sure I'd never do no such ondacent thing in
a set speech.  Ban't respectful.  Not but what I was
surprised to find how pat the right word comed to
me at the right moment wi'out any digging for un."

"'Tis a gert gift for a humble man," said Mr. Ash.

"A gift to be used wi' caution," confessed Jonah.
"When you say 'tis a gift, last word's spoken," he
added, "but a man's wise to keep close guard awver
his tongue when it chances to be sharper'n common.
Not as I ever go back on the spoken word, for 'tis a
sign of weakness."

Myles Stapledon laughed and Mr. Cramphorn grew hot.

"Why for should I?" he asked.

"If you never had call to eat your words after fifty
years o' talkin', Jonah, you're either uncommon fortunate
or uncommon wise," declared the blind man.  "Wise
you are not particular, not to my knowledge, so we
must say you're lucky."

The others laughed, and Jonah, despite his brag of
a tongue more ready than most, found nothing to say
at this rebuke.  He made an inarticulate growl at the
back of his throat and puffed vigorously, while Henry
Collins came to the rescue.

"Can 'e tell us when the weddin's like to be, sir?" he
inquired of Stapledon, and Myles waited for somebody
else to reply; but none did so.

"I cannot tell," he answered at length.  "I fancy
nothing is settled.  But we shall hear soon enough, no
doubt."

"I suppose 'tis tu inquirin' to ax if you'll bide to
Endicott's when missis do leave it?" said Samuel
Pinsent.

"Well—yes, I think it is.  Lord knows what I'm
going to do.  My home's here for the present—until—well,
I really cannot tell myself.  It depends on
various things."

There was a silence.  Even the most slow-witted
perceived a new revelation of Stapledon in this speech.
Presently Churdles Ash spoke.

"Best to bide here till the time-work chaps be through
wi' theer job.  Them time-work men!  The holy text
sez, 'Blessed be they as have not seed an' yet have
believed'; but fegs! 'tis straining scripture to put that
on time-work.  I'd never believe no time-work man
what I hadn't seed."

"Anybody's a fool to believe where he doesn't trust,"
said Mark Endicott.  "You open a great question, Ash.
I believed no more or less than any other chap of
five-an'-twenty in my young days; but, come blindness,
there was no more taking on trust for me.  I had to
find a reason for all I believed from that day forward."

"Was faith a flower that grew well in the dark with
you, uncle?" inquired Myles, and there was a wave
of sudden interest in his voice.

"Why, yes.  Darkness is the time for making roots
and 'stablishing plants, whether of the soil or of the
mind.  Faith grew but slowly.  And the flower of it
comes to no more than this: do your duty, and be
gentle with your neighbour.  Don't wax weak because
you catch yourself all wrong so often.  Don't let any
man pity you but yourself; and don't let no other set
of brains than your own settle the rights and wrongs
of life for you.  That's my road—a blind man's.  But
there's one thing more, my sons: to believe in the
goodness of God through thick and thin."

"The hardest thing of all," said Stapledon.

Mr. Cramphorn here thought proper to join issue.
He also had his own views, reached single-handed, and
was by no means ashamed of them.

"As to the A'mighty," he said, "my rule's to treat
Un same as He treats me—same as we'm taught to
treat any other neighbour.  That's fair, if you ax me."

"A blasphemous word to say it, whether or no,"
declared Ash uneasily.  "We ban't teached to treat
folks same as they treat us, but same as we wish they'd
treat us.  That's a very differ'nt thing.  Gormed if I
ban't mazed a bolt doan't strike 'e, Jonah."

"'Tis my way, an' who's gwaine to shaw me wheer it
fails o' right an' justice?"

"A truculent attitude to the Everlasting, surely,"
ventured Myles, looking at the restless little man with
his hang-dog forehead and big chin.

"Who's afeared, so long as he'm on the windy side o'
justice?  I ban't.  If God sends gude things, I'm fust
to thank Un 'pon my bended knees, an' hope respectful
for long continuance; if He sends bad—then I cool off
an' wait for better times.  Ban't my way to return
thanks for nought.  I've thanked Un for the hay for
missus's gude sake a score o' times; but thank Un for
the turmits I won't, till I sees if we'm gwaine to have
rain 'fore 'tis tu late.  'No song, no supper,' as the
saying is.  Ban't my way to turn left cheek to Jehovah
Jireh after He's smote me 'pon the right.  'Tis contrary
to human nature; an' Christ's self can't alter that."

"'Tis tu changeable in you, Cramphorn, if I may say
it without angering you," murmured Collins.

"Not so, Henery; ban't me that changes, but Him.
I'm a steadfast man, an' always was so, as Mr. Endicott
will bear witness.  When the Lard's hand's light on me,
I go dancin' an' frolickin' afore Him, like to David afore
the ark, an' pray long prayers week-days so well as
Sundays; but when He'm contrary with me, an' minded
to blaw hot an' cold, from no fault o' mine—why, dammy,
I get cranky tu.  Caan't help it.  Built so.  'Pears to
me as 'tis awnly a brute dog as'll lick the hands that
welts un."

"What do 'e say to this here popish discoorse, sir?"
inquired Churdles Ash; and Mark answered him.

"Why, Jonah only confesses the secret of most of us.
We've got too much wit or too little pluck to tell—that's
all the difference.  He's blurted it out."

"The 'state of most of us'?" gasped Mr. Collins.

"Surely, even though we don't own it to our innermost
souls.  Who should know, if not me?  It makes a
mighty difference whether 'tis by pleasant paths or bitter
that we come to the throne of grace.  Fair weather
saints most of us, I reckon.  I felt the same when my
eyes were put out.  God knows how I kept my hands
off my life.  I never shall.  Before that change I'd
prayed regular as need be, morn and night, just because
my dear mother had taught me so to do, and habit's the
half of life.  And after my eyes went the habit stuck,
though my soul was up in arms and my brain poisoned
against a hard Providence.  And what did I do?  Why,
regular as the clock, at the hour when I was used to
bless God, I went on my knees and lifted my empty
eyes to Him and cursed Him.  'Twas as the psalmist
prayed in his awful song of rage: my prayer was turned
into sin.  I did that—for a month.  And what was the
price He paid me for my wickedness?  Why, He sent
peace—peace fell upon me and the wish to live; and
He that had took my sight away brought tears to my
eyes instead.  So I reached a blind man's seeing at the
last.  I've lived to know that man's misty talk and
thought upon justice is no more than a wind in the
trees.  Therefore Jonah is in the wrong to steer his life
by his own human notion of justice.  There's no justice
in this world, and what fashion of stuff will be the
justice in the next, we'll know when we come to get it
measured out, not sooner.  One thing's sure: it's not
over likely to be planned on earthly models; so there's
no sight under heaven more pitiful to me than all
mankind so busy planning pleasure parties in the next world
to make up for their little, thorny, wayside job in this."

"The question is, Do we matter to the God of a starry
night?" asked Stapledon, forgetting the presence of any
beyond the last speaker.  "We matter a great deal to
ourselves and ought to—I know that, of course," he
added.  "We must take ourselves seriously."

Mark laughed and made instant answer.

"We take ourselves too seriously, our neighbours
not seriously enough.  It's the fault of all
humans—philosophers included."

"An' I be sure theer's immortal angels hid in our
bones, however," summed up Mr. Ash.

"If so, good," answered Stapledon with profound
seriousness.  "But thought won't alter what is by the
will of God; nor yet what's going to be.  The Future's
His workshop only.  No man can meddle there.  But
the present is ours; and if half the brain-sweat wasted
on the next world was spent in tidying the dirty corners
in this one—why, we might bring the other nearer—if
other there be."

"You'll know there's another long before your time
comes to go to it, my son," said the blind man in a calm
voice.  Then the tall clock between the warming-pans
struck ten with the sonorous cadence and ring of old
metal.  At this signal pipes were knocked out and
windows and doors thrown open; whereupon the west
wind, like the voice of a superior intellect, stilled their
chatter with sweet breath, soon swept away the reek of
tobacco, and brought a blast of pure air through the
smoke.  All those present, save only Myles and
Endicott, then departed to their rest; but these two sat on
awhile, for the old man had a hard thing to say, and
knew that the moment to speak was come.

"How long are you going to stop here?" he asked suddenly.

"I can't guess.  I suppose there's no hurry.  I've
really not much interest anywhere else.  Why do you ask?"

"Because it's important, lad.  Blind folks hear such a
deal.  And they often know more than what belongs
to the mere spoken word.  There's an inner and an
outer meaning to most speech of man, and we sightless
ones often gather both.  It surprises people at
times.  You see we win nothing from sight of a speaking
mouth or the eyes above it.  All our brain sits behind
our ear; there's no windows for it to look out at."

"You've surprised me by what you have gleaned out
of a voice, uncle."

"And I'm like to again.  Not pleasantly neither.  I've
thought how I'd found something on your tongue long
ago; but I've kept dumb, hoping I was mistaken.
To-night, my son, there's no more room for doubt."

"This is a mystery—quite uncanny."

"I don't know.  'Tis very unfortunate—very, but a
fact; and you've got to face it."

"Read the riddle to me," said Stapledon slowly.  His
voice sounded anxious under an assumption of amusement.

"Do you remember after supper how Pinsent asked
you whether you would stop on here when his mistress
was married?  You answered that the Lord knew what
you were going to do.  Now it was clean out of your
character to answer so."

"I hope it was; I hope so indeed.  I was sorry the
moment afterwards."

"You couldn't help yourself.  You were not thinking
of your answer to the question, but the much more
important thing suggested by the question.  That's what
made you so short: the thought of Honor's marriage."

"I own it," confessed the other.  A silence fell; then
Mark spoke again more gravely.

"Myles, you must clear out of here.  I'm blind and
even I know it.  How much more such as can see—you
yourself, for instance—and Honor—and Christopher
Yeoland."

Stapledon's brow flushed and his jaw set hard.  He
looked at the sightless face before him, and spoke
hurriedly.

"For God's sake, what do you mean?"

"It's news to you?  I do think it is!  And it has
come the same way to many when it falls the first time.
The deeper it strikes, the less they can put a name to it.
But now you know.  Glance back along the road you've
walked beside Honor of late days.  Then see how the
way ahead looks to you with her figure gone.  I knew
this a week ago, and I sorrowed for you.  There was an
unconscious tribute in your voice when you spoke to
her—a hush in it, as if you were praying.  Man, I'm
sorry—but your heart will tell you that I'm right."

A lengthy silence followed upon this speech; then the
other whispered out a question, and there was awe rather
than terror in his tone.

"You mean I'm coming to love her?"

"I do—if only that.  Remember what you said the
first day you came here about the false step at the
threshold."

"But she is another man's.  That has been familiar
knowledge to me."

"And you think that fact can prevent a man of
honour from loving a woman?"

"Surely."

"Not so at all.  Love of woman's a thing apart—beyond
all rule and scale, or dogma, or the Bible's self.
The passions are pagans to the end—no more to be
trusted than tame tigers, if a man is a man.  But
passions are bred out nowadays.  I don't believe the
next generation will be shook to the heart with the
same gusts and storms as the last.  We think smaller
thoughts and feel smaller sentiments; we're too careful
of our skins to trust the giant passions; our hearts don't
pump the same great flood of hot blood.  But you—you
belong to the older sort.  And you love her—you
who never heard the rustle of a petticoat with quickened
breath before, I reckon.  You're too honest to deny it
after you've thought a little.  You know there's
something seething down at the bottom of your soul—and
now you hear the name of it.  Go to bed and sleep
upon that."

Stapledon remained mute.  His face was passive, but
his forehead was wrinkled a little.  He folded his arms
and stared at the fire.

"God knows I wish this was otherwise," continued
Mark Endicott.  "'Twould have been a comely and a
fitting thing for you to mate her and carry on all here.
So at least I thought before I knew you."

"But have changed your opinion of me since?"

"Well, yes; I did not think so highly of you until we
met and got to understand each other.  But I doubt if
you'd be a fit husband for Honor.  There's a difference
of—I don't know the word—but it's a difference in
essentials anyway—in views and in standpoint.  Honor's
a clever woman to some extent, yet she takes abundant
delight in occasional foolishness, as clever women often
do.  'Tisn't your fashion of mind to fool—not even on
holidays.  You couldn't if you tried."

"But she is as sober-minded as I am at heart.  Under
her humorous survey of things and her laughter there
is——"

"I know; I know all about her."

"We had thought we possessed much in common on
a comparison of notes now and again."

"If you did, 'tis just what you wouldn't have found
out so pat at first sight.  There's a great gulf fixed
between you, and I'm not sorry it is so, seeing she's
another man's.  Yeoland looks to be a light thing; I
grant that; but I do believe that he understands her
better than you or I ever could.  I've found out so much
from hearing them together.  Moreover, he's growing
sober; there's a sort of cranky sense in him, I hope,
after all."

"A feather-brain, but well-meaning."

"The last leaf on an old tree—even as Honor is."

"At least there must be deep friendship always—deep
friendship.  So much can't be denied to me.
Don't talk of a great gulf between us, uncle.  Not at
least a mental one."

"Truly I believe so, Myles."

"We could bridge that."

"With bridges of passing passion—like silver
spider-threads between flowers.  But they wouldn't stand the
awful strain of lifelong companionship.  You've never
thought what that strain means in our class of life, when
husband and wife have got to bide within close touch
most times till the grave parts them.  But that's all
wind and nothing.  She's tokened to Yeoland.  So no
more need be spoken on that head.  You've got to
think of your peace of mind, Stapledon, and—well, I'd
best say it—hers too.  Now, good-night.  Not another
word, if you're a wise man."

.. vspace:: 2

Mark Endicott was usually abroad betimes, though
not such an early riser as Myles, and on the following
morning, according to his custom, he walked in the
garden before breakfast.  His pathway extended before
the more ancient front of Bear Down, and in summer, at
each step, he might stretch forth his hand over the
flower border and know what blossom would meet it.
Now there fell a heavy footfall that approached from
the farmyard.

"Good morning," said Stapledon, as he shook Mark
by the hand.

"Good morning, my lad."

"I'm going on Saturday."

Mr. Endicott nodded, as one acknowledging information
already familiar.

"Your loss will fall heavily on me," he said, "for it's
not twice in a month of Sundays that I get such a
companion spirit to chop words with."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THREE ANGRY MAIDS`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER X.


.. class:: center medium bold

   THREE ANGRY MAIDS

.. vspace:: 2

Upon the day that Myles Stapledon determined
with himself to leave Little Silver, Christopher's
patience broke down, and he wrote to Honor
concerning their protracted quarrel.  This communication
it pleased him to begin in a tone of most unusual
severity.  He struck the note in jest at first, then
proceeded with it in earnest.  He bid his lady establish
her mind more firmly and affirm her desires.  He
returned her liberty, hinted that, if he so willed, he
might let Godleigh Park to a wealthy Plymouth
tradesman, who much desired to secure it, and himself go
abroad for an indefinite period of years.  Then, weary
of these heroics, Christopher became himself on the
third page of the note, expressed unbounded contrition
for his sins, begged his sweetheart's forgiveness, and
prayed her to name a meeting-place that he might
make atonement in person.  With joke and jest the
letter wound to its close; and he despatched it to Bear
Down upon the following morning.

Mr. Gregory Libby happened to be the messenger,
and of this worthy it may be said that, while now a
person well-to-do in the judgment of Little Silver, yet
he displayed more sense than had been prophesied for
him, kept his money in his purse, and returned to his
humble but necessary occupation of hedge-trimming.
He was working about Godleigh at present, and being
the first available fellow-creature who met Yeoland's
eye as he entered the air, letter in hand, his temporary
master bid Gregory drop gauntlet and pruning-hook
that he might play postman instead for a while.

The youth departed then to Endicott's under a
personal and private excitement, for his own romance lay
there, as it pleased him to think, and he was conducting
it with deliberate and calculating method.  Libby found
himself divided between the daughters of Mr. Cramphorn,
and, as those young women knew this fact, the
tension between them increased with his delay.  Upon
the whole he preferred Sally, as the more splendid
animal; but the man was far too cunning to commit
himself rashly.  His desires by no means blinded him,
and he looked far ahead and wondered with some
low shrewdness which of the maids enjoyed larger
part of her father's regard, and which might hope for
a lion's share of Jonah's possessions when the head-man
at Bear Down should pass away.  In this direction
Mr. Libby was prosecuting his inquiries; and the operation
proved difficult and delicate, for Cramphorn disliked him.
Margery met the messenger, and gave a little purr of
pleasure as she opened the kitchen door.

"Come in, come in the kitchen," she said; "I'm all
alone for the minute if you ban't feared o' me,
Mr. Libby."

"Very glad to see you again," said Gregory, shaking
her hand and holding it a moment afterwards.

"So be I you.  I heard your butivul singing to
church Sunday, but me, bein' in the choir, I couldn't
look about to catch your eye."

"Wheer's Sally to?" he asked suddenly, after they
had talked a few moments on general subjects.

The girl's face fell and her voice hardened.

"How should I knaw?  To work, I suppose."

"I awften wonder as her hands doan't suffer by it,"
mused Libby.

"They do," she answered with cruel eagerness.  "Feel mine."

She pressed her palms into his, considering that the
opportunity permitted her so to do without any lack of
propriety.  And he held them and found them soft and
cool, but a thought thin to his taste.  She dropped her
eyelids, and he looked at her long lashes and the thick
rolls of dark hair on her head.  Then his eyes ranged
on.  Her face was pretty, with a prim prettiness, but
for the rest Margery wholly lacked her sister's physical
splendours.  No grand curves of bosom met Mr. Libby's
little shifty eyes.  The girl, indeed, was slight
and thin.

He dropped her hand, and she, knowing by intuition
the very matter of his mind, spoke.  Her voice was the
sweetest thing about her, though people often forgot
that fact in the word it uttered.  Margery had a bad
temper and a shrewish tongue.  Now the bells jangled,
and she fell sharply upon her absent sister.  She
declared that she feared for her; that Sally was
growing unmaidenly as a result of her outdoor duties.  Then
came a subtle cut—and Margery looked away from her
listener's face as she uttered it.

"Her could put you in her pocket and not knaw you
was theer.  I've heard her say so."

Mr. Libby grew very red.

"Ban't the way for a woman to talk about any chap,"
he said.

"Coourse it ban't.  That's it with she.  So much
working beside the men, an' killin' fowls, an' such like
makes her rough an' rough-tongued.  Though a very
gude sister to me, I'm sure, an'——"

She had seen Sally approaching; hence this lame
conclusion.  The women's eyes met as the elder spoke.

"Wheer's faither to, Margery?  Ah!  Mr. Libby—didn't
see you.  You'm up here airly—helpin' her
to waste time by the look of it."

"Theer's some doan't want no help," retorted the
other.  "What be you doin' indoors?  Your plaace is
'pon the land with the men."

"Wheer you'd like to be, if they'd let 'e," stung the
other; "but you'm no gude to 'em—a poor pin-tailed
wench like you."

"Ess fay!  Us must have a brazen faace an'
awver-blawn shape like yourn to make the men come about
us!  Ban't sense—awnly fat they look for in a female
of coourse!" snapped back Margery; and in the
meantime the cause of this explosion—proud of his power,
but uneasy before the wrath of women—prepared to
depart.  Fortune favoured his exit, for Honor appeared
suddenly at the other end of the farmyard with some
kittens in her hands and a mother cat, tail in air,
marching beside her and lifting misty green eyes, full of joy.

Libby turned therefore, delivered his letter, and was
gone; while behind him voices clashed in anger, one
sweet, one shrill.  Then a door slammed as Margery
hastened away upon a Parthian shot, and her sister
stamped furiously, having no word to answer but a
man's.  Sally immediately left the house and proceeded
after the messenger; but a possibility of this he had
foreseen, and was now well upon his way back to
Godleigh.  Sally therefore found herself disappointed
anew, and marked her emotions by ill-treating a pig
that had the misfortune to cross her stormy path.

Another woman's soul was also in arms; and while
Margery wept invisible and her sister used the ugliest
words that she knew, under her breath, their mistress
walked up and down the grass plot where it extended
between the farm and the fields, separated from the
latter by a dip in the land and a strange fence of
granite posts and old steel rope.

Honor had now come from seeing Myles Stapledon.
Together, after breakfast, they had inspected a new
cow-byre on outlying land, and, upon the way back,
he told her that he designed to return to Tavistock
at the end of that week.  Only by a sudden alteration
of pace and change of foot did she show her first
surprise.  Then she lifted a questioning gaze to his
impassive face.

"Why?" she asked.

"Well, why not?  I've been here three months and
there is nothing more for me to do—at any rate nothing
that need keep me on the spot."

"There's still less for you to do at Tavistock.  You
told me a month ago that there was nothing to take
you back.  You've sold the old house and let the mill."

"It is so; but I must—I have plans—I may invest
some money at Plymouth.  And I must work, you know."

"Are you not working here?"

"Why, not what I call work.  Only strolling about
watching other people."

Honor changed the subject after a short silence.

"Did you see Christopher on Sunday?  I thought
you were to do so?"

"Yes; the linen-draper from Plymouth has been at
him again.  He's mad about Godleigh; he makes a
splendid offer to rent it for three years.  And he'll
spend good money upon improvements annually in
addition to quite a fancy rent."

"Did you advise Christopher to accept it?"

"Most certainly I did.  It would help to lessen his
monetary bothers; but he was in one of his wildly
humorous moods and made fun of all things in heaven
and earth."

Honor tightened her lips.  Their first great quarrel, it
appeared, was not weighing very heavily on her lover.

"He refused, of course."

"He said that he would let you decide.  But he vows
he can't live out of sight of Godleigh and can't imagine
himself a trespasser on his own land.  He was sentimental.
But he has such an artist's mind.  'Tis a pity
he's not got some gift of expression as an
outlet—pictures or verses or something."

"That can have nothing to do with your idea of going
away, however, Myles?" asked Honor, swinging back
to the matter in her mind.

"Nothing whatever; why should it?"

"I don't want you to go away," she said; and some
passion trembled in her voice.  "You won't give me
any reason why you should do so, because there can
be none."

"We need not discuss it, cousin."

"Then you'll stop, since I ask you to?"

"No, I cannot, Honor.  I must go.  I have very
sufficient reasons.  Do not press me upon that point,
but take my word for it."

"You refuse me a reason?  Then, I repeat, I wish
you to stay.  Everything cries out that you should.
My future prosperity cries out.  It is your duty to
stay.  Apart from Bear Down and me, you may do
Christopher much good and help him to take life more
seriously.  Will you stay because I ask you to?"

"Why do you wish it?" he said.

"Because—I like you very much indeed; there—that's
straightforward and a good reason, though you're so
chary with yours."

She looked frankly at him, but with annoyance rather
than regard in her eyes.

"It is folly and senseless folly to go," she continued
calmly, while he gasped within and felt a mist crowding
down on the world.  "You like me too, a little—and
you're enlarging my mind beyond the limits of this
wilderness of eternal grass and hay.  Why, when
Providence throws a little sunshine upon me, should I rush
indoors out of it and draw down the blinds?"

He was going to mention Christopher again, but felt
such an act would be unfair to the man in Honor's
present mood.  For a moment he opened his mouth to
argue the point she raised, then realised the danger and
futility.  Only by an assumption of carelessness amounting
to the brutal could he keep his secret out of his
voice.  And in the light of what she had confessed so
plainly, to be less frank himself was most difficult.  Her
words had set his heart beating like a hammer.  His
mind was overwhelmed with his first love, and to such a
man it was an awful emotion.  It shook him and
unsteadied his voice as he looked at her, for she had never
seemed more necessary to him than then.

"Don't be so serious," he said.  "Your horizon will
soon begin to enlarge with the coming interests.  I've
enjoyed my long visit more than I can tell you—much
more than I can tell you; but go I must indeed."

"Stop just one fortnight more, Myles?"

"Don't ask it, Honor.  It's hard to say 'No' to you."

"A week—a little week—to please me?  Why shouldn't
you please me?  Is it a crime to do that?  I suppose it
is, for nobody ever thinks of trying to."

"I cannot alter my plans now.  I must go on Saturday."

"Go, then," she said.  "I'm rewarded for being so
rude as to ask so often.  I'm not nearly proud enough.
That's a distinction you've not taught me to achieve
with all your lessons."

She left him, but he overtook her in two strides, and
walked at her right hand.

"Honor, please listen to me."

"My dear cousin, don't put on that haggard, not to
say tragic, expression.  It really is a matter of no
moment.  I only worried you because I'm spoiled and
hate being crossed even in trifles.  It was the
disappointment of not getting my way that vexed me,
not the actual point at question.  If you can leave all
your interests here without anxiety and trust me so
far—why, I'm flattered."

"Hear me, I say."

"So will the whole world, if you speak so loud.  What
more is there to hear?  You're going on Saturday, and
Tommy Bates shall drive you to Okehampton to catch
the train."

"You're right—and wise," he said more quietly.  "No,
I've nothing to say."

Then he made a ghastly effort to be entertaining.

"And mind, Honor, I shall be very sharp if my
cheque does not come each quarter on the right day.
A hard taskmaster I shall be, I promise you."

"Don't, Myles," she answered instantly, growing grave
at his simulated merriment.

A few minutes afterwards she left him, sought out
the squeaking kittens to calm her emotions, presently
deposited them in a sunny corner with their parent,
and, taking Christopher's letter, walked out again upon
the grass.

A storm played over her face which she made no
attempt to hide.  Tear-stained Margery, peeping from
the kitchen window, noticed it, and Samuel Pinsent, as
he passed from the vegetable garden, observed that his
salute received no recognition.

Honor Endicott knew very well what she now confronted,
and she swept from irritation to anger, from
anger to passion before the survey.  Ignoring the great
salient tragedy that underlaid the position, she took
refuge in details, and selecting one—the determination
of Myles to depart—chose to connect Christopher
Yeoland directly with it, decided to believe that it
was at Yeoland's desire her cousin now withdrew.  The
rectitude of the act added the last straw to her temper.
The truth perhaps was not wholly hidden from her;
she had been quick to read Myles by light thrown from
her own heart.  And here, at a point beyond which her
thought could not well pass, she turned impatiently to
the letter from her lover, tore it open, and scanned the
familiar caligraphy.

Half a page sufficed, for her mood just then was
ill-tuned to bear any sort of reproof.  Anger had dimmed
both her sense of proportion and her knowledge of
Christopher; round-eyed she read a few lines of stern
rebuke and censure, a threat, an offer of liberty, and no
more.  The real Christopher, who only began upon a
later folio, she never reached.  There was a quick
suspiration of breath, a sound suspiciously like the gritting
of small teeth, and her letter—torn, and torn, and torn
again—was flung into the hand of the rough wind,
caught, hurried aloft, swept every way, scattered afar,
sown over an acre of autumn grass.

"This is more than I can bear!" she said aloud; and
after the sentiment—so seldom uttered by man or
woman save under conditions perfectly capable of
endurance—she entered the house, tore off her gloves,
and wrote, with heaving bosom, an answer to the letter
she had not read.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`PARTINGS`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XI.


.. class:: center medium bold

   PARTINGS

.. vspace:: 2

When Christopher Yeoland received his
sweetheart's letter at the hand of Tommy Bates, he
read it thrice, then whistled a Dead March to himself
for the space of half an hour.

He retired early with his tribulation, and spent a night
absolutely devoid of sleep; but Nature yielded about
daybreak, when usually he rose, and from that hour
the man slumbered heavily until noon.  Then, having
regarded the ceiling for a considerable time, he found
that Honor had receded to the background of his mind,
while Myles Stapledon bulked large in the forefront of
it.  To escape in their acuteness the painful impressions
awakened by his letter, he destroyed it without further
perusal; he then wandered out of doors, and climbed
above his pine woods to reflect and mature some course
of action.  He retraced the recent past, and arrived at
erroneous conclusions, misled by Honor's letter, as she
had been deceived from the introductory passages in
his.  He told himself that she had yielded to his
importunities through sheer weariness; that in reality she
did not love him and now knew it, in presence of this
pagan cousin, sprung up out of the heather.  From
finding herself in two minds, before all the positive
virtues of Stapledon, she was doubtless now in one
again, and he—Christopher—had grown very dim, had
quite lost his old outline in her eyes, in fact had suffered
total eclipse from the shadow of a better man.

To these convictions he came, and while still of
opinion—even after the catastrophe of her letter—that
no more fitting husband could have been found for
Honor than himself, yet was he equally sure, since her
indignation, that he would never ask her to marry him
more.  Thus he argued very calmly, with his body cast
down under the edge of the pine woods, his eyes upon
the dying gold of oak forests spread over an adjacent
hill.  Against Honor he felt no particular resentment, but
with Stapledon he grew into very steadfast enmity.

Under his careless, laughter-loving, and invertebrate
existence Yeoland hid a heart; and though none,
perhaps not Honor herself, had guessed all that his
engagement meant to him, the fact remained: it began
to establish the man in essential particulars, and had
already awakened wide distaste with his present
uncalculated existence.  Thus Honor's promise modified
his outlook upon life, nerved him, roused him to
responsibility.  He was not a fool, and perfectly realised
what is due from any man to the woman who suffers
him henceforth to become first factor in her destiny.
Yet his deeply rooted laziness and love of procrastination
had stood between him and action up to the
present.  All things were surely conspiring to a definite
step; but events had not waited his pleasure; another
man now entered the theatre, and his own part was
thrust into obscurity even at the moment when he
meditated how to make it great.  But the fact did not
change his present purpose.  Ideas, destined to produce
actions during the coming year, were still with him, and
recent events only precipitated his misty projects.  He
resolved upon immediate and heroic performance.  He
began by forgiving Honor.  He marvelled at her
unexpected impatience, and wondered what barbed arrow
in his own letter had been sharp enough to draw such
serious wrath from her.  There was no laughter in her
reply—all thunder, and the fine forked lightning of a
clever woman in a passion on paper.  He felt glad that
he had destroyed the letter.  Yet the main point was
clear enough, though only implicitly indicated; she
loved him no more, for had she done so, no transient
circumstance of irritation or even active anger had been
strong enough to win such concentrated bitterness from
her.  He did not know what had gone to build Honor's
letter; he was ignorant of Stapledon's decision, of the
fret and fume in his sweetheart's spirit when she heard
it, of the mood from which she suffered when she
received his note, and of the crowning fact that she had
not read all.

So Christopher made up his mind to go away without
more words, to let Godleigh to the enamoured linen-draper
for a term of years, and join his sole surviving
relative—an ancient squatter in New South Wales—who
wrote to his kinsman twice a year and accompanied
each missive with the information that Australia was
going to the dingoes and must soon cease to be
habitable by anything but a "sun-downer" or a kangaroo.
Hither, then, Christopher determined to depart; and,
viewed from beneath his whispering pines, the idea had
an aspect so poetical that he found tears in his eyes,
which set all the distant woods swimming.  But when
he remembered Myles, his sorrow dried, scorched up by
an inner fire; and, as he looked into the future that
this stranger had snatched away from him, he began
to count the cost and measure the length of his life
without Honor Endicott.  Such calculations offered no
standpoint for a delicate emotion.  They were the
difference between visions of billowing and
many-breasted Devon, here unrolled before him, glorious
under red autumn light, and that other in his mind's
eye—a sad-coloured apparition of Australian spinifex
and sand.

His anger whirled up against the supplanter, and he
forgot his former charitable and just contentions uttered
before this blow had fallen.  Then he had honestly
affirmed to Honor that in his judgment Stapledon was
in love with her and scarcely realised his position.  That
utterance was as nearly true as possible; but in the
recollection of the woman's anger he forgot it.  How
the thing had come about mattered nothing now.  To
inquire was vain; but the knowledge that he had done
no deed to bring this storm upon himself proved little
comfort.  His patience and humour and philosophy
went down the wind together.  He was, at least to that
extent, a man.

To Honor's letter he returned no answer; neither did
he seek her, but avoided her rather and pursued an
active search for Myles Stapledon.  Accident prevented
a meeting until the morning of the latter's departure,
and, wholly ignorant that his rival was at that moment
leaving Bear Down for good and all, Christopher met
him in a dog-cart on the road to Okehampton, not far
from the spot where had fallen out their first
introduction.

The pedestrian raised his hand, and Myles bid Bates,
who drove him, pull up.

"Well met," he said.

"Would you mind giving me a few minutes of your
time, Stapledon?" inquired Christopher coldly;
whereupon Myles looked at his watch, and then climbed to
earth.

"Trot on," he said to his driver, "and wait for me at
the corner where Throwley road runs into ours.  And
now," he continued, as the vehicle drew out from
ear-shot, "perhaps you won't mind turning for half a mile
or so.  I must keep moving towards Okehampton, or I
shall miss my train."

They walked in step together; then Yeoland spoke.

"You'll probably guess what I've got to say."

"Not exactly, though I may suspect the subject.
Hear me first.  It'll save you trouble.  You know me
well enough to grant that I'd injure no man willingly.
We must be frank.  Only last Sunday did I find what
had overtaken me.  I swear it.  I didn't imagine such
things could happen."

"Don't maunder on like that!  What do I care what's
overtaken you?  You say you suspect the thing I want
to speak about.  Then come to it, or else let me do so.
When first we met you heard that I was the man your
cousin had promised to marry.  You won't deny that?"

"You told me."

"Then why, in the name of the living God, did a man
with all your oppressive good qualities come between
us?  That's a plain question anyway."

A flush spread over Stapledon's cold face and as
quickly died out.  He did not answer immediately, and
the younger spoke again.

"Well?  You're the strong man, the powerful,
self-contained, admirable lesson to his weak brethren.
Can't you answer, or won't you?"

"Don't pour these bitter words upon me.  I have
done no deliberate wrong at all; I have merely moved
unconsciously into a private difficulty from which I am
now about to extricate myself."

"That's too hard a saying for me."

"It is true.  I have wakened from an error.  I have
committed a terrible action in ignorance.  A blind man,
but not so blind as I was, showed me my stupidity."

"Say it in so many words.  You love Honor."

"I do.  I have grown to love her—the thing farthest
from my thoughts or dreams.  I cannot help it.  I do
not excuse it or defend myself.  I am doing all in my power."

"Which is——?"

"Going—going not to come back."

"It is too late."

"Do not say so, Yeoland.  What could I be to her—such
a man——?"

"Spare me and yourself all that.  And answer this
one question—on your oath.  Did she tell you of the
letter she wrote to me?"

"She did not."

"Or of my letter?"

"Not a word."

"One question more.  What did she say when you
told her you were going?"

"She deemed it unnecessary at the time."

"She asked you to stop?"

Stapledon did not answer immediately; then his
manner changed and his voice grew hard.  He stood
still, and turned on his companion and towered above
him.  Their positions were suddenly reversed.

"I will suffer no more of this.  I have done you no
conscious wrong, and am not called upon to stand and
deliver at your order.  Leave a man, who is sufficiently
tormented, to go his way alone.  I am moving out of
your life as fast as my legs will carry me.  I mourn that
I came into it.  I acknowledge full measure of blame—all
that it pleases you to heap upon me; so leave me in
peace, for more I cannot do."

"'Peace!'  She did ask you not to go?"

"I have gone.  That is enough.  She is waiting for
you to make her your wife.  Don't let her wait for ever."

"You do well to advise—you who have wrecked two
lives with your—'private difficulty'!"

Yeoland stood still, but the other moved hastily
on.  Thus they parted without further words, and
Christopher, at length weary of standing to watch
Stapledon's retreating shape, turned and resumed his way.

He had determined, despite his sneer, to take Stapledon's
advice and go back to Honor.  The bonds woven
of long years were not broken after all.  How should
events of a few short weeks shatter his lifelong
understanding with this woman?  Recent determinations
vanished as soon as his rival had done so, and Yeoland
turned and bent his steps to Bear Down, resolved that
the present hour should end all and place him again
in the old position or dethrone him for ever.  His mind
beat like a bird against the bars of a cage, and he asked
himself of what, in the name of all malevolent magic,
was this man made, who had such power to unsettle
Honor in her love and worship, to thrust him headlong
from his high estate.  He could not answer the question,
or refused to answer it.  He swept on over the sere
fern, with the soft song of the dead heather bells in his
ear; but the message of stone and heath was one: She
had asked the other man not to go.

Before that consummation his new-kindled hope faded,
his renewed determinations died.  The roads of
surrender and of flight were all that stretched before him.
To Honor he could be nothing any more; and worse
than nothing if he stopped.  Complete self-sacrifice and
self-effacement seemed demanded of him if his love was
indeed the great, grand passion that he had imagined it
to be.  Impressed with this conviction he passed from
the Moor and sought his nearest way to Godleigh; and
then the mood of him suffered another change, and hope
spoke in the splendours of sunset.  Myles Stapledon
had certainly gone; and he had departed never to
return.  That was his own assurance.  Honor at least
might be asked, and reasonably asked, to tell her mind
at this crisis in affairs.

And so he changed the road again and set his face for
Bear Down.  A dark speck met his gaze while yet he
was far distant; and he knew it for the mistress and
hastened to her, where she walked alone on the little lawn.

Coming quietly over the grass Yeoland surprised her;
she lifted a startled face to his, and he found her moist
of eye while in her voice was a tremor that told of tears
past.

"Why d'you steal on me like this?" she asked
suddenly, and her face flushed, and her hands went up
to her breast.  "You frighten me.  I do not want you.
Please, Christopher, go away."

"I know you do not want me, and I am going away,"
he answered gloomily, his expectations stricken before
her words.  "I'm going, and I've come to tell you so."

"How much more am I to suffer to-day?"

"You can ask me that, Honor?  My little girl, d'you
suppose life's a bed of roses for me since your letter?"

"A bed of roses is the sum of your ambitions."

"Why, that's like old times when you can be merely
rude to me!  But is the old time gone?  Is the new
time different?  Listen, Honor, and tell me the truth."

"I don't know the truth.  Please go away and leave
me alone; I can tell you nothing.  Don't you see I
don't want you?  Be a man, if you know how, and go
out of my sight."

The voice was not so harsh as the words, and he
thought he saw the ghost of a hope behind it.

"Curious!" he said.  "You're the third person this
week who has told me to be a man.  Well, I'll try.
Only hear this, and answer it.  I've just left Myles
Stapledon on his way to Okehampton—gone for good."

"What is that to me?"

"Your looking-glass will tell you.  Now, Honor,
before God—yes, before God, answer me the truth.  Do
you love him?"

"You've no right to stay here prattling when I bid
you go."

"None; and I'm not going to stay and prattle.  But
answer that you shall.  I've a right at least to ask that
question."

The girl almost wrung her hands, and half turned
from him without speaking; but he approached and
imprisoned both her arms.

"You must tell me.  I can do nothing until I know,
Your very own lips must tell me."

"You don't ask me if I love you?"

"Answer the other question and I shall know."

"Blind—blind—selfish egotists—all of you," she cried.
Then her voice changed.  "Is it my fault if I do love
him?" she asked.

"I'm no judge.  To part right and wrong was a
task beyond me always—excepting on general, crude
principles.  Answer my question."

"Then, I do."

He bent his head.

"I love him, I love him, I love him."

Neither spoke for some seconds; then the man lifted
up his head, shook it as though he had risen from a
plunge, and laughed.

"So be it.  Now here's news for you, that I can
relate since you've been so frank.  D'you remember
what I whispered to you when I was a little boy, of
the cracks on my ceiling and the chance patterns I
found on my window-blind when I used to lie awake in
the grey of summer mornings, waiting for the first gold?
You forget.  So had I forgotten until a few days since.
Then, being lazy, I lay abed and thought, and thought,
and fell to tracing the old stories told by the lines on
blind and ceiling.  Chance patterns of bays and estuaries,
continents and rivers, all mapped out there—all more
real to me than those in my atlas.  I remember a land
of blackamoors, a sea of sharks, an island of cannibals,
a desert of lions, in which the little flies figured as
monsters of the wilderness.  Such dreams of deeds
by field and flood I weaved in those grey, gone
mornings to the song of the thrush and the murmur of the
old governor snoring in the next room!  And now—now
I'm smitten with the boy's yearning to speed forth
over the sea of sharks—not after lions, but after gold.
I'm going to justify my existence—in Australia."

"You couldn't go further off if you tried."

"Not well—without slipping over the edge altogether."

"You mustn't do this, Christopher."

"It's done, dearest.  This is only a ghost—an
adumbration that's talking to you.  I ask for my freedom,
Honor—sweetheart Honor.  Thank God we are
humorists both—too sensible to knock our knuckles
raw against iron doors.  You'll be happy to-morrow,
and I the day after.  We mustn't miss more laughter
than we can help in this tearful world.  And friends we
must always be.  That can't be altered."

"I quite understand.  You shall not do this, Christopher.
I love you for suggesting it.  You may go—as
far as London, or where the steamer starts from.  Then
you must come back to me.  You've promised to
marry me."

"Forget it.  I'm in earnest for once.  At least you
must credit that.  There's Mrs. Loveys at the window
calling you to tea.  We'll meet again in a day or two
very likely."

"Don't go; don't go, Christo; I'm so lonely, and
wretched, and——"

But the necessary iron in him cropped up at this hour
of trial.  He hardened his heart and was gone before
she had finished speaking.

.. vspace:: 2

Two days later Honor, who had heard nothing of
Christopher since their last meeting, sent a message to
him.  He returned an evasive answer, which annoyed
her for the space of three days more.  Then, still
finding that he kept at home, she went to seek him there.
Between ten and eleven o'clock one morning she started,
but breaking her bootlace near the outset, returned home
again.  The total delay occupied less than fifteen minutes,
and presently she reached Godleigh to find Mrs. Brimblecombe,
wife of Noah Brimblecombe, the sexton of
Little Silver, on her knees, scrubbing in the porch.  The
charwoman readily desisted from work and answered
Honor's question.

"He kept it that 'mazin' quiet from us all, Miss.  An'
you never told nobody neither.  Gone—gone to foreign
lands, they tell me; an' the place in a jakes of a mess;
an' the new folks comin' in afore Christmas."

As she spoke a dog-cart wound up the steep hill
to Chagford, and a man, turning in it, stopped and
looked long at the grey house in the pines.  Had
anybody walked on to the terrace and waved a
handkerchief, he must have seen the signal; but as Honor
spoke to Mrs. Brimblecombe the trap passed from
sight.

"When did he go?" she asked unguardedly.

"Lard!  Doan't 'e knaw 'bout it—you of all folks?"

"Of course; of course; but not the exact hour."

"Ten minutes agone or less—no more certainly;
an' his heavy boxes was took in a cart last night, I
hear."

Honor hurried on to the terrace and looked at the
road on the hill.  But it was empty.  Mrs. Brimblecombe
came also.

"Sails from Plymouth this evenin', somebody telled
us, though others said he'm gwaine to Lunnon fust;
an' it seems that Doctor Clack knawed, though how a
gen'leman so fond of the moosic of his awn tongue
could hold such a tremenjous secret wi'out bustin' I
can't fathom."

Honor Endicott walked slowly back to Bear Down.
The significance of her own position, as a woman
apparently jilted, did not weigh with her in the least.
She reflected, with a dull ache and deadness, that her
accident, with a delay of ten little minutes resulting
from it, had altered the whole scope and sweep of her
life and another's.  That Christopher Yeoland had
taken his great step with very real difficulty the fact
of his continued absence before it made sufficiently
clear.  He had not trusted himself to see her again;
and now Honor's conviction grew: that her presence
even at the last moment, must surely have broken down
his determination and kept him at home had she so
willed.

She asked herself what she might have done in the
event of that ordeal, and believed that she would have
tried hard to keep him.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE DEFINITE DEED`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XII.


.. class:: center medium bold

   THE DEFINITE DEED

.. vspace:: 2

Life, thus robbed of love for Honor Endicott, was
reduced to a dreary round of mere duties.
Within one fortnight of time these two men, severally
responsible for the music and sunshine of her life, had
departed out of it in a manner perfectly natural,
conventional, and inevitable.  Given the problems that had
arisen, this was the solution to have been predicted.
Mark Endicott, indeed, put it very bluntly to her; but
Honor viewed the tragedy with more tender pity for
her own feelings.  She marvelled in secret at the great
eternal mystery of human affections, at the evolution
of the love instinct, which now, ennobled and sublimated
through the generations of men, had achieved its present
purity and perfection in the civilisation of monogamous
nations; while her uncle told her, in fewer words and
homelier, that between two stools she had fallen to the
ground.

She was supremely miserable through dwindling days,
and each of them to her seemed longer than those of
the summer that was past.  The shadows of two men
often accompanied her lonely rides, and circumstances
or places would remind her of each in turn, would
suddenly stab her into acute suffering as they wakened
the image of Christopher or of Myles in very life-colours.

There came a laugh once, when she overheard Pinsent
and Collins congratulating each other that Bear Down
had not been too precipitate in the purchase of the
wedding "momentum"; but the salt was gone out of
humour for a little while; and with her uncle, at least,
she never laughed at all.  His boundless sympathy was
strained before her wayward unhappiness.  She flew to
paradoxes, contradictions, and whimsical conceits, all
vain, and worse than vain in his judgment.  She
sometimes talked at random with no particular apparent
object save to waken opposition.  But the knitting-needles
ticked placidly through long evenings beside
the glowing peat: and it asked an utterance beyond
measure flagrant to set them tapping, as an indication
that the blind man's patience was exhausted.

About mid-December they sat together in the little
parlour of the kitchen, and Honor, who lolled beside
the fire, employed her pretty fingers upon no more
useful task than playing with a piece of string from
a grocer's parcel.

"What are you doing?" asked Mark suddenly.

"Making cats' cradles," she answered, and won from
him the reproof that such a confession invited.

"How is it you've given up reading of late days?"

"I've sunk into a lazy way.  The lazier you are the
less time there is for anything."

"You ought to read; you've ample leisure to improve
your mind; and ample need to."

"That's just it—the ample leisure.  When I had
Christo to look after, though every precious moment
of the day was full, I could find time for all.  And
that shows a busy man or woman's more likely to see
well after affairs than a leisurely one.  Some men
can actually *make* time, I believe—Myles could.  But
now—through these black, hateful, sunless days—I feel
I'm always wanting to creep off to bed, and sleep, and
forget."

"That's never my brave girl spoke that?"

"I'm not brave; and I'm tired of the awful stores
of things worth knowing collected by people who are
dead.  How the men who wrote books must look back
from the other world and shiver at the stuff they've left
behind them in this—knowing all they know there!
But Myles was right in that.  He used to say he'd
learned more from leaning over gates than from any
books.  And I believe he had."

"He was grounded in solid knowledge by lessons
from wise books to start with.  They taught him to
learn."

"Such a way as he had of twisting everything into
a precept or example!"

"You'd have held that prosy talk presently."

"Speak of sermons in stones!  He found whole
gospels in a dead leaf."

"But you would have grown mighty impatient of all
that after a while."

"Very likely indeed.  And yet I doubt it; for never
being in earnest myself, I admire it in others," she said.

"Never in earnest and never of one mind!  'Tis a
poor character, and I'd not like to hear anybody give
it to you but yourself, Honor."

"With two minds you get light and shade into life—shade
at any rate.  If I hadn't been—but you'll grow
as weary of that as I am.  Yet a woman's days are so
drab if she never changes her mind—all cut and dried
and dead.  Why, every morning I open my eyes and
hope I shall get a new idea.  I love my ideas to jostle
about and fight and shift and change and dance, like
colours in a cloud.  I like to find myself helpless,
shaken, bewildered, clutching at straws.  You don't
understand that, Uncle Mark.  Ideas are the beautiful,
budding flowers of one's thoughts."

"And fixed opinions the roots—or should be.  What's
the value of poor blossoms 'pon the top of a tree when
the storm comes an' puny petals are sent flying down
wind?  You talk foolishness, and you know 'tis foolishness.
Done to vex me, I could almost think.  'Tis your
ideas that make you miserable now.  A feather in a
gale is a stable thing beside you, Honor.  You must
turn to books if only to please me."

She promised to do so presently, but did not keep
her promise; and thus, to little purpose, oftentimes they
talked.  Then a circumstance quite unexpected made
Honor think less of her ill fate and start into new and
lively touch with her existence.  After long intervals it
chanced that some intelligence both of Yeoland and
Stapledon reached Bear Down on the same morning;
and Doctor Clack it was who brought news of his
friend; while information concerning Myles came more
directly from himself.

Doctor Clack dismounted with some parade, and
made his announcement before Honor and her uncle.
That he might perchance move the girl to emotion
troubled him but little, for the physician was a staunch
partisan, and held that Christopher had been very badly
treated.

"A communication from the wanderer," said he.
"Yeoland was leaving Sydney for his kinsman's
up-country place when he wrote six weeks ago.  All is
well with him—at least so he declares, and—what
do you think?  He desires me to join him.  Such a
romantic notion!"

"Well?"

"Well, Mr. Endicott, positively I don't see why I
should not.  Little Silver without Christopher is, frankly,
a howling wilderness from my point of view—a mere
solitary tomb.  And nobody ever ill—nobody ailing—no
opportunities.  When folk do succumb it means the
end of them and the inevitable dose of churchyard
mould—that final prescription none can escape."

"The health of the place is your highest tribute surely."

"Not at all—far from it.  I've nothing to do with
the matter.  Drugs decaying in their vases; steel
rusting in its velvet.  Besides, the loneliness.  A fishing-rod
is but a vain thing to save a man—especially when it's
close time as now; and the new people at Godleigh
haven't asked me to a single shoot.  In fact there's
to be no shooting this year at all.  So my case is
desperate."

"Come and see us oftener," said Mark.

"I will; I positively must; but I think I'll go abroad.
There's a saying that a man who can live quite happily
alone must be one of two things: an angel, or a demon.
Now I'm neither to my knowledge, and since Christo
has vanished I've lived alone, and it's telling on me.  I
shall drift into one of those extremes, and I leave you
to guess which."

"But you're always welcome everywhere, my dear Clack."

"I know it—at least I think so; but there's such fear
of wearing out a welcome in a small place.  Hereditary
modesty, you'll say.  If so, it's on the mother's side, not
the father's.  But, in all seriousness, why should not I
join him?"

"You know your own business best.  Is there money
to be made there?"

"Plenty for a professional man.  They are to have a
qualification of their own, I believe; but at present a
practitioner with English degrees gets the pull—very
right and proper of course.  Thus the old country
drives her sons away; but not before she's arranged
ample accommodation for them elsewhere—God bless
her!  So I'm wise to go—eh?"

"Nothing like seeing the ends of the earth and
enlarging the mind," said Mark.

"Well, don't any of you develop anything in the
nature of an interesting indisposition to tempt me to
stop."

Margery brought in a letter at this moment as the
postman had just penetrated to Bear Down—a feat
he rarely accomplished much before midday.  Doctor
Clack wondered in secret whether her old lover had
also communicated with Honor, but seeing that his own
missive was charged with a general message of goodwill
to all at Endicott's, he suspected the letter came from
elsewhere.

Soon he was gone; then, without comment, Mark's
niece read aloud a brief note from Myles Stapledon.
It did no more than set forth his determination to
return in a fortnight's time.  Reason for the step was
not given, as the writer disdained any excuse.  His
words were bald.  "I will arrive on such a date, if
convenient," he concluded; and Mark Endicott, reading
ahead and reading backwards also, was saddened, even
amazed, as one standing before the sudden discovery of
an unsuspected weakness or obvious flaw in a work he
had rejoiced to believe near perfection.

The stages by which Myles had arrived at the
determination now astonishing Mark Endicott had extended
over three months, and the curtain rose upon his battle
exactly a week after he left the farm, for at that date he
learned how the engagement between Honor and Christopher
was definitely at an end, and how the latter
would be on the sea before his words were read.  The
announcement came from Yeoland himself, and was
written in London on the eve of his departure.  Then
began the fight that ended with a determination to
return, and caused such genuine disappointment in
Mr. Endicott.  Mark, however, forgot the force of the
passion his niece had awakened in this man; and certain
it is that neither he nor any other could have guessed at
the storm which swept Stapledon's soul when he learned
how Honor had regained her freedom.  Soaked as he
was in love, to remain away from Endicott's with this
knowledge for three months had proved no mean task
to Myles.  The battle fought and won with his passion
while it had no right to exist proved but a prelude
to encounters far more tremendous upon Christopher
Yeoland's departure.

There grew within him a web of sophistry spun
through sleepless nights.  This at first, with the
oncoming of morning, he swept away; but, spider-like, and
with a spider's patience, the love in him renewed each
mesh, and asked his conscience a question that his
conscience seemed powerless to answer.  He fought, yet
knew not the name of the foe.  To-day he marvelled at
his own hesitation, and asked himself what still held
him back; to-morrow a shadow of Yeoland shamed his
troubled longings, and the word of Mark Endicott,
"between you is a great gulf fixed," reverberated drearily
upon his thoughts.  Then the cloud castles fell to earth,
and the sanguine glow upon their pinnacles vanished
away.  Yet against that saying of the blind man's every
pulse in his body often throbbed furiously.  He knew
better, and Honor knew better also.  It was not for
nothing that they had walked over the Moor together;
not for nothing they had stood silently, each by the
other's side, on moonlight nights.

Out of darkness Christopher Yeoland sometimes took
shape, but only as an abstraction that grew more misty
with passage of days.  He had gone for all time; and
Honor was left alone.  Myles burnt to know something
of her mind; how much or how little she had forgotten;
how much or how little she wondered at his attitude;
in what she blamed him; whether such blame grew daily
greater or was already fading away—perhaps along with
his own image—in her recollection.

The great apparition of Duty rose.  In the recent
past he had made others supremely unhappy and
tormented himself.  That was over; and now—the slave
of duty from his youth up—he stood in doubt.  For the
first time the man discerned no clear sign-post pointing
to his road.  Wherein lay duty now?  He wearied his
brain with dialectics.  Sometimes duty looked a question
of pure love; sometimes it hardened into a problem of
pure logic.  He would have risked all that he had for
one glimpse of Honor's attitude towards the position;
and finally he decided that his duty lay in ascertaining
that attitude.  This much might very easily be done
without a word upon the vital theme.  He told himself
that a few hours under the same roof with her—the
sound of her voice, the light in her eyes—would tell
him all he needed to know.  He dinned this assurance
upon his own mind; but his heart remained dead, even
before such a determination, and the cloud by no means
lifted itself from off him.  He presented the somewhat
uncommon spectacle of a man trying to deceive himself
and failing.  His natural instincts of justice and probity
thrust Christopher Yeoland again and again into his
thoughts.  He began three letters to the traveller on
three separate occasions, but these efforts ended in fire,
and the letter that was written and posted went to Bear Down.

Through turmoil, tribulation, and deepening of frontal
furrows he reached this step, and the deed done, his
night thickened around him instead of lifting as he had
hoped and trusted.  Perhaps the blackest hour of all
was that wherein he rode through familiar hamlets under
the Moor upon his way to Honor.  Then came the real
sting of the certainty that he had lapsed from his own
lofty rule; and love itself forsook him for a space
beneath Cosdon's huge shadow at sunset time.  He
hastened, even galloped forward to the sight of the
woman; he told himself that in her presence alone
would be found balm to soothe this hurt; and the very
feebleness of the thought fretted him the more.

So he came back, and Chance, building as her custom
is on foundations of the trivial, wrought from his return
the subsequent fabric of all his days.  For out of the
deliberate action, whether begun in laughter or prayer,
whether prompted by desire or inspired by high ambition,
springs issue, and no deed yet was ever barren of
consequence, hidden or revealed.  Never, since conscious
intelligence awakened here, has that invention of the
dunces justified itself—never once has any god from any
chariot of fire descended to cut one sole knot in a tangle
of earthly affairs.  The seeds of human actions are
sown to certain fruition but uncertain crop, and Fate
and Chance, juggling with their growth, afford images
of the highest tragedy this world has wept at; conjure
from the irony of natural operations all that pertains to
sweet and bitter laughter; embrace and environ the
whole apparition of humanity's progress through time.
Life's pictures, indeed, depend upon play of ridiculous
and tragic chance for their rainbow light, for their huge
spaces of formless and unfathomable shadow, for their
ironic architecture, their statuary of mingled mice and
mountains—flung together, fantastic and awful.  In
Titan visions these things are seen by lightning or by
glow-worm glimmer; or sunned by laughter; or rained
upon with tears; or taking such substance and colour as
wings above the reach of either.

Thus, his deed done, through chaos of painful thoughts,
came Myles Stapledon; and then, standing amid the
naked beds of Bear Down garden, he found Honor
Endicott's little hand in his at last.  Whereupon he
whispered to his soul that he had acted wisely, and was
now about to pass from storm into a haven of great peace.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`SNOW ON SCOR HILL`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XIII.


.. class:: center medium bold

   SNOW ON SCOR HILL

.. vspace:: 2

There came a day when Honor and Myles rode
out upon a dry and frozen Moor under the north
wind.  The man, who had brought his own great horse
to Endicott's, now galloped beside Honor's pony, and
the pace warmed them despite the extreme coldness of
the weather.  Presently, upon their homeward way from
Watern's granite castles, they stopped to breathe their
horses, where a ring of horrent stones sprouted abrupt,
uneven, irregular, out of the waste, and lay there, the
mark of remote human activity.  All the valley
presented a stern spectacle unsoftened by any haze,
untouched by any genial note of colour.  The Moor's
great, iron-grey bosom panted for coming snow; and
Teign, crying among her manifold stairways, streaked
the gorges with ghostly foam light, where naked sallows
and silver birches tossed lean arms along the river.
Only the water offered action and sound in the rocky
channels; all else, to the horizon of ashy hills under a
snow-laden sky, waited and watched the north.

Two horses stood steaming in Scor Hill Circle—that
ancient hypæthral high place of the Damnonians—while
their riders surveyed the scene and one another.
Both long remembered the incident, and for them,
from that day forward, the spot was lighted with a
personal significance, was rendered an active and vital
arena, was hallowed by interest more profound than
its mere intrinsic attributes of age and mystery had
formerly imparted to it.

Myles Stapledon did not reach the speedy conclusion
he anticipated upon return to Bear Down.  A
month had now lapsed since his arrival, and, while very
thoroughly assured of his own sentiments, while gulfed
and absorbed, heart and soul, in a transcendent love of
Honor that swept all before it and left him a man of one
hope, one daily prayer, he had yet to learn her explicit
attitude.  His own humility helped to blind him a little
at first, but she made no attempt to disguise her pleasure
in his society, and by her unconventional companionship
and intercourse wakened strong hopes within him.  For
he attached an obvious meaning to many actions, that
had perhaps been conclusive of intention in any other
woman, but were not in Honor.  She went everywhere
with him alone—to Chagford on horseback, to Exeter
by train.  Moreover, she let her cousin do as he would
with the farm, and when he suggested embarking further
capital and acquiring a half interest of all—she made
no personal objection, but consulted Mr. Endicott.  The
inevitable sequel now stared Bear Down in the face, yet,
when his niece put the question to him in private, Mark
refused to give advice.

"That's a point none can well decide but yourself," he
said.  "The future's your own, as far as a human being
can claim such control.  As you act now, so the man
will assume you mean to do afterwards."

"I mean nothing at all but the welfare of the farm
and—you won't advise, then?"

"No.  It looks all cut and dried to me."

Honor stamped her foot like a child.

"Everything's always cut and dried in my hateful life—try
as I will," she said.  Then she swept away, and he
knitted on without visible emotion, though not lacking
an inner sympathy.  For he understood her desire to
escape from the monotonous, and foresaw how this
imminent incident would not bring about that end.
Personally Stapledon had served to brighten his
sightless life not a little, had set new currents running in
his mind, had sweetened back waters grown stagnant by
disuse; for Myles, as Endicott believed, was fine
metal—wise, self-contained even in his love, a sober and
discreet man—super-excellent save in the matter of his
return to Bear Down.  Even there, however, on second
thoughts, Mark did not judge him.  He only felt the
lover to be human, and it was viewed in the character
of a husband for Honor that the old man regarded his
nephew without enthusiasm.  Stapledon's very goodness,
simplicity, and content with rural interests would
suffice to weary the wife he wanted soon or late.  And
Christopher Yeoland must probably return to his home
some day.

Thus he argued, but, meantime, full of hope, and
arriving at a right logical conclusion on a wrong
hypothesis of logical intention in Honor, Stapledon
resolved to speak.  And now, before the beauty of
her, kissed into a sparkle by her gallop, her bosom
rising and falling, a tiny cloud around her lips, caught
and carried away by the wind at each expiration—before
this winter vision his heart found a tongue; and, as they
walked their horses in the grey circle, he spoke.

"It's a strange place this to tell you, yet these things
are out of one's keeping.  I must say it I must.
Honor, do you care for me at all?"

"Of course I care for you."

"Do you love me?"

"Now, dear Myles, please don't say anything to make
me cry in this wind.  Think of the freezing misery of
it!  Please—Please."

"To make you cry!  I hope not—indeed.  I hope
not that.  Yet it's solemn enough—the most solemn
thing a man can say to a woman."

"That's all right, then," she said cheerfully.  "Nothing
solemn ever makes me cry."

He looked bewildered, wistful, and her heart smote
her; but the inopportune fiend would speak.  She
remembered how that Christopher had proposed marriage
in a flippant spirit, while she craved for something
so different.  Here was no frivolous boy in a sunny
wood, but a strong, earnest man under skies full of
snow.  His great voice and his eyes aflame made her
heart beat, but they had no power to alter her mood.

"I love you!" he said simply.  "I loved you long
before I knew it, if you can believe so strange a thing.
I loved you, and, finding it out, I left you and poured
all the bitter blame on myself that I could.  Then I
heard how you had agreed to part.  He was going.  He
went.  And now I stand before you all yours.  You
are unlinked by any tie.  He said so—he——"

"Oh you wretches of one idea!" she burst out,
interrupting him.  "You self-absorbed, self-seeking, selfish
men!  How can I explain?  How can I lay bare my
weaknesses before such superiority?  He was the
same—poor Christo—just the same.  I suppose nearly all
of you must be; and women are frightened to speak
for fear of shocking you.  So we pretend, and win from
you a character for huge constancy that we often deserve
no more than you do.  Why attribute so many virtues
to us that you don't possess yourselves?  Why demand
a single, whole-hearted, utter, ineffable love from us that
not one in a thousand of you can give?"

"All this is nothing to the purpose," he said in a
puzzled voice.  "What can you answer, Honor?

"Well, I'll speak for myself, not for the hosts of
single-hearted women.  I won't tar them with my black
brush.  You want me to marry you, Myles?"

"God knows how dearly."

"And because I love you, you think I ought to marry
you.  Yet if I love somebody else too?  I wish I had
fine words, though perhaps plain ones are better to
describe such an unheroic muddle.  When I told Christo
I loved you—yes, I told him that—he bowed his head
as though he had heard his death knell.  Yet I did not
tell him I loved him less than before."

"You still love him?"

"Of course I do.  Can a quarrel kill a live love?  He
was made for somebody to love him.  And I love
you—love you dearly too.  And I'm not ashamed of it,
however much you may think I should be."

"The end of that?" he said drearily.

"Clear enough.  I've spoilt two lives—no, not all, I
hope, but a part of two lives."

"It is I that have done so," he answered bitterly and
slowly; then he stopped his horse and looked aloft
where scattered flakes and patches of snow began to
float heavily downward from the upper grey.

"No, no, no," said Honor.  "It's just a snappy,
snarling, unkind fate that wills it so.  Two's company, and
three's none, of course."

"Your knowledge is imperfect," he said, "and so your
argument is vain.  If you were a type, the foundation of
civilisation would fail.  Surely no woman worth
thinking of twice can love in two places at once?"

"Then think of me no more," she answered, "for I do—if
I know love at all.  Is not the moon constant to
earth and sun?  A woman can love two men—as easily
as a man can love two women.  You couldn't—I know
that; but you're not everybody.  Most men can.  Christianity
has made a noble, exalted thing of love, and I was
born into the Christian view.  Yet I'm unfortunately a
barbarian by instinct.  Just an accidental primitive
heathen who has cropped up in a respectable family.
You can't alter any particular cranky nature by pruning.
Oh, dear Myles, if I could marry you both!  You for the
working weeks and Christo for Sundays and holidays!"

He merely gasped.

"Yet I love to think you love me.  But you know
what naughty children say when they're crossed?  I
can't have you both, so I won't have either."

"This you say for love of him?"

"Don't trouble to find reasons.  At any rate I'm
speaking the truth.  Should I have confessed to such
a depraved and disgraceful frame of mind to a man I
love if I had not been deadly serious despite laughter?
Hate me, if you must, but I don't deserve it.  I would
marry you and be a good wife too; but there's a sort of
sense of justice hid in me.  Christo noticed it.  So don't
drive me into marriage, Myles dear."

"You love him better than me at any rate?"

"Arithmetic can't be brought to bear upon the
question.  I love you both."

There was a pause; then she added suddenly—

"And if there were a hundred more men like you
and Christopher, I should love them all.  But there are
no more."

"You've got a big heart, Honor."

"Don't be unkind to me.  It's a very unhappy heart."

"It should not be."

"That fact makes it so much the more unhappy."

"Do you know your own mind in this matter?"

"Of course I don't.  Haven't you found that out?"

"It's going to snow," he said.  "We'd better hurry."

"No, walk to the top of the hill; I like it."

"You must be made happy somehow," he continued.
"It's everybody's duty who loves you to make you that,
if it can be done."

"You great, generous thing!  How I wish I could do
what you ask me to; but I should be haunted if I did.
You don't want a haunted wife, Myles?"

"Leave that.  I have spoken and you have answered.
I shall not speak again, for I pay you the respect and
honour to believe your 'No' means no."

"Yes," she said; "you would."  Then she turned away
from him, for her tears were near at last.  "Every flake
lies on the frozen ground.  D'you see how black the
spotless snowflakes look against the sky?  Isn't there
some moral or other to be got out of that, Myles?"

"Why did you let me buy half Endicott's?" he
asked, not hearing her last speech.

"Because you wanted to.  And I wanted some money."

"Money!"

"Yes—I can tell you just at this moment.  It will
help to show you what I am.  I sent a thousand pounds
to Christo."

"He'll never take it!"

"Of course not.  Yet, somehow, it comforted me for
quite two days to send it."

"How we fool ourselves—we who think we stand
firm!  I fancied I was getting to understand you,
Honor, and I knew nothing."

"You'd know everything, and find that everything
was nothing if you weren't in love.  There's nothing to
know beyond the fact that I'm a very foolish woman.
Uncle Mark understands me best.  He must do so,
for he can always make me angry, sometimes even
ashamed."

Snow began to fall in earnest, and fluttered, tumbled,
sidled, scurried over the Moor.  The wind caught it and
swept it horizontally in tattered curtains; the desolation
grew from grey into white, from a spotted aspect, still
lined and seamed with darkness, into prevailing pallor.
The tors vanished; the distance was huddled from
sight; Honor's astrakhan hat caught the snow, and her
habit also.  She shook her head, and shining drops fell
from her veil.  Then Myles went round to ride between
her and the weather, and they hastily trotted down the
hill homeward.

Already a mask of snow had played magic pranks
with the world, reduced known distances, distorted
familiar outlines, brought remote objects close, dwarfed
the scene, and much diminished its true spaciousness.
The old familiar face of things was swallowed by a
new white wilderness, like in unlikeness to the earth it hid.

Early darkness closed down upon the land before
tremendous snow.  Within the farm candles guttered,
carpets billowed, cold draughts thrust chill fingers down
stone passages, and intermittent gusts of wind struck
upon the casement, like reverberations of a distant gun.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE WISDOM OF DR. CLACK`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XIV.


.. class:: center medium bold

   THE WISDOM OF DR. CLACK

.. vspace:: 2

That night, despite the heavy snow, and not averse
from a struggle with the weather, Myles set out,
after supper, for Little Silver, three-quarters of a mile
distant, in the valley beneath Bear Down.  Progress was
difficult, but though snow already stood above Stapledon's
knees in the drifts, he found strength more than
sufficient for the battle, and presently brought a blast of
cold air and a snow wreath into the small dwelling of
Doctor Clack, as he entered without formal announcement.
Courteney Clack—deeply immersed in packing for his
departure—marvelled at the advent of any visitor on
such a night and abandoned his labours.

"Get out of that coat and come to the fire," he said.
"I'm afraid this means something serious, or you wouldn't
have turned out in such a tempest.  Who's ill, and what's
amiss?"

"Nobody—nothing.  I wanted this wild weather
against my face to give me a buffet.  I also want a
talk with you—if I can trespass on your time."

The physician was much relieved to learn that it
would not be necessary for him to go out of doors.

"I sail on Thursday," he said, "but, until that date,
I am, as usual, at the beck and call of all the world.
Sit down and I'll get the necessary ingredients.  Need
I say that I refer to a glass of punch?"

"In six weeks," began Myles abruptly, "you'll be
seeing Christopher Yeoland."

"God willing, that pleasure is in store for me."

Stapledon took out his pipe, and began to fill it
mechanically.

"I want you to do a very delicate thing," he said.
"The task will need even all your tact and skill, doctor.
Yet it happens that if I had to pick a man out of
England, I should have chosen you."

"Now that must be flattery—a mere country apothecary."

"No, it's true—for particular reasons.  You are
Yeoland's best friend."

"A proud privilege.  I have his word for it."

"And, therefore, the man of all others to tackle him.
Yet it's not to your personal interest either.  I'll be
frank.  That is only fair to you.  In the first place, what
was the position between Miss Endicott and your friend
when he finally left here?"

"Well, Stapledon, I suppose you've the right to ask,
if anybody has; and not being blind, I can't speak the
truth, perhaps, without hurting you.  The rupture was
pretty complete, I fancy—final in fact.  I didn't know
whether to be glad or sorry.  Miss Honor is a girl who
wants a tight hand over her.  I say it quite respectfully,
for her good—and yours."

"Don't drag me in, Clack.  The point is that she still
loves Yeoland.  That's what I came here to explain to
you.  It is right that he should know it, and you are the
man to tell him.  The information must come from
yourself, remember—from nobody else.  The point is,
how are you to be furnished with proofs?"

"Are you sure there exist proofs?  Is it true?"

"She told me so herself."

Doctor Clack had little difficulty in guessing at the
nature of the conversation wherein such a confession
had made a part.  He was impulsive, and now did a
thing that a moment's reflection had left undone.  He
stretched out his hand and gripped Stapledon's.

"I'm sorry," he said.  "You have my sincere sympathy.
Forgive me if I offend."

Myles flushed, and as the other had been surprised
into sudden speech, so now was he.  Indeed he answered
most unexpectedly, on the spur of the moment, stung
thereto by this assault on self-esteem.

"You mistake!" he answered.  "She loves me also."

Doctor Clack whistled.

"How spacious!  These times are really too cramped
for such a girl.  This is the sort of knot that could be
cut so easily in mediæval days; but now the problem is
most difficult.  You want to drop out of the running in
favour of Christo?  Carlyle says that the heroic slumbers
in every heart.  It woke in Yeoland's when he turned
his back on Little Silver and everything that made life
worth living for him.  Now it wakes in you."

"I do not want her life to be made a lonely, wretched
thing by any act of mine."

"Of course not."

"We must save her from herself."

"Ah, that means that she has announced a determination
not to marry at all."

"Yes.  We are both so much to her that she cannot
marry either."

The doctor smothered a smile—not at Stapledon's
speech, but before the monumental sternness with which
he uttered it.

"How characteristic!"

"Against that, however, I have the assurance that she
does not know her own mind.  Women, I think, if I
may say so without disrespect and upon slight
experience, are very contradictory.  Miss Endicott has not
been in the habit of analysing her emotions.  Not that
she is not lucidity itself.  But—well, if he were here
and I—if I were out of the way—I only want her
happiness.  It seems to lie there.  He must come back
to her.  I can't say all I feel about this, but you
understand."

"You're set on her happiness.  Very altruistic and
all the rest; but I'm afraid she's not built for it.  To
get happiness into her life will be difficult.  Too
humorous to be happy, don't you think?  Omar al
Khattab remarks, very wisely, that four things come
not back to man or woman.  They are the spoken
word, the sped arrow, the past life, and the neglected
opportunity.  She sent Yeoland about his business.
Now there is a sort of love that won't brook cruelty of
that pattern."

"Cruelty's too big a word for it.  She called it a
lover's quarrel herself.  Eliminate me, and judge whether
the spoken word might not be retrieved and forgotten if
he came back to her again."

"Of course improbability's the only certainty with a
woman.  Don't fancy I'm letting my own interest stand
in the way.  I, too, in common with all human clay,
contain the germ of the heroical.  I'll tell Christo
everything; that he still has half—is it half or a lesser or
greater fraction?—of Miss Honor Endicott's heart.
Here we are—three able-bodied men: you, Christo, and
myself.  Well, surely with a little expenditure of brain
tissue we can—eh?  Of course.  One of you chaps is
the obstacle to the other.  You pull her heart different
ways.  She is suspended between your negative and
positive attractions like a celestial body, or a donkey
between two bundles of hay.  So you both go free.
Now, if one of you heroes could only find comfort in
another woman such a circumstance might determine—you
follow me?"

"Her happiness?"

"Not so much her happiness as her destination.
Well, I'll urge upon Yeoland the advisability of coming
home; I'll tell him how things stand, and of course keep
you out of it."

"She would be happier with him than with me: that's
the point."

"Say rather: that's the question.  He may not think
so.  I don't want to flatter you, but I don't think so
myself.  There is that in Christo not usually associated
with the domestic virtues.  He and I are bachelors by
instinct—natural, unsophisticated beasts, in no sense
educated up to the desirable and blessed, but extremely
artificial, state of matrimony.  You, on the contrary, are
a highly trained creature with all your emotions under
your own control, and capable of a consistent unselfishness
in the affairs of life which is extremely rare in the
male animal.  No; merely considered as a husband,
Christo would not have a look in with you—could
hardly expect to get a vote—certainly not mine."

"He might make a better husband for Honor."

"Not for any woman."

"Don't tell him so, if you think it."

"Leave me to do what I deem wise.  Like you, I'm
solely actuated with a desire to brighten Miss Endicott's
life.  But you must not dictate my line of action.  My
judgment is not wont to be at fault."

"I know that very well.  This great cause is safe in
your hands.  Put it first.  Put it first, before everything.
You can't feel as I do, and as Yeoland must; but you're
a man of very wide sympathy—that's to say a man
of genius more or less.  And you're his first
friend—Yeoland's, I mean; so for his sake—and hers——"

"And yours—yes.  I shall glory in bringing this
matter to an issue—happy for choice, but definite at
any rate—if only to prove all your compliments are not
vain.  Light your pipe and drink, and fill your glass
again."

"No more—perfect punch—perfect and very warming
to the blood."

"Your punch-maker, like your poet, is born.  The
hereditary theory of crime, you know."

"Now I must get up the hill.  And thank you, Clack.
You've lightened my anxiety, I think.  We shall meet
again before you go?"

"Certainly—unless you are all snowed up at Bear
Down.  Good-night!  Gad!  I hope nobody will want
me!  Not my weather at all."

The storm screamed out of the darkness.  Beyond a
narrow halo of light from Courteney Clack's open door
all was whirling snow and gloom; and through it, his
head down, Stapledon struggled slowly back to the farm.

The significance of his own position, the bitterness of
his defeat, the nature of his loss, and the gnawing sting
of suffering had yet to come.  This effort to ameliorate
the lonely life of Honor by bringing Yeoland back into
it was indeed laudable; but mere consciousness of
right has no power to diminish the force of great
blows or obliterate the awful meaning of a reverse in
love.  His future stretched desolate as the weather
before Myles Stapledon, and these physical exercises
under the storm, together with his attempts on behalf
of others, might serve to postpone, but could not
diminish by one pang, the personal misery in store for him.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`SUN DANCE`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XV.


.. class:: center medium bold

   SUN DANCE

.. vspace:: 2

On the morning of Easter Sunday, some three
months after the departure of Doctor Clack from
Little Silver, certain labouring men in their best
broadcloth ascended Scor Hill at dawn.  Jonah Cramphorn,
Churdles Ash, Henry Collins, and the lad Tommy
Bates comprised this company, and their purpose was
to behold a spectacle familiar and famous in ancient
days but unheeded and little remembered at the period
of these events.  Ash had attracted the younger men to
see the sun dance on Easter morn, and of those who
accompanied him, Mr. Cramphorn was always willing to
honour a superstition, no matter of what colour; Collins
came to gain private ends; while the boy followed
because he was promised a new experience.

"T'others may go to the Lard's Table for their bite
an' sup, an' a holy act to theer betterment no doubt,"
declared Churdles; "but, for my paart, 'tis a finer deed
to see the gert sun a-dancin' for sheer joy 'pon
Resurrection Marnin', come it happen to be fine.  A butivul day,
sure enough, an' the elements all red an' blue, like the
Saviour's clothes in the window-glasses to church."

Mr. Ash's dim eyes scanned the sweetness of an April
sky, and the party moved onward to the crown of the
hill.  Through pearly dews they went, and passed
forward where the soft, green mantle of on-coming spring
hung like a veil on hedgerows and over wild waste
places.  A world stretched before them lighted by the
cold purity of spotless dawn, and the day-spring,
begemmed with primrose stars, was heralded by thrushes
in many a dingle, by the lark on high.  As yet earth lay
in the light that is neither sunshine nor shadow, but out
of the waxing blue above, from whence, like a shower,
fell his tinkling rhapsody, one singing bird could see
the sun, and himself shone like a little star.

To the upland heath and granite plodded these
repositories of obsolescent folk-lore; and they talked as
they went, the better to instil Collins and the boy
with a proper understanding in the matter of those
superstitions a scoffing generation agreed to disregard.
Henry, on his part, felt more than uneasy, for he much
doubted the sanctity of this present step.  But love was
responsible; Collins pined for Sally in secret, and his
great desire to conciliate Mr. Cramphorn was such that,
when Jonah invited him to the present observation, he
undertook at once to be of the party.  Now he
recollected that he had also promised the vicar to go to the
Sacrament that morning.

"You must knaw," said Churdles Ash to Tommy,
"that this holy season be a gert time for signs an'
wonders up-along an' down-along.  I tell 'e these things,
'cause you'm a young youth, an' may profit an' hand
'em on to your childern in fulness of time.  Theer be
Gude Friday—a day of much vartue, I assure 'e.  Not
awnly the event o' the Lard's undoing by they bowldacious
Jews, but the properest for plantin' vegetables in
the whole of the year."

"An' the best for weanin' of childern," said Mr. Cramphorn.
"Sally was weaned 'pon that day, an' went
straight to cow's milk so natural an' easy as a born calf;
an' look at her now!"

Mr. Collins sighed deeply.

"Butivulest gal in Debbensheer, I reckon," he said.

Jonah grunted assent, and Henry, feeling the moment
for a certain vital question had arrived, mopped his wet
brow and tremulously approached the matter.

"Fall back a pace or two, will 'e, maister?  Your
darter—I daresay you might have seed as I was a bit
hit in that quarter?"

"I've seed it, I grant you.  I'm all eyes wheer my
gals be consarned."

"These things caan't be helped.  I mean no disrespect,
I'm sure.  'Tis the voice of nature in a man."

"I'm sorry for 'e, Henery."

"For that matter I couldn't wish myself out o' the
evil, though 'tis perplexin' an' very onrestful to my head.
I be mazed when I consider how a man of my modest
way could think twice 'bout a rare piece like Sally.
Never seed such a wonnerful strong arm 'pon any woman
in all my born days."

Jonah frowned and shook his head.

"Never mind her paarts.  Don't become you or any
man to name a limb of her separate from the rest.
Baan't respectful!"

"Then I'm sorry I said it.  An' as for respectfulness,
I'd go on my bended knees to her to-morrow."

"Have you?" inquired the parent.  "That's the
question.  Have 'e axed her an' got a answer?"

"Not for the world," stammered Henry.  "Not for the
world afore gettin' your leave.  I knaw my plaace
better."

Mr. Cramphorn's nose wrinkled as though it had
caught an evil odour.

"Bah!  You say that!  You'm so chicken-hearted
that you come to me 'fore you go to she!  Then I
sez 'No.'  I forbids you to speak a word of the matter,
for I reckon your way be more tame an' soft than the
likes of her or any other high-spirited female would
suffer."

"You'm tu violent—I swear you be," protested Mr. Collins.
"You'd have been the fust to blame me if I'd
spoke wi'out axin' you.  Besides, caan't a man talk apart
from usin' his tongue in this matter?  I've a looked at
her time an' again wi' all the power of the eye.  Theer's
a language in that, an' she knawed what I meant, or I'm
a fule."

"Theer be such a language for sartain," admitted
Jonah; "but not for you.  No more power o' speech in
your gert eyes than a bullock's—I don't mean as it's to
be counted any fault in you, but just the will of Nature.
An' so enough's said."

"Quick!  Run, the pair of 'e!" cried Tommy's voice.
"Her's risin' nigh the edge o' Kes Tor Rock all copper-red!"

Cramphorn quickened his pace, and Collins, now
merged in blank despair, strode alter him.  Together
they approached Mr. Ash, and joined the aged man upon
a little granite elevation at the south-eastern extremity
of Scor Hill.  Below them, a watercourse, now touched
to fire, wound about the shoulder of the elevation; and
beneath, much misty, new-born verdure of silver birch
and sallow, brightened the fringe of fir woods where
Teign tumbled singing to the morning.

Over against the watchers, lifted above a grey glimmer
of ruined Damnonian hut villages and primæval pounds,
there towered the granite mass of Kes Tor, and from
the distant horizon arose the sun.  He bulked enormous,
through the violet hazes of nightly mist that now
dwindled and sank along the crowns of the hills; then
the effulgent circle of him, ascending, flashed forth clean
fire that flamed along unnumbered crests and pinnacles
of far-flung granite, that reddened to the peaty heart
each marsh and mire, each ridge and plane of the
many-tinted garment that endued the Moor.

Silently the labourers watched sunrise; then was
manifested that heliacal phenomenon they had come to
see.  A play of light, proper to the sun at ascension, ran
and raced twinkling round his disc; and, like an empyreal
wheel, the blazing star appeared to revolve and spin
upon its upward way.

"He be dancin'!  He be dancin', now!" declared
Mr. Ash.

"For sure, if I could awnly keep the watter out o' my
eyes," added Jonah; while Collins, by his comment,
reflected personal tribulations and exhibited an impatient
spirit in presence of this solemn display.

"I've seed un shimmer same as that scores o' times
on working-days," he said sourly.

"Granted—in a lesser fashion; but not like he be
doin' now.  He knaws as the Lard o' Hosts leapt forth
from the tomb to the biddin' of cherub angels 'pon this
glad marnin'—nobody knaws it better than him.  An',
for all his size, he'm as giddy an' gay an' frolicsome by
reason of it, as the high hills what hop in the Psalms
o' David."

Thus speaking, Gaffer Ash regarded the source of
light with a benignant and indulgent smile.

"An' us all did ought to feel the same, I'm sure,"
moralised Jonah Cramphorn, wiping the tears from his
eyes and blinking at a huge red spot now stamped upon
his retina and reproduced in varying size against
everything which he regarded.  "For my part I hold that not
a heathen in the land but ought to rise into a gude
Christian man afore that gert act."

They waited and watched until the growing glory
defied their vision; then all started to return
homewards, and both the elder men declared themselves
much refreshed, invigorated, and gladdened by what
they had seen.  Each, inspired by the incident,
occupied himself with time past and matters now grown
musty.  They related stories of witches and of ghosts;
they handled omens, and callings, and messages from
dead voices heard upon dark nights; they explained
the cryptic mysteries hidden in hares and toads, in stars,
in 'thunder-planets,' and the grasses of the field.  They
treated of turning stones against an enemy; of amulets
to protect humanity from the evil eye; of ill-wishing
and other magical misfortunes; of oil of man; and of
the good or sinister forces hidden in wayside herbs.

"'Tis the fashion 'mongst our young school-gwaine
fules to laugh at auld saws an' dark sayings because
theer teachers laugh at 'em; but facts doan't change,
though manners may," said Mr. Cramphorn.  "Theer's
witches descended from Bible witches, same as theer be
saints an' 'postles comed from laying on of hands.  An'
Cherry Grepe's of 'em; she doan't want for power yet,
or my brain be no better'n tallow.  I seed Chowne's
oxen charmed into gude health again, an' gerter wonders
than that onder my awn eyes.  Ten shillin' she had of
mine—" he added, lowering his voice for the ear of
Mr. Ash alone—"ten shillin' to bring harm 'pon
Christopher Yeoland.  An' she drawd a circle against un
before my faace an' done a charm wi' wax an' fire.
''Twill all act presently,' she said; and act it did, as
you knaw, for he'm crossed in love, an' a wanderer 'pon
the faace of the airth, like Cain at this minute; an' worse
to come, worse to come."

Mr. Ash looked very uneasy.

"I could wish as you hadn't told me that," he
answered.  "You'm allus lickin' your lips on it, an' I'd
rather not knaw no more.  Ban't a pleasant side o' your
carater."

Shouts from Tommy interrupted Churdles, and all
looked where the boy pointed—to see some white object
vanish under a gate before their eyes.  As for himself,
heedless of Cramphorn's loud warning, Tommy Bates
picked up a stone and ran after the object.

"'Ful to me!" cried Cramphorn, "did 'e see it—a
rabbit as I'm a sinful man!"

"The white coney o' Scor Hill!  An' that's death
wi'in the year to some wan us knaws!  Fegs!  A bad
business for sartain."

"Death inside the week," corrected Jonah solemnly.
"It may have awvertook some poor neighbour a'ready."

"Or it may be ordained for wan of ourselves," murmured
Mr. Ash gloomily.

"I wish to Christ I'd gone to church then!" burst out
Collins.  "For it's been a cruel hard marnin' for me
from time I rose, sun dance or no sun dance; an' now to
cap it wi' this gert, hidden calamity, an' death in the
wind."

"Sure as night follows day," declared Churdles Ash.

The love-sick Collins tramped on his way without
further speech; Tommy did not return from pursuit of
the apparition, and Ash argued with Cramphorn as to
who might now be numbered with the majority.  Upon
this delicate point they could by no means agree; and
they were still wrangling as to the identity of their
ill-starred acquaintance when a man met them hard by
the main entrance of Bear Down, and they saw that it
was Myles Stapledon.

After Doctor Clack's departure and within a few days
of the scene in gathering snow upon Scor Hill, Myles
had left Endicott's and taken him rooms at Little Silver,
in the dwelling of Noah Brimblecombe, sexton to the
parish.  This man owned a pleasant abode somewhat
greater than a cottage—an establishment the bulk of
which its possessor annually under-let to advantage in
the summer months.  Hither came the rejected, his
plans for the future still unformed.  And here he
dwelt for three long months and laboured like a giant
to crush the agony of his spirit, the black misery of
every waking hour.  Bear Down once thoroughly
invigorated by his capital and improved by his
knowledge, he determined to leave; but while work still
remained to do he stopped at the gates of the farm
and exercised a painful self-control.  Honor he saw
not seldom, but the former friendship, while still
quite possible for her, was beyond the power of the
man.  She pitied him, without wholly understanding;
and very sincerely pitied herself in that circumstances
now deprived her not a little of his cherished society.
The difficulty lay in her attitude towards him.  To
behave as one who loved him was impossible under
the constraint that now hedged him in; so she attempted
to imitate his manner, and failed.  A great awkwardness
and unreality characterised present relations, and Honor
found in these circumstances ample matter for mental
distraction, if only of a painful nature; while Stapledon
waited for the season of spring to finish his labours,
and counted that each post might bring some message
from Christopher.

To-day he had news definite and tremendous enough
The last of the Yeolands was coming back to his
fathers—that he might sleep amongst them; for he was dead.

With a face darkened, Myles asked Cramphorn where
he might find Mr. Endicott, and Jonah, seeing that
something was amiss, himself made an inquiry.

"Maister Mark be in the garden most likely.  An'
what ill's walkin' now, sir, if a man may ax?  Theer's a
black story in your faace as you caan't hide."

"Black enough," said Stapledon shortly.  "You'll
know in good time."

He passed by and left them staring.

"That dratted white rabbit!" murmured Mr. Ash;
while the messenger of sorrow approached Mark, where
he walked up and down under the walls of the farm,
beside uprising spikes of the orange-lilies and early
growth of other things that stood along his way.

"You, Stapledon?  Good morning.  There's the feel
of fine weather on my cheek."

Above them a window, set in cherry-buds, stood
open, and within Honor, who had just returned with
her uncle from a celebration of the Lord's Supper, was
taking off her hat at her looking-glass.

"Good morning, uncle.  I've brought some awfully
sad and awfully sudden news.  Here's a letter from
Clack.  I rode early to Chagford about another
letter I expected, and found this waiting, so saved the
postman.  Christopher Yeoland—he has gone—he is dead."

"Dead!  So young—so full of life!  What killed him?"

"Died of a snake-bite near Paramatta.  It's an
orange-growing district near Sydney, so the doctor
says.  He was there with his cousin—an old settler—a
survivor from a cadet branch of the family, I fancy.
And it seems that it was Yeoland's wish to lie at
home—his last wish."

"Then no doubt Clack will look to it.  Gone!  Hard
to credit, very hard to credit."

"I'm thinking of Honor.  It will be your task to tell
her, I fear.  My God!  I can't believe this.  I had hoped
for something so different.  She loved him—she loved
him still."

"Is there any reason why she should not read the
letter?" asked Mr. Endicott.

"None—not a line she need not see.  It is very
short—cynically short for Clack.  He was probably dazed
when he wrote; as I am now."

"Give it to me, then.  I will go up to her at once.
Yes, I must tell her—the sooner the better."

But Honor Endicott knew already.  She had heard
through her casement, and stood like a stone woman
staring up into the blue sky when Mark knocked at
her door.

"Come in, uncle," she said; and then continued, as he
entered groping, "I have heard what you want to say.
So you are spared that.  Give me the letter and I will
read it to you."

"You know!"

"My window was open.  I could not choose but hear,
for the first word chained me.  Christo is dead."

He held out the letter and left her with it; while she,
as yet too shocked to see or feel beyond the actual
stroke, read tearlessly.

And, gazing with the eye of the mind through those
great spaces that separated her from this tragedy, she
saw her old lover again, remembered his joy of life,
heard his laughter, and told herself that she had killed
him.

.. vspace:: 2

Below, in the kitchen, all Bear Down assembled about
breakfast.  Then Mark Endicott told the company this
news, and unutterable glances passed between Ash,
Cramphorn, and Collins.

"You'd best to keep dumb 'bout your share, Jonah,"
muttered Churdles under his breath, with round eyes
that indicated aversion.  "I wouldn't say the law
mightn't overget 'e, if it knawed."

"As to that, I fear nothin', an' the tears I shed won't
drown a midge," answered the other in a defiant whisper.
"I've forgived his wrong; forget it I never shall."

Collins was busy telling Sally and Margery of the
spectral rabbit.

"An' 'tis plain the ill-convenient beast didn't run for
nought.  Who shall laugh at such deeds now?  Not
the vainest man amongst us," he concluded.

"Him of all to go!" sighed Mrs. Loveys; "an' when
us thinks of what might have been an' how one short
word will make or mar a life——"

Then a question from Margery as to where Tom
Bates might be was answered by the sudden appearance
of that youth, and Mrs. Loveys, with a mind
somewhat overwrought, found outlet for emotion in
an attack upon him.

"Doan't 'e knaw the hour for eatin', you ugly li'l
twoad?" she demanded sharply.  "An' to come to the
table in such a jakes of a mess tu!  You ought to be
shamed."

But the boy paid no heed.  He returned breathless
with a comforting discovery, and now cried it aloud
to his companions of the morning.

"'Tis all right," he said; "no call for no upstore nor
trouble at all.  That theer white bastey I mean.  I
followed un half a mile to the furze meadows down-long
to make sartain, then I lost un, an' presently if I didn't
see un again—wi' a young rabbit he'd catched!  Nought
but that baggerin' auld ram cat as they've got to Creber
Farm!"

"Quiet! you young fule!" said Mr. Cramphorn
roughly; "shut your mouth, will 'e? or I'll scat 'e
awver the ear-hole!  You to pit your green brains
against our ripe wans!  A man be dead, an' so 'tis
sartain us seed what us seed."

"Sartain as doom us seed what us seed," echoed
Gaffer Ash, "for a man be dead."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A SHELF OF SLATE`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XVI.


.. class:: center medium bold

   A SHELF OF SLATE

.. vspace:: 2

A blackbird, with sleepy notes and sad, warbled
in a green larch at dawn; and the pathos proper to
his immemorial song was well suited to the scene.  For
the larch raised her lovely foliage, begemmed with rubies,
above many graves in the burying-place of Little Silver;
and a streamlet also murmured there, uttering a sort
of purring harmony that mingled with the contralto
of the bird.  From an ivy-tod, at hand in the
grave-yard hedge, bright eyes peeped and the mother, with
head and tail alone visible and sooty-brown body
pressed close upon four eggs, listened to her lord.
Elsewhere a man also heard the music, but heeded
it not.  He stood at his house door, yawned and
sniffed the morning; while his whitewashed walls that
faced the east were warmed into a glowing melon
colour, and sunshine wove golden threads along the
ancient straw of the thatch above.

Noah Brimblecombe, the sexton, was a man of middle
age, with grey whiskers, clean-shaved lips and chin, a
strong mouth, and a reflective forehead.  His back had
grown rounded by digging of graves from early manhood,
and the nature of his life's labours appeared in
a tinge of gloom that marked his views.  He passed
through the world with an almost morbid severity in
his disparagement of all mundane concerns, triumphs
or possessions.  The man now stood and fixed his small
grey eyes upon the church, but little more than a
hundred yards distant.  Then, bearing great keys in
one hand, an inch or two of candle in the other, he
proceeded to the burying-ground upon an errand
connected with his calling.

Little Silver is a hamlet of almost beggarly simplicity.
In the midst stands a trinity of three great buildings
beneath the bosom of a hill; certain ruined barns, with
a few thatched cots and a pound, embrace the remainder
of the village; while a duck-pond outside the churchyard
gate, orchard lands sloping to the valleys beneath,
a little winding road and a stone wall, beside which
grow yellow bullace plums, complete the picture.
Variety in form and wide divergence in point of age
characterise the central features of this spot.
Paramount, by virtue of years and pristine significance,
stand the ruins of Little Silver Castle; the church
comes next—an erection of the customary moorland
pattern, with a ring of small, sweet-toned bells, and a
crocketted tower, something too tall for its breadth;
while, between these two, there stands an old-time
manor-house—empty as the ruined castle at the date
of this narrative; but more recently repaired for habitation.
Here spread the familiar theatre of Mr. Brimblecombe's
life.  Every stone of the old fourteenth-century
castle was familiar to him, and he delighted to take
chance visitors of antiquarian taste upward by a winding
stair into the time-fretted, ivy-mantled abode of the
lords of Little Silver.  Now the sky was its covering;
the lancet windows, through which once frowned
war-like faces behind crossbow, matchlock, or petronel, were
the dwelling of a thousand soft green things and framed
the innocent eyes of wild flowers; in the upper chamber
rowans stood rooted upon old hearthstones; briar and
many grasses, pellitory of the wall and blue speedwells
superseded bygone mural tapestries; and where antlers
of the red deer hung and brazen sconces for the torch
aforetime sprang, there now rose the fronds of
hart's-tongue and shield ferns, with tangle of woodbine and
ivy and networks of rootlets that hid the mossy homes
of wrens.  Beneath the ruin there still existed a
dungeon-vault, gloomy and granite-groined; yet, save for broken
wall and stairway, perfect as when poor wretches
mouldered there at the mercy of their feudal masters.
Now not so much as one spectre of a vanished sufferer
haunted the place; only the bats passed their sleeping
hours among the arches of the roof, and hung from
five-clawed hands, with sinister, wrapped wings—like little
dusky cherubim that worship with veiled faces at some
mystery-seat of evil.

Mr. Brimblecombe was not concerned with castle or
with church at the present time.  His eye roamed
forward to a ponderous mausoleum that lay amid lush
grasses and rank, sappy, umbelliferous plants in a corner
of the churchyard.  A conical yew tree flanked each
angle, and the larch, whereon a blackbird sang, extended
high overhead.  Here stood the vault of the Yeolands,
and the last six generations of them slept within, for no
further accommodation existed under the church flags,
where earlier members of the race lay jowl to jowl with
their historic enemies, the Prouzes.  The family tomb
was of granite, with white marble tablets upon three
sides and a heavy metal door in the fourth or eastern
face.  Above grinned decoration of a sort, and the
architect, following sepulture fashions at that date, had
achieved a chaplet of marble skulls, which Time was
toying with from year to year.  Now their foreheads,
their crowns, and occiputs were green and grimy; their
eyes and jaws were stuffed with moss; trailing toad-flax
crept out of their noses; and stray seeds, bird-planted,
hung bright blossoms above them in summer-time.

Hither came Brimblecombe, and his feet stamped over
the graves of many more dead than the mounds of the
churchyard indicated.  A young man, the sexton's
assistant, sat and smoked among the marble skulls,
waiting for his master there; and now he rose, put out
his pipe, and gave Noah "Good morning."  A moment
later the blackbird had fled with a string of sharp
ejaculations, for a harsh note grated upon the air as the
sexton turned his key in the Yeoland vault door.  A
flood of light from the risen sun streamed in where,
"sealed from the moth and the owl and the flitter-mouse,"
lay the dead.  A few giant woodlice rushed to
concealment before this shattering incursion of sunshine,
and other curling, crawling things made like haste to
disappear.  Then Brimblecombe's blinking eyes
accommodated themselves to the inner gloom.  Two ledges of
slate lay on each side of the mortuary, and coffins, whose
nails had long turned green, poked head and feet from
rotting palls upon three of these.  The place struck
very cold, with a fungus smell.  A few puny fragments
of asplenium found life amid the interspaces of the
stone-work and lived dismally in the dark where damp oozed
and granite sweated.  The fourth ledge bore a coffin
that held Christopher Yeoland's father, and its pall had
as yet resisted the decaying influences of this gloomy
spot, for only a few round circles of mould dimmed the
lustre of the velvet.

It was the custom of the family that the last four of
their dead should lie here upon these shelves; but now
another needed his place and the most ancient of the
four—a matron who had flourished in the first George's
days—was to be deposed and lowered into the charnel
below.  Brimblecombe moved an iron grating in the
floor; then, with his assistant's help, carried a slight
and much tarnished shell to its place in the ultimate
desolation beneath.

"'Tis awful how the watter gains down here," declared
Noah.  "Small wonder them ducks of Mother Libby's
do graw to be so heavy.  They gets the very cream an'
fatness of the churchyard into 'em, an' 'tis a'most a
cannibal act to eat 'em."

"'Tis lucky this here gen'leman's last of his race
seemin'ly," said the younger man, raising a candle above
his head and spitting among the coffins; "for theer
ban't no more room to bury a beetle.  Full up above an'
below by the look of it."

"Last of his line—'tis so—an' comed of gude havage[#]
as ever a man need to boast on.  A poor end to such a
high family.  Just a worm stinged un an' he'm falled
into lifeless dust, no better than the founder of the race.
To think this heap o' rags an' bones be all that's left of
a mighty folk as was."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: noindent small

[#] Havage = ancestry.

.. vspace:: 2

"An' not a Yeoland left to carry on the name, they
tell me."

"Not wan, Sam Reed; not a single bud left to bloom.
Auld tree be dead of sheer age, I reckon, for 'tis with
families as with nations, as parson said 'pon the Sunday
after auld Jarvis died.  They rise up gradual an' slow to
theer high-watter mark; then, gradual or fast, they
tumble back into the dust wheer they started.  All
dust—nations an' men like you an' me—all draws our life an'
power from dust—airth, or gold, or grass, or what not.
An' awnly lookin' 'pon the whole story of a man or
a family when 'tis told to the end, can you say wheer
'twas it reached the high-watter mark an' measure the
sum weight of the gude or bad to be set against its
name.  Do you take me?"

Young Reed nodded.

"In paart I do," he said.

"Very well, then.  Now I be gwaine to my meal."

Having made all ready for a new-comer, as yet upon
the sea, Mr. Brimblecombe locked up the Yeoland vault
again.  He then walked to a rubbish heap at the back
of the church behind the tower, there deposited the rags
of a pall taken from the coffin that he had just deposed,
and so returned home.

At his door stood Stapledon, smoking a pipe before
breakfast; indeed of late Myles had fallen much upon
tobacco and the company of his horse and dogs.  But
neither narcotic nor the trustful eyes of the dumb
animals he loved possessed power to lighten loads that
now weighed upon his heart.  They lay beyond the
alleviation of drug or the affectionate regard of beasts.
This sudden death had shocked him immeasurably, and
in process of time he began to accuse himself of it and
saddle his conscience with the self-same deed that
Honor had instantly committed to her own account on
hearing the ill tidings.  Stapledon felt that he was sole
cause of the disastrous catastrophe; that by blundering
blindly into the united lives of this woman and man he
had destroyed the one and blackened all the future days
of the other.  Before this spectacle, very real, very bitter
contrition and self-accusation overwhelmed him.  And
that the lash fell vainly rendered its sting the greater.
But he could not punish himself adequately, and at
length even remorse fainted before the sure knowledge
that Yeoland was beyond all reach of prayer or petition.
Stapledon's was not a nature that could grieve for long
over an evil beyond possibility of cure.  In any sort of
future he disbelieved; yet, if such existed, then there
might be time in it for Christopher Yeoland to settle
with him.  Meanwhile, a living, suffering woman
remained.  He thought without ceasing of Honor, he asked
himself by how much this event altered his duty with
regard to her, and finally determined, through turmoil
of sleepless nights and much torture of the mind, to do
as he had already determined before this sad news came,
and leave Bear Down when certain buildings were
completed and the new stock purchased.

For some weeks he had seen nothing of Honor, and
purposely abstained from seeking her.  Concerning her,
however, he had learnt from Sally Cramphorn, who
described how the mistress kept her room for two days
from Easter Sunday, how she had then reappeared,
dressed in mourning, and how that ever since she had
spent most of her time with Mr. Endicott, and
preserved an unusual silence.  For nearly three weeks
Honor did not pass beyond her garden; and this fact
confirmed Stapledon in a suspicion that she had so
acted and avoided the land to escape from sight of him.
He felt such a desire natural in her, and only wondered
that she had not known him well enough to rest assured
he would not seek her or cross her path.

Then he learned that the girl was going from home
for a while to visit an aunt at Exeter; and, once
assured of her departure, he hastened to Bear Down
and won a lengthy conversation with Mark Endicott.
Women were at work in the kitchen; so, setting down
his needles and worsted, Mark walked out of doors,
took the arm Myles offered, and moved with him
slowly along the hillside.  They spoke first of
Christopher Yeoland.

"I can't believe it yet somehow.  A man so full of
life and possibilities, with all the world before him to do
some good in.  A sad death; a cruel death."

"As to that, I don't know," answered the elder.
"He's out of earshot of our opinions now, poor fellow;
but I'm not ashamed to say behind his back what I
told him to his face more than once.  Never a man
played a poorer game with his time.  'Tis the life of
him looks sad and cruel to me—not the death."

"So young as he was."

"What's that?  Only a woman would be soft enough
to mourn there.  'Tisn't the years of a man's life that
matter, but the manner of living 'em.  The length of
the thread's no part of our labour—only the spinning
of it.  He went—poor soul—but left no ball of yarn
behind him—nought but a tangle of broken ends and
aimless beginnings.  'Tis the moral sticking out of this
I speak for—not to blame the man.  God knows I don't
judge him unkindly.  My youth was no better
spent—maybe not so well."

Stapledon's mind continued to be occupied by the
former figure.

"The spinning—yes, the spinning," he said.  "That's
a true saying; for, if you look at it, all life's much like
a ropewalk, where we toil—walking backwards—with
our faces turned away from fate."

"Some are blind for choice—such as you," answered
Mr. Endicott; "some judge they've got the light; some
hope they have; some know they have.  That last sort
denies it to all but themselves, an' won't even let
another soul carry a different pattern candlestick to
their own.  But a man may envy such high faith, for
it's alive; it rounds the rough edges of life; sets folk at
peace with the prospect of their own eternity; smooths
the crumples in their deathbeds at the finish."

"I don't know.  I've never heard that your thorough-paced
believers make a better end than other folks,"
Myles answered.  "My small experience is that they
regard death with far more concern and dread than the
rudderless ones who believe the grave is the end."

"That's only to say a fear of death's nature-planted
and goes down deeper than dogma.  Most makes of
mind will always shrink from it, so long as life's good
to live.  Faith is a priceless treasure, say what you
may, if a body has really got it.  I'll maintain that so
long as I can talk and think.  The man who pretends
he has it, and has not, carries his own punishment for
that daily lie with him.  For the Lord of the Blessings
never could abide pretence.  Take Him or leave Him;
but don't play at being sheep of His fold for private
ends.  That's a game deserves worse damnation than
most human baseness."

"Yes, yes.  Take Him as He is; and take what
He brought, and be thankful.  Lord of the Blessings!
Isn't that a title high enough?  But here's my thought
and sure belief, uncle.  The discovery called Christianity
depended on no man, no single advent of a prophet, or
poet, or saviour.  It was a part of human nature always,
a gold bred in the very heart's core of humanity.  And
Christ's part was to find the gold and bring it into the
light.  Burn your book; let the beautiful story go.  It
is ruined, worm-eaten, riddled by the centuries and
follies and lies heaped upon it.  Sweep your institutions
all clean away and Christianity remains, a sublime
discovery, the glorious, highest known possibility of
man's mind towards goodness.  Lord of the Blessings!
What dogma intrudes amongst them to blind and
blight and make our hearts ache?  They are alive and
eternal—as all that is true must be eternal.  They were
waiting—hidden in human hearts—left for a man to
discover, not for a God to invent.  Who cares for the
old dead theories that explained rainbows and precious
stones, and the colour of a summer-clad heath and the
strength of the solid earth?  We have the things
themselves.  And so with the message of Christ."

"Wild man's talk," said Mark.  "And quite out of
your usual solid way of thought.  There's more hid in the
Rock of Ages than a vein of gold opened by a chance
good man; but you and me won't argue on that, because
we're not built to convince each other.  With years may
come light; Potter Time may mould a bit of faith into
the fabric of even you presently; who can tell?  But spin
slow and sure, as you mostly do—look to the thread and
see you leave no knot or kink behind as won't stand the
strain that life may call it to bear any moment."

"There's another thought rises from what you said;
and I'll tell you why I'm on that morbid tack in a
moment.  You declare the length of the thread is out
of our keeping, and that a mind will shrink naturally
from death so long as life is good.  But how many a
poor fool does determine the length and cut the thread
when life ceases to be good?"

"Determine the length they don't.  They are the
puppets, and when the string is pulled they make their
bow and go off the scene—by their own hand, if it is
to be."

"Humanity holds suicide a crime now.  Once, I learn,
it was not so.  Great heathen men destroyed themselves,
yet do not lack marble statues for it.  Only yesterday,
as one might say, a man was cut off and buried at
crossroads with a stake through his belly if he dared to die
by his own hand.  The Church recognises no shades of
meaning in this matter, and so to-day, as often as not, a
coroner's jury bleats out a solemn and deliberate lie—so
that a man shall be buried with the blessing of the
Church and rest in God's acre against the trump.  But
there's no greater piece of solemn humbug than that
eternal verdict."

"I thought much of these things when my eyes were
put out.  I have been on the brink myself, but 'twas
ordained my thread should run.  A man must be mad
to destroy himself—mad or else a coward."

"Most times cowardly perhaps," answered Myles.
"But to be a coward is not to be a lunatic.  Suicide
is one of those matters we shut our eyes about—one
of the things we won't face and thresh out, because
the Church is so determined on the point.  Not but
a man may picture circumstances when a self-death
would be a great deed.  You may lay down your
life for your friend in more ways than one.  Such a
thing can rise to greatness or sink to contempt
according to the mainspring of the action.  Some at least
might think so, and that's why I'm on this subject.  I
feel a shadowy fear sometimes that Christopher Yeoland
might have had some such fancy—would even have
done such a crack-brained deed for love of Honor.  I
bid his friend be very plain with him and explain the
gap that his going left in her life.  I made it as clear
as I had power to.  Honor distinctly told me that she
still loved him too well to marry any other man.  That
was all he had need to know, and I asked Clack to
make Yeoland return to her on the strength of her
confession."

"And now he does."

"How might he have argued when you consider his
great love for her?  Is it not possible that he thought
so?  Is it not possible that he said, 'I am the obstacle.
Let me go beyond reach, and Honor—who still feels that
nothing can wipe out our old understanding—will be in
reality free?'  Might he not reason in that way?"

The old man shook his head.

"Not to the extent of blotting himself out by death.
Had the cases been reversed, I could almost picture you
destroying yourself, since your views are what they are.
You might do it, worse luck—Yeoland never.  Besides,
what necessity?  Such a course would be merely like
a stage play under these circumstances."

"But there was an inclination towards just that in him;
towards a theatrical sort of way—unreal."

"You read him like that.  But he wasn't so
superficial as he seemed to a man of your build of mind.
You don't find Honor superficial?  No—he wouldn't
kill himself, because the necessity wouldn't appear from
his point of view.  As I say, you'd blunder into the
act much sooner than Yeoland."

"Not so at all.  You misunderstand me."

"Well, at least you can't see what would be easier and
pleasanter, and answer the purpose just as well under
our present civilisation.  Consider.  How stands the
problem if Yeoland married somebody else?  You'll
find that meets the case at every point.  I'm not
belittling Yeoland.  Who knows what chances of
greatness there may have been hidden and lost in him?
Life only calls into play a thousandth part of any
man's powers during his brief tale of days, and most of
us die full of possibilities unguessed even by ourselves,
because the hazard never rose; but Yeoland's greatness,
if greatness he had, would not have led him off the
stage by that road.  He didn't die willingly, I promise
you.  Come back he might have upon your message, if
he had lived; or married he might have, even out of
consideration for Honor's future.  We'll allow him all
the credit belonging to possibilities.  Meantime, the
only thing that we know beyond his death is a last
wish expressed to Clack—a wish quite in keeping with
his character."

"To be brought home again."

"Yes, the desire to rest his bones in Little Silver.
Struck for death, the thought in his mind was not death,
nor Honor, nor you.  His love for the grass and the
trees and the earth of his mother-land woke in him;
dying, his heart turned to Godleigh and his own old
roof-tree.  The picture of the place was the last on his
brain when all things were fading away."

The other bowed his head; then he asked concerning
Honor.

"It's hit her hard," answered Mark Endicott.  "This
sudden end of him has been a burnish on the glass
of memory—polished it very bright.  She has lived
through the summer weather with him and talked
fitfully of woodland walks by him, and chatter of birds,
and shining of Teign, and cutting of letters on tree
trunks.  The glow and glory of love slowly growing
in them—sad enough to look back on for those that
love her."

"Sad enough.  And my share of the pain's all too light."

"Who knows how much or how little you deserve?
You were sent to play your part in her life.  Just a bit
of the machine.  Change—change—change—that's the
eternal law that twists the wheel and opens the womb;
digs the grave and frets the name off the tombstone;
gnaws away the stars; cools the sun in heaven and the
first love of a young maid's heart.  You brought
something new into her life—for better or for worse.
Something new and something true, as I think; but maybe
truth's not always the right medicine at all hours.
Anyhow change will work its own way with time and
space and the things that belong to them.  She was
torn in half between you, and brave enough to make
naked confession of it.  That proclaimed her either a
greater character than we thought once, or a poorer
thing every way—according to the mind that views the
case."

"I didn't know such a tangle could happen."

"Every sort of tangle can happen where men and
women are concerned.  Not that she's not a puzzle to
me, too, every hour.  She has gone now for a while to
Exeter.  I advised that she should bide there until after
the funeral, but she scorned the thought.  'I'm chief
mourner in truth, if not in name,' she said; and so she
will be.  Time must do the rest."

"The last resource of the wretched."

"And the best to be relied on."

"I can only hope to God she's not to be unhappy for ever."

"She gets her happiness, like a bee gets honey—here,
there, everywhere, by fits and snatches.  Too quick to
see the inner comedy of human affairs to be unhappy
for ever, or happy for long.  And what are you going
to do, Myles?"

"I thought to go for good—yes, for good this time."

"Couldn't do better.  She will read you into these
chapters of her life.  Can't help it.  But Time's on your
side too, though you slight him.  And this, at least,
you'll remember: if she wants you to come back, she
won't hesitate to let you know it."





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.. _`SPRING ON SCOR HILL`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XVII.


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   SPRING ON SCOR HILL

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Often it happens that small matters demand
lengthy spaces in time for their development,
while affairs of import and interests involving high
changes are carried through at comet speed upon the
crest of some few splendid or terrible moments.  Thus
did concerns of note to those playing a part of their
history under our eyes tumble unexpectedly to the top,
and an event take place wholly unforeseen by Myles
Stapledon, though predicted and prophesied for a more
or less remote future by Uncle Endicott.  For this
surprise one woman was responsible.

Honor returned from Exeter in time to be present at
Christopher Yeoland's funeral; and with her she bore a
fair wreath of Eucharis lilies, which Mr. Brimblecombe
consigned to a rubbish heap behind the church tower as
soon as her back was turned, because he held flowers
out of place on the coffin of quality.  Those now
occupying Godleigh for a term of years gladly allowed
the recent possessor to pass his last night among men
beneath that roof, and not a few folk representative
of the district attended the obsequies in person or by
proxy.  So Christopher Yeoland was laid upon his
shelf of slate, and Doctor Courteney Clack, for the
benefit of such as cared to listen, told how a whip snake,
falling from a tree, had fastened upon the dead man's
neck, and how, with few words and one wish to be
buried at home, he had quickly passed away under the
poison.

So that chapter closed at the mausoleum, whose
guardian cherubs were moss-grown skulls; and day
followed day, month succeeded upon month, into the
time of early summer; of misty silver nights and
shining noons; of warm rain and steaming fields; of
the music of life from birds' throats; of the scent of
life in the chalices of bluebells; of the very heart-beat
and pulse of life under the glades of green woods and
beside the banks of Teign.

Then, in a June day's shape, Time, of many disguises,
began his work with Honor Endicott.  A revulsion
followed the gloom that had passed and pressed upon her;
she mourned still, but for choice in the sunshine; and,
growing suddenly athirst for the river and the manifold
life that dwelt upon the brink of it, she took her rod
as an excuse, passed upward alone, descended Scor
Hill, and pursued her way eastward to a lonely glen
where Teign winds into the woods of Godleigh.  Many
fair things broke bud about her, and in secret places the
splendour of summer made ready.  Soon the heather
would illuminate these wastes and the foxgloves carry
like colour aloft on countless steeples of purple bells;
soon woodbine and briar would wreathe the granite, and
little pearly clusters of blossom spring aloft from the
red sundews in the marsh; while the king fern already
spread his wide fronds above the home of the trout, and
the brake fern slowly wove his particular green into the
coombs and hills.

Despite a sure conviction that melancholy must
henceforth encompass her every waking hour, Honor Endicott
was not armed against the magic of this blue and golden
day.  She could fish with a fly, and that skilfully; and
now, before the fact that a brisk rise dimpled and
dappled the river, passing temptations to kill a trout
wakened and were not repulsed.  She set up her rod,
and by chance mused as she did so upon Myles
Stapledon.  Him she had not seen for many days, but her
regard had not diminished before his abstention.  Indeed
she appreciated it up to a point, though now it began to
irk her.  She did not know that he was about to depart
definitely; for Mark Endicott had deemed it
unnecessary to mention the fact.

At her third cast Honor got a good rise, and hooked
a fish which began its battle for life with two rushes
that had done honour to a heavier trout.  Then it
leapt out of the water, showed itself to be a
half-pounder or thereabout, and headed up stream with a
dozen frantic devices to foul the line in snag or weed.
But Honor was mistress of the situation, turned the fish
with the current, and, keeping on the deadly strain, soon
wearied it.  Then she wound in the line steadily, steered
her victim to a little shelving backwater, and so, having
no net, lifted the trout very gently out of its element on
to the grass.  Flushed with excitement, and feeling,
almost against her will, that she was young, Honor
gazed down upon gasping fario, admired the clean bulk
of him, his fierce eye, dark olive back spotted with ebony
and ruby, the lemon light along his plump sides, his
silver belly, perfect proportions, and sweet smell.  He
heaved, opened his gills, sucked deep at the empty
air, and protested at this slow drowning with a leap
and quiver of suffering; whereupon, suddenly moved
at thought of what this trout had done for her,
Honor picked him up and put him back into the water,
laughing to herself and at herself the while.  After a
gulp or two, strength returned to the fish, and like
an arrow, leaving a long ripple over the shallow, he
vanished back to the deep sweet water and his own
sweet life.

Other trout were not so fortunate, however, and by
noon, at which time all rise ceased, the angler had slain
above half a dozen and was weary of slaughter.  She
fished up stream, and had now reached the tolmen—a
great perforated stone that lies in the bed of Teign near
Wallabrook's confluence with it.  And resting here
awhile, she saw the figure of Myles Stapledon as he
approached the river from a farm on the other side.
The homestead of Batworthy, where it nestles upon the
confines of the central waste, and peeps, with fair silver
thatches, above its proper grove, shall be seen surrounded
by heather and granite.  The river babbles at its feet,
and on every side extends Dartmoor to the high
tors—north, south, and west.  From hence came Myles
Stapledon, after gathering certain information from a
kindly colleague; and now he strode across the stream
and on to within ten yards of Honor, yet failed to see
her, where she sat motionless half hidden by ferns and
grasses.  He moved along, deep plunged in his own
thoughts, and she determined to let him pass, until
something in the weary, haggard look of him tempted her to
change her mind.  He was lonely—lonelier than she; he
had nobody to care about him, and all his life to be
lived.  Perhaps, despite these sentimental thoughts, she
had suffered him to go, but one circumstance decided
her: on the arm of his workaday coat appeared a band
of black.  And, guessing something of his recent
tribulations, she lifted her voice and called him.

"Myles!  Why do you avoid me?"

He started and slipped a foot, but recovered instantly,
turned, and approached her.  His face betokened surprise
and other emotion.

"How good of you to call me—how kind.  I did not
know that you were out on the Moor, or within a mile
of this place.  Else I would have gone back another way."

"That's not very friendly, I think.  I don't bite."

"I thought—but like all thoughts of mine, though
I've wasted hours on it, nothing was bred from it.  At
least I may accompany you back.  It was most kind to
call me.  And most strange and culpable of me not to
see you."

She noticed his gratitude, and it touched her a little.

"I've killed eight trout," she said; "one nearly
three-quarters of a pound."

"A grand fish.  I will carry them for you.  Fine
weather to-day and the summer really at the door."

"It was thoughtful of you to keep away, Myles.  I
appreciated that."

"I should have gone clean and haunted the land no
further; but there was much to do.  Now all is done,
and I'm glad of this chance to tell you so.  I can really
depart now.  You'll think it a cry of 'Wolf!' and
doubt my strength to turn my back on Bear Down
again; but go I must at last."

She was reflecting with lightning rapidity.  That he
meant what he said she did not doubt.  The news,
indeed, was hardly unexpected; yet it came too
suddenly for her peace of mind.  There existed a side to
this action in which she had an interest.  Indeed with
her might lie the entire future of him, if she willed it
so.  Decisions now cried to be made, and while even
that morning they had looked afar off, vague, nebulous
as need be, now they rushed up from the horizon of the
future to the very zenith of the present.  Yet she could
not decide thus instantly, so temporised and asked idle
questions to gain time.

"Of what were you thinking when I saw you cross
the river with your head so low?" she asked, and hoped
that his answer might help her.  But nothing was
further from his mind than the matter in hers.  He
answered baldly—

"My head was bent that I might see my way on the
stepping-stones.  As to my thoughts, I only had a
muddled idea about the season and the green
things—friends and foes—all growing together at the
beginning of the race—all full of youth and sap and
trust—so to speak; and none seeing any danger in the
embrace of his companion.  Look at that pest, the
beautiful bindweed.  It breaks out of the earth with
slender fingers, weak as a baby's, yet it grows into a
cruel, soft, choking thing of a thousand hands—more
dangerous to its neighbour than tiger to man—a
garotter, a Thug, a traitor that hangs out lovely bells
and twines its death into fair festoons that it may hide
the corpse of its own strangling."

"And then?"

"That was all my thought.  Yet I seemed to feel
akin to the plant myself."

"Something has changed you since we dropped out
of one another's lives.  Fancy a practical farmer
mooning over such nonsense!  Bindweed can be pulled up
and burnt—even if it's growing in your heart."

"How like you to say that!  It is good to me to
hear your voice again, Honor."

"Take down my rod then, and tell me why you are
going.  Half of Endicott's is your own."

"I thought—I believed that you would be happier
if I did so.  And I still suspect that is the case.  I
owe you deeper reparation than ever a man owed a
woman."

"You are too good, but your goodness becomes morbid."

"I'm only a clumsy fool, and never knew how clumsy
or how much a fool until I met you."

"No, I say you are really good.  Goodness is a
matter of temperament, not morals.  Some of the most
God-fearing, church-going people I know can't be good;
some of the worst people I ever heard about—even
frank heathens like yourself—can't be bad.  There's a
paradox for you to preach about!"

But he shook his head.

"Your mind's too quick for me.  Yet I think I know
what you mean.  By 'goodness' and 'badness' you
signify a nature sympathetic or otherwise.  It's all a
question of selfishness at bottom."

"But the day looks too beautiful for such talk,"
answered Honor.

"So it is; I don't desire to talk of anything.  You
can't guess what it is to me to hear your voice
again—just the music of it.  It intoxicates me, like drink."

"You're dreaming; and, besides, you're going away."

The light died out of his face, and they walked
together in silence a few paces.  Then the girl's mind
established itself, and her love was a large factor in that
decision, though not the only one.  She determined
upon a course of action beyond measure unconventional,
but that aspect of the deed weighed most lightly
with her.

They were passing over the face of Scor Hill when
she turned to the left, where stood that ancient
monument of the past named Scor Hill Circle.

"I'm going down to the old ring," she said; "I've a
fancy to visit it."

He followed without speech, his mind occupied by a
frosty picture of their last visit to the same spot.  Now
it basked under sunlight, and spring had touched both
the splinters of granite and the lonely theatre in which
they stood.  Upon the weathered planes of the stones
were chased quaint patterns and beads of moss, together
with those mystic creatures of ochre and ebony, grey
and gold, that suck life from air and adamant and clothe
the dry bones of Earth with old Time's livery.

Upon a fallen stone in the midst, where young heather
sprouted in tufts and cushions, Honor sat down awhile;
and seeing that she remained silent, Myles uttered some
platitudes concerning the spot and the ceremonies of
heathen ritual, state, or sacrifice that had aforetime
marked it.  The upright stones surrounded them where
they sat beside a sort of central altar of fading furze.
The giant block of the circle stood on the north of its
circumference, and upon more than one of the unshaped
masses were spots rubbed clean by beasts and holding
amid their incrustations red hairs of cattle, or flecks of
wool from the fleeces of the flocks.  Even now a heifer
grazed upon the grass within the circle; its herd roamed
below; round about the valley rose old familiar tors;
while sleepy summer haze stole hither and thither upon
the crowns of Watern and Steeperton, and dimmed the
huge bulk of Cosdon Beacon where it swelled towards
the north.

"When did we last come here?" began Honor suddenly.

"On the day of the snowstorm."

"Ah, yes.  We were riding, and stopped a moment
here.  Why?"

Stapledon looked at her, then turned his head away.

"If you have forgotten, it is good," he said.

"What did I say to that great question, Myles?"

"Spare me that, Honor.  I have been punished enough."

"Don't generalise.  What did I say?"

"That you could marry neither of us—neither Yeoland
nor me—out of consideration for the other."

"And you gasped when you heard it; and I kept my
word.  Now the pity is that you must keep yours."

"Mine?"

"Never to ask again what I would not give then."

"Honor!"

"Hush.  Don't break your word for such a trifle as a
wife.  I'm accustomed to doing unmaidenly, horrible
things, so this doesn't hurt me as much as it would
a proper-thinking, proper-feeling woman.  I love you;
I always have loved you since I knew you.  And I
suppose you love me still—more or less.  He who has
gone—has gone.  There will never be another Christo
for me, Myles.  You cannot take his place; and if you
were dead and he was alive, he could never have taken
yours.  That's my peculiarly deranged attitude.  But
here I sit, and I should like to be your wife, because life
is short and a woman's a fool to throw away good love
and starve herself when plenty is offered."

Stapledon's dog looked up from his seat on the
heather, barked and wagged his tail, knowing that his
master was happy; and the heifer, startled by these
canine expressions of delight and sudden ejaculations
uttered aloud in a man's deep voice, flung up her hind
legs wildly and cutting cumbrous capers, to indicate
that she too appreciated the romance of the moment,
shambled away from the grey circle to join her
companions in the valley below.





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.. _`ROSES AND ROSETTES`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XVIII.


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   ROSES AND ROSETTES

.. vspace:: 2

"Us'll go down-long awver the plough-path; then
us'll be in full time to see the butivul bride
arrive," said Tommy Bates.  He stood in Sunday attire
among his betters, and the sobriety of much black
broadcloth was brightened by unusual adornment, for
Cramphorn, Ash, Collins, Pinsent, and the rest were
decorated with large rosettes of satin ribbon.  Many
also wore roses in their buttonholes, for one of
Stapledon's few friends was a big rose-grower at Torquay,
who, from the abundance of his scented acres, had
despatched countless blooms—crimson and cream,
snow-white, ivory and orange-yellow, pink and regal
purple—to brighten a glorious day.

But in the judgment of Ash and the elders no flower
of cultivation could compare in significance or beauty
with the sham sprigs of orange-blossom at the centre
of the rosettes.  Churdles himself also carried a bulky
parcel in the tail of his coat, which added another
protuberance to his gnarled form.  It was not a
prayer-book, as he gave Collins to understand with many nods
and winks.

The party stood upon the grass plot before Bear
Down—a space separated from the main great grass
lands of the farm.  These latter subtended the level
ground and swelled and billowed under waves of colourless
light that raced free as the wind over another year's
hay harvest.  Far beneath, just visible above a green
hedge between elms, four small peaks arose and a White
Ensign fluttered from a flagstaff in the midst, where
stood the village church.

Mr. Cramphorn and his friends set forth and improved
the occasion with reflections upon what would follow
the wedding, rather than in much consideration of the
ceremony itself.

"They be gwaine straight off from the church door,"
said Mr. Ash, "an' so they'll miss the fun of the fair
up-long, though 'tis theer money as'll furnish the
junketings.  A braave rally of neighbours comin' to eat an'
drink an' be merry by all accounts; an' not a stroke
more'n milkin' cows an' feedin' things to be done to-day
by man or woman."

"They ought to bide to the eating whether or no,"
said Mr. Cramphorn.  "An' I be gwaine to tell a speech,
though they'll be half ways to Exeter before I does.
I hold it my duty.  She'm the best mistress an' kindest
woman in the world to my knawledge, an' my gift o'
words shan't be denied at her solemn weddin' feast,
whether she be theer or whether she han't."

Mr. Collins applauded these sentiments, for his private
ambitions were strong at heart under the rosy
atmosphere of the hour.

"I lay you'll tell some gude talk come bimebye," he
said.  "'Tis a gert power—same as the gift of tongues
in the Bible seemin'ly."

"Theer'll be some plum drinkin' by all accounts,"
said Mr. Ash, pouting up his little wrinkled mouth
in cheerful anticipation.  "Brown sherry wine for us,
an' fizzy yellow champagne an' auld black port for
the quality.  An' it's a secret hope of mine, if I ban't
tu bowldacious in thinkin' such a thing, as I may get
a thimbleful of the auld wine—port—so dark as porter
but butivul clear wi' it, an' a sure finder of a man's
heart-strings.  I be awful set upon a sup of that.  I've
longed for fifty years to taste it, if so be I might wi'out
offence.  It have been my gert hope for generations;
an' if it awnly comes 'pon my death-bed I'll thank the
giver, though 'twould be a pleasanter thing to drink
it in health."

"I seed larder essterday," said Tommy Bates.  "My
stars!  The auld worm-eaten shelves of un be fairly bent."

"Purty eating, no doubt," assented Cramphorn, though
as one superior to such things.

"Ess fay!  Fantastic pastry, more like to cloam
ornaments for the mantelshelf than belly-timber.  God knaws
how they'll scat 'em apart."

"Each has its proper way of bein' broke up," said
Mr. Cramphorn.  "Theer's manners an' customs in all
this.  Some you takes a knife to, some a fork, some
a spoon.  The bettermost takes a knife even to a apple
or pear."

"Things a lookin' out o' jellies, an' smothered in sugar
an' transparent stuff!  I'd so easy tell the stars as give a
name to half of 'em.  But theer was a pineapple—I
knawed un by seein' his picksher in the auld Bible,
where Joseph was givin' his brothers a spread.  But
they didn't have no such pies an' red lobsters as be
waitin' up-long.  Such a huge gert cake 'tis!  All
snow-white, an' crawled awver wi' silver paper, an' a li'l naked
doll 'pon top wi' blue eyes an' gawld wings to un.
A pixy doll you might say."

"Her ought to bide an' cut that cake herself, not dash
away from church as though she'd done murder 'stead
of praiseworthy matrimony," grumbled Mr. Cramphorn.
"'Tis defying the laws of marryin' and givin' in marriage.
Theer may be trouble to it presently."

"If they'm both of a mind, they'll do what they
please," said Collins.

"Ay, an' 'twon't hurt none of us, nor make the vittles
an' drinks less sweet," declared Samuel Pinsent.

"That's truth," assented Gaffer Ash; "an' when you
come to be my ripe years, Jonah, you'll go limpin' to
meet the li'l pleasures that be left to 'e half-way, 'stead
of fearin' evil.  As for the pains—fegs! they meets you
half-way!"

"'Twill be a happy marriage, I should reckon," ventured
Pinsent.

"We'll pray it will be, though he'm a thought tu deep
in love for my money," declared Cramphorn.

"Can a man love his maiden more'n enough?" asked
Henry Collins in amazement; and the other answered
that it might be so.

"Love be well knawn for a mole-blind state, Henery—a
trick of Nature to gain her awn ends; an' the sooner
new-fledged man an' wife see straight again better for
their awn peace of mind.  Maister Myles be a shade
silly here and theer, though Lard knaws if ever a man's
to be forgiven for gettin' his head turned 'tis him.
A marvellous faace an' shape to her.  But ban't the
wise way to dote.  She'm a human woman, without
disrespect; and her sawl's to save like poorer folk.  In
plain English, he'll spoil her."

"Couldn't—no man could," said Mr. Ash stoutly.
"To think of a sovereign to each of us, an' two to me by
reason of my ancient sarvice!"

"You've toiled 'pon the land for a fearsome number
of years, I s'pose, Maister Ash?" asked Tommy
respectfully.

"Me?  I was doin' man's work in the reign of the
Fourth Gearge.  I've ate many an' many a loaf o' barley
bread, I have; an' seed folks ride pillion; an' had a
woman behind me, on the auld-fashion saddles, myself,
for that matter.  An', as for marriage, though I never
used it, I've seed scores o' dozens o' marriages—sweet
an' sour.  Marriages be like bwoys playin' leapfrog,
wheer each lad have got to rucksey down in turn; an'
so man an' wife have got to rucksey down wan to t'other
at proper times an' seasons.  Each must knaw theer awn
plaace in the house; an' Mrs. Loveys was right, when us
gived 'em the cannel-sticks for a gift.  You call home
how she said, 'I wish 'e patience wan wi' t'other, my
dearies, 'cause theer ban't nothin' more useful or more
like to be wanted 'bout the house o' newly married folk
than that!'"

The party now mingled with those already assembled
in Little Silver.  A crowd drawn from Throwley,
Chagford, and elsewhere stood and admired flags that waved
between green-garlanded poles at the churchyard gate.
Many passed from the hot sunshine into the shadow of
the holy building; many had already entered it.

"Us'll bide here till our brows be cool an' she've
a-come.  Then us'll go in an' sit usual plaace, left side
o' the alley," said Mr. Cramphorn.

Presently Myles Stapledon appeared, and a hum of
friendship rose for him.  He looked somewhat anxious,
was clad in a grey suit, white waistcoat, and a white tie
with his solitary jewel in it—an old carbuncle set in gold
that had belonged to his father and adorned that gentleman's
throat or finger on the occasion of his marriage.
In the bridegroom's buttonhole was a red rosebud, and
now and again his hand went nervously across to an
inner pocket, where reposed the money for the honeymoon.
He walked to the vestry, made certain entries
in the book spread open for him, and presented
Mr. Scobell with two guineas.  He then entered a choir stall
and sat down there, facing the eyes of the increasing
company without visible emotion.

Outside came stroke of horse-hoofs and grinding of
wheels.  Then entered an ancient aunt of the
bridegroom's with her two elderly daughters.  A second
carriage held Honor's relatives from Exeter, and a third
contained Mrs. Loveys and Sally and Margaret
Cramphorn; for it was Honor's wish that her serving-maids
should be her bridesmaids also, and she knew none of
her sex who loved her better.  Each had a bouquet of
roses; each wore a new dress and now waited at the
entrance for their mistress, with many a turn and twist,
perk of head, and soft rustle from the new gowns.  The
eyes of Mr. Collins watered as he beheld Sally, and his
huge breast rose, heaved up by mountainous sighs.
Meantime, she had secretly handed a rosette to
Mr. Greg Libby, who, in company of his old mother, adorned
the gathering; and Margery too, at the first opportunity,
presented the young man with a rosette.  Thus it came
about that Gregory gloried in dual favours and attached
both to his marriage garment; whereupon two maiden
hearts under dove-coloured raiment were filled with
emotions most unsisterly, and all men, save one, laughed
at the luck of the gilded hedge-tacker.

The glory of Little Silver church centres in an ancient
screen of many colours.  Upon it shall be found
elaborate interlacing of blue and gold, pale blue and dark
crimson; while through the arches of it may be seen the
Lord's Table under a granite reredos.  Pulpit and
lectern are also of the good grey stone, and to-day a
riot of roses that made the little place of worship very
sweet climbed the old pillars and clustered in the deep
embrasures of the windows.  The walls, painted with
red distemper, ascended to a waggon roof; and upon
pews, where the humble living stood or knelt above
dust of noble dead, frank daylight entered through
plain glass windows.

Along the base of the ornate screen stood figures of
the saints mechanically rendered, and about one, standing
upon the right hand of the choir entrance, there twined
a text that indicated this figure stood for John the
Baptist.  "The voice of one crying in the wilderness"
were those graven words; and now by chance they
caught a pair of downcast eyes, as Honor Endicott bent
her young head and passed onward from independence
into the keeping of a man.

She came with her uncle, and those in church rose
amid mighty rustlings and clink of iron-shod boots, and
those outside crowded into their places.  A little
harmonium groaned gallantly, and Mr. Scobell billowed
up the aisle from the vestry.  Honor walked to meet
Myles with her hand holding Mark Endicott's.  At the
steps, under the screen, she stopped for him to feel
the step, and as she did so caught sight of the text.
Then a big, florid face, with the plainest admiration
exhibited upon it, met her gaze, and she also became
dimly conscious of a tall, grey man at her right elbow.
The florid face belonged to Mr. Scobell, who,
recollecting himself and chastening his features, frowned
at the back of the church, and began the ceremony.
But the grey man was waiting for her, longing for her,
"to have and to hold from this day forward, for better
for worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and in
health, to love and to cherish," until death should part
them.

Yet the text—that voice in the wilderness—haunted
her mind all the while, as it is the way with irrelevant
ideas to intrude upon high moments.  Presently Honor
put her hand into her husband's, felt the gold slip over
her finger, and marvelled to feel how much heavier this
ring was than the little toy of diamond and pearl she
had been wearing of late.  Then all was accomplished,
and Mr. Ash and his friends quite drowned the squeak
and gasp of a Wedding March, with which the vicar's
daughter wrestled upon the harmonium; for they all
clattered out of church and drew up in a double line
outside along the pathway.  Churdles then produced
his mysterious packet and exhibited a bag of rice.  This
was opened, and old, tremulous hands, knotted and
veined like ivy-vines upon an oak, flung the grain as
lustily as young plump ones, while man and wife came
forth to face the benignant shower.

At the gate two stout greys and an old postillion—relic
of days flown—were waiting to take Myles and
his lady to Okehampton for the London train.  Mark
Endicott, led by Tommy Bates, stood at the carriage
door; and now he felt warm lips on his blind face and
a tear there.

"Be a good uncle," whispered Honor; "and don't
weary your dear hands too much for those Brixham
fishermen.  Home we shall come again in a month;
and how I'm going to do without you for so long, or
you without me, I can't guess."

He squeezed her hands, and for once the old Spartan
was dumb.

"God bless 'e!"

"Long life an' happiness to 'e!"

"Good luck to the both of 'e!"

Then a jumble and buzz of many speaking together;
lifting of voices into a cheer; a gap in the road, where
the carriage had stood; a puff of dust at the corner by
the old pound; and courageous fowls, clucking and
fluttering and risking their lives for scattered rice, among
crushed roses and the legs of the people.

The bells rang out; the dust died down; personages
drove slowly up the hill to the banquet; certain persons
walked up.  Mr. Cramphorn, fearful of a love contagion
in the air, convoyed his daughters home himself, and
Libby, growing faint-hearted before the expression on
Jonah's face, abandoned his design of walking by Sally's
side for half the distance and with Margery for the rest.
Henry Collins was also deprived of the society he
craved, and by ill-fortune it chanced that Ash, Pinsent,
and the two rivals found themselves in company on the
journey home.  Collins thereupon relieved his wounded
soul by being extremely rude, and he began with a
personal remark at the expense of Gregory's best coat
and emerald tie.

"All black an' green, I see—mourning for the devil
that is," he said, in a tone not friendly.

"Aw!  Be he dead then?" inquired Mr. Libby with
great show of interest.

"Not while the likes of you's stirrin'.  An' what for
do 'e want to make a doomshaw of yourself—wearin'
two rosettes, like a Merry Andrew, when other men
have but wan?"

"Grapes are sour with you, I reckon, Henery.  You
see I puts this here left bow just awver my 'eart, 'cause
Sally Cramphorn gived it to me."

Collins blazed into a fiery red, and a fist of huge
proportions clenched until the knuckles grew white.

"Have a care," he said, "or I'll hit 'e awver the jaw!
Such a poor penn'orth as you to set two such gals as
them by the ears!"

"Who be you to threaten your betters?  You forget
as I'm a man wi' money in the bank, an' you ban't."

"Ah, so I did then," confessed Collins frankly.  "I
did forget; but they didn't.  Keep your rosettes.  'Tis
your gert store o' money winned 'em—same as bullock,
not farmer, gets the ribbons at Christmas fair.  So, every
way, it's dam little as you've got to be proud of!"

Mr. Libby became inarticulate before this insult.  He
rolled and rumbled horrible threats in his cleft palate,
but they were not intelligible, and Collins, striding
forward, left him in the rear and joined Gaffer Ash and
Pinsent, who dwelt peaceably on the joys to come.

"A talk of moosicians there was," said Samuel.

"Right.  The Yeomany band to play 'pon the lawn.
An' gude pleasure, tu, for them as likes brass moosic."

"How Maister Stapledon girned like a cat when the
rice went down onderneath his clean collar!"

"Ess, he did; 'twas a happy thought of mine."

"What's the value or sense in it I doan't see all the
same," objected Collins, whose day had now suffered
eclipse.  "'Pears to me 'tis a silly act whether or no."

"That shaws how ill you'm learned in affairs,"
answered Mr. Ash calmly.  "The meanin' of rice at a
weddin's very well knawn by onderstandin' men.  'Tis
thrawed to ensure fruitfulness an' a long family.  A
dark branch of larnin', I grant 'e; but for all that I've
awnly knawed it fail wance; an' then 'twern't no fault of
the magic."

But Henry had been taught to regard a full quiver as
no blessing.

"If that's what you done it for, 'twas a cruel
unfriendly act," he declared, "an' I stands up an' sez so,
auld as you be.  Devil's awn wicked self caan't wish
no worse harm to a innocent young pair than endless
childer.  I knaw—who better?—being wan o' thirteen
myself; an' if I heard that was the use of it, not a grain
would I have thrawed at 'em for money."

Churdles blinked, but was quite unmoved.

"You speak as a bachelor, my son, not to say as a
fule.  Black dog's got 'pon your shoulder this marnin'.
A pity tu, for 'tis a perspiring day wi'out temper.  No
rough language to-day.  All peace an' plencheousness;
an' a glass o' black port, please God.  Us'll feast wi'
thankful hearts; an' then go forth an' sit 'pon the
spine-grass in the garden an' smoke our pipes an' listen
to the moosickers in the butivul sunshine."

"'Pears to me," said Gregory Libby, who had now
rejoined them, "that you chaps o' Endicott's did ought
to give some return for all this guzzling an' holiday
making."

"Theer you'm wrong, as you mostly be, Greg,"
answered old Ash with a serene smile, "for 'tis awnly
a small mind caan't take a favour wi'out worrittin' how
to return it."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE SEEDS`:

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   BOOK II.

.. vspace:: 3

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER I.

.. class:: center medium bold

   THE SEEDS

.. vspace:: 2

In late summer a strong breeze swept the Moor,
hummed over the heather, and sang in the chinks
and crannies of the tors; while at earth-level thin rags
and tatters of mist, soaked with sunshine, raced beneath
the blue.  Now they swallowed a hill in one transitory
sweep of light; now they dislimned in pearly tentacles
and vanished magically, swept away by the riotous
breezes; now moisture again became visible, and grew
and gathered and laughed, and made a silver-grey home
for rainbows.  Beneath was hot sunshine, the light of
the ling, the wild pant and gasp of great fitful zephyr, as
he raced and roared along the lower planes of earth and
sky; above, free of the fret and tumult, there sailed,
in the upper chambers of the air, golden billows of
cloud, rounded, massed and gleaming, with their aerial
foundations levelled into long true lines by the rush
of the western wind beneath them.  Other air currents
they knew and obeyed, and as they travelled upon
their proper way, like a moving world, their peaks and
promontories swelled and waned, spread and arose,
billowed into new continents, craned and tottered into
new golden pinnacles that drew their glory from the
gates of the sun.  To the sun, indeed, and above
him—to the very zenith where he had climbed at noon—the
scattered cloud armies swept and ascended; and
their progress, viewed from earth, was majestic as the
journey of remote stars, compared with the rapid frolics
of the Mother o' Mist beneath.

A man and a woman appeared together on the high
ground above Bear Down, and surveyed the tremendous
valleys where Teign's course swept to distant Whiddon
and vanished in the gorges of Fingle.  There, gleaming
across that land of ragged deer park and wild heathery
precipices crowned with fir, a rainbow spanned the
river's channels, and the transparent splendour of it
bathed the distance with liquid colour, softened by
many a mile of moist air to the melting and misty
delicacy of opal.

"How flat the bow looks from this height," said the man.

"Fancy noting the shape with your eyes full of the
colour!" answered the woman.

He started and laughed.

"How curiously like poor Christopher Yeoland you
said that, Honor.  And how like him to say it."

Myles and his wife were just returning from payment
of a visit.  They had now been married a few months,
and, with the recent past, there had lifted off the head of
the husband a load of anxiety.  He looked younger and
his forehead seemed more open; he felt younger by a
decade of years, and his face only clouded at secret
moments with one daily care.  Despite his whole-hearted
and unconcealed joy he went in fear, for there
were vague suspicions in his head that the happiness
of his heart was too great.  He believed that never,
within human experience, had any man approached so
perilously near to absolute contentment as he did then.
Thus in his very happiness lay his alarm.  As a
reasonable being, he knew that human life never makes
enduring progress upon such fairy lines, and he searched
his horizon for the inevitable clouds.  But none appeared
to his sight.  Every letter he opened, every day that he
awakened, he expected, and even vaguely hoped for
reverses to balance his life, for minor troubles to order
his existence more nearly with his experience.  He had
been quite content to meet those usual slings and arrows
ranged against every man along the highway side of his
pilgrimage; and tribulation of a sort had made him feel
safer in the citadel of his good fortune.  Indeed, he could
conceive of no shaft capable of serious penetration in his
case, so that it spared the lives of himself and his wife.
Now the balance was set one way, and Providence
blessed the pair with full measure, pressed down and
running over.  All succeeded on their land; all
prospered in their homestead; all went well with their
hearts.  On sleepless nights Stapledon fancied he heard
a kind, ghostly watchman cry out as much under the
stars; and hearing, he would turn and thank the God he
did not know and sleep again.

"Gone!" said Honor, looking out where the rainbow
died and the gleam of it was swept out of being by the
sturdy wind.

"So quickly; yet it spoke a true word before the
wind scattered it; told us so many things that only
a rainbow can.  It is everlasting, because it is true.
There's a beauty in absolute stark truth, Honor."

"Is there?  Then the multiplication table's beautiful,
dear love.  If a rainbow teaches me anything, it is what
a short-lived matter beauty must be—beauty and
happiness and all that makes life worth living."

"But our rainbow is not built upon the mist."

"Don't think about the roots of it.  So you are
satisfied, leave them alone.  To analyse happiness is
worse and more foolish, I should think, than hunting
for rainbow gold itself."

"I don't know.  What is the happiness worth that
won't stand analysis?  All the same, I understand you
very well.  I believe there is nothing like prosperity and
such a love of life as I feel now to make a man a
coward.  Anybody can be brave when he's got everything
to win and nothing to lose; but it takes a big
man to look ahead without a quickened pulse when
he's at the top of his desire, when he knows in the heart
of him that he's living through the happiest, best, most
perfect days the earth can offer.  Remember that to me
this earth is all.  I know of nothing whatever in me or
anybody else that merits or justifies an eternity.  So
I cling to every moment of my life, and of yours.  I'm
a miser of minutes; I let the hours go with regret;
I grudge the night-time spent in unconsciousness; I
delight to wake early and look at you asleep and know
you are mine, and that you love to be mine."

"It's a great deal of happiness for two people, Myles."

"So much that I fear, and, fearing, dim my happiness,
and then blame myself for such folly."

"The rainy day will come.  You are like poor, dear
Cramphorn, who scents mystery in the open faces of
flowers, suspects a tragedy at crossing of knives or
spilling of salt; sees Fate busy breeding trouble if a foot
but slips on a threshold.  How he can have one happy
moment I don't know.  He told me yesterday that
circumstances led him to suspect the end of the world
by a thunder-planet before very long.  And he said it
would be just Endicott luck if the crash came before the
crops were gathered, for our roots were a record this
year."

"His daughters bother him a good deal."

"Yes; I do hope I may never have a daughter,
Myles.  It sounds unkind, but I don't like girls.  My
personal experience of the only girl I ever knew
intimately, inclines me against them—Honor Endicott, I
mean."

"Then we disagree," he said, and his eyes softened.

"Fancy, we actually differ, and differ by as much as the
difference between a boy and a girl!  I would like a
girl for head of the family.  I've known it work best so."

Honor did not answer.

While her husband had renewed his youth under the
conditions of & happy marriage, the same could hardly
be said for her.  She was well and content, but more
thoughtful.  Her eyes twinkled into laughing stars less
often than of old.  She made others laugh, but seldom
laughed with them as she had laughed with Christopher
Yeoland.  In the note of her voice a sadder music, that
had wakened at her first love's death, remained.

Yet she was peacefully happy and quietly alive to
the blessing of such a husband.  Her temperament
found him a daily meal of bread and butter—nourishing,
pleasant to a healthy appetite, easy to digest.  But,
while he had feared for his happiness, she had already
asked herself if his consistent stability would ever pall.
She knew him so thoroughly, and wished that it was
not so.  It exasperated her in secret to realise that she
could foretell to a nicety his speech and action under
all possible circumstances.  There were no unsuspected
crannies and surprises in him.  Surprises had ever been
the jewels of Honor's life, and she believed that she
might dig into the very heart's core of this man and
never find one.

"He seems to be gold all through," she thought once.
"Yet I wish he was patchy for the sake of the excitement."

But Myles by no means wearied his wife in these
halcyon hours.  She was very proud of him and his
strength, sobriety, common sense.  She enjoyed testing
these qualities, and did so every day of the week, for
she was a creature of surprises herself, and appreciated
juxtaposition of moods as an epicure desires contrary
flavours.  She never found him wanting.  He was as
patient as the high Moor; and she believed that she
might as easily anger Cosdon Beacon as her husband.
He ambled by her side along the pathway of life like a
happy elephant.  If ever they differed, it was only upon
the question of Honor's own share in the conduct of
the farm.  Formerly she had been energetic enough,
and even resented the man's kindly, though clumsy
attempts to relieve her; since marriage, however, she
appeared well content to let him do all; and this had
not mattered, in the opinion of Myles, while Honor
found fresh interests and occupations to fill those hours
formerly devoted to her affairs.  But she did not do
so; she spent much time to poor purpose; she
developed a passing whim for finer feathers than had
fledged her pretty body as a maiden; she began buying
dresses that cost a ten-pound note apiece.  These rags
and tags Myles cared nothing for, but dutifully
accompanied to church and upon such little visits of ceremony
as the present.  Then he grew uncomfortable and mentioned
the trifle to Mark Endicott, only to hear the old
man laugh.

"'Tis a whim," he said; "just one blind alley on the
road towards happiness that every woman likes to
probe if she can; and some live in it, and, to their dying
day, get no forwarder than frocks.  But she won't.
Praise the new frill-de-dills when she dons them.  Please
God there's a time coming when she'll spend money
to a better end, and fill her empty time with thoughts
of a small thing sprung from her own flesh.  No latest
fashions in a baby's first gear, I believe.  They don't
change; no more do grave clothes."

Man and wife walked homeward beside tall, tangled
hedges, full of ripeness and the manifold delicate
workmanship and wrought filigrane of seed-vessels that
follow upon the flowers.  Honor was in worldly vein,
for she had now come from calling upon folks whose
purse was deeper than her own; but Myles found the
immediate medley of the hedgerow a familiar feast, and
prattled from his simple heart about what he saw there.

"You hear so often that it's a cheerless hour which
sees the summer flowers dying, but I don't think so,
do you, sweetheart?  Look at the harvest of the hedges
in its little capsules and goblets and a thousand quaint
things!  But you've noticed all this.  You notice
everything.  Take the dainty cups, with turned rims, of the
campions; and the broadswords or horse-shoes of the
peas-blossomed things; and the cones of the foxgloves
and the shining balls of starry stitchworts; and the
daggers of herb Robert; and the bluebell's triple
treasure-house; and the violet's; and the wood-sorrel,
that shoots its grain into space; and the flying seeds
of dandelions and clematis.  And the scarlet fruits—the
adder's meat, iris, the hips and aglets, bryony and
nightshade; and the dark berries of privets and madders
and wayfaring-tree and dogwood; and then the mast of
oak and beech and chestnut—it is endless; and all such
fine finished work!"

She listened or half listened; then spoke, when he
stopped to draw breath.

"Poor Christo used to say that he saw Autumn as
a dear, soft, plump-breasted, brown woman sitting on
a throne of sunset colours—sitting there smiling and
counting all the little cones and purses and pods with
her soft hazel eyes, until falling leaves hid her from his
sight in a rain of scarlet and gold and amber, under
crystalline blue hazes.  And sometimes he saw her in
the corn, with the round moon shining on her face,
while she lingered lovingly in the silver, and the ripe
grain bent to kiss her feet and stay her progress.  And
sometimes"—she broke off suddenly.  "You have an
eye like a lynx for detail, Myles.  Nothing escapes you.
It is very wonderful to me."

He was pleased.

"I love detail, I think—detail in work and play.  Yet
Yeoland taught me more than he learned from me.
The seeds are symbols of everlasting things, of life
being renewed—deathless."

Honor yawned, but bent her head so that he should
not see the involuntary expression of weariness.
Believing that he had her attention, he prosed on.

"For my part I often think of the first sowing, and
picture the Everlasting, like a husbandman, setting forth
to scatter the new-born, mother-naked earth with
immortal grain."

"And I suppose the slugs came as a natural consequence;
or d'you think Providence only had the happy
thought to torment poor Adam with prickles and thorns
and green flies and caterpillars and clothes after he'd
made that unfortunate effort to enlarge his mind?"

Myles started.

"Don't, Honor love!  You should not take these
things so.  But I'm sorry; I thought I was interesting
you."

"So you were; and those heavy, brick-red curtains of
Mrs. Maybridge were interesting me still more.  I don't
know whether I liked them or hated them."

"Well, decide, and I'll write to Exeter for a pair if
they please you.  Where you'll put them I don't know."

"More do I, dearest.  That's why I think I must
have a pair—to puzzle me.  Nothing ever puzzles me
now.  I've read all the riddles in my world."

"How wise!  Yet I know what you mean.  I often
feel life's got nothing left that is better than what it has
brought.  We want a hard winter to brace us—with
anxiety, too, and perhaps a loss here and there.  So
much honey is demoralising."

She looked at him with curiosity.

"Are you really as happy as all that?  I didn't know
any human being could be; I didn't think it possible to
conscious intelligence.  That's why I never quite grasped
the perfect happiness of the angels—unless they're all
grown-up children.  Nobody who has trodden this poor,
sad old world will ever be quite happy again even in
heaven.  To have been a man or woman once is to
know the shadow of sorrow for all eternity."

But he was thinking of her question, and heard no
more.  It came like a seed—like some air-borne,
invisible, flying spore of the wild fern—touched his heart,
found food there, and promised to rise by alternative
generation to an unrest of like pattern with the
mother-plant in Honor's own heart.

"You're not as happy as I am then?" he asked, with
a sudden concern in his voice.  "D'you mean that?  You
must mean it, for you wonder at the height of my
happiness, as though it was beyond your dreams."

"I'm very, very happy indeed, dear one—happier than
I thought I could be, Myles—happier by far than I
deserve to be."

But the seed was sown, and he grew silent.  In his
egotism the possibility of any ill at the root of his new
world, of a worm in the bud of his opening rose, had
never struck him.  His eyes had roamed around the
horizons of life; now there fell a little shadow upon
him from a cloud clean overhead.  He banished it
resolutely and laughed at himself.  Yet from that time
forward it occasionally reappeared.  Henceforth
unconsciously he forgot somewhat his own prosperity of mind
in attempting to perfect Honor's.  He laboured like
a giant to bring her measure of full peace.  Her days of
light and laughter were his also; while when transitory
emotions brought a chill to her manner, a cloud to her
eyes, he similarly suffered.  The wide distinctions in
their nature he neither allowed for nor appreciated.
Concerning women he knew nothing save this one,
and all the obvious, radical differences of essence and
nature, he explained to himself as necessary
differences of sex.

Man and wife proceeded together homeward, and
Honor, acutely conscious of having raised a ripple upon
the smooth sea of his content, entered with vigour into
her husband's conversation, chimed with his enthusiasm,
and plucked seeds and berries that he might name them.
Without after-showing of the bitter she had set to his
lips, Myles serenely returned to the hedgerow harvests;
and so they passed downward together towards the farm,
while the sky darkened and pavilions of the coming rain
loomed large and larger.

"Just in time," said the man.  "I heard Teign's cry
this morning; but bad weather is not going to last,
I think."

Yet the day closed in drearily, after set of sun.  The
wind fell at that hour and backed south of west; the
mist increased and merged into the density of rain; the
rain smothered up the gloaming with a steady, persistent
downpour.





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.. _`CHERRY GREPE'S SINS`:

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   CHAPTER II.


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   CHERRY GREPE'S SINS

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Where Honor's head lay upon her pillow by night,
a distance of scarcely one yard separated it from
the famous cherry tree of Endicott's.  This year, owing
to a prevalence of cold wind, the crop, though excellent,
had been unusually late, and it happened that the
thrushes and blackbirds paid exceptional attention to
the fruit.  Once, in a moment of annoyance at sight of
her shining berries mutilated by sharp bills, and pecked
to the purple-stained stones, Honor had issued an
impatient mandate to the first servant who chanced to
meet her after discovery of the birds' theft.  Henry
Collins it was, and his round eyes grew into dark moons
as she bid him shoot a few of the robbers and hang their
corpses Haman-high as a dreadful lesson to the rest.

For a fortnight after this stern decree Collins, full of
private anxieties, paid no heed to his mistress's
command, and Honor herself dismissed the matter and
forgot her order as completely as she forgot those
moments of irritation that were responsible for it; but
anon Henry recollected the circumstance, borrowed
Jonah Cramphorn's gun, rose betimes, and marched into
the garden on a morning soon after the rainstorm.  A
flutter of wings in the cherry tree attracted him, and
firing against the side of the house he brought down a
fine cock blackbird in a huddled heap of ebony feathers
now streaked with crimson, his orange bill all stained
with juice from the last cherry that he would spoil.  The
shot echoed and re-echoed through the grey stillness of
dawn, and Myles, already rising, hastened to the window,
while Honor opened her eyes, for the report had roused her.

"It's Collins!" exclaimed her husband, staring into
the dusk of day; "and the brute has shot a blackbird!
Is he mad?  How did he dare to come into the private
garden with his gun?  And now you'll most probably
have a headache—being startled out of sleep like that.
Besides, the cruelty of it."

"What a storm in a teacup, my dear!  The man is
only doing as I ordered him.  The birds are a nuisance.
They've eaten all my cherries again this year.  I bid
Collins thin them a little."

"*You* told him to shoot them?  Honor!"

"Oh, don't put on that Sunday-school-story look, my
dearest and best.  There are plenty of blackbirds and
thrushes.  The garden is still my province, at any rate."

"The birds do more good than harm, and, really, a
handful of sour cherries——"

"They're *not* sour!" she cried passionately, flaming
over a trifle and glad of any excuse to enjoy an emotion
almost forgotten.  "My father loved them; my
great-grandfather set the tree there.  It's a sacred thing to
me, and I'll have every bird that settles in it shot, if
I please."

"Honor!"

"And hung up afterwards to frighten the rest."

"I'm surprised."

"I don't care if you are.  You'll be more surprised
yet.  'Sour'!  They're better cherries than ever you
tasted at Tavistock, I know."

"Collins——"

"Collins must do what I tell him.  You're master—but
I'm mistress.  If the house is going to be divided
against itself——"

"God forbid!  What in heaven's name are you
dreaming of?  This is terrible!"

"Then let Collins kill the thrushes and blackbirds.
I wish it.  I hate them.  If you say a word I'll turn
the man off."

But two go to a quarrel.  Myles, much alarmed and
mystified by this ebullition, vowed that Collins might
shoot every bird in the county for him; then he
departed; and his lady, only regretful that the paltry
little quarrel had endured so short a time, arose much
refreshed by it.  The sluggish monotony of well-balanced
reciprocal relations made her spirits stagnant,
while pulses of opposition, like sweet breezes, seemed
always a necessity of health to invigorate and brighten
it.  Stapledon appeared at breakfast with anxious eye
and a wrinkle between his brows; his attitude towards
Honor was almost servile, and his demeanour to
the household more reserved than common; but the
mistress had obviously leapt from her couch into
sunshine.  She chatted cheerfully to all, granted Sally
a morning away from work, when that maiden begged
for some leisure; and herself, after breakfast,
announced a determination to go afield and see whether
the recent rain had improved the fishing.  Myles
offered to make holiday also, but, with the old ripple
in her voice and between two kisses, she refused him.

"No, dear heart.  'Tis my whim to go alone.  I'm
feeling a good girl to-day, and that's so rare that I
don't want to spoil the sensation.  So I mean
catching some trout for your supper and Uncle Mark's.
Don't come.  A day alone on the Moor will blow away
some cobwebs and make me better company for my
dear, good husband."

Presently she tramped off to northern Teign, where
it tumbles by slides and rocky falls through steep valley
under Watern's shoulder; and as she left the men at
the garden, Mr. Endicott turned his blind eyes upon
Myles with a sort of inquiry in them.

"What's come over her to-day?  Fresh as a daisy
seemingly, and happy as a lark.  Got a new ring or
bracelet out of you?  The old note, that I've missed of
late and sorrowed to miss.  But I can name it now,
because it's come back.  What's the reason?"

"I can't tell you.  You hurt me a good deal when
you say you've missed any indication of happiness in
her.  As a matter of fact we had a brief passage of
words this morning.  Nothing serious of course.  That
wasn't it at any rate."

Mr. Endicott chuckled.

"But it was though, for certain!  You set a current
flowing.  You've done her a power of good by crossing
her.  I don't want any details, but a word to the wise is
enough.  Labour keeps your life sweet; she wants
something else.  Some women must have a little healthy
opposition.  I wager she loves you better for denying
some wish or issuing some order."

"Not at all.  Since we're on this incident I may
mention that I gave way completely.  But 'twas a
paltry thing."

"Then if a breeze that ends tamely, by her getting
her will, can shake her into such brave spirits, think
how it would be if you'd forbid her and had your way!
Learn from it—that's all.  Some natures can't stand
eternal adoration.  They sicken on it.  There's no good
thing, but common-sense, you can't have too much of.
So don't be—what's the word?"

"Uxorious," said Myles Stapledon drearily.

"Yes.  Don't pamper her with love.  You're all the
world to her and she to you; but take a lesson from her
and hide more than you show.  Man and woman's built
for stormy weather, and as calm seas and snug harbours
breed grass and barnacles on a ship's bottom, so you
can reckon it with sheltered souls.  I've seen whole
families rot away and vanish from this sort of
self-indulgence.  It saps strength and sucks the iron out
of a man.  There's metal in you both.  Don't try and
stand between her and the weather of life."

"I understand you, uncle.  I'm only waiting for
trouble to come.  I know all this happiness isn't
entirely healthy.  But it's natural I should wish to
shield her."

"Right, my son.  Only remember she's a hardy plant
and won't stand greenhouse coddling.  How would you
like it yourself?"

They parted, the younger impressed with a new
idea; yet, as the day wore on, he began to think of
Honor, and presently strolled up the hill to meet her.
Once he laughed to himself as he tramped to the
heights; but it was a gloomy laugh.  This idea of
quarrelling as a counter-irritant, of coming nearer to
her by going further off, he little appreciated.

Myles wandered to the circle of Scor Hill and mused
there.  Here she had denied him in snow, offered herself
to him in springtime.  Honor he did not see, but another
woman met his gaze.  She was aged and bent, and she
passed painfully along under a weight of sticks gathered
in the valley.  He spoke from his seat on a stone.

"I should not carry so much at one load, Cherry;
you'll hurt yourself."

Gammer Grepe, thus accosted, flung her sticks to the
ground and turned to Myles eagerly.

"'Tis a gude chance I find 'e alone," she said, "for
I'm very much wantin' to have a tell with 'e if I may
make so bold."

"Sit down and rest," he answered.

Then the gammer began with tearful eagerness.

"'Tis this way.  For years an' years the folks have
been used to look sideways 'pon me an' spit awver
theer shoulders arter I'd passed by.  An' I won't say
the dark things my mother knawed be hid from me.
But I never could abear the deeds I've been forced
into, an' was allus better pleased doin' gude than harm.
God's my judge of that.  But I've so fair a right to live
as my neighbours, an' I've done many an' many a ugly
thing for money, an' I shall again, onless them as can
will come forrard and help me.  Eighty-four I be—I'll
take my oath of it; an' that's a age when a lone woman
did ought be thinkin' of the next world—not doin' dark
deeds in this."

Myles had seen his wife far off and caught the flutter
of her dress in the valley a mile distant.  She was still
fishing as her tardy progress testified, but where she
stood the river was hidden under a tumble of rocky
ledges.  He turned in some surprise to the old woman.

"D'you mean that here, now, in the year eighteen
hundred and seventy-one, folks still ask you for your
help to do right or wrong and seriously think you can
serve them?"

"Ess fay; an' I do serve them; an' 'tis that I'm weary
of.  But, seein' theer's nought betwixt me an' the Union
Workhouse but theer custom, I go on.  Theer's cures
come fust—cures for childern's hurts an' the plagues
of beasts."

"That's not doing harm, though it's not doin' good either."

"Listen, caan't 'e?  Ban't all.  I killed a man last
year for ten shillin'!  An' it do lie heavy upon me yet.
An' the mischief is, that my heart be so hard that I'd do
the same to-morrow for the same money.  I must live,
an' if I caan't get honest dole at my time of life, I must
make wicked money."

Stapledon inwardly decided that the sooner this old-time
survival was within the sheltering arm of the poor-house
the better.  He suspected that she was growing anile.

"You mustn't talk this nonsense, mother.  Surely you
know it is out of your power to do any such thing as
'ill-wish,' or 'overlook,' let alone destroy anybody?"

"That's all you knaw!  Us o' the dark side o' life be
so auld as Scripture.  The things we'm taught was
never in no books, so they'm livin' still.  Print a thing
and it dies.  We'm like the woman as drawed up
Samuel against Saul.  We can do more'n we think we
can here an' theer.  I killed a man other end of the
world so sure's if I'd shot un through the heart; for
them as seed my deed, which I offered up for ten
shillin' o' money, has ears so long as from here to
hell-fire; an' they sent a snake.  I drawed a circle
against Christopher Yeoland, an' picked him, like a
bullace, afore he was ripe.  An', along o' poverty, I'd
do the same against anybody in the land—'cepting
awnly the Lard's anointed Queen—so theer!  That's
the black state o' wickedness I be in; an' 'tis for you at
Bear Down to give me gude money an' a regular bit
weekly, else theer'll be more mischief.  Yet 'tis a
horrible thing as I should have to say it—me so auld
as I be, wi' wan foot in the graave."

"So it is horrible," said Myles sternly, "and if you
were not so old I should say the ancient remedy of a
ducking in a horse-pond would be the best way to treat
you.  To wish evil to that harmless man!  Surely you
are not such a malignant old fool as to think you
destroyed him?"

"Me!  Gude Lard A'mighty, I wouldn't hurt a
long-cripple or a crawling eft.  'Twas awnly to earn bread.
Who paid me I caan't tell 'e, for we has our pride; but
I was awnly the servant.  Us larns a deal 'bout the
inner wickedness of unforgiving sawls in my calling."

"It must have been a strange sort of brute who
would wish to hurt Christopher Yeoland; but you
needn't be concerned, old woman.  Be sure your
tomfoolery didn't send death to him."

Cherry reddened under her wrinkles.

"'Tis you'm the fule!" she cried.  "I knaw what
I knaw; an' I knaw what power be in me very well,
same as my mother afore me.  An' best give heed
or you might be sorry you spoke so scornful.  I'm a
wise woman; an' wise I was years an' years afore your
faither ever got you.  I doan't ax for no opinions on
that.  I ax for money, so I shall give up these things an'
die inside the fold of Jesus—not outside it.  Because my
manner of life be like to end in an oncomfortable plaace,
an' I'd give it up to-morrow if I could live without it."

"You're a very wicked woman, Charity Grepe!"
flamed Stapledon, "and a disgrace to the countryside
and all who allow themselves to have any dealings with
you.  I thought you only charmed warts and such
nonsense.  But, here at the end of your life, you deal
in these disgusting superstitions and apparently gull
intelligent human beings with your tricks.  Be sure
a stop shall be put to that if I can bring it about.  The
hands at Endicott's at least won't patronise you any
more.  You might be locked up if half this was known."

"Then you won't help me to a higher way of living
an' regular wages?"

"You must reform first.  I can promise nothing."

Cherry, in doubt whether to bless or curse, but
disposed towards the latter expression of her emotions,
rose and eyed Stapledon suspiciously.  He too rose,
helped her with her bundle, and again assured her that
she must promise reformation before he could
undertake any practical assistance.  So she hobbled away,
uneasy and angered.  Actual wounded feeling was at
the bottom of her resentment.  Whatever her real age,
she was human, and therefore not too old to be vain.
Since the death of Christopher Yeoland, Gammer Grepe
had taken herself very seriously and been much
impressed with the nature of her own powers.

Ten minutes later husband and wife met, and Stapledon
spoke of his recent experience.

"Scor Hill Circle seems destined to be the theatre of
all my strangest accidents."

"And most terrible, perhaps?"

"And most precious.  But this last is grim enough.
Just now that old hag Cherry Grepe was here begging
and threatening in a breath.  Think of it: she says she
killed Christopher Yeoland!"

Time is like a Moor mist and weaves curtains of a
density very uncertain, very apt to part and vanish in
those moments when they look most impenetrable.
Moods will often roll away the years until memory
reveals past days again, and temperaments there are
that possess such unhappy power in this sort that they
can rend the curtain, defy time, and stand face to face
at will with the full proportions of a bygone grief,
though kindly years stretch out between to dim vision
and soften the edges of remembrance.

Honor often thought of her old lover, and during
this day, alone with her mind and the face of the
Moor, she had occupied herself about him.  She had a
rare faculty for leaving the past alone, but, seeing that
he was now dead, and that she believed in eternity,
Honor pictured that state, and wondered if a friendship,
impossible between two men and a woman, would be
practicable for the three when all were ghosts.  An
existence purely spiritual was a pleasant image in her
esteem, and to-day, while all unknowing she hovered on
the brink of incidents inseparably entwined with flesh
and womanhood, she bent her thoughts upon radiant
pictures and dreamed strange dreams of an eternal
conscious existence clothed only with light.

The crude announcement of Gammer Grepe's
confession came inharmoniously upon her thoughts from
one direction, yet chimed therewith at the standpoint
of the supernatural.  She shivered, yet laughed; she
declared that Cherry and her cottage should be conveyed
entirely to Exeter Museum as a fascinating relic of old
times; yet recollected with a sort of discomfort the old
woman's predictions concerning herself when, as a girl,
and in jest, she had sought to hear her fortune.





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.. _`A SECRET`:

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   CHAPTER III.


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   A SECRET

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Mark Endicott showed not a little interest
in the matter of Cherry Grepe.  Such a survival
astonished him, and being somewhat of a student in
folk-lore, he held that, far from discouraging the wise
woman, she should be treated with all respect, and an
effort made to gather a little of her occult knowledge.

By a coincidence, soon after Stapledon's conversation
with the wise woman, there came further corroboration
of Cherry's powers from the mouth of one among her
steadfast clients.  After supper, at that hour when the
hands were wont to utter their opinions or seek for
counsel from those in authority over them, Mr. Cramphorn
opened a great question vital to his own peace
of mind and the welfare of his daughters.  Jonah loved
them both with a generous measure of paternal regard
for one of his mental restrictions.  Next to his mistress
in his esteem came Sally and Margery; and now, with
passage of days, there grew in him a great perplexity,
for his daughters were old enough to take husbands
and both apparently desired the same; while, as if that
did not present complication sufficient, the man their
ardent hearts were fixed upon by no means commended
himself to Cramphorn's judgment.

As for Mr. Libby, with an impartiality very
exasperating, he committed himself to no definite course.
He made it plain that he desired an alliance with
Jonah; yet, under pressure of such monkey brains as
Providence had bestowed upon him, and secretly strong
in two strings to his bow, he held the balance with
great diplomacy between these maids and exercised
a patience—easy to one who in reality possessed little
love for either.  His aim was to learn whether Sally
or her sister had greatest measure of her father's regard,
for he was far-seeing, knew that Mr. Cramphorn might
be considered a snug man, and must in the course of
nature presently pass and leave his cottage and his
savings behind him.  The cottage lease had half a
hundred years to run, and an acre of ground went with
it.  So Gregory, while he leant rather to Sally
Cramphorn by reason of her physical splendours, was in no
foolish frenzy for her, and the possible possession of
a house and land had quickly turned the scale in favour
of her sister.  Moreover, he was alive to the fact that
the father of the girls held him in open dislike; another
sufficient cause for procrastination.

With indifferent good grace Jonah recorded his
anxieties to Myles and Mark Endicott.

"Both wife-auld, an' be gormed if I knaw what to do
'bout it.  A gude few would have 'em, but not wan's
for theer market seemin'ly except that fantastical chap,
Greg Libby, who stands between 'em, like a donkey
between two dachells.  I may as well awn up as I seed
Cherry Grepe on it, but for wance seems to me as I
thrawed away my money.  Two shillin' I gived her an'
got nought."

"What did she say?" asked Mr. Endicott.

"Her took me by a trick like.  Fust her said, 'Do 'e
reckon your gals have brains in theer heads?'  An' I
said, 'Coourse they have, so gude as any other females in
theer station o' life.'  Then her said, 'You'm satisfied
with theer intellects?'  An' I said, 'Why for shouldn't
I be?'  Then said Cherry, 'Very well, Jonah; let 'em
bide an' find men for theerselves.  Ban't your business,
an' you'll be a fule to make it so.  'Tis awnly royal
princesses,' she said, 'an' duchesses an' such like as have
to set other people husband-huntin' for 'em.  But us
humble folks of the airth—'tis the will of Providence we
may wed wheer we love, like the birds.  Let 'em bide,
an' doan't keep such a hell-hard hold awver 'em,' said
her to me, 'an' then they'll larn you in theer awn
time what they be gwaine to do 'bout husbands,' she said."

"Don't see who can give you better advice, Jonah.  I
can't for one.  Looks to me as if old Cherry's got more
sense than I was led to believe.  Let them find their
own men—only see to it when found that they're sound
in wind and limb.  Libby's got a cleft palate, and, likely
as not, his child will have one.  'Tisn't in reason that a
lovesick girl should think for her unborn children; but
for his grandchildren a man ought to think if chance
offers.  Anyway, never give a flaw any opportunity to
repeat itself, when you can prevent such a thing.  Not
enough is done for love of the unborn in this world.
'Tis them we ought to make laws for."

By no means satisfied, Cramphorn presently went to
bed, and Myles pursued the subject for a while.  Then
he too retired, taking the lamp with him, and the blind
man knitted on for a space, while a choir of crickets
chirruped and sped about upon the hearth.

But though Stapledon went to his chamber, the day
was not yet done for him, the theme in his thoughts not
yet to be extinguished.  Since their trivial quarrel
Honor and her husband had been as happy together as
man and woman need pray to be, and that dim, dreary
shadow which Myles had stared at, Honor shut her eyes
upon, might be said to have retreated to a point of
absolute disappearance.  The ache in the man, that
showed at his eyes, had passed like any other pain; the
twinge in the woman, revealed not at all, though
generally followed by a humorous speech, troubled her no
more at this moment.  She grew pensive and very
self-absorbed; she stared absently through the faces of those
who addressed her; she dwelt much with her own
thoughts and discoveries.

This night she was not in bed when Myles entered
her room, but sat beside the open window, her elbows
upon the sill and her face between her hands.

"Myles," she said, "there's a man down in the meadow.
I saw him distinctly pass between two of the sleeping
cows.  Then he drifted into the shadow of the
hedge—a man or a ghost."

"A man, sweetheart, though I know you would rather
think it something else and so get a new sensation.
Pinsent probably, as a matter of prosy fact.  I bid him
get me some rabbits.  Shut the window and come to
bed.  You'll catch cold."

"No; I'm cold-proof now—so the old wives say
when——  Come here a minute, Myles, and sit here
and look at the moon and listen to the dor beetles.
There will not be many more such nights and such
silvery mists this year."

"You can almost see the damp in the air," he said.

"Yes, and down below, with ear to grass, one might
hear the soft whisper of the little mushrooms breaking
out of Mother Earth, while the fairies dance round them
and scatter the dew."

"You're not wise to sit there, dear love."

"I must be humoured—we must be."

He threw off his coat and stretched his great arms
in pleasant anticipation of rest and sleep.

"Whatever do you mean, my pretty?"

"I mean that I have a long, tedious, tremendous
enterprise in hand.  A most troublesome enterprise.
You're always at me not to waste time.  Now I'm really
going to be busy."

"You couldn't tell me anything I'd like to hear better."

"Couldn't I?  Remember!"

He did remember.

"That—yes—all in good time."

"Not a moment more shall I waste.  You'll guess
I'm in earnest, for I'm going to work night and day."

"A fine resolve!  But keep your work for working
hours, sweetheart.  And how many are to benefit by
this great achievement?"

"Who can tell that?  It may be for good or for harm.
Yet we have a right to be hopeful."

"You make me most curious.  How shall I view it,
I wonder?"

"Well, you ought to be rather pleased, if you've told
me the truth.  And—look!"

A meteor gleamed across the misty moonlight.  It
seemed to streak the sky with radiance, was reflected
for an instant in the pond among the rhododendrons,
then vanished.

"D'you know what that means?" asked Honor.

"A wandering atom from some old, ruined world
perhaps, now burnt up in our atmosphere."

"And do new-born souls come wandering from old,
ruined worlds, I wonder?  The German folk say that a
shooting-star means a new life brought down from
above, Myles.  And—and how I do wish next May was
come and gone; and if it's a girl, my dear one, I believe
I shall go mad with disappointment."

So new fires were lighted in the man's deep heart, and
blazed aloft like a signal of great joy and thanksgiving.
His first impulse was to cuddle her to his breast; then
he felt her to be a holy thing henceforth, separated from
him by a veil impenetrable.

Long after his wife slept he lay in thought, and his
spirit was much exalted, and his grey mind filled to
bursting with sense of unutterable obligations.  Nature
was not enough to thank; she alarmed him rather, for,
upon the approach of such experience, men fear the
impassive Earth-Mother as well as love her.  But that
night he felt with unusual acuteness the sense of the
vague power behind; and it pressed him on to his knees
for a long, silent, wordless hour with his soul—an hour
of petition and thanksgiving, of renewed thanksgiving
and renewed petition.





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.. _`THE WISDOM OF MANY`:

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   CHAPTER IV.


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   THE WISDOM OF MANY

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When the news spread to all ears at Endicott's
and beyond it, Mr. Cramphorn, ever generous
of his great gift, and always ready to speak in public if
a high theme was forthcoming, proposed to make an
official congratulation in the name of himself and his
companions.  His love of his mistress prompted him
to the step; yet he designed a graceful allusion to
Myles also.

It was with much difficulty that Churdles Ash
prevailed upon Jonah to postpone this utterance.

"'Tis a seemly thought enough," admitted the ancient,
"an' I, as knaws your power of speech, would be the fust
man to hit 'pon the table an' say 'Hear, hear' arter;
but ban't a likely thing for to do just now, 'cause fust
theer's the bashfulness of her—an' a woman's that
bashful wi' the fust—that shaame-faaced an' proud all to
wance, like a young hen lookin' round to find a plaace
gude enough to lay her fust egg in, an' not findin' it.
Then theer's the laws of Nature, as caan't be foretold to
a hair by the wisest; so, all in all, I'd bide till the baaby's
born if I was you.  You'm tu wise to count your awn
chickens 'fore they'm hatched out; then why for should
'e count any other party's?  But bide till arter—then
you'll give us a braave discoourse no doubt."

So Jonah delayed his next important declaration as
mouthpiece of Bear Down; but while he thus restrained
the warmth of his heart and denied himself the pleasure
of his own voice uplifted in a public capacity, neither
he nor any other adult member of the little
community saw reason to desist from general conversation
upon so interesting a subject.  During Sunday evenings,
after supper, while the men smoked their pipes upon
departure of Honor and her maids, the welfare of the
little promised one grew to be a favourite theme; and
Myles, proud but uneasy at first, in the frank atmosphere
of conjecture, theory, and advice, now accepted the
reiterated congratulations as a matter of course, and
listened to the opinions and experiences of those who
might be supposed to have deeper knowledge than his
own in such delicate affairs.

There fell a Sunday evening hour towards Christmas,
when Mr. Ash, full of an opinion awakened in him at
church, began to utter advice concerning Honor; and
the rest, chiming in, fell to recording scraps of sense and
nonsense upon the great subject in all its relations.

"Seed missis down-along to worship's marnin'," said
Mr. Ash; "an' fegs! but she was a deal tu peart an'
spry 'pon her feet if you ax me.  She did ought to
keep her seat through the psalms an' hymns an' spiritual
songs; an' theer's another thought, as rose up in sermon:
Onless you want for your son—come a bwoy—to be a
minister, 'tis time missis gived up church altogether
till arter."

"Why for not a parson?" inquired Cramphorn.  "'Tis
a larned, necessary trade, though other folk, tu, may
knaw a little 'bout principalities here an' there.  Still,
seein' all they do—why they'm so strong as Lard
Bishops come to think of it, 'cept for laying on of
hands—though why that calls for a bigger gun than
a marryin' I never yet heard set out.  You'd say a
weddin' was the stiffest job—the worst or the best as
man can do for his fellow-man.  However, a larned
trade 'twill be no doubt—not farmin', of course," he
concluded.

"As to that, it depends," said Stapledon quite seriously,
"if he showed a strong taste."

"We'll hope he'll be ambitious," declared Mark.  "Yes,
ambitious and eager to excel in a good direction.  Then
he'll be all right."

"But he might be blowed away from his ambition by
the things as look gude to young gen'lemen, so I should
keep un short of money if I was you," advised Mr. Ash.

"Blown away!  Not he—not if his ambition is a
live thing.  If he lets pleasure—dangerous or
harmless—come between him and his goal—then 'twill be mere
vanity, only wind, nothing.  But let me see a lad with a
big, clean ambition.  Nought keeps him so straight or
makes his life a happier thing to himself and others."

"You never do see it," declared Myles.  "A fine idea,
but it hardly ever happens."

"Not lawyering," begged Jonah, drawing down his
eyebrows.  "Doan't 'e let un go for a lawyer, maister.
'Tis a damn dismal trade, full of obstructions and
insurrections between man an' man, an' man an' woman."

"So it is then!" ejaculated Mr. Endicott heartily.
"A damn dismal trade!  You never said a truer word,
Jonah.  They live in a cobweb world of musty, dusty,
buried troubles, and they rake justice out of stuff set
down by dead men for dead men.  'Tis precedent they
call it; and it strangles justice like dogma strangles
religion.  Myles understands me."

"They'm a solemn spectacle—the bettermost of 'em
be—savin' your honor's pardon," ventured Pinsent.
"The fur an' robes an' wigs of 'em do look terrible
enough to a common man."

"Terrible tomfoolery!  Terrible science of escaping
through the trap-doors of precedent from common-sense!"

"But I seed a high judge to Exeter," persisted Pinsent.
"An' 'twas at the 'Sizes; an' he told a man for hangin';
an' his eyes was like gimlets; an' his lean face was so
grey as his wig; an' a black cap he had; an', what's
worse, left no room for hope of any sort."

"Rogues, rogues," growled the blind man.  "I'd sooner
see son of mine fighting with the deep sea or building
honest houses with moor-stone.  A vile trade, I tell you;
a trade to give any young mind a small, cunning twist
from the outset!"

To hear and see Mr. Endicott show heat upon any
subject, and now lapse from his own judicial attitude
upon this judicial theme, provoked a moment of silence
and surprise.  Then Mr. Ash returned to his practical
starting-point.

"Gospel truth and the case against law put in a
parable," he declared; "but theer's a gude few things
to fall out afore the cheel's future performances call for
minding.  Fegs!  He've got to be born fust, come to
think of it.  'Tis the mother as you must be busy for,
not the cheel; an' I'd warn 'e to fill her mind with
gude, salted sense; an' also let her bide in the sunshine
so much as her can these dark days.  An' doan't let
her read no newspapers, for the world's a bloody
business by all accounts, with battles an' murders an'
sudden deaths every weekday, despite the Litany
Sundays—as doan't make a ha'porth o' differ'nce
seemin'ly.  Keep her off of it; an' never talk 'bout
churchyards, nor ghostes, nor butcher's meat, nor any such
gory objects."

"I won't—in fact I never do," answered Myles, who
was as childlike as the rest of the company upon this
subject.  "No doubt a calm and reposeful manner of
living is the thing."

"Ess," concluded Mr. Ash; "just Bible subjects, an'
airly hours, an' such food as she fancies in reason.
'Seek peace and ensue it,' in Scripture phrase.  An'
leave the rest to Providence.  Though in a general way
'tis a gude rule to leave nought to Providence as you
can look arter yourself."

"Shall 'e lift your hand to un, maister?" inquired
Mr. Collins.  "They tell me I was lathered proper by my
faither afore I'd grawed two year auld.  Do seem a
gentle age to wallop a bwoy; yet here I be."

"'Tis a very needful thing indeed," declared
Cramphorn—"male an' female for that matter.  A bwoy's
built to larn through his hide fust, his head arterwards.
Hammer 'em! I sez.  Better the cheel should holler
than the man groan; better the li'l things should kick
agin theer faither's shins than kick agin his heart, come
they graw."

"If we could only be as wise as our words," said
Myles.  "I'm sure I gather good advice enough of
nights for a king's son to begin life with.  So many
sensible men I never saw together before.  You're likely
to kill him with kindness, I think."

The boy Tommy Bates returned home from a walk
to Chagford at this moment, with his mouth so full of
news that he could not get it out with coherence.

"A poacher to Godleigh last night!  Ess fay!  An'
keeper runned miles an' miles arter un, if he's tellin'
truth; an' 'twas Sam Bonus—that anointed rascal from
Chaggyford by all accounts.  Not that keeper can
swear to un, though he's very near positive.  Catched
un so near as damn it—slippery varmint!  An' his
pockets all plummed out wi' gert game birds!  But
theer 'tis—the law ban't strong enough to do nought
till the chap's catched red-handed an' brought for trial."

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Thus the advent of a precious new life at Endicott's
was discussed most gravely and seriously.  Mark
Endicott indeed not seldom burst a shell of laughter
upon so much wisdom, but Stapledon saw nothing
to be amused at.  To him the subject was more
important and fascinating than any upon which thought
could be employed, and he permitted no utterance or
canon of old custom to escape unweighed.  At first
he repeated to his wife a little of all that eloquence
set flowing when she retired; but Honor always met
the subject with a silver-tongued torrent of irreverent
laughter, and treated the ripest principles of Mr. Ash
and his friends with such contemptuous criticisms that
her husband soon held his peace.

Yet he erred in forgetting the blind man's warning
under this added provocation of a little one in the bud;
he spent all his leisure with his wife; he tried hard to
catch her flitting humours, and even succeeded
sometimes; but oftener he won a smile and a look of love
for the frank failure of his transparent endeavours.

"Don't be entertaining, sweetheart," she said to him.
"I cannot tell how it is, but if you are serious, I am
happy; if you jest and try to make me laugh, my
spirits cloud and come to zero in a moment.  That's
a confession of weakness, you see; for women so seldom
have humour.  Everybody says that.  So be grave, if
you want me to be gay.  I love you so; and gravity is
proper to you.  It makes me feel how big and strong
you are—how fortunate I am to have you to fight the
battle of life for me."

"I wish I could," he said.  "But you're right.  I'm
not much of a joker.  It's not that you have a weak
sense of humour that makes me miss fire; it's because
you have a strong one."

Sometimes the veil between them seemed to thicken
from his standpoint.  Even a little formality crept into
his love; and this Honor felt and honestly blamed
herself for.  Mark Endicott also perceived this in the voice
of the man; and once he spoke concerning it, when the
two walked together during a January noon.

It was a grey and amber day of moisture, gentle
southern wind and watery sunlight—a day of heightened
temperature, yet of no real promise that the earth was
waking.  Ephemera were hatched, and flew and warped
in little companies, seen against dark backgrounds.
Hazardous bud and bird put forth petal and music, and
man's heart longed for spring; but his reason told him
that the desire was vain.

"No lily's purple spike breaking ground as yet, I
doubt?" said Mark Endicott, as he paced his favourite
walk in the garden.

"Not yet.  But the red japonica buds already make
a gleam of colour against the house.

"What good things this coming springtime has
hidden under her girdle for you, Myles!  Leastways,
one's a right to hope so.  That reminds me.  Is Honor
happy with you alone?  Not my business, and you'll
say I'm an old cotquean; but I'm blind, and, having no
affairs of my own, pry into other people's.  Yet
Honor—why, she's part of my life, and the best part.  She
seems more silent than formerly—more and more as
the days pass.  Natural, of course.  I hear her thread,
and the click of her needle, and her lips as she bites the
cotton; but her work I can't follow with my ears now,
for it's all soft wool, I suppose.  She said yesterday
that she much wished I could see her new garb—'morning
gown' she called it.  She's pleased with it, so I
suppose you've praised it."

"Yes, uncle, and was sorry that I had.  I don't
know how it is, but I contradict myself in small things,
and she never forgets, and reminds me, and makes me
look foolish and feel so.  This gown—a brown, soft,
shiny thing, all lined with silky stuff the colour of
peach-blossom, warm and comfortable—I admired it
heartily, and said it was a fine thing, and suited her well."

"You could do no more."

"But somehow I was clumsy—I am clumsy, worse
luck.  And she said, 'Don't praise my clothes, sweetheart;
that's the last straw.'  'Last straw' she certainly
said, yet probably didn't guess how grave that made the
sentence sound.  Then she went on, 'You know my
gowns don't match earth and sky one bit; and you love
better the drabs and duns of the folk.  You've told me
so, and I quite understand.  You'd rather have Sally's
apron and sun-bonnet, and see her milking, with her
apple cheeks pressed against a red cow, than all my
most precious frippery.  And, of course, you're right, and
that makes it so much the more trying.'  Now that was
uncalled for.  Don't you think so?  I say this from no
sorrow at it, God bless her! but because you may help
read the puzzle.  I don't understand her absolutely, yet.
Very nearly, but not absolutely."

"No, you don't, that's certain.  The mistake is to try
to.  You're wise in what you let alone, as a rule.  But
her nature you can't suffer to grow without fuss.
There's a sound in your voice to her—afore the hands,
too—like a servant to his mistress."

"I am her servant."

"Yes, I know; so am I also; but—well, no call to
tramp the old ground.  You might guess she'd look for
gentleness and petting, yet——"

"She asks for it one moment, and grows impatient at
it the next."

"Well, you'll learn a bit some day; but you've not
got the build of mind to know much about women."

Myles sighed, and drummed his leg with a whip.

"It's all so small and petty and paltry—these shades
and moods and niceties and subtleties."

"Women will have 'em."

"Well, I try."

"Go on trying.  The world's full of these small
things, speaking generally.  You're built for big, heavy
game.  Yet it's your lot to catch gnats just now—for
her.  And she knows how hard you try.  It'll come
right when she's herself again.  Life brims with such
homespun, everyday fidgets.  They meet a man at
every turn."

"I long to be heart and heart with her; and I am;
but not always."

"Well, don't addle your brains about it.  Your large
kindness with dogs and beasts, and love of them, and
discipline would please her best.  If you could only
treat her as you treat them."

"Treat her so!  She's my wife."

"I know; and lucky for her.  But remember she
can't change any more than you can.  The only difference
is that she doesn't try to, and you do.  All this
brooding and morbidness and chewing over her light
words is not worthy of a man.  Be satisfied.  You'll
wear—you can take that to your comfort.  You'll wear all
through, and the pattern of you is like to be brighter in
her eyes ten years hence than now.  No call to go in
such a fog of your own breeding.  Wood and iron are
different enough in their fashion as any two creatures
in the world; but that doesn't prevent 'em from cleaving
exceeding tight together.  She knows all this well
enough; she's a woman with rather more sense of
justice than is common to them; and your future's
sure, if you'll only be patient and content; for she
loves you better far than she's ever told you, or is ever
likely to."





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.. _`IN SPRING MOONLIGHT`:

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   CHAPTER V.


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   IN SPRING MOONLIGHT

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Another springtime gladdened the heart of man
and set the sap of trees, the blood of beasts, the
ichor of the wild wood gods a-flowing.  A green veil
spread again, a harmony of new-born music, colour,
scent, all won of sunshine, rose from feathered throats,
from primroses, from censers of the fragrant furze;
and there was whisper of vernal rains, ceaseless hurtle
of wings, and murmur of bees; while upon new harps
of golden green, soft west winds sang to the
blue-eyed, busy young Earth-Mother, their immemorial song.

Honor Endicott moved amid the translucent verdure;
and her eyes shadowed mystery, and her heart longed
for her baby's coming, as a sick man longs for light of
day.  She found an awakening interest in her own sex—a
thing strange to her, for few women had ever peeped
within the portals of her life; but now she talked much
with Mrs. Loveys and the matrons of Little Silver.  She
listened to their lore and observed how, when a woman's
eyes do dwell upon her child, there comes a look into
them that shall never be seen at any other time.  She
noticed the little children, and discovered with some
surprise how many small, bright lives even one hamlet
held.  Black and brown-eyed, blue-eyed and grey;
with white skins and red; with soft voices and shrill;
rough and gentle; brave and fearful—she watched them
all, and thought she loved them all, for the sake of one
precious baby that would come with the first June
roses.  The little life quickened to the love-songs of
the thrushes; it answered the throbbing music of river
and wood; its sudden messages filled her eyes with
tears; her heart with ineffable, solemn thrills of
mother-joy.  Great calm had spread its wings about Honor.
She approached her ordeal in a high spirit, as of
old-time mothers of heroes.  She abstracted herself from
all daily routine, but walked abroad with her husband
in the long green twilights, or sat beside Mark Endicott
and watched his wooden needles tapping as he talked.
A recent pettiness of whim and fancy had almost
vanished, though now and again she did express a
desire and rested not until the fulfilment.  Fear she had
none, for the season of fear was passed, if it had ever
clouded her thoughts.  To Myles her attitude insensibly
grew softer, and she found his wealth of affection not
unpleasant as her time approached.  She accepted his
worship, received his gifts, even pretended to occasional
fancies that he might have the pleasure of gratifying them.

There came an evening of most lustrous beauty.
Mild rain had fallen during the day, but the sky cleared
at nightfall, when the clouds gleamed and parted in
flakes of pearl for the pageant of a full May moon.
Silently she swam out from the rack of the rain;
spread light into the heart of the spring leaves; woke
light along the glimmering grass blades; meshed and
sprinkled and kissed with light each raindrop of them
all, until the whole soaking world was bediamonded
and robed in silver-grey.

Honor turned from beholding her dim grass lands,
the time then being nine.

"I must go out," she said.  "The night is alive and
beckoning with its lovely fingers.  The peace of it!
Think of this night in the woods!  I must go out, and
you must take me, Myles."

"Not now, dearest one.  It is much too late, and
everything soaking wet after the rain."

"I can wrap up.  I feel something that tells me this
is the very last time I shall go out till—afterwards.
Just an hour—a little hour; and you can drive me.
I've got to go whether you will or not."

"Let us wait for the sun to-morrow."

"No, no—to-night.  I want to go and feel the peace
of the valley.  I want to hear the Teign sisters kissing
and cuddling each other under the moon.  I'll put on
those tremendous furs you got me at Christmas, and do
anything you like if you'll only take me."

"Doctor Mathers would be extremely angry!" murmured
her husband.

"He need know nothing about it.  Don't frown.
Please, please!  It would hearten me and cheer me;
and I promise to drink a full dose of the red wine
when I come in.  You shall pour it out.  There—who
could do more?"

She was gone to make ready before he answered, and
Mark spoke.

"She cannot take hurt in this weather if she's wrapped
up in the furs.  The air feels like milk after the rain."

Stapledon therefore made no ado about it, but
marched meekly forth, and himself harnessed a pony
to the little low carriage purchased specially for his
wife's pleasure.

Soon they set off through the new-born and moon-lit
green, under shadows that lacked that opacity proper
to high summer, under trees which still showed their
frameworks through the foliage.  Inflorescence of great
oaks hung in tassels of chastened gold, and a million
translucent leaves diffused rather than shut off the
ambient light.  Unutterable peace marked their
progress; no shard-borne things made organ music; no
night-bird cried; only the rivers called under the
moon, the mist wound upon the water-meadows, and
the silver of remote streamlets twinkled here and there
from the hazes of the low-lying grass land or the
shadows of the woods—twinkled and vanished, twinkled
and vanished again beyond the confines of the
night-hidden valley.

"A fairy hour," said Honor; "and all things awake
and alive with a strange, strange moon-life that they
hide by day."

"The rabbits are awake at any rate.  Too many for
my peace of mind if this was my land."

"Don't call them rabbits.  I'm pretending that their
little white scuts are the pixy people.  And there's
Godleigh under the fir trees—peeping out with huge
yellow eyes—like the dragon of an old legend."

"Yes, that's Godleigh."

"Drive me now to Lee Bridge.  It was very good
of you to come.  I appreciate your love and self-denial
so much—so much more than I can find words to tell
you, Myles."

"God be good to you, my heart!  I wish I deserved
half your love.  You make me young again to hear you
speak so kindly—young and happy too—happy as I can
be until afterwards."

"It won't be many more weeks.  The days that seemed
so long in winter time are quite short now, though
it is May.  That is how a woman's heart defies the
seasons and reverses the order of Nature on no greater
pretext than a paltry personal one."

"Not paltry!"

"Why, everything that's personal is paltry, I suppose,
even to the bearing of your first baby."

"I should be sorry if you thought so, Honor."

"Of course, I don't really.  Hush now; let me watch
all these dear, soft, moony things and be happy, and
suffer them to work their will on my mind.  I'm very
near my reformation, remember.  I'm going to be so
different afterwards.  Just a staid, self-possessed, sensible
matron—and as conservative as a cow.  Won't there be
a peace about the home?"

"Honor!"

"Honour bright.  Look at Forde's new thatch!  I hate
new thatch under the sun, but in the moonlight it is
different.  His cot looks like some golden-haired, goblin
thing that's seen a ghost.  How pale the whitewash
glares; and the windows throw up the whites of their
eyes!"

"Don't talk so much.  I'm sure you'll catch cold or
something.  Now we're going down to valley-level.
Lean against me—that's it.  This hill grows steeper
every time I drive down it, I think."

They crossed Chagford Bridge, where a giant ash
fretted the moonlight with tardy foliage still
unexpanded; then Myles drove beyond a ruined wool
factory, turned to the right, passed Holy Street and
the cross in the wall, and finally reached the
neighbourhood of Lee Bridge.  Here the air above them
was dark with many trees and the silence broken by
fitful patter of raindrops still falling from young foliage.
The green dingles and open spaces glittered with
moisture, where the light fell and wove upon them a
fabric of frosted radiance touched with jewels, to the
crest of the uncurling fern-fronds, and the wide shimmer
of the bluebell folk—moon-kissed, as Endymion of old.
Pale and wan their purple stretched and floated away
and faded dimly, rippling into the darkness; but their
scent hung upon the air, like the very breath of sleeping
spring.

"Stop here, my love," said Honor.  "What a bed for
the great light to lie upon!  What a silence for the tiny
patter of the raindrops to make music in!  And
thoughts that hide by day—sad-eyed thoughts—peep
out now upon all this perfection—hurry from their
hiding-places in one's heart and look through one's
eyes into these aisles of silver and ebony; and so go
back again a little comforted.  The glory of it!  And
if you gaze and listen closer, surely you will see Diana's
own white self stealing over the mist of the bluebells,
and hear perhaps her unearthly music.  Nay, I must
talk, Myles, or I shall cry."

"I'm only thinking of all this ice-cold damp dropping
upon you out of the trees," he said.

They proceeded, then stopped once again at Honor's
urgent desire.  The great beech of the proposal stood
before her, and she remembered the resting-place
between its roots, the words carved upon its trunk.
Its arms were fledged with trembling and shining
foliage; its upper peaks and crown were full of
diaphanous light; its huge bole gleamed like a silver
pillar; and spread under the sweep of the lower
branches there glimmered a pale sheen of amber where
myriads of little leaf-sheafs had fallen and covered the
earth as with spun silk.

Great longing to be for one moment alone with the
old tree seized upon Honor.  Suddenly she yearned
to gaze at the throne of her promise to Christopher,
to see again those letters his hand had graven upon
the bark above.  The desire descended in a storm upon
her, and shook her so strongly that her voice came,
tremulously as bells upon a wind, to utter the quick
plan of her imagination.

"I wish you'd go to the bridge yonder and get me
some water to drink.  Your tobacco pouch will do if
you rinse it well, as you often have upon the Moor.
I'm frantically thirsty."

"My dear child—wait until we get home.  Then
you've promised me to drink some wine."

"No, I can't wait; I'm parched and I want the river
water.  To please me, Myles.  It won't take you a
moment—straight between the trees there, to that old
bridge of ash poles.  That's the nearest way.  I must
drink—really I must.  It's unkind to refuse."

He grumbled a little and declared what with the
dropping trees, she might have enough water; but then
he saw her face in the moonlight, and she kissed him,
and he departed to do her bidding.

The rustic bridge, crossed by Honor at the outset of
this record, was a structure but seldom used save by
gamekeepers.  It spanned Teign some seventy yards
away from the great tree; but Myles, who did not
know the spot well, found that he must now cross a
tangled underwood to reach the river.  The place was
difficult by night, and he proceeded with caution,
emptying the tobacco out of his pouch into his pocket
as he did so.  One fall, got from a treacherous briar, he
had; then he arrived beside the bridge and noted where
faint indication of a woodland path led from it.  By
following this his return journey promised to be the
easier.  Myles knelt and scrambled to the brink,
sweetened the rubber pouch and filled it as well as he
could with water.  He had, however, scarcely regained
his feet when a shrill scream of fear twice repeated
frightened the dreaming forests from their sleep, rang
and reverberated to the depths of the woods, and
revealed a sudden echo close at hand that threw back
upon its starting-point the deep horror of the cry.  For
a second Stapledon made no movement, then he charged
into the woods and tore his way back to the road.
There he arrived a minute later, torn and bleeding.
The pony stood unmoved, but Honor had disappeared.
As Myles looked wildly about him, it seemed that in
her fearful expression of sudden terror his wife had
vanished away.  Then, amid the dark spaces of shadow
and the silver interspaces of light he found her, lying
with the moon upon her white face and one small hand
still clutching a few bluebells.  She had fallen midway
between the carriage and the great beech; she had
been stricken senseless by some physical catastrophe
or mental shock.

The man groaned aloud before what he saw, dropped
down on his knees beside her, gathered her up gently,
and uttered a thousand endearing words; but her head
fell forward without life towards him, and setting her
down, he gathered the wet, shining moss and pressed it
about her forehead and neck and unfastened the buttons
at her throat.  Great terror came upon him as she still
remained unconscious, and he picked her up to carry
her back to the carriage.  Then she moved and opened
her eyes and stretched her hands to him; whereupon,
in his turn, he cried aloud and thanked God.

As she began to apprehend, to order the broken
tangles of thought and take up again the threads so
suddenly let fall, he feared that she would faint once
more, for with return of memory there came a great
wave of terror over her eyes; but she only clung to him
and breathed with long, deep gasps of fear, yet said no
word.  Then it seemed that a physical pang distracted
her mind from the immediate past; a strange, bewildered
look crossed her upturned face, and she bowed herself
and pressed her hand into her side and moaned.

"Oh, I was a mad fool to do this!" he cried.  "I am
to blame for it all.  Let me drive—back through
Godleigh.  That's nearest.  We've the right, though we
never use it.  Say you're better now."

But she could not answer yet, and he made the pony
gallop forward until it crossed the bridge over Teign,
then turned into the private park-lands beyond.

Presently Honor spoke.

"I'm so sorry I screamed out.  I frightened you and
made you hurry from the river and tear your face.  It's
bleeding very badly still.  Take my handkerchief—poor
Myles!"

"What happened?  What were you doing?"

"I had a sudden longing to gather some of the
bluebells with the moonlight and dew on them.  Nothing
happened—at least——"

"Something must have nearly frightened you to death
from your terrible shriek."

"I don't know.  I can't remember.  A tree moved,
I think—moved and seemed alive—it was some dream
or trick of the light."

"All my fault.  Why am I thus weak with you?"

"Oh, it was so grey, Myles.  You saw nothing?"

"Nothing but you.  I had eyes for nothing else."

She shivered and nestled close to him.

"But I'm so sorry I cried out like that."

"Don't think more about it.  Half the terror was in
your mind, and half in the pranks of the moonlight
among the trees.  They look enough like ghosts.  I only
hope to heaven no harm will come of this.  The fall has
not hurt you, has it?"

"No, no, no; I shall be all right.  I was only——"

Then suffering overtook her again, and she shrank
into herself and said no more.  But as they left the
gates of Godleigh and prepared to mount the hill
homewards, Honor spoke in a small, faint voice.

"While we are here in Little Silver, dearest,
perhaps—Doctor Mathers—I don't know whether it's anything,
but I'm not very well, dear Myles.  I'm—indeed I think
baby's going to be born to-night.  Perhaps we had better
call and tell him before going home."

Her husband was overcome with concern.  He ran to
the physician's little dwelling, distant two hundred yards
off in the village, delivered his message, and then,
returning, put the astounded pony at the hill in a manner that
caused it to snort viciously and utter a sort of surprised
vocal remonstrance almost human.  The sound made
Honor laugh even at her present crisis; but the laugh
proved short, and in three minutes Myles was carrying
her to her room and bawling loudly for women.

Soon the household knew what had happened; Doctor
Mathers arrived; and Tommy Bates, hurled out of
sleep, was despatched at high pressure for Mrs. Brimblecombe,
the sexton's wife—a woman of significance at such times.

Very faintly through the silence a noise of voices came
to the ear of Collins where he slept in a spacious attic
chamber with Churdles Ash.  Thereupon Henry left
his bed and wakened the elder man.

"Theer's the douce of a upstore down house 'bout
somethin'.  Please God we ban't afire!"

Mr. Ash grunted, but the last word reached his
understanding; so he awoke, and bid the other see what was
amiss.  Collins thereupon tumbled into his trousers
and proceeded to make inquiries.  In three minutes he
returned.

"'Tis missus took bad," he said.  "A proper tantara,
I can tell 'e, an' doctor in the house tu.  Ought us to
rise up?  Might be more respectful in such a rare event."

"Rise up be damned!" said Mr. Ash bluntly.  "Not
that I wouldn't rise up to the moon if I could take the
leastest twinge off of her; but 'tis woman's work
to-night.  The sacred dooty of child-bearin' be now gwaine
on, an' at such times even the faither hisself awnly looks
a fule.  Go to sleep."

"The dear lady be afore her date seemin'ly," remarked
Collins, returning to his bed.

"'Tis allus so wi' the fustborn.  The twoads be mostly
tu forrard or tu back'ard.  An' they do say as them born
late be late ever after, an' do take a humble back plaace
all theer days; while them born airly gets ahead of
or'nary folks, an' may even graw up to be gert men.
I've seed the thing fall out so for that matter."

"An' how might it have been wi' you, I wonder, if
theer's no offence?  How was you with regards to the
reckoning?"

"'Tis a gude bit back-along when I was rather a small
bwoy," answered Churdles, laughing sleepily at his own
humour; "but, so far as I knaw, I comed 'pon the
appointed day to a hour."

"Just what us might have counted upon in such a
orderly man as you," mused Collins.

"'Tis my boast, if I've got wan, that I never made my
faither swear, nor my mother shed a tear, from the day
that I was tucked-up.[#]  No fegs!  Never.  Now you
best go to sleep, or you might hear what would hurt
your tender 'eart."

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.. class:: noindent small

[#] Short-coated.

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.. _`SORROW'S FACE`:

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   CHAPTER VI.


.. class:: center medium bold

   SORROW'S FACE

.. vspace:: 2

Throughout that short summer night the
young successor of Doctor Courteney Clack was
torn in two between a birth-bed and a death-bed.
For the old mother of Gregory Libby was now to
depart, and it chanced that the hour of her final
journey fell upon a moment of great peace before
the dawn.  Then, when she had passed, while her son
yet stared in fear from the foot of the bed, Doctor
Mathers dragged his weary limbs up the hill again to
Bear Down.  Now he rendered the household happy by
his announcement that he had come to stop until all
was concluded.

He sat and smoked cigarettes and soothed Myles, who
tramped the parlour like a caged animal.  He spoke
cheerily, noted the other's mangled face, and congratulated
him upon a narrow escape, for his left cheek was
torn by a briar to the lid of the eye.  Presently he
yawned behind his hand, gladly partook of a cup of tea,
and prayed that the expected summons from the dame
above might not be long delayed.  And when the sun
was flaming over the hills and the air one chant of birds,
there came a woman with a kind face, full of history,
and spoke to Doctor Mathers.

"Now, sir, us would like to see you."

Myles turned at the voice, but his companion was
already gone.  Then the terrific significance of these
next few moments surged into the husband's mind, and
he asked himself where he should go, what he should
do.  To go anywhere or do anything was impossible;
so he hardened his heart and tramped the carpet
steadily.  There was a vague joy in him that his child
should be born at the dawn hour.

A moment later Mark Endicott entered.  He, too,
had not slept but he had spent the night in his own
chamber and none knew of his vigil.  Now he came
forward and put out his hand.

"Be of good heart, lad!  She's going on very well
with great store of strength and spirit, Mrs. Loveys
tells me."

"If I could only—"

"Yes, every man talks that nonsense.  You can't; so
just walk out upon the hill along with me an' look at
the first sun ever your child's eyes will blink at.  A
fitting time for his advent.  A son of the morning you
are; and so will he or she be."

"Last night it is that makes me so fearful for Honor."

"A shock—but time enough to fret if there's any
harm done.  Wait for the news quiet and sensible."

They walked a little way from the house, Myles
scarcely daring to look upward towards a window
where the cherry-blossom reigned again; but when
they stood two hundred yards distant, a cry reached
them and Tommy Bates approached hurriedly.

"Maister!  Maister Stapledon, sir!  You'm wanted
to wance!"

"Go!" said Mark, "and tell Tom to come and lead
me back."

So, for the second time in twenty-four hours, Myles
Stapledon ran with heavy and laborious stride.  In a
few moments he reached the house, and finding nobody
visible, entered the kitchen and made the china ring
again with his loud summons.  Then Mrs. Loveys
entered, and her apron was held up to her eyes.
Behind her moved Cramphorn and his daughter Margery,
with faces of deep-set gloom.

"What's this?  In God's name speak, somebody.
Why are you crying, woman?"

"She's doin' cleverly—missis.  Be easy, sir.  No call
to fret for her.  All went butivul—-but—but—the dear
li'l tiny bwoy—he'm dead—born dead—axin' pardon
for such black news."

"Honor knows?"

"Ess—'pears she knawed it 'fore us did.  The dark
whisper o' God—as broke it to her in a way no human
could.  'Twas last night's fright an' fall as killed un,
doctor reckons."

The man stared, and sorrow set his face in a
semblance more than common stonelike.

"Bear up, dear sir," ventured Jonah.  "She'm doin'
braave herself, an' that's more'n a barrel-load o' baabies
to 'e, if you think of it aright.  An' gude comes out o'
evil even in such a case sometimes, for he might have
been born a poor moonstruck gaby, as would have been
a knife in his mother's heart for all time."

But Stapledon did not answer.  He walked past
them, returned to the parlour and resumed his slow
tramp up and down.  What of the great event waited
for, hoped for, dreamed about through near nine
months—each a century long?  He felt that all the past was
true, but this last half-hour a dream.  He saw the chair
that Doctor Mathers had occupied, observed his empty
cup, his litter of cigarette-ends about the hearth.  It
seemed hard to believe that the climax was come and
passed; and for one brief and bitter moment the man's
own suffering dominated his heart.  But then he swept
all personal tribulation out of mind, and went upon his
knees and thanked the Unknown for His blessings, in
that it had pleased Him to bring Honor safely through
her ordeal.  He prayed for her sorrow to be softened,
her pain forgotten, and that her husband might be
inspired in this trial to lighten his wife's supreme grief.
He begged also for wisdom and understanding to support
her and lift her burden and bear it himself as far
as that was possible.

He still knelt when Doctor Mathers suddenly entered,
coughed, and plunged a hand into his pocket fiercely
for more cigarettes.  Then Myles rose, without visible
emotion, to find the young physician red and angry.
Indeed he now relieved his mingled feelings by
swearing a little.

"Your wife's all right, and of course I'm infernally
sorry about this.  You know it's not my fault.  The
shock quite settled the matter, humanly speaking.  A
most unlucky chance.  What in the name of God were
you doing in the middle of the night in the woods?
It's enough to make any doctor get savage.  I'm heartily
sorry for you both—heartily; but I'm mighty sorry for
myself too.  As a man with his way to make—but, of
course, you don't know what all the fools on the
countryside will say, though I well do.  It's always
the doctor's fault when this happens.  However, I can't
expect you to be sorry for me, I know."

"I am, Mathers.  The blame of this sad thing is
mine—all.  I should have been firm, and not yielded to
an unwise idea.  And if you've no objection, I should
like to see my wife and tell her how entirely I blame
myself."

"It's no good talking like that, my dear sir; but,
fault or no fault, let it be a lesson to you next time.
Be firm.  Mrs. Stapledon was frightened by the ghost
of the devil apparently.  Anyway, I can't learn what
the nature of the shock was.  'Something grey—suddenly
close to me,' is all she will say.  That might be a
wandering donkey.  It's all very cruel and hard for you
both—a jolly fine little boy he would have been.  Better
luck next time.  I'll be back again in a few hours."

"I may see Honor?"

"Yes, certainly; but cut it short, and don't talk
about fault or blame on anybody.  Let her think you're
glad—eh?"

"She wouldn't believe it."

"Well, well, don't make a fuss.  Just say the right
thing and then clear out.  I want her to sleep before I
come back.  You know how sorry I am; but we must
look ahead.  Good morning."

A little later Stapledon, his heart beating hard and a
sort of fear upon him, knocked at the door of his wife's
room and was allowed to enter.  In the half light he
saw Mark sitting by Honor, and heard the old man
speak in a voice so soft and womanly that Myles could
scarce believe it was his uncle.

"Why, your good, brave heart will tide you over for
all our sakes.  'Twas part of the great web of woman's
sorrow spun in the beginning, dearie.  It had to be.
You thought how life was going to change for you; but
it hasn't changed—not yet—that's all the matter.  Take
your life up again where you set it down; and just go
on with it, like a brave girl.  Here's Myles come.  I
hear his breathing.  He'll say the same, in better words
than mine.  We must all live through the cloud, my
Honor, and see it sink before the good sunshine that
will follow.  'Twasn't Nature's will this should happen
so, but God's own.  There's comfort in that for you.
And we'll have God and Nature both to fight on our
side come next time."

He departed, and husband and wife were left alone.
For a moment he could only hold her hand and press it
and marvel to see how young she appeared again.  Her
eyes were very bright—like stars in the dim room.  She
looked at him and pressed back on his hand.  Then a
flicker of a whimsical smile woke at the corner of her
lips and she spoke in a little voice.

"I'm so—so sorry, dear heart.  I did my very best—I——"

"Don't," he said; and the old nurse in the next room
frowned at his loud, hoarse tones.

"You'll say that I've been wasting my time again—I
know you will."

"Please, please, Honor.  For God's sake not at a
minute like this—I——"

Then he stopped.  Where was the answer to his
prayer?  Here he stood ranting and raving like a
lunatic, while she, who had endured all, appeared calm
and wholly self-possessed.

"The fault was all mine—every bit of it," he began
again quietly.  "If I had not let my headstrong little
love go into the woods, the child——"

"Don't blame yourself.  The past is past, and I'll
never return to it in word or in thought, if I can help
doing so.  Only there are things we don't guess at,
Myles—terrible things hidden and not believed in.  Our
little son had to die.  It is cruel—cruel.  I cannot
explain—not now.  Perhaps some day I will if I am
ever brave enough."

"Don't talk wildly like this, my darling Honor.  You
are overwrought; you will be better very soon.  Uncle
Mark was right.  Life has not changed for us."

"It never will.  Things hidden—active things say
'No'!  Oh, the grey horror of it there!"

She shivered and put her arms round Myles, but
Mrs. Brimblecombe had heard her patient's voice lifted
in terror, and this was more than any professional nurse
could be expected to stand.  As the medical man before
her, she considered her own great reputation, and,
entering now, bade Myles take his leave at once.

"Please to go, sir," she said aside to him.  "You really
mustn't bide no longer; an' 'tis very ill-convenient this
loud talking; an' your voice, axin' your pardon, be lifted
a deal tu high for a sick chamber."

"I'll go," he answered; "but don't leave her.  The
cursed accident of light or shade, or whatever it was
that frightened her overnight, is in her mind still.  She's
wandering about it now.  Soothe her all you can—all
you can.  And if she wants me, let me know."

In the passage red-eyed women of the farm met him,
and Mrs. Loveys spoke.

"We'm all broken-hearted for 'e, I'm sure; an'—an'
would 'e like just to see the dear, li'l perfect bwoy?
Her wouldn't—missis.  But p'raps you would, seein'
'tis your awn.  An' the mother of un may be glad to
knaw what he 'peared like later on, when she can bear
to think on it."

Myles hesitated, then nodded without words and
followed Mrs. Loveys into an empty room.  There he
looked down, among primroses and lilac that Sally
had picked, upon what might have been his son; and
he marvelled in dull pain at the dainty beauty of the
work; and he stared with a sort of special blank wonder
at the exquisite little hands and tiny nails.  Presently
he bent and kissed this marred mite, then departed,
somehow the happier, to plan that it should lie within
the churchyard for Honor's sake.

He broke his fast soon after midday, and, upon learning
that his wife slept peacefully, sought for his own
comfort the granite counsellors of the high hills.  There
was an emptiness in life before this stroke; it left him
helpless, not knowing what to turn to.  His great edifice
of many plans and hopes was all a ruin.

Much to their own regret, Cramphorn and Churdles
Ash met Stapledon as he climbed alone to the Moor.
They were very sorry for him in their way, and they
felt that to touch their hats and pass him by without
words at such a moment would not be fitting.

"Sure, we'm grievous grieved, all the lot of us," said
Jonah grimly—"more for her than you, because, bein'
an Endicott, she'm more to me an' Ash than ever you
can be.  But 'tis a sad evil.  Us had thought 'twould be
osiers as you li'l wan would rock in—soft an' gentle by
his mother's side; but 'tis elm instead—so all's ended,
an' nought left but to bend afore the stroke."

Mr. Ash was also philosophical.

"'Tweern't death ezacally as comed 'pon the house,
neither; nor yet life, you see.  'Cause you can't say as
a babe be dead what never drawed breath, can 'e?"

"An' theer's another cheerful thought for 'e," added
Cramphorn, "for though 'tis as painful for a woman to
bear a wise man as a fool, no doubt, yet so it might
have failed out, an' the pain ends in wan case and turns
to joy; an' in t'other case it never ends.  An' as 'twas
odds he'd have been a poor antic, 'tis better as her
should mourn a month for un dead than for all the
days of his life, as Scripture sez somewheers."

"Well spoke," commented Churdles.  "Never heard
nothin' wiser from 'e, Jonah.  An', beggin' your pardon,
theer's a gert lesson to such a trouble, if a body ban't tu
stiff-necked to see it.  It do teach us worms o' the airth
as even God A'mighty have got a pinch of somethin'
human in the nature of Un—as I've allus said for that
matter.  This here shows how even He can alter His
purpose arter a thing be well begun, an' ban't shamed
to change His Everlasting Mind now an' again, more'n
the wisest of us.  Theer's gert comfort in that, if you
please."

Stapledon thanked both old men for their consolation,
and set his face to the Moor.





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.. _`PLOTS AGAINST AN ORPHAN`:

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   CHAPTER VII.


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   PLOTS AGAINST AN ORPHAN

.. vspace:: 2

The departure of Mrs. Libby and its probable
effect upon her son became a matter of local
interest, because she had toiled with her old bones for
him to the end, and he had taken all her service as a
matter of course, but would now feel the loss of his
home comforts exceedingly.

"He'll have to get a wife," said the man Pinsent at
Sunday supper.  All were assembled save Honor, who
had now been in her room for three weeks, and still
kept it.

"If 'tis awnly for somebody to cook his victuals, the
man must marry," declared Collins.  Then with some
craft he added, "And the question in Little Silver is
who's to be the gal."

"He'm a comical tempered chap, to my thinking;
an' they do say a man wi' a tie in his speech——"
began Pinsent.  But he found himself sharply taken
to task from the quarter he had secretly aimed at.

"You'd best to mind your awn business, Samuel!"
flamed out Sally, then blushed rose-red to the roots of
her hair at the laughter her confession won.  Her
relations alone did not laugh.  Margery bent over her
plate and grew white rather than red; and Mr. Cramphorn
roundly rated the speaker for such a lapse of manners.

"'Fore the whole world, would 'e?  I blush for
'e—though you can for yourself still, it seems.  An' him
never so much as opened his lips on it!  'Tis a most
unmaidenly thing, an' never to have been looked for in
no darter o' mine."

"Sorry I drawed it from her, notwithstanding," said
Pinsent.  "I'm sure I'd rather have bit my tongue out
than bring red to any gal's cheeks."

"Nobody would hurt her for gold," added Collins.

But Sally was now in tears.  She left her supper, and
withdrew weeping; her sister gave vent to a little hard
laugh; while a moment later Cramphorn, in some
discomfort, followed his elder daughter.  Then, familiar
with Jonah's estimate of Libby, and having no desire
to breed further storm, Mark Endicott spoke to Ash.

"What's your opinion of the man, Churdles?"

"A poor creation, your honour," answered the patriarch
promptly.  "Not a penn'orth o' nature in un, else
he'd have had some gal squeezed to his heart so soon as
ever he comed by enough money to marry.  He'm cold
clay, an' awnly waitin' to see which of Jonah's maids be
in highest favour—which is most like to have the
cottage left to her.  His faither was another most
calculating chap.  The woman what's just gone had awnly
half a score short of a hunderd pound saved when he
offered hisself.  Married for money, in fact; an' that's
a 'mazin' thing to happen except among respectable
people."

"What d'you say to that, Margery?" asked Myles
Stapledon bluntly.  He did not like Margery, and her
attitude at her sister's discomfiture had not escaped him.

"Ban't for me to speak against my elders," she
answered slowly, with a malignant look at the placid
veteran.  "Mr. Ash—auld as he is—do find it so hard
to mind his awn business as other people seemin'ly.
He ban't paid for pokin' his ancient nose into Gregory
Libby's consarns, I s'pose.  But he'm past larnin'
manners now, no doubt."

The boyish features of Mr. Ash flushed suddenly
and his head shook a little.

"Theer's a sour speech—an' her so young!  Worse'n
any vinegar you'll be in the marriage cruet, woman,
whoever 'tis that's daft enough to take 'e!  Fegs!  I pity
un; an' I pity the Dowl when it's his turn—as it will be
some day.  To talk to a auld man so!"

Unwonted wrinkles appeared in Mr. Ash's apple-face,
and he showed a great disinclination to let the matter
drop, though Stapledon bid him be silent.  He chattered
and growled and demanded an apology, which Margery
declined to offer.  Then she instantly left the kitchen,
so that no argument should rise upon her refusal.  She
glowered sullenly about her, restrained a strong desire
to scream, and then withdrew.

Yet Churdles, though he knew it not, and must have
much deplored the fact if it had come to his
understanding, was responsible for a practical and valuable
lesson to Margery.  His words, though they angered
her, had not fallen upon deaf ears.  She sulked away
now in the corner of an empty room and set her wits
to work.  Mr. Libby was in one respect like heaven;
he had to be taken by storm, and Churdles Ash
unwittingly indicated the direction of attack.

Margery indeed loved this shifty youth; she adored
his cane-coloured hair cut straight across his low
forehead, like a child's fringe, his uncertain eyes, his
moustache—with a most "gentleman-like droop to it,"
as she had discovered.  She loved him—not for his
money but for himself, and her sister's infatuation was
of a similar genuine quality.  They were primitive
maidens both and had seen little of the other sex,
owing to their father's suspicions that every man on
the eastern side of Dartmoor would run away with
them, given the opportunity.  Now passion worthy of
a better cause burnt in their young hearts, and each
raged against the other—inwardly for the most part.
Their weapons were different, and whereas Margery's
sarcasms proved wholly wasted on her sister, Sally's
anger, when roused, generally took the shape of a
swinging box on the ear—a retort contemptible enough, no
doubt, yet not easy to be ignored.  Margery's waspish
tongue was no match for her sister's right arm, therefore
open quarrels seldom happened; yet each daily strained
every nerve, and since Gregory had come to be a mere
womanless, desolate orphan, the efforts of both girls
were redoubled.  It had, however, been left to the
sensation of that evening to quicken their wits; and
now each, by ways remote, set about a new and more
pressing investment of Mr. Libby's lonely heart.

Margery took the word of Mr. Ash to herself, and
realised that if her loved one was really waiting to get
a hint of Jonah Cramphorn's intentions, her own course
must be modified.  She knew that her father, despite
his surly and overbearing disposition, might be
influenced without difficulty; and she possessed the tact
and discretion proper to such a task.  She had never
desired any influence over him until the present, and
had indeed thought but little of the future, excepting
with reference to herself and Gregory.  Now, however,
the danger of allowing Sally even an indirect
ascendency was made manifest, and Margery determined that
her sister must be put out of court at home, by fair
means if possible, by foul if necessary.

In a most cold-blooded and calculating spirit she
approached the problem of making herself so
indispensable to her father that he should come to regard
her as his better and more deserving child.  That
situation once established, no doubt Gregory Libby would
be the first to perceive it.  If he was backward in
doing so, then might she delicately aid his perception;
indeed she doubted not that this course would be
necessary, for the control she now set herself to maintain
over her parent must be more real than apparent at
first.  She hoped that within a month at the latest it
would be safe to hint to Gregory that such supremacy
existed.

And meanwhile, hanging over a gate out of doors,
so that her tear-stained cheeks might cool, Sally also
meditated some definite action whereby the halting
regard of the desired object should grow established
and affirmed.  To a determination she also came, but
it fell far short of her sister's in subtlety.  She merely
fell back upon the trite conceit of a *tertium quid*, and
hoped how, once reminded of the fact that other
men also found her pleasant in their eyes, Mr. Libby
would awaken into jealousy and so take action.  Her
father she did not consider, because his opinions had long
since ceased to weigh with her, when it was possible
to disregard them.  Sally approached the future in a
sanguine spirit, for within the secret places of her heart
there lurked an honest belief that Gregory loved her
to desperation.  Why he delayed to mention the fact,
under these distracting circumstances, was not easy to
explain; but now, upon his mother's death, there had
come a climax in the young man's life; and Sally felt
that in the present forlorn circumstances she ought to
be, and probably was, his paramount object of reflection.

So she determined to precipitate the imminent
declaration by parading another possible husband; and that
point established it remained only to decide upon whom
this thankless part should fall.  Henry Collins naturally
offered himself to her mind.  His emotions were
perfectly familiar to her, though in that he had scrupulously
obeyed Jonah and never dared to offer marriage, Sally
regarded him with some natural derision.  But he loved
her very well, and would come when she whistled, and
frisk at her side with great content and joy.
Whereupon, driven frantic before the spectacle of Collins
lifted to this giddy fortune, she doubted not but that
Gregory would declare himself and make a definite
offer.  His words once spoken, she felt no fear for the
future.  She held herself in some esteem, and was
satisfied of her powers to keep Libby, or any other man, to
a bargain.

Thus both maids, within the space of an hour, had
braced their minds to a course of vital action; and
it remained for time to show which, if either, was to
succeed in the result.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A NECKLACE OF BIRDS' EGGS`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER VIII.


.. class:: center medium bold

   A NECKLACE OF BIRDS' EGGS

.. vspace:: 2

There came a Sunday, yet not so soon as Doctor
Mathers hoped, when Honor declared herself able
and desirous to take the air again.  She chose the Moor
as the scene of this return to life; and, as Stapledon had
departed for the day to see an acquaintance at
Okehampton before his wife decided to go forth, her uncle,
and not her husband, accompanied her—to the deep
chagrin of the latter when he returned home.

Through the long hours of a weary and empty
convalescence, Honor said little concerning the incident
responsible for wreck of hope; but her loss had grown
into an abiding grief nevertheless; and while the man
was stricken most sorely at first, but had now become
resigned, devoting only leisure thought to his private
sorrow, the woman took this trial to her heart with
increasing bitterness through those lonely hours that
followed upon it.  There was, moreover, an added
element of terror and a superstitious despair bred of
her alarm in the woods.  This died but slowly, for she
would not share the experience with any other; yet,
as physical health increased, all lesser emotion dwindled
before the ever-present sense of loss.  From Myles she
hid the heavy misery of it, that his own sorrow might
not be increased; but she liked to speak with her uncle
of the little flower lost in the bud, and he was patient
and never weary of comforting her to the best of his
power.

It is to be noted, however, that Myles somewhat
misunderstood Honor's extreme reticence, and her
assumed air of brightness and good hope misled him
perhaps more completely than Honor designed.  He
was secretly surprised that this matter had not left a
deeper mark; he did not guess at a scar out of his
sight; but he marvelled that his wife could still laugh
and even jest upon occasion.  Under her tranquillity
and humour he failed to probe, but he bade the inner
wonder in his mind be dumb.  Not until long
afterwards did he learn the truth and realise the depth
of the sorrow she had masked for love of him.

The little open carriage crept up over Scor Hill, then
proceeded by a steep way to Charity Grepe's cottage.
There Honor left half-a-crown in person, for since
certain rumours that poor Cherry must go to the
work-house, the mistress of Bear Down had become her active
champion.  Then the pony was turned, climbed the
hill again, and presently stood above Teign valley, at a
point on the hillside where a little lakelet reflected the
blue sky above it, and shone framed in rushes and
verdant sphagnum, in rosy sundews all frosted and
agleam, in small scattered flames of the bog asphodel,
and in many lesser things that love a marsh.

Away on the wide front of Watern, great gloomy
tracts, still dark from fire, spread forth over many an
acre.  There a "swaling" had freed the land of heath
and furze, and provided light and air for grass; but the
spot seen from this distance was naked as yet.

"There's a great scar over against us on the
hill—black—black against the green and the grey and the
blue overhead—all charred and desolate.  That's how
my heart feels, Uncle Mark—so dreary and forlorn—like
an empty nest."

"Look again," he said; "look at what seems so black
upon the hill, and think as you look, and you'll remember
the ash and ruin are all full of young, sweet blades,
sprouting strong, brimming with sap to hide the rack
of dead char.  'Twill be so with you, my dear; for
there's the bend and spring of youth in your heart still.
Wait till the heather's out again, and the foxgloves are
nodding along the low ridges over the Teign, and the
whortle bells be turned to purple berries once more."

"How you remember!" she said, "despite all the
long years of darkness."

"Yes; I remember, thank God.  I smell the damp
near where you've pulled up; and I see the marsh, down
to the little bluebell flower that creeps in the grass, and
the spotted leaves of orchis, and the white wisps of the
cotton grass in summer, and all the rest, that I never
thought upon when I had my eyes.  But there's a
quiet, unknown mercy that works through the morning
hours of a man's life if he lives in the lap of Nature
and is true to her.  Keen sight stores the memory
unbeknown to us; and none can tell how deep that
unconscious, unguessed gathering-up may be but those
who fall upon blindness.  No credit to me at all; yet
the pictures come as the seasons come—at bud-break;
at the sound of the west wind and the call of the river;
at the music of rain on the leaves; at the whirr of the
cutter in the hay; at the touch of snow on my face and
in my eyebrows.  I know—I know it all, for my eyes
reaped and my brain garnered at the merciful will of
God.  Without those mind picture-books I should be
blind indeed."

"You're so brave.  I wish that I had more of you in
me.  I'm not a true Endicott."

"As to that, 'tis only those who won't see are blind.
Eyesight's the window of the house, but the ear is the
door.  A blow-fly on the window-pane is big enough to
hide the evening star—if you're content to let it; but
shut your eyes and you'll see the star in the blue, with
nought between it and your thoughts."

"It's so hard to be wise; and words are not warm,
live things you can cuddle.  Oh, I want something
smaller than myself to love!  I had lighted such a
great fire of love; and now it's all burnt out, and no
green hope springing through the ashes."

"Be patient.  Look forward, my Honor."

"There's nothing there—all blank."

"You're morbid; and that's the last foolishness I
should ever have thought to tax you with.  Myles——"

"No—no; you don't understand.  How should you
understand?"

"Moonshine!"

"It wasn't moonshine.  I wish I could think it was.
But you must be patient with me.  It's so cold to open
your eyes every morning with the dull feeling that
something sad is waiting for you to remember it.  I'm
all winter, while the rest of the world is full of spring."

"And spring will touch you presently."

"I had built such castles in the air—painted such
futures.  First, my boy was to be a soldier; but I grew
frightened of that when I began to fill in details of
the picture; and then a farmer, but that did not satisfy
me at all.  Presently my heart went out to the thought
of his being an artist—either in words or pictures, but
an artist in deeds at any rate.  You don't know what
I mean by that.  One who thought and felt like an
artist—and walked so.  He was to magnify the Lord
and love the earth, and all green things, and birds
especially, and the changeful sky.  I did not think of
him as loving men and women very much—excepting
me.  So my silly thoughts sped and I shut my eyes,
that nobody should see my hope looking out of them.
I was going to be the mother of a great man—and I am
only the mother of a great sorrow, after all."

"A shared sorrow; don't forget that, my dear.  There's
three hearts to take each a part of the load.  More than
that, for, beyond Myles and me, every man's breast and
woman's bosom is heavy for you here.  A widespread,
real regret, though 'tis not their way to make much ado."

"They are very good to me—better than I deserve.
I shall have more thoughts for them now.  Sorrow at
least teaches sympathy.  But my soul has quite lost
heart of late days, and I feel so old."

At this moment from the valley there came two
persons along the path where Honor's pony carriage
stood.  One appeared uneasy, the other in a very
halcyon halo of delight; for Sally, true to her resolve,
had indicated that a little attention from Mr. Collins
would not be unwelcome; and now they moved side by
side upon a stolen walk.  Elsewhere Margery accompanied
her parent to see a neighbour, and Sally was
supposed to be at the farm.

The pair made awkward acknowledgments and were
proceeding, when Honor noted an unusual decoration
about her milkmaid's neck.  In addition to a string of
glass pearls, a little necklace of birds' eggs—alternate
thrush and blackbird—adorned Sally's plump throat,
and the spectacle, suggestive as it was of robbed nests,
woke a wave of passing indignation in Honor's heart.

"What is that round your neck?" she asked with a
sudden hardness in her voice; and Sally's hands went
up gingerly to the frail adornment, while she looked
at Collins, whose gift, snatched from screaming birds,
she wore.  Seeing explanation was expected from him,
Henry stood forward, touched his Sunday hat, and
spoke with many stumblings.

"Beggin' pardon, I'm sure, ma'am, I——"

"You robbed the birds, Collins?"

"Ess, I did, but if you call home last cherry-time,
ma'am; if I may say so—you see I did as you bid
an' shot a braave lot last autumn, as you wanted—them
being so bowldacious as to eat your fruit; an' come
autumn an' winter, I catched a gude few in traps what
I teeled in the garden.  Then, come spring, I had a
bright thought that if I took the eggs of 'em 'twould
mean gert thinning out o' the birds.  An' no account
neither, if I may say so; 'cause a egg's just life in the
raw, waitin' for warmth an' time to quicken it.  They
never lived like, savin' your presence, so the airth ban't
the poorer by a bird's note, 'cause us caan't lose what
we never had.  'Tis no more'n a seed spoiled, or a
leaf-bud nipped by frost, or a cheel still——"

He clapped his hand over his mouth and heard Sally
say "Fule!" under her breath; but his mistress nodded
and bid him go on his way.

"You may be right; but take no more eggs from the birds."

So Mr. Collins got himself out of sight to the tune
of a reprimand from Sally that made his ears tingle.

"You gert, clumsy-mouthed gawk!  To utter such
a speech an' tellin' that stuff to her, an' go mumblin'
on, like a bumble-bee in a foxglove; an' end up so!
Not the sense of a sheep you ain't got!"

She tore off his gift and stamped on the blown
shells, while he merely stood and rolled his great eyes
wretchedly.

Elsewhere Endicott spoke to his niece.

"Strange how a chance word out of a fool's mouth
will often come pat.  These things—eggs—buds—babies
are so little account in the great sum total.
Nature's units don't trouble her.  The crushed
windflower will bud and blow again next year.  What is
a year to her?  The robbed mother-bird screams for an
hour, then goes on with the vital business of preserving
her own life; and the robbed mother-woman—her heart
aches to-day, but the pain soothes off presently as the
months and years roll over first memories.  We're built
to forget; else the world would be a madhouse, or just
one great welter of sorrow.  'Tis God's way, I judge,
seldom to put upon us more than we can bear.  If grief
or pain's past bearing—why then the heart or something
cracks and there's an end of us.  But sorrow alone
never killed a healthy being.  I'd rather count it the
torch that lights to the greatest deeds we're built to
do.  I hoped that a little child would draw you together—Myles
and you—close, close as soil and seed; but 'tis
a shared grief must do it—instead of a shared joy.
Such a welding, as by fire, may last longest after all."

She sighed, touched her pony with the whip, in a sort
of thoughtful caress, and turned him homewards.

"I don't know what Myles thinks about it.  Either
he hides all he feels to save me—or he is forgetting, as
you say.  It is natural that he should.  No man that
ever lived can know how long those nine months are to
a woman.  But I—I—there it is in the wind—in the
rustle of the leaves.  I hear it so often—the sound
of a rocking cradle.  I must wait until the wind sings
a different song before I can be wise.  Some day
I shall wake up strong again—strong to acknowledge
all your goodness and everybody's goodness and
sympathy.  I cannot yet."

The old man was moved for her.  He put his hand
on hers and patted it.

"I think I understand as much as an ancient bachelor
may.  But you must do your share and help the powers
to help you.  There's an effort called for.  Hard to
make, but you must make it.  Take up your life again—the
old life that you laid down; an' do it with a single
heart."

"I cannot yet.  I left it behind so gladly.  I must go
back for it.  I do not care about any life just now.
I cannot cry or laugh with my heart.  It's all
pretence—think what that means.  I look at everything from
the outside—like Christo used to.  I'm a dead, withered
bough still on the tree; and what is it to me that the
next bough is busy about new leaves?"

"You do yourself a wrong to say so, and I'd not
listen to anybody else who spoke so ill of you.  You
must come back to yourself—your own good self—and
the sooner the better.  That's a plain duty at least—not
to be escaped from.  That's a call, whether your heart's
sad or merry.  'Tis the honest, everyday duty of a
woman to be good, dear heart—same as it's the duty
of a Mary lily to be white.  Keep your proper colour,
as God meant you, and as God taught you.  Live as
you have lived: with a sense of duty for the sake of
those that love you, if no better reason."

She sighed again, aweary of the subject.

"Now we'll go home.  We're wasting my first breath
of sweet air in words.  Better to draw it in silently and
not turn it into talk."

Mark Endicott laughed.

"Why, yes, it does the heart more good that way, no
doubt.  You're a deal wiser than I am, niece, for all my
grey hairs and jackdaw chatter."

Then slowly down the hill, without more speech, they
drove together.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`AN OLD-TIME PRESCRIPTION`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER IX.


.. class:: center medium bold

   AN OLD-TIME PRESCRIPTION

.. vspace:: 2

From the occasion of her drive upon the Moor,
Honor, instead of proceeding towards good health,
fell away in that desired progress.  What chance had
conspired to an effect so unfortunate none knew, but
the fact was apparent, and as days passed and summer
returned, there stole gradually upon her a listless and
inert attitude of spirit—a state of the mind that
reflected upon her physical condition and appeared in a
most despondent outlook upon life.  From time to time
some transient gleam of returning health and happiness
gladdened those who loved her; but weeks passed and
still Honor's temper was of a sort that kept Myles
anxious and Doctor Mathers exasperated.  For she
proved not a good patient and none could prevail upon
her to consider the foreign travel and sea voyage that
her physician stood out for at every visit.  She told
them that she was well enough at home; that her health
improved; and that they need be under no concern for
her.  Meanwhile, her life grew narrower and narrower,
both in its bounds of thought and performance.  Her
reflections indeed she kept to herself for the most part,
and certainly the event responsible in great measure for
her sustained ill-health she imparted to no one; but her
actions were obvious, and Myles began to grow care-worn
as he watched a life so full of energy and various
interest now sink into mere mechanical existence.  Her
walks dwindled to strolls; Nature brought Honor no
particular delight; and the old haunts failed to cheer her.
Until midday she rarely stirred from her own room,
and sometimes she would keep her bed altogether from
sheer indifference toward affairs.

This life of ashes, which neither love nor duty seemed
capable of rousing into renewed activity and vigour, was
beheld in its dreary unfolding by the little population
of Bear Down; and that busy hive, both in season and
out, discussed this grave crisis in the fortunes of its
mistress and offered all manner of suggestions and
advice upon it.  Some opinions were undoubtedly
sensible enough, as when Churdles Ash counselled
forcible compliance with the doctor's orders.

"You'm her lawful lard an' master," he said to
Stapledon; "so 'tis your dooty to hale your lady away
to furrin paarts, whether her will or no.  She'll be fust
to thank 'e, dear sawl, come her gets whole again."

But Myles knew Honor well enough, or little enough,
to believe that such a high-handed course must be futile.
Long and anxious were the deliberations he held with
his uncle, and there came a time when Mark suggested
a visit from some great physician of expert knowledge.

"Have a London chap," he proposed.  "Honor
doesn't care a fig for Mathers.  But maybe a keen pair
of eyes, and a big forehead, and a big voice, and the
knowledge it's cost perhaps a hundred pounds to fetch
it all down to see her, might bring the woman to some
sense."

"I proposed it.  She wouldn't hear of it."

"Very well; don't let her hear of it—till the man is
in the house.  Get Mathers to tell you of some great
wonder whose strong point is all these nerve twists
and tangles that Honor's struggling under.  For a woman
to take to thinking, is as bad as for a man to take to
drinking—sometimes.  It breeds a wrong habit and
interferes with Nature.  There's a mystery under all
this—ever since that sad mischance—and as she won't tell
those that love her maybe a clever doctor, who
understands the springs of healthy mental action, will find a
way to bring back her peace."

"There's a secret, as you say; and I've known it on
her tongue; I've felt that it was to be revealed at last.
Then there has come a sigh, like the shutting of a door
of the mind—a door not to be opened from the outside."

"That is so—and it may be a doctor's work to open
that door, instead of a husband's.  We'll hope I'm right.
Fetch such a man along, if it costs the hay harvest.
It's all drouthy nothings here with this fever eating the
girl alive."

.. vspace:: 2

While Mark Endicott and his nephew thus debated
the question of the hour and sought for one able to
storm the dim domain of Honor's neurotic disorders,
Mr. Ash, Mr. Cramphorn, and others of Endicott's took
counsel among themselves how best the tribulation might
be overcome.

Ash now regarded the illness as a moonstroke, and
was of opinion that doses of lunar radiance alone would
restore their mistress.

"Moon must undo what moon's done," he announced.
But Cramphorn knew of no precedent, and therefore
scoffed at the idea.

"Never was I lower in my spirits," the head-man
declared; "an' the plague is that gen'lefolks be so
exalted in their awn opinions that no word of ours
will they heed, though we spoke wi' the tongues of
fire.  What do they care for organy tea an' such-like
herbs of the field?  Yet here I stand, a living sawl, as
would be dust at this hour, but for that an' other
such-like simples.  Cherry Grepe's 'pon theer black books,
or, if they'd had sense, they'd have thrawed awver that
bwoy—that Mathers—an' gived her a chance to shaw
her gert gifts.  So like as not she've got a cunning
remedy for this dark complaint—a mess of some sort
as would put our lady right, mind an' body, in a week.
Many a time have I seen a wise man or woman by mere
force of words, wi'out so much as striking the sickness,
charm it that sudden, as wan might a'most say he seed
the evil fly from a party's mouth—like a leather-bird,[#]
a-screechin' across the dimpsy light."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: noindent small

[#] A leather-bird = a bat.

.. vspace:: 2

"Ess; 'tis pity they doan't give Mother Grepe a
chance," admitted Churdles Ash; "for wi' all her little
ways an' secrets, she do worship the same Saviour in
heaven as her betters do—onless she'm a liar."

"A white witch for sartain," declared Collins.  "An'
her charmed a wart for Tommy Bates but last week, an'
done it in the name of Jesus Christ, an' awnly axed a
threp'ny-bit."

So the men discussed Honor's evil case during a
dinner interval on the land, then returned to work,
regretful that those most involved thus persisted in
overlooking a possible means of grace in their hour of
tribulation.

But while Collins and the rest dismissed this matter
before work and those personal interests of life
uppermost in all minds, Mr. Cramphorn continued to dwell
darkly upon the subject.  This cross-grained, surly soul
loved his mistress with an affection superior to that
commanded by his own flesh and blood.  Herein
circumstances and even heredity were strong upon him.
Sprung from a line that had laboured at Endicott's
through many generations, the descendant of men
who were born heirs of toil upon this land and looked
to the reigning powers as their immediate lords under
Providence, a traditionary regard dwelt in the blood of
him, and the concerns of those who controlled his
destiny became Cramphorn's own concerns.  Such a
spirit modern education and the spread of knowledge
drives quickly forth, for the half-educated class of
to-day scorns gratitude as a base survival; but Jonah
dated from long before the Board Schools, and their
frosty influence was no more in his heart than upon his
tongue.  Sour, conceited, a very rustic Malvolio, he
might be; but the nobler qualities of Malvolio, he also
possessed.  It was not the least among his vague
regrets that the name of Endicott must presently vanish
from Bear Down, even as the name of Cramphorn was
destined to.

And now Jonah thought upon the word of Churdles
Ash concerning the wise woman.  His own experience
of her powers also inclined him in that direction, and
finally he decided to visit her again.  That Cherry had
destroyed Christopher Yeoland he did not doubt; that
she might, if she would, cure his mistress, he was
assured.  He determined that if the thing could be
done for half a sovereign, done it must be.  And should
Cherry's charm prove powerful enough to work without
the patient's connivance, so much the better.

That same evening he visited the cottage of the
sorceress, where it lay behind the low wall, and the row
of ox vertebræ, and the torch of the great mullein, that
now towered aloft with its first blossoms shining in the
gloaming above a woolly spire.

Gammer Grepe was at home and in her garden.  She
stood with her arms folded on the gate, and Cramphorn
observed that she smoked a clay pipe with the manner
of long experience.  He asked civilly for a little
conversation and followed the old woman into her cottage.

"Walk in an' welcome, if there's any money to it,"
she said bluntly.  "'Tis 'bout them gals again, I s'pose.
Tu gert a handful for 'e, eh?  You'm a fule to fret, for
they'll go theer ways wi'out axin' your leave.  Be your
peas a-come to the farm?  Might let 'em knaw as I've
got half a quart or so, if Mrs. Stapledon fancies 'em."

"Ess, our peas be come, an' it 'idden 'bout my darters
I'm here; an' fule or no fule, it takes two to make a
weddin'; an' if the proper chap ban't on-coming, us
have got to sit down an' wait, like nesseltripe.  I be
here touching the mistress of Endicott's."

Cherry frowned.

"I've no word against her, as you knaw, but the rest
of 'em—that auld blind piece an' her husband—specially
him—I doan't set no store by.  She'm what a Endicott
should be.  T'others I'd so soon ill-wish as not—just to
larn 'em the things they doan't believe."

Her eyes glimmered with anger, and the candlelight
played pranks with her aged but not venerable face.

"Well, 'tis peace rather than war so far as I'm
consarned.  I know what you can do—who better?"

"Ess; an' for all theer hard words I'd rather starve
than hurt Endicott's.  'Tis his loss, not mine—this
furriner she've married.  Not but what I might to-morrow——"

"'Tis the very thing I be come upon," interrupted
Jonah eagerly.  "Her—the mistress.  What do this green
youth by name of Mathers knaw?  If he'd got the wit
of a louse he'd never have let the cheel slip through
his fingers.  But her—she'll slip through his fingers
next."

"Ban't no doctor's job now," said Cherry.  "The
things that could cure her trouble doan't come out of
shops.  For tearings of heart, an' black night vapours,
an' such-like deep ills the very herbs o' the fields are
vain.  You want sterner food."

"'Tis her sawl be sick by all the looks of it,"
explained Jonah.  "An' it tells 'pon the butivul body of
her, like a blight 'pon a rose.  She've been ill, to an'
from, ever since the bearin' of that dead baaby; an'
from being a woman of ready spirit she've grawed that
down-daunted as you'd a'most say she'd cry or run if a
goose hissed at her.  An' now, be gormed if she ban't
comin' to be a regular bed-lier!  Think of her, so peart
an' spry as she was, keepin' her room these summer days!
Caan't 'e offer for to cure her, Cherry?  I lay theer'd be
gude money to it an' plenty, whatever hard thoughts
some have got against you."

"Theer's but wan cure as I knaws for her," said the
old woman gloomily; "an ugly, savage cure, an' fallen
out of use these many days now.  But a sure balm and
a thing as eats to the heart like a cancer, rubbed under
a woman's left breast."

"God's truth, mum!"

"'Tis as I tell 'e.  Like a cancer; but 'stead of being
death to the livin', 'tis life to the dyin', or them like to
die.  A savage cure, an' such latter-day stuff as Myles
Stapledon would awnly cock his nose at it; so it won't
be done, however.  An' her'll die—her'll die for need of
oil of man.  'Tis that—a thing in no books—a secret
as'll be a dead and buried secret in a few years' time,
when me an' the likes of me be dead an' buried."

"Oil of man?  I've heard Churdles Ash name it."

"Ess, he'd be sure to knaw at his age.  'Tis simple
enough.  Theer's a virtue in all bones—that everybody
knaws who's drinked soup, I s'pose."

"Surely; an' the better the bone, the better the broth,"
assented Jonah.

"That's it!  You've hit the point I was comin' to.
So it happens that a Christian bone of a human be
fuller far of virtue than any saved from a sheep or other
beast."

Cramphorn felt a cold shiver slide up his spine like
a speedy snail, and spread out upon his neck and
shoulders.

"Christ A'mighty!  What be tellin' 'bout?  Would
'e have folks turn into black cannibals?"

"Didn't I say 'twas used outwardly, you gaby?  Oil
of man be rubbed 'pon the heart, or be burnt like a
candle.  In that shaape 'tis a torch held up for them
wanderin' in the world to come home to others as
yearns for 'em.  Both ways be precious deeds.  Theer
ban't none wanderin' she wants; so us must rub it 'pon
her heart against this fit she'm suffering from."

"Wheer's such a thing to be got?"

"You ax that!  As for preparin' the bones, 'tis my
work.  Gettin' of 'em be a man's."

Mr. Cramphorn breathed hard.

"A sure cure?" he asked.

"Sure as Scripture.  An' a thing knawed for centuries,
so my mother used to tell me.  She made it a score o'
times a'most.  Men was braver then."

"Just—churchyard—bones," murmured Jonah with an
expression like a dog half frightened, half angry.

"The skull of a man—no more.  Bones as have held
human brains.  I'll do my paart for ten shillin'—same
as you gived me when——"

"Hush, for the Lard's sake!  Doan't 'e go back to that."

She laughed.

"You knaw at any rate that I ban't a vain talker.  I'll
say no more.  Awnly if you'm serious set on restorin'
Honor Stapledon to her rightful health, 'tis in your
power.  Mrs. Loveys can rub the stuff in when she's
asleep if she won't consent to no other way.  An' her'll
come to herself again in a fortnight."

"Be so mortal light of evenings now, an' never
dark all night," said Cramphorn, his mind running ahead.

"That's your outlook.  If you'm man enough to go
an' dig——"

"I be in a maze," he confessed.  "Never heard tell of
such a fearful balm in my born days."

"Very likely.  Theer's more hid than you'll ever
knaw, in this world or the next."

"I must think upon it.  'Tis a onruly, wild, dangerous
deed.  Might lead to trouble."

"'Tis a rightful, high act if you ax me.  God'll knaw
why for you be theer.  Theer's a reward for the salvation
of our fellow-creatures in next world if not this; an'
I'm sure theer did ought to be, for I've saved enough in
my time."

"I'll think about it serious," said Cramphorn, who was
now desperately anxious to be gone.

"Just a bone against a woman's life.  You think
about it as you say."

"So I will, then, wi' all my strength."

Before he had reached the gate Cherry Grepe called
him back.

"An' look here, I'll do my share for three half-crowns,
seein' it's for her.  I'm allus awnly tu glad
to do gude deeds so cheap as can be, though wi' evil
actions 'tis differ'nt.  They win high wages all the
world awver."

Then Jonah retreated with his dreadful idea, yet
found that as it became more familiar it began to look
less terrible.  For all his follies and superstitions, he
lacked not physical courage, and once assured by
Gammer Grepe that such a sacrilege would be judged
by his Maker from the standpoint of its motive, he
troubled no further as to the performance of the deed.
Thenceforward his mind was busy with details as to
how such an enterprise might be safely achieved, and
through his head passed the spectacle of many green
graves.  Even before the familiar memories of those
who slept beneath them the dogged Jonah winced not;
but presently a new reflection glared in upon his
mind—an idea so tremendous that the man stood still and
gasped before it, as though petrified by the force of his
own imagination.  For a moment this aspect peopled
the night with whispering phantoms; it even set Jonah
running with his heart in his mouth; then the wave of
personal fear passed and left him well over the shock
his thought had brought with it.  But the effect of so
much excitement and such unwonted exercise took a
longer time to depart; his nerves played him some
tricks; he was more than usually taciturn at supper,
and retired to rest soon after that meal.

Yet, once in bed, Jonah's thoughts kept him such
active and unfamiliar company that sleep quite forsook
his couch, and it wanted but a little time of the hour
for rising when finally he lost consciousness—to do
grim deeds in dreamland.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`OIL OF MAN`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER X.


.. class:: center medium bold

   OIL OF MAN

.. vspace:: 2

Concerning this weird medicament, it is only
necessary to state that memory of the nostrum
lingers yet in ancient and bucolic minds; while the
tradition, now nearly extinct, is nevertheless founded
upon matters of fact from a recent past.  For your Oil
of Man was counted precious medicine through bygone
centuries, and in the archives it may be gleaned that
Moses Charras, author of a Royal Pharmacopoeia,
published two hundred years ago, indicates the nature
of its preparation, and declares how that the skulls of
healthy men, slain in full flush of their strength by lead
or steel, best meet its requirements.  One Salmon of
London prepared and sold *Potestates cranii humani* at
the sign of the "Blew Bull," in Shoe Lane, during the
sixteenth century; *oleum humanum* has within man's
memory been a source of advantage to the porters of
our medical schools; and, at a date even later than that
of which we treat, a physician practising hard by
Dartmoor received applications for the magic antidote from
one who found herself in private trouble beyond reach
of common drugs.  She believed that oil of man must
still be a medicinal commodity general as rhubarb or
syrup of squills.

It was not surprising, therefore, that Cherry Grepe
remembered the potent force of this remedy, or that
Jonah Cramphorn, once satisfied that the decoction
alone stood between his mistress and her end, determined
to procure it.  A great thought kept him waking
until the sun was ready to ascend above the remote
gorges of Fingle; but when Jonah rose, cold water and
daylight finally dwarfed the dim horrors of his project
until they grew perfectly plain before him.  That the
plan was defensible his strenuous spirit had long since
decided.  But an accomplice seemed necessary to such
a design, for the feat was of too great a magnitude
and peril to be achieved single-handed.  The common
operation of two willing workers might, however, make
all the difference, and while he regretted a need for
assistance, Jonah felt it to be imperative.  Upon the
subject of punishment in event of detection, he did not
waste thought.  The prospect from that standpoint was
undoubtedly dark—too dark to dwell upon.  The power
of the law he could only guess at, and in his mind was
a tumultuous upheaval of old recollections touching the
theme.  He remembered Burke, Hare, and others of
their trade; but they had killed men; he proposed no
action more unlawful than taking of bones long dead.

To choose his assistant for a matter so delicate
appeared difficult in one aspect, yet simple enough viewed
practically.  That he must broach such a subject to a
sane man offered no embarrassment to Mr. Cramphorn;
but to select a kindred soul, of stuff sufficiently stern
to help with the actual details, promised a harder
problem.  Scarcity of choice, however, tended towards
elucidation.  The field was narrowed to an option
between Pinsent and Collins; of whom Jonah quickly
decided for the latter.  By midday indeed he
determined that Henry should participate both in the peril
and the privilege of restoring Honor to health.

The men met soon after noon near the farmyard, and
Cramphorn seized his opportunity.

"Come in here, an' put home the door behind 'e,
Henery Collins," he said; "I've got somethin' mighty
serious to say to you.  For your ear awnly 'tis; an'
you'll be very much dumbfounded to larn as you an'
me be chosen by Providence for a gert, far-reachin' deed."

In the dim light of a stable Mr. Collins gazed with
round, innocent eyes at the speaker; then he began to
clean his boots on a spade.

"Whatever do 'e mean?  Providence doan't chose
the likes of me for its uses, I reckon."

"I stand for Providence in this thing; an' I mean
missus.  Theer's no nature left in her now, as you must
see along wi' the rest.  An' why for?  'Cause she'm
fadin' away like a cloud.  So wisht an' hag wi' her
trouble—an' her not quarter of a century auld yet.
Dyin'—dyin' afore our eyes; an' theer's awnly one
creation as'll save her; an' that's for you an' me to get,
my son.  'Tis ordained as we'm the parties."

"Sure, I'd go to world's end for her," declared Mr. Collins.

"No need.  No call to go further'n Little Silver
buryin' ground."

"Then, if 'tis any deed of darkness, you'd best to put
it in other hands to wance."

"No fay—you an' me.  An' a high an' desperate act—I
won't deceive you theer—but a act righteous in the
eye of God; though, if it got knawed by humans, theer'd
be trouble."

"I'm tu peaceful in my ways for it then, an' I'll take
it very kind if you'll say no more about it to me at all.
Ban't in my line."

"Tu late; you'm in the plot; an' you ought to be
a proud man if you do feel all for missus as I've heard
'e say scores o' times, in drink an' out.  Ess, you must
do what I ax you; theer ban't no gwaine back now."

Mr. Collins reflected.  He believed, despite the
eggshell necklace, that he still gained ground with Jonah's
elder daughter in that she tolerated him at less than
a yard's distance by fits and starts; but the necessity
for not proposing marriage Henry felt to hamper his
movements.  That Sally might refuse—perhaps a dozen
times—was nothing against the argument, for a rustic
love-maker is as patient as Nature's self.  But in the
heart of Collins, obedience to anybody who ordered him
with voice sufficiently loud, was a rooted instinct.  He
had abided by Jonah's clear utterance during time past;
and now he remembered it, and, astonished at his own
astuteness, sought to make a bargain.

"If I help 'e with this thing, will 'e let me offer
marriage to your eldest darter?"

The other was much astonished, for his views upon
the subject of Sally had changed somewhat under
Margery's delicate manipulation.

"Offer!  Powers!  I thought as you'd axed her years
agone.  What's to hinder 'e?  'Tis a free country, an'
you'm auld enough to knaw your awn minds, ban't 'e?"

The younger labourer was hurt, and showed as much.

"Your memory's grawin' short seemin'ly," he said.
"No matter.  If you say I may ax her—'tis all I want.
Then I'll serve 'e to the best of my power."

In less than half an hour Henry Collins departed
from the stable a haunted man.  His eyes roamed like
those of a frightened horse; he would have given the
wide world to be a thousand miles from Bear Down;
for the deed without a name made him tremble to the
foundations of his being and threw him into an icy
perspiration each time that its significance crossed his
mind.  Only the permission to propose to Sally
sustained him; and even his love could hardly stand the
ordeal of this test, for, to tell truth, he doubted more
than once whether the game was worth the candle.

How he lived through those moments that separated
him from the night Henry never afterwards remembered;
but the suspense only endured through some
few hours, for Mr. Cramphorn, after revealing his design,
perceived that it must be put into immediate execution
if the other's help was to be counted upon.

"Give the fule time and he'll draw back or bolt,"
reflected Jonah.

But the sombre minutes, deep laden each with its own
horrid burden of terror and presentment, flapped their
bat-wings away into the limbo of time past, and a
moment arrived—midnight between two days of late
July—when Collins and his leader met by appointment
at a spot in the great hayfield of Endicott's, and
together proceeded down the hill to Little Silver.

Henry carried an unlighted bull's-eye lantern;
Cramphorn's pocket bulged, and in his hand he bore a small
bag of battered leather.  Under their breath they
discussed the matter.  The night was moonless, and a
haze of heat stole abroad upon the land.  Pale green
light shuddered along the north-eastern horizon, and
the faces of umbel-bearing flowers caught it and spoke
of it dimly out of the darkness.  A dewy peace held
the world—a peace only broken by the throb of the
field-crickets that pulsed upon the ear infinitely loud
in contrast with the alternate silences.  Mist enveloped
all things in the valleys, and as the men sank towards
the churchyard, Collins shivered before cold moisture
that brushed his face like a dead hand.

"'Tis a thing beyond all belief," he said; "an' I
be very glad as you didn't give me more'n a day
to think, else I should have runned away rather than
faace it."

"'Tis a ugly thing done for a butivul purpose.  'Tis
the best work as ever that brain-pan will have to its
credit in this here world."

"'Struth!  I cream all awver to hear 'e!  Such
courage as you've got.  Did 'e get the keys?"

"Ess; when Noah Brimblecombe was up to the
rectory.  I seed un go; then went in the cottage an'
waited, an' when his missus had her back turned at the
door, I pulled the curtain in the corner, under the cloam
images wheer the church keys all hang to.  And them
I wanted I found.  To put 'em back wi'out him knawin'
will be a harder job."

"An' arter the—the screws, theer'll be a lead case, I
s'pose—have 'e thought 'pon that?  But I lay you have."

"I've got a mall an' cold chisel in my bag.  Ban't no
harder than openin' a chest of tea," answered the old
man grimly.

Mr. Collins whined and shivered.

"To think of it!  The mystery of it!  If she knawed—the
very man she promised to wed.  'Tis tu gashly;
I been ever since this marnin' broodin' awver the
business."

"A gert thought—that's what it was, an' I be proud
of it; an' if 'tis ever knawed an' telled about after I'm
dead and gone, folks'll say 'tweern't no common man as
carried out such a projec'.  A fule would have digged in
the airth an' be catched so easy as want-catcher kills
moles; but theer's brains goes to this item.  I minded
Christopher Yeoland—him as was taken off in full power
an' pride of life by a snake-sting; an' I minded how
nought but the twist of a key an' the touch of a
turnscrew still lay between him an' the quick."

"Twas 'cause you hated un so mortal bad livin' as
your thoughts ran upon him dead," ventured Collins
uneasily.

"Not so 'tall.  As to hatin' un, I did; but that's
neither here nor theer.  I'm just a tool in this matter,
an' the dead dust of Christopher Yeoland ban't no
more to me than the ridge of airth a plough turns.
'Tis a fact this same dust an' me comed to blows in
time agone; but all these frettings an' failings be
forgotten now, though we weern't no ways jonic—a empty,
lecherous man.  Still, he've answered for his sins, an' I
hates un no more.  I awnly wants a bit of the 'natomy
of un for a precious balm; then 'tis screws again, an'
locks again; an' none wiser 'cept you an' me an' the
spiders."

"Theer's God A'mighty."

"I doan't forget that.  The Lard's on our side, or I
shouldn't be here.  No puzzle for Him.  No doubt
Judgment Day will find the man all of a piece again
to take his deserts."

"You'm a wonder—to talk of such a fatal deed as if
'twas no more'n pullin' a turnip."

"An' that's how us should look 'pon it.  An' if 'twas
a turnip axed for, a turnip I'd have got."

They now entered the churchyard from its south-western
side by a hole in the hedge.  Mr. Collins lighted
his lantern and passed over the graves like a drunken
Will-o'-the-wisp with many a trip and stagger.  Then
he stood under the skulls of the Yeoland mausoleum,
and glanced fearfully up where they grinned, and his
light seemed to set red eyeballs rolling in their mossy
sockets.

Soon both men had entered the sepulchre, and
Henry happily burned himself with the lantern as
he did so—an accident that served to steady his
nerves and shut his mouth upon chattering teeth.
Jonah, too, felt the tragedy of the situation, but in a
higher spirit, and the peacock part of the man played
him true, though only coffins were his audience.  He
thought how ages unborn might ring with this desperate
deed; he even determined that, if the matter leaked
out no sooner, he would himself confess it upon his
death-bed, when ignoble retaliation would be impossible,
and little time left for much save admiration and
applause.

This he resolved as he lifted the pall of Christopher's
coffin and observed how that damp had already begun
to paint the brass inscription green.

He opened his bag, bade Henry keep the lantern
steady and shut his mouth, then calmly removed his
coat, turned up his sleeves, and began his work.  But
the task proved harder than he had anticipated, and
his assistant, after one bungling effort to aid, was forced
to abandon any second attempt.  To hold the lantern
proved the limit of his power; and even that bobbed
every way, now throwing light among the dim shadows
upon the shelves, now blazing into Jonah's eyes, now
revolving helplessly over the ceiling of the vault.
Presently Cramphorn grew annoyed as well as warm,
and, aware that precious time was passing, swore so
loudly that a new, material terror overtook his companion.

"For God's grace, doan't 'e bawl so loud!" he
implored.  "If p'liceman was ridin' past and catched us!"

Though he felt no flicker of fear, Jonah realised the
value of this counsel.  He looked to see that the door
was shut fast, then proceeded with his work in silence.
The reluctant screws came out quicker as he acquired
increased skill, and from their raw holes issued a faint
smell of eucalyptus, for the coffin was built of that wood.

At last the men together lifted the lid, and set it in a
corner.  Then a sterner task awaited them where the
lead shell lay bare.  Noise of mallet on chisel was now
inevitable, and Collins heard himself directed to stand
sentry at the churchyard gate, so that if the nightly
patrol should pass that way on his uncertain round,
silence might fall until he had departed beyond earshot.
Probability of any other human visitor there was none,
unless the doctor chanced to be abroad.

Henry therefore got out into the fresh air very
willingly, and before long sat him down at the churchyard
gate and listened to muffled activity from Jonah's mallet
in the distance.  One other sound disturbed the night.
Already grey dawn stole along the eastern woods, but
the deep, tranced hour before bird-waking was upon
all things, and in its loneliness Collins found the lap
and chuckle of a stream under the churchyard wall
welcome as a companion.  It knew action at least, and
broke the horrible stillness.  Once he heard slow
footfall of hoofs, and was about to give an alarm, when,
from the shadows, came forth an old white horse that
wandered alone through the night.  Like a ghost it
dragged itself slowly past—perchance waking from
pain, perchance wondering, as such aged brutes may
wonder, why grass and water are no longer sweet.  It
hobbled painfully away, and the echo of its passing was
swallowed up in the silence, and the apparition of its
body vanished under the mist.  There only remained
the wakeful streamlet, leaping from its dim journey
among coffins into the watercress bed, and a hollow
reverberation of blows from the mortuary.

Presently, however, Mr. Cramphorn's mallet ceased to
strike, and finding that the supreme moment had now
come, Collins nerved himself to return.  From the
dawn-grey into gloom he stole to see the picture of
Jonah in a round ring of lantern light sharply painted
upon darkness.  A coffin, with its inner leaden shell torn
back, lay at Cramphorn's feet, and Henry instantly
observed that some tremendous and unforeseen circumstance
had fallen out during his vigil at the churchyard
gate.  The other man was glaring before him like a
lunatic; his short hair bristled; his face dripped.
Terrified he was not, yet clearly had become the
victim of amazed bewilderment and even horror.

"For Christ's sake, doan't 'e glaze at me like that!"
implored Henry.  "What have 'e done?  What's happened
to 'e?  Doan't tell me you'm struck into that shaape for
this high-handed job!"

The other's mouth was open and his under-jaw hung
limp.  Apparently he lacked force to speak, for he
merely pointed to his work; upon which Collins looked
sideways into the coffin with stealthy dread.  Instantly
his face also became transformed into a display of
liveliest astonishment and dismay; but in his case
frank terror crowded over him like a storm.  And thus
three men—two living and one a corpse—each
confronted the others, while the marble serenity of this
death offered a contrast to the frenzied emotion on the
faces of those that lived.

"God's gudeness!  You've brawked into the wrong
wan!" gasped Collins.

Jonah shook his head, for still he could not answer;
yet the suspicion of his companion seemed natural,
because not Christopher Yeoland but another lay at
their feet.

Within the coffin, placid and little disfigured save
where the eyes had fallen in and the skin tightened
over his high, bald brow, appeared a venerable
face—a face almost patriarchal.  The dead man's beard
gleamed nobly white upon his breast, and his features
presented the solemn, peaceful countenance of one
indifferent to this rude assault from busy souls still
in life.

"'Tis magic—black, wicked magic—that's what it is.
Else he've been took out an' another party put in
unbeknawnst," stuttered Collins.

Then Cramphorn found his voice, and it came weak
and thin with all the vigour strained out of it by shock.

"Not him at all—an' like as not he never was in.
A far-reachin', historic action—that's what we've comed
on.  Our dark deed's brought to light a darker."

"Which us'll have to keep damn quiet about," gasped Henry.

"'Tis a gert question how our duty do lie.  My brains
be dancin' out of my eyes in water.  Maybe we've found
a murder.  An' I caan't get the thread of action all in
a minute."

"'Tis daylight outside, anyway."

"Then for God's sake do your share, if you'm a man.
Hammer that lead back an' shut up this here ancient
person—Methuselah he might be, from the look of un.
I be gone that weak in the sinews that a cheel could
thraw me.  I must get a bite of air, then I'll help."

"You ban't gwaine!" cried Henry in terror; but Jonah
remained in sight and soon returned.  Then, to the
younger's great satisfaction, he heard that his partner
had quite abandoned the original enterprise and was
only desirous to make good their desecration and depart.

"It caan't surely be as a dead man graws auld quick
after he's put away?" asked Collins.

"A fule's question.  'Tis all a trick an' a strammin'
gert lie worked for some person's private ends.  An' the
bite comes to knaw how we'm gwaine to let it out."

"Ess; we'm done for ourselves if we tell."

"Doan't talk; work.  I must think bimebye when
I'm out of this smell o' death."

Henry obeyed, and showed considerable energy and
despatch.

"He may be a livin' man still!"

"Young Yeoland?  I'd guess it was so, if I didn't
knaw 'bout Cherry Grepe.  Please God, mine be the
intellects to smooth out this dark deed anyways, so
that generations yet to come shall call me blessed.
Awnly you keep your mouth shut—that's what you've
got to do.  Guy Fawkes an' angels, to be faaced wi'
such a coil!"

"It'll want a powerful strong brain to come out of it
with any credit to yourself," said Mr. Collins.

"As to that, such things be sent to those best able to
support 'em."

"Well, no call to tell me to keep quiet.  I'll not make
or meddle, I swear to 'e.  If theer's any credit due an'
any callin' of anybody blessed, you may have the lot.
I shall pray to God for my paart to let me forget everythin'
'bout this night.  An' seein' the things I do forget,
I awnly hope this will go like a breath o' air.  Same
time 'tis more likely to haunt me to my dyin' day
than not."

"Doan't drink, that's all.  Forget it you won't; but
doan't drink 'pon it, else you'll let it out in the wrong
ears for sartain.  You ban't built to keep in beer an'
secrets to wance.  An' take care of Ash, as sleeps along
wi' you.  Have a lie ready if he's wakin' when you go
back."

In twenty minutes the matter was at an end, an old
man's coffin once more in its appointed place, and the
family vault of the Yeolands locked and double-locked.
Collins and Cramphorn then left the churchyard, but
Jonah found himself without physical strength to start
uphill immediately; so the men retired to rest awhile
within the crumbling walls of Little Silver Castle, close
at hand.  There they sat, under the great groined arches
of the dungeon chamber, and whispered, while the bats
squeaked and clustered in their dark nooks and crannies
at return of day.

Then Cramphorn and his assistant proceeded homewards
as they had come—knee-deep through the grass
lands—and before three o'clock both were back in their
beds again.  Yet neither slept, for each, in proportion
to his intelligence, was oppressed by the thought of his
discovery and by the memory of an ancient face, autumn
brown, yet having a great white beard, that rippled over
his breast and so passed out of sight beneath the
engirding lead.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A CLEAN BREAST OF IT`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XI.


.. class:: center medium bold

   A CLEAN BREAST OF IT

.. vspace:: 2

As discoveries of moment hidden for long years or
through all past time will suddenly and simultaneously
burst, like Neptune, upon students widely
separated, yet pursuing one goal by divers roads, so
now this extraordinary circumstance stumbled upon by
Jonah Cramphorn and his companion during their
secret enterprise was noised abroad within a fortnight,
yet without any action or intervention from them.

It is true that, despite his solemn promises, Henry
Collins soon found himself constitutionally unequal to
preserving the secret, and he confessed the same within
a week of the incidents relating to it; but those before
whom he published his experience took no step upon it
until they heard the story in full detail at a later date.
Then the whole curious truth was blazed abroad.

Mr. Cramphorn, as soon as Noah Brimblecombe's
keys were back on their nail without awakening of
suspicion, shut up his adventure stoutly enough, while
he pondered how best to reveal the discovery; but his
accomplice found the position far less endurable.  Henry
existed henceforth like a man struggling under some
grim incubus by day as well as night.  Sleep deserted
him; his head ached; he found himself bungling his
work, and, upon this development, the man grew
alarmed for his brains and believed that he must be
going mad.  Even poor Henry's love-star dwindled
somewhat while yet this cloud of horror hung over him,
and though he had won permission from Sally's father
to propose marriage, such was the tremendous nature
of the price paid and its appendage of mental chaos
that he found himself unequal to thoughts on any other
theme.  He could not profit by his new powers for the
present; indeed, he felt that, until this knowledge was
shifted on to other shoulders, life would hold no happy
moment.  Five days he spent with his secret; then,
being strung to a pitch when his promise to Jonah
ceased to weigh with him, he determined to make a
clean breast of the whole matter.  Everything should
be divulged excepting only the name of his partner.
First rose the question of an ear for this confession,
and, hesitating only a moment between Mark Endicott
and Myles, Mr. Collins decided that he would tell them
both.  He thought also of the vicar, but held, doubtless
correctly, that his personal offence would bulk larger
in the eyes of Mr. Scobell than upon the view of those
at Bear Down.

Chance to make his revelation offered within two
nights of Henry's decision, for then it happened that
Cramphorn, his daughters, Churdles Ash, and other of
the hands tramped off to Chagford, where a travelling
circus was attracting the countryside.  Henry, though
he angered Sally not a little by refusing to accompany
her, found an opportunity excellent for his purpose,
and seized upon it.  Left alone with the blind man and
Stapledon, Collins began tremulously to tell his story;
and his eyes rolled as he proceeded; and his voice often
failed him or rose into high squeaks between gulps of
emotion; but he made his meaning clear, and so lifted
a weight from off his soul.

"Please, your honours, I've got a thing in my head as
be burstin' it, an' I'll thank you to let me have a tell
now I be alone with you.  A devilish secret 'tis, an'
I caan't keep my lips shut 'pon it no more, or I shall
go daft."

"Out with it then," said Stapledon.  "Your brains
weren't built for devilish secrets, Henry."

"No, they wasn't," admitted Collins, "an' I'm glad to
hear you allow it.  I do best I can wi' the gifts I've
got—an' who could do more?  An' 'twas last week as I promised
to go along wi' another man whose name theer ban't no
call to mention.  He'll answer for hisself 'pon the
Judgment Day; but I can't wait so long.  I wants to get it
awver now."

"Begin at the beginning, lad; talk quietly, and light
your pipe.  We're friends and shan't let out your secret
where it can hurt you," said Mark.

"I'm sure I pray God to bless you for them words,"
answered Collins earnestly; "but I can't smoke—the
very taste of tobacco be changed since.  'Tis like
this—us wanted oil of man, which you might knaw 'bout,
bein' so wise as you are."

"An old wife's remedy—well?"

"Whether or no, it was told to my mate that awnly
oil of man stood between missus here an' her death.
So we ordained to fetch what was needed in the faace
of all men."

"For that old witch on the hill, I suppose?" asked
Myles.

"I doan't name no names, axin' your humble pardon,"
answered Collins uneasily.  "This is my awn sacred
confession—awnly my business an' yours, if I may say
it without rudeness.  Anyway, we went for what was
wanted; an' that was a man's head bones—a chap cut
off in fulness of life for choice.  An' my mate—a deep
man, I allow that much—thought fust of Bill Cousins—him
took off by sunstroke two years ago; an' then
he reckoned 'twas beyond our power these short nights
to dig for what we wanted between dimpsy-light of
evening an' morn.  An' when he comed to me he
minded me how theer was quality buried above ground
so well as poor folks under; an' a young man slain in
his strength by mischance.  Squire Christopher
Yeoland he meant.  A gashly auld thought, sure enough;
yet us steeled ourselves to it."

"You dared that sacrilege!" burst out Stapledon;
but Collins merely stared at him.  Time had taken the
labourer so far beyond this point in the tragedy that
not only did he forget its dramatic significance upon a
new listener, but also how he himself had felt when
Jonah first broke it to him.

"Ess; us set about the job.  That ban't nothin'.  'Twas
for love of missus us done it.  An' I watched while
t'other worked; an' when he stopped hammerin' an'
I went back, he was starin' an' bristlin', 'cause afore him
laid—not the gen'leman us counted 'pon—but a very
auld, aged man, berry-brown from keepin', yet so sweet
as a rose, wi' a gert white beard to un."

"You broke into the wrong coffin!"

"No fay, us didn't.  'Tis the carpse what comed from
furrin paarts—anyways the box as did.  Christopher
Yeoland, beggin' his pardon, was the name 'pon the
brass.  An' my mate was mazed; an' us hammered
back the lead all suent and tidy, an' screwed on the
lid, an' put un 'pon his shelf wance more an' slipped
it home.  That's the tale, an' I'll take my oath of it
afore God A'mighty's angel."

There followed a lengthy silence upon his story; then
Mr. Collins made an end.

"'Tis the awful hardness of sharin' such a dreadful
secret wi' wan other man as I caan't endure no more.
An' I swear, by any deep word you choose, that I never
meant no findin' of anybody's secrets—awnly gude to
missus—as might have been saved by what we went
for, but won't never be better without it."

"That's as may be, Henry," said Mr. Endicott.  "For
the rest, this thing is somebody's secret, as you say.
Anyway you're not weighed down with it now.  You
may hold yourself free of it, and if you take my advice,
having eased your mind, you'll go off to rest with a
quiet conscience.  No great harm can fall on you at
any rate.  Perhaps none at all, for I'll wager it was
Cramphorn, not you, who hatched this piece of folly."

"Please, please, doan't name nobody, your honours!"
implored Henry.  "I promised the man to bide still
as a worm 'bout it.  In fact I swore I would.  An' I
did try to keep him off my tongue at any rate, an'
thought as I had."

"We shall not take any steps against him or you.
Now go to bed and sleep.  You've done the right thing
in telling us; but don't tell anybody else."

Mr. Collins, not sorry to depart, did so, and for some
minutes Stapledon and the blind man continued to sit
in silence, each busy with his own thoughts.
Then Mark spoke.

"A stunning, dislocating, play-acting piece of foolery,
if it's true.  Yet somehow I know it is.  There's a deal
of light shed on darkness for me, and for you too I
reckon, by such an upheaval."

"Not so.  I see no light—unless you believe this
means that Christopher Yeoland may still be alive."

"Yes, I think it means that; and such a return must
be an earthquake more or less in all the lives that were
once connected with him.  Men can't die and live
again without upsetting the world.  A mad imagining.
Perhaps no mother's son but him would have dreamed
of it.  But the motive——"

"That," said Myles quickly, "is all I can see.  Knowing
as much of the man as I do, so much looks clear.
When Clack joined him, I sent a message.  It was as
urgent as need be, and to the effect that Honor loved
him still.  That she loved me too Clack probably added
to my message.  While one of us lived, Honor would
never have married the other.  So this thing he did
to make her road easy."

"If you're right, the puzzle comes together piece by
piece."

"Excepting the old man in the coffin—supposing
that it was a man."

Endicott reflected; then was struck with an idea.

"It may be that the death of this old man put the
cranky thought into Yeoland's head.  If it was his
kinsman that lies there instead of himself, all's smoothed
out.  What simpler way to clear Honor's road?  This
parade of evidence is made that there may be no doubt
in any mind.  A Yeoland dies and is buried in the tomb
of his forefathers.  But after all it wasn't our Yeoland."

"Did he mean to let this farce go on for ever?"

"No farce for him; yet, maybe, he got some solid joy
out of it.  A quick mind for all his vagabond, empty
life.  He saw the position, and reckoned that in fulness
of time she might come to be a happy wife along with
you.  Then this old relative dies at the right moment
and sets a spark to his imagination.  No, I suppose we
should never have known.  His idea would be to keep
his secret close hid for ever from those it concerned
most—unless——"

He broke off and pursued his reflections in silence.
Myles waited for him to speak again, but the blind man
only resumed his knitting.

"He blotted himself clean out of life for love of
Honor," Stapledon at length declared.

"That I believe.  A strange, unlawful deed, yet 'tis
a question whether the law has any punishment.  To
think of the immense confusion of human life if many
graves yielded up their dead again!"

"And what is our course?  Who can benefit or suffer
if we state these things?  There's such huge folly about
it when you think of details that I feel as if it must all
be a nightmare of Henry's."

"No, no; it's true enough."

"Then he may be married himself by this time, and
in a new home, with England a mere dream behind him?"

"I wish I thought he was, Myles—for—for general
peace of mind; but I don't.  If he had a live, guiding,
absorbing passion, after Honor, it was Godleigh—the
woods and hills and songs of Teign.  These things
were in his blood.  If I know him, they might have
drawn him back with bands of steel."

"Why didn't they do so then?"

"How can we say that they didn't?"

"What!  He may have been here—at our elbows?"

"I see the likelihood of that clearer than you, being
blind.  Yes, I can very easily think of him under shadow
of night, with the true feel of a ghost, rambling beneath
his own trees—his and not his—or listening to the river,
or creeping to his own door when all men slept; or in
the dawn—such a lover of cock-light as he was—he
would steal through the dew with the birds to watch
sunrise, then vanish and hide himself, or get above to
some wild ridge of the moor and lie there till
darkness gathered again.  Such freaks would be meat and
drink to him; and also to remember that he was only
a live man in Australia, but a dead one in his own land.
Just for argument suppose that was so; then look back
a little way and think it out."

But Myles could by no means divine his uncle's drift.
Practical even before this surprise, he was looking to the
future, not backward, for study of the past appeared
vain, and doubly vain to him in this crisis.

"Not much use turning back," he said.  "I want to
know about the time to come.  These two—Collins and
Cramphorn—through their fool's errand have certainly
unearthed an extraordinary fact: Christopher Yeoland's
secret, so to call it.  And it is for us to determine
whether our duty is to proclaim the thing or not.
There's Godleigh—it falls empty again next autumn, for
the people don't renew their lease."

"Well, Godleigh reverts to the man in Australia.
The lawyers believe that man is an ancient settler; we
know, or think we know, that the place has not really
changed hands.  Yeoland may reappear after giving
Little Silver due warning."

"Or, being a rolling stone, and probably no better off
now than when he left England, he may stop in Australia.
Still, there's the chance of his returning."

"Be sure he will, even if he has not done so," said
Mark Endicott firmly.  "If 'tis only to the old life and
old ways, he'll come back.  He'll say, as likely as not,
that the thing he meant to do is done.  Honor is married
and a happy wife.  Who would deny him his own again
after that sacrifice?"

"I only think of Honor and the awful shock to her.
It might kill her."

"Don't fret yourself there, or torture over that point.
Now I'll say what will astound you: I think Honor
may very possibly be less amazed and staggered at
this news than ever you were, or I either."

"Not amazed!  What do you—what in God's name
do you mean by that?  That she knew?  Knew it and
hid it from me?  That she suffers now because——"

He broke off and sprang to his feet, while the other
maintained silence and let the stricken man stride away
his passion and regain his self-control.  Soon enough
Myles grew cool and contained.  Then he walked to
Mark and put his hand on the old man's shoulder.

"Forgive me; but this is the utter, blasting wreck
and ruin of my whole life that you are hinting at," he
said calmly.

"I hint at nothing," answered the other with unusual
roughness.  "Had I thought any such impossible thing
I should have been as big a fool as you are.  You ought
to know your wife better than to believe she'd act a lie
of that sort."

"I don't believe it—I never said that I believed it
Your words seemed to imply that you must believe it.
Else why do you suggest that Honor would be less
astonished to hear of this resurrection than you and
I are?"

"If you had taken a look back as I bid you, Myles,
instead of rushing forward without looking, you need
not have asked me that question.  Glance back, even
now, and what has been dark as the pit may lighten
and lift somewhat.  Just call to mind the sorrow that
has hung so heavily over us of late days—the little
chick that we counted so precious—too soon."

But Stapledon was in no mental mood for retrospective
or other thought.  A wide turmoil tossed the sea
of his soul into storm; the terrible weakness of the
strong got hold upon him, and he rocked in one of those
moments when capacity to think deserts the mind, when
intellect seems overwhelmed.

"I cannot see what you see," he said.  "I admit that
I am blind and a fool, but for God's sake don't ask me
any more questions beyond my power to answer.  Tell
me what you think, or know, or believe you know.
Consider what this means to me—the fact that
Christopher Yeoland may be alive—may have stood behind a
hedge yesterday, and watched me pass, and laughed.
Don't you see?  I've got Honor by falsehood—a false
pretence—a fraud."

"Not of your own breeding, if it is so.  Your true
and loving wife she is for all time now, whether the man
be dead or alive—though of that there's a certain proof
in my mind.  I'd be the last to tear you with questions
at this minute.  I only wanted you to see what has
rushed in upon me so sudden and fierce.  Light in it
every way—light in it for you and for Honor, I pray
God.  If what I make out of this puzzle is true, and
Christopher Yeoland alive, then there may be matter for
rejoicing in the fact rather than gloom.  Not darkness
anyway.  Now call home to your mind that night in the
woods, when at her silly whim, which I was fool enough
to support, you took your wife for a drive to Lee
Bridge."

"I remember it well enough."

"You left her to fetch water from the river, and while
you were away she got out of the pony carriage,
light-footed and silent as a moonbeam, to pick bluebells.
Then suddenly there!  Out of the mist and night—out
of the dim woods—the man!  Wandering alone no
doubt They met, and she, being in no trim for such
a fearful shock as the sight of one long dead walking
the earth again, went down before it.  Think of her
suddenly eye to eye and face to face with him in the
midst of night and sleep!  It froze her blood, and froze
the poor little one's blood too—that thawed no more.
For she thought him a spectral thing, an' thinks so
still—*thinks so still*!  That's the dark secret she's dumb
about and won't whisper to you or me, though she's
been near telling us once or twice.  That's what has been
eating her heart out; that's what neither your prayers
nor mine could get from her.  She must be made to
understand in careful words that will ask your best skill
to choose aright She must learn that you have
discovered what she's hiding, and that it was flesh and
blood, not phantom, she saw.  'Tis a pity, if what I say
is fact, that the fool ran away when he saw you coming
to succour her.  The harm was done by that time; and
if we had known, how many of these ghost-haunted
hours might we have saved her!  I may be spinning
thin air, yet I think what I tell is true."

But Stapledon was glaring at the impassive face
before him with a gaze that seemed to burrow through
Mark's sightless eyes and reach his brain.  Now Myles
spoke in a voice unfamiliar to his listener, for it was
loud-pitched and turbulent with sudden passion.

"That man killed my child!"

A glass vessel 90 the dresser echoed the deep,
dominant note of this cry and reverberated it; one
moment of silence followed; and then came shuffle of
feet on the flagged way, with laughter and echo of
time-worn jests, as Churdles Ash, Pinsent, and the others
returned from their pleasure.  Mark Endicott, however,
had opportunity for a final word.

"It may be as you say—a dark accident, and worse
ten thousand times for him than even you.  Be just—be
very just to the madman, if he has really done this
wayward deed and is coming back into your life again.
Be just, and don't swerve an inch out of your even-handed
course, for your road is like to get difficult if
you do."

"Us have viewed a gert pomp of braave horsemanship,"
announced Mr. Ash.  "Never seed no better
riders nor merry-men nowheer, though the hosses was
poor."

"An' Tommy Bates here be all for joinin' of 'em,"
laughed Samuel Pinsent; "but I tell un as he turns out
his toes tu far to do any credit to hisself in such a wild
course of life."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`LIGHT`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XII.


.. class:: center medium bold

   LIGHT

.. vspace:: 2

Beside his sleeping wife did Stapledon recline, and
endeavoured, through the hours of a weary night,
to gather the significance of those great things that he
had gleaned.  Sometimes he surprised his own thought—as
a man's conscience will often burst in roughly upon
his mind—and found himself hoping that this news was
untrue and that Christopher Yeoland filled a coffin, if
not at Little Silver.  But the edifice of probability so
carefully reared by Mark Endicott showed no flaw, and
even amid the mazes of his present doubt Myles found
time to marvel at the ratiocination of the old man.
Before this explanation it seemed difficult to believe that
another clue to the puzzle existed.  A note of inner
unrest, a question within a question, finally brought
Myles out of bed at dawn.  He rose, soon stood in the
air, and, through the familiar early freshness of day,
walked upwards to the Moor for comfort.  What was
it to him if this harebrained soul had thus played at
death?  He, at least, was no dreamer, and moved upon
solid ground.  He passed beside the kingdom of the
blue jasione and navel-wort on the old wall, while above
him wind-worn beeches whispered in the dawn wind.
From force of habit he stood at a gate and rested his
arms upon the topmost bar, while his great dog roved
for a rabbit.  Now the man's eyes were lighted to the
depths of their disquiet from the east, and at sight of
the distant woods his thoughts turned back to that
meeting responsible for his child's death.  He had yet
to learn from Honor whether his uncle's suspicion
was correct concerning the incident, but little doubt
existed within his mind, and he breathed heavily, and
his emotions almost bordered upon malignity.  Better
such a futile soul under the earth in sober earnest.  So
ill-regulated a human machine looked worse than useless,
for his erratic course impeded the progress of others
more potent, and was itself a menace and a danger.
This man had killed his little son—that child of many
petitions and wide hopes; had crushed him, like a sweet
wild flower under the heel of a fool.  So bitterly he
brooded; then pondered as to how his wife would
receive this tremendous message.

Upon the first heather ridges the cold breath of the
Moor touched the man to patience and brought him
nearer himself.  He looked out into the dayspring;
noted where one little flame-coloured forerunner of
dawn already shone upon lofty granite afar off; and
saw the Mist Mother rise from the ruddy seeding
rushes of her sleeping-place.  He beheld the ancient
heron's grey pinion brighten to rose beside the river;
heard cry of curlew and all the manifold music of
the world waking again.  Above him the sky flushed
to the colours of the woodbine, while upon earth
arose an incense and a savour of nightly dews
sun-kissed.  From marsh and moss, from the rush beds
and the peat beds; from glimmering ridges cast upward
by workers long gone by; from the bracken and the
heather, and the cairns of the old stone men; from the
gold eyes of the little tormentils, the blue eyes of
the milkworts, the white stars of the galiums woven
and interwoven through the texture of the budding
heath—from each and all, to the horizon-line of peak
and pinnacle, a risen sun won worship.  Then did
Stapledon's eyes soften somewhat and his brow clear
in the great light, for there came songs from the Sons
of the Morning—they who in time past had welcomed
him as a brother; and their music, floating from the
high places, soothed his troubled heart.  Under that
seraphic melody the life of man, his joys and his
sorrows, peaked and dwindled to their just proportions;
gradually he forgot his kind, and so thought only of
the solemn world-order outspread, and the round earth
rolling like an opal about the lamp of the sun, through
God's own estate and seigniory of space.

That hour and the steadfast nature of him presently
retrieved his patience; then Myles shone forth
unclouded as the morning.  Recollection of his recent
fret and passion surprised him.  Who was he to
exhibit such emotion?  The Moor was his exemplar,
and had been so since his boyish eyes first swept it
understandingly.  For him this huge, untamed delight
was the only picture of the God he did not know, yet
yearned to know; and now, as oftentimes of old, it
cooled his blood, exalted his reflections, adjusted the
distortions of life's wry focus, and sent him home in
peace.

Duty was the highest form of praise that he knew,
and he prepared to fall back upon that.  Let others
order their brief journeys on lines fantastical or futile,
he at least was wiser and knew better.  He reflected
that the folly of the world can injure no soul's vital
spots.  Only a man's self can wound himself mortally.
He would live on agreeably to Nature—obedient as the
granite to the soft, tireless touch of wind and rain;
prompt as the bursting bud and uncurling tendril;
patient as the cave spirits that build up pillars of
stalagmite through unnumbered ages; faithful as the
merle, whose music varies not from generation to
generation.  Life so lived would be life well guarded
and beyond the power of outer evil to penetrate.

So he believed very earnestly, and knew not that his
noble theory asked a noble nature to practise it.  Only
a great man can use perfectly a great tool; and this
obtains with higher rules of conduct than Stapledon's;
for of all who profess and call themselves Christians,
not one in a thousand is mentally equipped to be the
thing he pretends, or even to understand the sweep and
scope of what he professes.  It is not roguery that
makes three parts of Christendom loom hypocrite in
a thinker's eyes, but mental and constitutional inability
to grasp a gospel at once the most spiritual and material
ever preached and misunderstood.  Centuries of craft
stretch between man and the Founder's meaning;
confusion bred of passion has divided the House against
itself; politics and the lust of power have turned
religion into a piece of state machinery; and the rot
at the root of the cumbrous fabric will, within half a
century, bring all down in far-flung conflagration and
ruin.  Then may arise the immortal part out of the
holocaust of the Letter, and Christianity, purged of
churchcraft as from a pestilence, fly back to brood upon
the human heart once more in the primal, rainbow glory
of the Sermon on the Mount, preached under heaven by
a Man to men.

That day Myles Stapledon, with all caution and such
choice of words as he had at command, broke the story
to Honor, and his tactful language, born of love, was so
skilful that the shock brought no immediate collapse
with it.  The narrative asked for some art, yet he
developed it gradually, and found his reward where
Mark had predicted.  First Honor learnt what she
herself had seen upon that fateful night; and when, in a
very extremity of amazement, she confessed to the
secret of a fancied spectre, Myles went further and led
her to understand that what she had witnessed was
flesh and blood, that a confusion, probably not
intentional, had been created, and that Christopher Yeoland
might be suspected still to live.  Stapledon spared
himself nothing in this narrative.  Asked by his wife
as to the reason that could have prompted her former
lover to a step so extravagant, he reminded her of her
own determination to marry neither of them; he
explained how he had begged Christopher to come back,
that her life might be as it had been; and added that
doubtless the wanderer on his side, and for love of her
alone, had put this trick upon them in the belief that
such a course would contribute to her final happiness.
Having set out this much with extreme impartiality, a
human question burst from the heart of the man.

"For you he did this thing, love; he only thought
of you and not of the thousand preposterous tangles
and troubles likely to spring from such an action.  Your
happiness—that was all he saw or cared to see.  And
did he see it?  Tell me, dear Honor—here on the
threshold of his return perhaps—tell me; was it for your
happiness?  Thank God, I think I know; yet I should
like to hear from your own lips the truth and that I am
right."

The truth, as she believed it before this most startling
fact, came instantly to Honor's lips.  She was enfeebled
and unstrung by weeks of wayward living consequent
upon great fret of mind.  She had nursed this dreadful
belief in an apparition until it had grown into a sort
of real presence, and the conviction, fabricated through
weeks of brooding, would not be dispelled at a word.
Deep was the impress left upon her mind, and time
must pass before a shape so clear could fade.  As a
result, the man now thought to be returned from the
dead frightened her for a season, scarcely less than his
fancied ghost had done.  She was timid before the
amazing whisper that he still lived.  In this fear she
forgot for the moment what had prompted Yeoland to
his typical folly; she dreaded him in the body as she
had dreaded him in the spirit; she turned to the solid
being at her side, clung to Myles in her weakness,
and held his great arm tightly round her waist.

"For my happiness indeed, dearest one.  You have
loved me better than I deserved, and forgiven so many
faults.  This makes me shiver and grow cold and fear
to be alone; yet how different to the thing I thought!"

"And he may come home."

"He will never be real to me again—not if I see him
and hear him.  Never so real as there—-grey-clad with
the moon on his face—a shadowy part of the great web
of the night, yet distinct—all very ghost.  I'm frightened
still.  You can forgive a little of what I made you
endure, now that you know what I have suffered."

He hugged her up to his heart at these words, believed
her as thoroughly as she believed herself, and thanked
Heaven that blind Mark Endicott had been led to such
a true prophecy.

.. vspace:: 2

A week passed, yet no step was taken, though the
new position came to be accepted gradually by those
acquainted with the secret.  For Honor the knowledge
was actually health-giving by virtue of the morbid cloud
that it dispelled.  Such tidings liberated her soul from
a strange fear and offered her mind a subject of boundless
interest.  Many plans were proposed, yet scarcely a
desirable course of action presented itself.  Mark
advocated no step, and Honor added her plea to his, for she
openly expressed a hope that Christopher, if still he
lived, would not return to Godleigh.  And this she said
upon no suspicion of herself, but rather from a continued
dread of the man.  It seemed impossible to her that
she could ever think of him as among the living.
Stapledon, on the contrary, desired an explanation,
and his wish was gratified most speedily by an
unexpected herald from Yeoland himself.  An authentic
representative arrived at Endicott's—a somewhat
shame-faced and apologetic messenger laden with the facts.

For, upon a morning in August, Doctor Courteney
Clack appeared, desired to see Mr. Endicott alone, and
not only told the blind man that his theory was in the
main correct, but begged that from the stores of his
common sense and wisdom he would indicate the most
seemly and least sensational means by which this news
might be broken to those concerned.  The doctor did
not pretend to excuse himself or his part in the play.
There was, indeed, no necessity for recrimination or
censure.  The future lay at the door, and Christopher
Yeoland, who had, in truth, haunted his own domain
by night, designed to return to it in earnest during the
autumn.  The temporary lease would then terminate,
and circumstances now enabled the owner to free his
land of every encumbrance and henceforth administer
Godleigh in a manner worthy of its traditions.

The interview was an old man's triumph, for Mark
Endicott, too frank to pretend otherwise, gloried in the
relation of the story long afterwards, loved to dwell
upon his own reasoned synthesis and explain how
closely it fitted the revealed facts, despite their rare
singularity.  As for Courteney Clack, that gentleman's
amazement, when he found his intelligence more than
a fortnight old, may be guessed, but can hardly be
stated.  Mr. Endicott sent for Myles to substantiate
him, and finally the astounded physician unfolded his
own narrative, now shrunk to a tame and trivial
thing—an echo for the most part of Mark's deductions.

On reaching Australia with Stapledon's messages the
physician's first professional duty had been at the
bedside of Christopher's ancient kinsman, with whom the
young man was dwelling.  For only two days after
Doctor Clack's arrival, the old wool dealer was bitten
by a whip-snake at his country seat on the Hawkesbury
River, and there passed speedily out of life.  This fact
combined with Clack's news from home to determine
Christopher Yeoland in the action he had taken, and
the scheme, once adumbrated upon young Yeoland's
mind, grew apace.  The dead man, who was also named
Christopher, proved to be very wealthy, and his money,
willed to assist the establishment of technical schools in
Sydney, had been withdrawn from that purpose after
two months' intercourse with the youthful head of the
race.  Thus, in ignorance of his own near exit, the
elder left it within Christopher's power to redeem the
ancestral forests and roof tree in fulness of time.  Apart
from the imposition, built on the fact of his relative's
sudden death, the traveller had already determined
that he should lie in the family grave at home.  It
was the right place for one who had saved Yeoland
credit at the last gasp and given the head of that family
wherewithal to lift honour from the dust.  Then came
Stapledon's message and Clack's fearless gloss; so that,
with wits quickened and a mind enlarged by his own
unexpected good fortune, Christopher made final
sacrifice of all love hope—a renunciation worthy of honest
praise in sight of his own altered circumstances—and,
with Clack's aid, practised his theatrical imposition that
Honor's road might stretch before her straight and
certain.  Nothing less than his death would decide her,
and so he let the implicit lie be told, and determined
with himself at all cost to keep out of his own country
until expiration of the period for which he had let
Godleigh.

Clack indicated a circumstance in itself satisfactory at
this stage in his story.  Christopher's resurrection would
not practically prove so far-reaching as Mark Endicott
and Stapledon had imagined, for none existed with any
right to question the facts.  On the supposed death of
the owner, Godleigh had reverted to a man of the same
name in Australia—that was all the lawyers knew—and
the legal difficulty of reclaiming his own and re-establishing
his rights promised to be but trifling.  Neither
had the law very serious penalties in pickle for him,
because it could not be showed where Christopher had
wronged any man.

Time passed, and even the limits of patience that he
had set himself were too great for Yeoland of Godleigh.
Now he was rich, and hated Australia with a deep
hatred.  He returned home therefore, and those events
related had fallen almost act for act as Endicott
declared.  In the flesh had the man haunted Godleigh.
Once a keeper nearly captured him upon his own
preserves; once, during the past spring, he had crept to
the great beech tree, impelled thither at the same hour
and moment as his old sweetheart.  Her collapse had
frightened him out of his senses, and, on seeing
Stapledon approaching, he had retreated, concealed himself,
and, upon their departure, returned to his hidden horse.
Deeply perturbed, but ignorant of all that the incident
really signified, he had ridden back that night to
Exeter, and so departed to the Continent, there to
dwell unrecognised a while longer, and wait, half in
hope, half in fear, that Honor might proclaim him.

But no sound reached his ear, and of Little Silver
news neither he nor Courteney Clack had learnt
anything of note for many weeks.  Now, however, with
only two months between himself and his return to
Godleigh, Christopher Yeoland felt the grand imposture
must be blown away.  It had at least served his
purpose.

Thus spoke Clack; then his own curiosity was
satisfied, and he learned how, by the lawless operation of
obscure men, that secret hidden in the churchyard had
become known, and how, upon the confession of one
conspirator, three others beside the two discoverers had
come to hear of it.

"And as for that terrible thing—the child killed by
him accidentally—my child—" said Stapledon without
emotion, "little use tearing a tender-hearted creature
with that to no purpose.  I do not want him to
know it."

"I won't tell him, you may be sure," answered the
doctor, still in a dream before this unexpected
discounting of his great intelligence.  "He will not hear of it
from me.  But know he must sooner or later.  That
can't be spared him.  Only a question of time and some
blurted speech."

"I'll tell him, then," declared Myles.  "There's
nobody more fitting.  I don't forget."

The question next arose as to how Little Silver
should be informed, and Mr. Endicott declared that the
vicar must make a formal announcement after morning
service on the following Sunday.  Then, with further
conversation upon minor points, Doctor Clack's great
confession ended; while as for the matter of the
desecration, he held with Mr. Endicott that no notice need
be taken beyond, perhaps, warning Mr. Cramphorn that
his egregious enterprise was known, and that his own
safety rested in silence.

The doctor stopped a few days at Endicott's; saw
Honor, who heard him with deep interest and
decreasing fear; then wrote at length to Christopher in
London; but, not caring to face the publication of
Yeoland's existence and pending return, Clack finally
took himself off until the sensation was on the wane.
Before he set out, Myles had a private conversation
with him in nature comforting enough, for, concerning
Honor, the medical man gave it as his professional
opinion that this counter-shock would serve adequately
to combat her former hopeless, nerveless condition.  The
truth, despite its startling nature, must bring wide relief
from spiritual terrors, and so probably participate in
and hasten the business of recovery.

Then came the thunder-clap, whose echoes reverberated
in journals even to the great metropolitan heart of
things, and Christopher Yeoland achieved a notoriety
that was painful to him beyond power of words to
express.  Only one gleam of satisfaction shone through
all the notes and comments and unnumbered reasons
for his conduct: not one came nearer the truth than the
utterance of a West Country journalist, who knew the
history of the Yeoland family, and opined that a touch
of hereditary eccentricity was responsible for all.

Of Little Silver, its comments, theories, bewilderment,
and general suspicion that there must be something
rotten at the roots of the world while such deeds
could be, there appears no need to discourse.  How
Ash and his kind reviewed the matter, or with what
picturesque force it appealed to Noah Brimblecombe,
janitor of the mausoleum, may easily be imagined;
while for the rest it would be specially interesting,
if pertinent, to describe the emotions of Jonah
Cramphorn.  Relief and disappointment mingled in
his mind; he had made no history after all; he was
not the mainspring of this commotion, and when he
nodded darkly and showed no surprise, folks merely
held him too conceited to display honest amazement
like everybody else, and laughed at his assumption of
secret knowledge.  There came a night, however, when
Mr. Endicott spoke with him in private, after which
Jonah desired nothing more than silence for himself,
and poured his pent-up chagrin and annoyance upon
Charity Grepe, who—poor soul—derived little lustre
from this resurrection.





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.. _`VANESSA IO`:

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   BOOK III.

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.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER I.

.. class:: center medium bold

   VANESSA IO

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Between Bear Down and the valley was fern
and the breath of fern and great gleam and
drone of summer flies under the living sun.  Here
Teign tumbled through deep gorges, and from the
wind-swept granite of Godleigh hill, beneath unclouded
noonday splendour, acres of bracken panted silver-green
in the glare, dipped to the fringes of the woods
below, and shone like a shield of light upon the bosom
of the acclivity.  At river-level spread a forest, where
oak and alder, larch and pinnacles of pine shimmered
in the haze.  Dark shadows broke the manifold planes
of them, and the song of the river beneath, with
lull and rise on the lazy summer breeze, murmured
from mossy granite stairways twining through the
woods.  Here shone masses of king fern, twinkled
jewels of honeysuckle, and the deep, pink blossoms of
eglantine.  The atmosphere was very dry; the leaves
on a little white poplar clapped their hands to the river
melody; hirundines wheeled and cried in the upper
blue, and there lacked not other signs, all dearer than
rainbows to a farmer whose corn is ripe, of fine weather
and its continuance.

In the shadow of a great stone upon the hillside,
where, beneath the fairy forest of the fern, sad grasses
robbed of sunlight seeded feebly, and wood strawberries
gemmed the under-green, sat Honor Stapledon alone.
Upon one hand sloped bare descents, already blistered
somewhat by a hot July, patched with rusty colour
where the heather had been roasted under the eye of
the sun, painted with tawny, thirsty foliage, brightened
by the blue spires of viper's bugloss, starred with pink
of centauries.  A great bramble bore red fruit and pale
blossom together; and here butterflies made dancing,
glancing gleam and tangle of colour as they came and
went, flashed hither and thither, or settled to sun
themselves on the flowers and rocks.  One—*Vanessa
Io*—feared nothing, and pursued his business and pleasure
upon the bramble within a few inches of Honor's cheek.

As yet Christopher Yeoland had not plucked courage
to return publicly, but that morning came rumours from
Little Silver that he was upon a visit to Godleigh, as
guest of the departing tenant.  Noah Brimblecombe
had actually seen him and mentioned the fact to
Mr. Cramphorn.  Honor, therefore, expecting an early visit,
and feeling quite unequal to such an experience now
that it had come so near—desiring moreover that Myles
and not herself should first welcome the wanderer—had
stolen away to the adjacent hillside, there to pass some
hours with a book.  But her thoughts proved of a nature
more interesting than verses.  Indeed they lacked not
poetry and even images to be described as startling, for
the matter was dramatic and sufficiently sensational to
fire a less imaginative mind.  So her book remained
unopened, and she watched *Vanessa Io*, though her
thoughts were not with him.

While Stapledon had grasped the fact of Christopher's
continued existence and pending return somewhat sooner
than his wife, the positions a month later seemed reversed.
He faced the upheaval on the first proclamation, and she
shrank from it with emotion bred from her recent terror;
but now it was Honor who discussed affairs in the calmer
spirit, and Myles who changed the subject, not always
without impatience.  The woman's frank interest daily
grew, and she saw no cause to hide it; while the man,
whose mind had been jolted from the rut of accepted
things, now felt a desire to return into it and found
himself come near resentment of this wonder.  Such
a tremendous circumstance hung over his days like a
cloud, for it meant more to him than anybody, so at
least he believed at that season.  Stapledon's intellect
was of a sort likely to be impatient at such monkey
tricks.  He found all the solid building of the past, all
the logical sequences of events and movements leading
to possession of Honor, tumbled into ruins around him.
To his order-loving nature the skein of life grew in
some measure tangled before such sleight and jugglery.
Though he strove hard to keep in sight the sure
knowledge that Yeoland had played his part for love of
Honor, yet indignation would now and then awake to
burn in him; and that first spark of passion, lighted
when he thought of his child, after the earliest
confession from Henry Collins, was not as yet wholly
extinguished.  Now, while the return of the wanderer
came nearer, Myles shook himself into a resolute
attitude and told himself that the uncertain depths and
shallows of his own emotions must be discovered and
his future line of conduct determined, as Mark Endicott
had forewarned him.  But while he stood thus, in
unfamiliar moods of doubt, Honor, contrariwise, from a
standpoint almost approaching superstitious fear, was
come to accept the truth and accept it thankfully.  The
tremendous mental excitement, the shock and clash of
thoughts afforded by this event, possessed some tonic
faculty for her, and, as Doctor Clack had predicted,
wrought more good than harm within her nature.  For
a little while she had wept after the first wave of fear
was passed; she had wept and wondered in secret at
the snarling cruelty of chance that willed this man, of
all men, to rob her of her baby treasure; but the
thought of his sorrow when the truth should reach him
lessened her own.

The reason for Christopher's conduct Honor had of
course learned.  That much Myles set out for her with
the most luminous words at his command; and he
smarted even while he told of the other's renunciation
and self-sacrifice.  He explained many times how for
love of her Yeoland departed and let it be imagined
that he was no more; how, from conviction that her
happiness was wound up with her present husband, he
had done this thing.  Myles strove to live in an
atmosphere of naked truth at this season, for his instinct
told him that the way was strange and that salvation
only lay in stripping off it every cloud or tissue of
unreality.

As for Mark Endicott, from mere human interest at
an event beyond experience, he passed to estimate and
appraisement of Christopher's deeds.  Averse from
every sort of deception, he yet found himself unable
to judge hardly before the motives and the character
of the first puppet in this tragi-comedy.  Yeoland had
meant well in the past, and the only question for the
future was his own sentiments toward Honor.  That
these justified him in his return to Godleigh
Mr. Endicott nothing doubted.  He recollected the
somewhat peculiar emotional characteristics of the man and
felt no cause for fear, save in the matter of Myles.

As for Little Silver, intelligence that their squire,
resuscitated in life and pocket, was returning to his own
filled most hearts with lively satisfaction after the first
amazement had sobered.  Recollection of his generosity
awakened; whereon the fathers of the village met in
conclave and determined to mark their great man's
home-coming with some sort of celebration, if only a
bonfire upon the hill-top and some special broaching of
beer-barrels.

Honor moved her parasol a little, mused on time to
come, and wished the ordeal of meeting with Christopher
behind her.  The chapter of their personal romance
was sealed and buried in the past, and her feelings were
not fluttered as she looked back.  The interest lay
ahead.  She thought of the life he had lived since last
they met, and wondered what women had come into
it—whether one above all others now filled it for him.  She
hoped with her whole heart that it might be so, and sat
so quiet, with her mind full of pictures and possibilities
for him, that *Vanessa Io* settled within a foot of her
and opened and shut his wings and thanked the sun, as
a flower thanks him for his warmth, by display of
beauty.  His livery caught the thinker and brought her
mind back behind her eyes so that she noted the insect's
attire, the irregular outline of his pinions, their dull
brick-red and ebony, brown margins, and staring eyes
all touched and lighted with lilac, crimson, yellow, and
white.  Within this splendid motley the little body of
him was wrapped in velvet, and as he turned about
upon a bramble flower his trunk, like a tiny trembling
watch-spring, passed to the honeyed heart of the
blossom.  Then he arose and joined the colour-dance
of small blue butterflies from the heath, of sober
fritillaries, and other of his own Vanessa folk—tortoise-shells,
great and small, and a gorgeous red admiral in
black and scarlet.

Far beneath a horn suddenly sounded, and the music
of otter-hounds arose melodious from the hidden valley.
Flight of blue wood-pigeons and cackle of a startled
woodpecker marked the progress of the hunt.  Here and
there, with shouts and cries, came glint of a throng
through the trees that concealed them.  Then Honor
heard the grander utterance of an elderly foxhound
who was assisting the pack.  He had suddenly lighted
on the scent of his proper prey, and a moment later she
saw him away on his own account, climbing the opposite
hill at speed.  His music died, and the clamour beneath
soon dwindled and sank until a last note of the horn,
mellowed by distance, slowly faded away.  But Honor
was uninterested, for the modern fashion of
otter-hunting at noon instead of grey dawn, though it may
promise the presence of fair maidens at a meet, holds
forth small likelihood of otters, who are but seldom slain
upon these lazy runs.

Then the sound of a step sprang out of the silence,
and the woman turned and drew breath at sight of
Christopher Yeoland, standing knee-deep in the fern
behind her.  He was clad as when she saw him last, in
grey country wear; and to her first startled glance he
seemed unchanged.

"Never pass a parasol without looking under it, if I
can," he said; and then, before she could rise, he had
flung himself beside her and taken her left hand and
squeezed it gently between his.  Her other hand went
unconsciously towards her breast, but now she lowered
it into his and suffered the greeting she had no power
to speak, be uttered by that pressure of palm on palm.

"What tremendous, tragic things we ought to whisper
at this moment," he said; "yet, for the life of me,
I can only think of a single question: Have you
forgiven me for my far-reaching fool's trick?  If you
haven't, I can't live at Godleigh under the shadow of
Endicott's frown.  And I certainly can't live anywhere
else, so, should you refuse to pardon, I must die in real
earnest."

"If anybody can forgive you, it is I, Christopher.
Oh dear—I am glad we are over this meeting.  It has
made me feel so strange, so curious.  It seems only
yesterday that I saw you last; and I could laugh, now
that you are alive once more, to think your spirit had
power to frighten me—or anybody.  Yet I do not
quite believe I shall ever feel that you are flesh and
blood again."

"It will take time.  I began to doubt myself when
I came home and stole about in the old haunts, and
felt how ghosts feel.  Once a keeper chased me out
of Godleigh, and I only escaped by the skin of my
teeth!  Thrice I saw you—at your window in moonlight,
and driving with your husband, and—the last time."

His voice faltered; she saw tears in his eyes and
knew that he had learned of the misfortune in the
wood.  The fact pleased her, in that this sorrow was
bound to come to him and now it would not be
necessary for Myles to speak about the past.  A
moment of silence passed between them, and she looked
at Christopher softly and saw him unchanged.  Every
feature and expression, every trick of voice and gesture
was even as it used to be.  She knew his careless tie,
his jerk of head, his habit of twisting up the corner
of his moustache and then biting it.

"How wonderful this is!" she said, not heeding his
broken sentence.  "How mysterious to think I sit here
talking to a man I have believed for two years to be
dead!  And yet each moment my heart grows calmer
and my pulse beats more quietly."

"Things are always commonplace when you expect
them to be theatrical and rise to fine, giddy heights.
That's the difference between plays and real life.  Chance
works up to her great situations and then often shirks
them in the most undramatic and disappointing way.
But when she does want a situation, she just pitches
people headlong into it—like our meeting at the old
tryst by the beech.  Memory took me there; what took
you?  God forgive me, I——"

"Leave that," she said quickly.  "It can't be talked
about.  Have you seen Myles or Uncle Mark yet?"

"No; a proper attraction brought me here, and
somehow I knew that I should find you.  But I long to meet
him too—your husband.  It's a blessing to know that
among the many who blame me he won't be counted.
Please Heaven, I shall see a great deal of you both in
the future.  I always loved the west wind best, because
it blew over Bear Down before it came to me.
Sunshine ahead, I hope, and some for me.  I've come home
to be happy."

"Have you found a wife?"

"Honor!—No, I haven't looked for one.  Godleigh's
my wife.  And I must set about spending some money
on her, now I've got plenty.  So strange—that lonely
old cadet of our family.  He was, I thought, as poor
as a church mouse.  Three parts of a miser, and lived
hard and laughed at luxuries, as so many do who have
had to make their own fortunes.  Money-grubbing
carries that curse along with it, that it often turns the
grubber blind and deaf to all save the sight and clink
of the hateful, necessary stuff.  But the dear old boy
somehow warmed to me; and I drew pictures of home
for him; and he promised to come home and see me
some day when he grew old.  He was seventy-three
then, but utterly refused to accept the fact.  Then
death suddenly rushed him, in the shape of a
whip-snake, and dying, his thoughts turned home, and it
was his wish, not my whim, that he should lie there.
That put my plot into my head, for he was of the same
name.  Not until after his death did I know he had
altered his will; and I can tell you, seeing the style
he lived in and the size of his ideas, that I was
staggered when I found he had left me a real fortune.
That's my adventure—a mere bit of a story-book, yet
a very pleasant bit to the hero of it."

*Vanessa Io* returned, and so still sat Honor that he
settled boldly upon the sun-kissed folds of her skirt.

"Do you remember how I used to say you were all
butterfly, though in grave moments you rather claimed
for yourself the qualities of staid and sober twilight
things—solemn beetles, whose weight of wing-case
reminds them that life is real and earnest?"

"You were right upon the whole.  I've got the same
spirit in me as that little, gaudy, self-complacent atom
there, opening and shutting his wings, like a fairy's
picture-book upon your knee.  Our rule of life is the
same.  I only hope he's having more luck with his
existence than I have had with mine."

She reflected a moment.  This was the first hint of
his own sorrows in the past, of the price he had paid.

"But I'm not changed, for all the world of experiences
that separates us," he continued quickly.  "I'm
only a thought older.  Time is beginning to do a little
gradual work in grey just above my ears.  So delicate
and apologetic and gentle he is that I can't grumble.
Is Mr. Endicott well?"

"Very well."

"And Myles and the farm?"

"Both flourishing abundantly, I believe."

"And to think the sadness on your face is solely of
my bringing—yet you can welcome me after what I
have done!"

She marvelled a little that he could speak of it

"Pray, Christo, do not harp upon that.  None accuses
you.  How could such a thing be thrown as blame upon
anybody?  Fate so often uses the kindest of us to do
her cruel deeds.  'Tis the height of her cynic fun to
plan parts in her plots and make the wrong actor
play them."

"I ought to have used common sense and kept away
altogether."

"Common sense!"

"I know; but I found it in Australia.  There was no
excuse for me.  Can he forgive me?"

"I have not heard him breathe so much as one hasty
word since he has known.  You do not understand him
to ask such a question.  He is above admiration.  No
woman ever had such a good husband.  And the better
I love him, Christo, the better shall I love you, for giving
him to me."

"Good God! you mustn't talk like that, must you?"
he asked with some flutter; but she regarded him calmly
as she answered.

"Why should not I?  He knows that I loved you,
and, therefore, love you.  I am a most logical woman,
and unchanging.  It has all been very smooth and clear
between Myles and me from the first, because we both
hated any shadow of misunderstanding.  That's the
strength of our married life."

"My only fear centred in the recollection of his
great straightness.  He hates a trick, even though he
may win by it."

"He loves me with all his heart."

"Yes—there it is.  I didn't feel very anxious about
the thing I did first; only about what I have done since
I sometimes get a doubt.  The question is whether,
once dead, I was justified in coming to life again.
Man's only built to be heroic in snatches—at least
the average man—and when I found myself rich,
instead of keeping it up and going through to the bitter
end, as a bigger chap would have done, I thought of
Godleigh.  If you had lived a year and more among
gum trees I think you might find it in you to forgive
me for coming back.  Those eternally lost gum trees!
And springtime calling, calling from home!  And here
I am in God's good green again—His always, mine for
a little while."

"Who can wonder that you came?  The wonder
would have been if you had stopped away.  The thing
you desired to bring about is done—happily and for
ever."

"But Myles?  He's so thorough.  What does he
think?  Half-measures wouldn't win his respect."

"Half-measures you call them; but even a saint's life
is only patchwork—all wrought in the drab colours of
human nature, with a few bright stars marking the
notable deeds.  Yes, and lesser existences are a mere
patchwork of good intentions, mostly barren."

"Not barren for certain.  We sow decent grain and
dragon's teeth mixed; and the poor sowers so often
don't know which is which—till the crop's past praying
for."

"That's your philosophy, then.  I was wrong; you
have changed."

"It's true.  These things are in copybooks, but we
never heed them when we are young.  So that is why
sometimes I have my doubts about Myles.  Then I
think along another line and the cloud vanishes."

"There can be no cloud, and he will soon rejoice that
such a friend is in the land of the living."

But suspicion had already wakened in Yeoland.

"You say 'he will rejoice'; you don't say 'he does.'"

"Of course he does.  How can you doubt it?"

"Tell him you have seen me, and that I am a perceptible
shade wiser than when I left England.  Tell
him that incident in the wood has come near breaking
my heart.  I can feel great griefs if I don't show them.
I do not expect him to slip into the old relations as
you have.  You and I were a couple of wild wood
children together for years, until our elders trapped us
and attempted to tame and educate and spoil us.  Yet
between him and me now there are close bonds
enough—bonds as deep to me, as binding, as eternal as the
dawn-light we both adore.  But he's a fire-worshipper,
or something, and I'm a Christian; so, when all's said,
we shall never get straight to one another's hearts like
Honor and Christo.  It isn't possible.  I thought to
meet him with a handshake to bridge the years, and a
silent understanding too deep for words; I pictured him
all the way home as my friend of friends, and now—now
I ought to go upon my knees to him and ask him
to put his foot on my neck and forgive me for that
moonlight madness."

"Now I know that it is you, not I, who fail to
understand my husband," said Honor.  "He is a greater man
by far than you think or I know.  Never utter or dream
these things any more, for they are wrong.  Forget
them and look forward to happiness."

They talked a while longer on divers themes; then the
woman rose to return home, and Christopher, declaring
an intention to visit Endicott's that evening, went back
to Godleigh.

Each now marvelled much from a personal point of
view at this, their first meeting—at its familiarity of
texture and lack of distinction.  Both indeed felt
dumbly astonished that, after such a gap, converse
could be renewed thus easily; yet they joyed in the
meeting; and while Yeoland ingenuously gloried in
the sight and voice of the woman he had loved, Honor's
pleasure was of a colour more sober, a quality more
intricate.





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.. _`THE MEETING OF THE MEN`:

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   CHAPTER II.


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   THE MEETING OF THE MEN

.. vspace:: 2

Christopher Yeoland visited Bear Down
on the evening after his meeting with its mistress;
but the hour was late when he arrived, and Honor had
retired with a headache ere he entered the farm.  Even
as he reached the front door and lifted his hand to the
bell Yeoland changed his mind and strolled round to
the kitchen entrance.  There he stood for an instant
before marching boldly in according to his old custom.
A voice fell upon his ear, and for a moment he thought
that it must be Mark speaking to himself alone, as was
the blind man's wont; but other speech broke in upon
the first, and, catching his own name on Cramphorn's
tongue, Christopher stood still, laughed silently, and
listened.

An utterance from Churdles Ash was the first that
came distinctly to him.

"Us o' Little Silver be like the twelve apostles, I
reckon—all mazed wi' gert wonder to hear tell of a
resurrection."

"Awnly theer's a world-wide differ'nce 'tween Lard
o' Hosts an' this gormed Jack-o'-lantern," answered
Cramphorn.  "For my part I'd so soon—maybe sooner—he
was wheer us thought him.  Born he was to make
trouble, an' trouble he'll make while he walks airth.  No
fay, I can't fox myself into counting this a pleasing
thing.  He'm takin' up gude room, if you ax me."

Christopher, having heard quite enough, himself
answered as he came among them—

"That's honest, at any rate, Jonah.  But I hope you're
wrong.  I've come back a reformed character—on my
solemn word I have.  Wait and see."

He shook hands with Stapledon first, afterwards with
Mark Endicott and the assembled labourers.  There fell
a moment of awkward silence; then Jonah, who felt
some word from him seemed due, knocked out his pipe
and spoke before retiring.  He contented himself with
an expression of regret, but hesitated not to qualify it
so extensively that little doubt arose concerning his real
opinions.

"I didn't knaw as you was behind the door, Squire
Yeoland, else I might have guarded my lips closer.  An'
bein' a living sawl—to save or damn accordin' to God's
gudeness—'tweern't seemly for me to speak so sharp.
Not that offence was meant, an' a man's opinions be his
awn; though I trust as you'll order your ways to shaw
I'm a liar; an' nobody better pleased than me, though
not hopeful, 'cause what's bred in the bone comes out in
the flesh.  An' I may say you've proved wan thing—if
awnly wan: that a sartain party by name of Charity
Grepe be a auld, double-dealin' rascal, an' no more a
wise woman than my awn darters.  So gude-night all."

Pinsent and Collins retreated with Mr. Cramphorn,
but old Churdles Ash remained to shake hands once
again with the wanderer.

"I be a flat Thomas wheer theer's any left-handed
dealings like this here," he said.  "Most onbelievin'
party as ever was, as well a man may be when the
world's so full of evil.  But by the hand of you and
the speech of you, you'm flesh and blood same as the
rest of us.  I'm sure I hope, your honour, if you'll take
an old man's respectful advice, as you'll bide above
ground henceforrard an' do no more o' these dark,
churchyard deeds 'mongst Christian folks.  It may be
very convenient an' common down-long in furrin paarts,
but 'tidn' seemly to Little Silver, wheer theer's such
a lot o' the risin' generation as looks to 'e for a
example."

"I'll act as becomes me ever afterwards, gaffer,"
declared Christopher, whereon, gratified by this promise,
Mr. Ash touched his forehead, praised God and the
company, and so withdrew.

Then Yeoland began his story, and Mark put an
occasional question, while Stapledon kept silence until
he should have opportunity to speak with the other
alone.  A necessity for some recognition and utterance
of personal gratitude weighed heavy on him.  That
Christopher desired no such thing he felt assured, but
he told himself that a word at least was due, and must
be paid, like any other debt.  Myles had judged as the
wanderer suspected: Yeoland's initial act seemed great
to him; this return to life he accounted paltry and
an anticlimax beside it.  Putting personal bias out of
the question, or believing that he did so, Stapledon
endeavoured to estimate the achievement from an
impartial spectator's standpoint, and so seen this
homecoming disappointed him.  He did not deny the man
his right to return; he only marvelled that he had
exercised it.  Yet as Christopher, with many an
excursus, chattered through his story, and spoke of his
native land with manifest emotion, Stapledon wondered
no more, but understood, and felt disinterested sympathy.
Then he blamed himself for previous harsh criticism,
and discovered that the leaven of a personal interest
had distorted his point of view.  Morbidly he began to
think of Honor, and the dominant weakness of his
character awoke again.  He told himself that Yeoland
would find out how perfect was the unanimity between
husband and wife; then he gave himself the lie and
wondered, with his cold eyes upon Christopher, if the
returned wanderer would ever discover that the inner
harmony of Honor's married life was not complete at
all times.

When Yeoland had made an end, Mark asked him
concerning his plans for the future, and listened to many
projects, both happy and impracticable, for the glorification
of Godleigh and the improvement of Little Silver.

"Clack's going to be my agent.  After he practically
perjured his immortal soul for me, I cannot do less for
him than give him that appointment.  And he's a good
sportsman, which is so much nowadays."

With some element of restraint they discoursed for
an hour or more, then Yeoland rose and Myles walked
part of the way home with him.  Under a night of
stars the farmer spoke and said what he accounted
necessary in the briefest phrases capable of rendering
his sentiments.

"I want you to know that I understand and I thank
you.  My gratitude is measured by the worth of what
you—you gave me.  I can say no more than that."

"No need to have said as much.  Your voice tells
me you don't like saying it, Stapledon, and truly I had
no desire to hear it.  You see, we could only win her
full happiness that way.  I knew her character better
than you could——"

"Impossible!"

"Now, no doubt, but not then, when these things
happened.  I pictured her with you, and with me.
I appreciated your message, but I didn't agree with
you.  Honestly you have nothing to thank me for.
We're on this now and will leave the bones of the thing
clean-picked.  It was love of the woman—desire to see
her happy for all time—that made me act so.  You asked
her to marry you before you sent your message by
Clack.  So that showed me you believed that you could
achieve her happiness if she let you try.  But she would
never have married you until she knew that I was out
of it.  The right thing happened.  All's well that ends
well.  With a past so distinct and defined, it seems to
me that the future could hardly look happier.  We
understand each other so well—we three, thank God.
I threshed it all out through many a long, sleepless
night, I can tell you.  I'm no *tertium quid* come back
into lives that have done with me; I'm not here to
ruffle up a tangle already smoothed out by time.  You
understand that?"

Myles agreed with the younger man, and tried to
believe him.

"Of course I understand.  Friends we shall always
be, and each welcome to the other when our devious
ways may cross.  Honor is not likely to be sentimental
under such curious conditions.  She will view this, your
return, with the calm self-possession she displays in all
affairs of life.  It has done her good already, and lifted
a cloud.  I tell you so frankly.  She was haunted.
I hear you know all about that.  There is no need for
you to say what you feel about it.  I will take your
words as spoken.  So here we stand—we three—and
our lives must go forward and unfold to the ripening
here on this hillside.  What then?  There is room enough?"

"Ample, I should imagine.  That you should ask the
question is a little astonishing.  But I understand you
better than you think.  You can't help the defiance in
your tone, Stapledon; you can't wholly hide the
hardness in your voice.  D'you think I don't know what's
cutting you so deep when you look at me and remember
that night?  Forgive me.  I have paid for it with grey
hairs."

"You mistake.  I should be a fool to blame you
seriously for that.  Merely evil fortune.  Evil fortune
was overdue in my life.  I had been waiting long for
reverses.  You were the unconscious instrument."

"Your old, sombre creed, whose god is the law of
chance.  Anyhow, you and your wife shall find no
truer friend than Christopher Yeoland in the years to
come."

They shook hands and separated, the one perfectly
happy and contented that this ordeal was over; the
other already in a cloud of cares with his face lifted to
meet troubles still invisible.  The one saw a smooth
and sunlit road ahead of him—a road of buds and
flowers and singing birds; the other stood among
pitfalls past numbering, and the way was dreary as
well as dangerous.

As he returned home, Myles stopped and looked over
a gate to set his thoughts in order.  Whereupon he
made discoveries little calculated to soothe or sustain
him in this hour.  First he found that lack of
knowledge alone was responsible for his commotion—lack of
knowledge of his wife; and secondly, reviewing his
recent conversation with Christopher, he very readily
observed a note in it unfamiliar to himself.  This man's
advent aroused an emotion that Myles had read of and
heard about, but never felt.  Upon the threshold of
renewed intercourse, and despite so many friendly
words, Stapledon recognised the thing in his heart
and named it.  He was jealous of Yeoland's return,
and his discovery staggered him.  The fact felt bad
enough; the position it indicated overwhelmed him, for
it shone like an evil light on the old fear; it showed
that the understanding he boasted between himself and
Honor by no means obtained.  Herein lay his trial
and his terror.  No cloudless marital life could receive
this miasma into its atmosphere for an instant, for
jealousy's germ has no power to exist where a man and
a woman dwell heart to heart.

Great forces shook Stapledon; then he roused himself,
fell back upon years of self-discipline, shut the
floodgates of his mind, and told his heart that he was
a fool.

"The man shall be my friend—such a friend as I
have never had yet," he said aloud to the night.  "I
will weary him with my friendship.  He is honest, and
has sacrificed his life for me.  It is the vileness of
human nature, that hates benefits received, which works
in me against him.  And if it pleases Fate to send me
another child, this man, who believes in God, shall be
its godfather."

His determination comforted Stapledon, and he
passed slowly homeward conscious of a battle won,
strong in the belief that he had slain a peril at its
birth.  He told himself that the word "jealousy" rang
unreal and theatrical, in presence of his wife's slumber.





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.. _`FLAGS IN THE WIND`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER III.


.. class:: center medium bold

   FLAGS IN THE WIND

.. vspace:: 2

Godleigh forest was paying its debt to the
Mother in good gold, and a myriad leaves flew
and whirled aloft, tumbled and sailed downwards,
rustled and hustled over the green grass, dropped
amongst the forest boughs, floated away on Teign's
bosom, eddied in sudden whirlwinds at gates and
wind-swept gaps of the woodlands.  The summer glory was
extinguished once again, the tree-top life was ended for
another generation of foliage; and now, final livery of
russet or crimson won, the leaves fell and flew at the
will of a wild wind, or waited in some last resting-place
for latter rains, for alchemy of frost and for the
sexton worm.  Their dust is the food of the whole
earth, and to the blind and patient roots, twisting
gigantically at the hidden heart of things, they return
obedient.  For to them they owe every aerial happiness
in gleaming dawns, every joy of the moonlight and
starlight and deep nocturnal dews, song of birds and
whisper of vernal rain, cool purple from shadows of
clouds and all the glorious life of a leaf—of each small
leaf that joins its particular jewel to the green coronet
of summer.

Little Silver took a holiday from the affairs of
working-day life on the occasion of the Squire's official
return to Godleigh Park, and the day was set aside
for rejoicing and marked with a white stone.  A great
banquet under canvas formed the staple attraction; the
grounds were thrown open, and Christopher invited his
small world to lunch with him in a noble marquee
tricked out with flags and streamers.  But the season
and the day proved out of harmony with campestral
merry-making.  Nature's October russets, pale gold and
red gold, killed the crude bunting colours; a high wind
rollicked and raved through the woods and over the
waste places; the great tents and the lesser creaked and
groaned, billowed and bent; yet those driven from them
by fear were sent back by heavy squalls of rain.  The
autumnal equinox welcomed Yeoland roughly to his
home; but happily he drove under the triumphal arch
of laurel and oak before an envious gust sent it
sprawling; happily also the increasing wind blew the sky
clean towards nightfall, though the rockets that then
shrieked aloft chose perilous, unexpected places for
their descent, and the bonfire was abandoned, for its
conflagration must have threatened every rick of hay
within half a mile east of it.  Upon the whole, however,
this celebration was counted successful, though one
uncanny incident marred the day.  At earliest dawn
Mr. Brimblecombe discovered that some genius unknown
had decorated the Yeoland mausoleum with heavy
wreaths of autumn flowers and evergreens; but even
the least imaginative recognised that such accentuation
of the tomb at this moment showed a triumph of
wrong-headedness.

Upon that great occasion did Henry Collins, whose
patience, even in affairs of the heart, was almost
reptilian, avail himself of the general holiday.  And when
Sally Cramphorn, who still philandered with him, though
fitfully, promised that she would take a walk by his
side after the feasting, Henry believed that the moment
for speech was come at last.  He had debated the form
of his proposition for several months, and the girl's
attitude now naturally led him to suspect an agreeable
termination to his protracted sufferings.  The time was
that of eating and drinking, and Sally, who perceived
that Mr. Gregory Libby, from his standpoint as carver
at the head of one of the tables in the banqueting
tent, viewed her position beside Collins with concern,
hastened her meal and shortened it.  Then, as soon as
possible upon the speech-making, she took Henry by
the arm and led him forth very lovingly under the nose
of the other man.  Together they proceeded through
the woods, and the graciousness which she exhibited
while Gregory's eye was yet upon her, diminished a
little.  Still the woman felt amiably disposed to her
innocent tool, and even found it in her heart to pity
him somewhat, for she guessed what now awaited her.
Mr. Collins walked slowly along, with some strain and
creaking of mental machinery as he shook his thoughts
and ideas into order.  He passed with Sally under pine
trees, and at length found a snug spot sheltered from
the wind.

"Us might sit here 'pon the fir-needles," suggested
Henry.

"'Tis damp, I doubt," answered his companion, thinking
of her best gown.

"Then I'll spread my coat for 'e.  I want to have a
tell along with you, an' I caan't talk travellin'.  'Tis tu
distractin', an' what I've got to say'll take me all my
power, whether or no."

He spread his black broadcloth without hesitation,
and Sally, appreciating this compliment, felt she could
not do less than accept it.  So she plumped down on
Henry's Sunday coat, and he appeared to win much
pleasure from contemplation of her in that position.
He smiled to himself, sighed rather loudly, and then
sat beside her.  Whereupon his tongue refused its office
and, for the space of two full minutes, he made no
remark whatever, though his breathing continued very
audible.

"What be thinking 'bout?" asked Sally suddenly.

"Well, to tell plain truth, I was just taking pleasure
in the idea as you'd ordained to sit 'pon my jacket.
'Twill be very comfortin' to me to call home as you've
sat on un every time I put un on or off."

"If 'twas awnly another party!" thought the girl.
"Doan't be such a fule," she said.

"That's what everybody have been advisin' me of
late," he answered calmly, without the least annoyance
or shame.  "'Tis the state of my mind.  Things come
between me an' my work—a very ill-convenient matter.
But, whether or no, I'll be proud of that coat now."

She sat comfortably beside him, and presently, after
further silence, Henry lolled over towards her, and,
taking a straw, sought with clumsy pleasantry to stick
it into her hand under the white cotton glove which she
was wearing.

"What be about?" she asked sharply.  "Go along
with 'e!  Doan't 'e knaw me better than to think I be
so giddy?"

Thus repulsed, Mr. Collins apologised, explained that
in reality he did know Sally better, that his action was
one of pure inadvertence, and that he admired her
character by special reason of its sobriety.  Silence
again overtook them, and, while Sally fidgeted
impatiently, the man's owl eyes roamed from off her face
to the woods, from the woodland back again to her.
He stuffed his pipe slowly, then returned it to his
pocket; he sighed once or twice, tied up his boot-lace,
and cleared his throat.  After a painful pause the
woman spoke again.

"Be us at a funeral or a junketing?  You look for
all the world as if you'd catched something hurtful.
Wheer's your manners?  What's in your mind now?"

Henry gulped, and pointed to an oak immediately
opposite them—a great tree bound about in a robe of ivy.

"Was just considerin' 'bout thicky ivydrum, an' what
gude sneyds for scythe-handles her'd make."

"Then you'd best to bide here with your
scythe-handles, an' I'll go back-along to the company.  I
didn't come out to sit an' stare at a ivybush if you
did."

"Doan't 'e be so biting against me, woman!" said
Collins indignantly.  "I be comin' to it so fast as I can,
ban't I?  'Tedn' so easy, I can assure 'e.  Maybe chaps
as have axed a score o' females finds speech come quick
enough; but I've never spoke the word to wan afore in
all my life; an' 'tis a damn oneasy job; an' I ban't
gwaine to be hurried by you or any other."

Sally appeared awed at this outburst.  She suddenly
realised that Mr. Collins was a man, a big one, a strong
one, and an earnest one.

"Sorry I took you up tu quick, I'm sure.  I didn't
knaw as you felt so deep."

"If I could have trusted pen an' ink, I should
have written it out for 'e," he answered, "but my
penmanship's a vain thing.  I'll have the handkercher out
of that pocket you'm sittin' on, if 'tis all the same to
you.  Theer's a dew broke out awver my brow."

She rose and passed to him a large red handkerchief.
Then he thanked her, mopped his face, and continued—

"When fust I seed you, I felt weak by reason of
your butivul faace, an' the way you could toss hay an'
keep so cool as a frog.  An' I will say that the laugh of
you was very nigh as fine as a cuckoo's song.  Then
I got to see what a gude gal you was tu, an' how you
scorned all men-folk—'cept Libby."

These words he added hastily, as he saw her colour rising.

"Libby, I do allow, you gived your countenance to,
though, if I may say it, ban't no gert sign of love to see
a chap in two minds between such a piece as you an'
your sister.  But I never looked at no other but
you—not even when I was up to Exeter.  An' if you see
your way to keep comp'ny along wi' me, God's my
judge you'll never be sorry you done it.  I be a man as
stands to work an' goes to church Sundays when let
alone.  An' I'd trust you wi' every penny of the money
an' ax for no more'n a shillin' here an' theer.  An' I'd
stand between you an' your faither, as doan't 'pear to be
so fond of you of late as he used to be."

Sally moved uneasily, for he had echoed a recent,
dim suspicion of her own.

"Best let that bide," she said.  "If my faither likes
Margery better'n what he do me, that's his business, not
yours."

"'Tis a fault in him, however," answered Henry.
"You'm worth ten thousand o' she; an' he'll live to find
it out yet.  He'm grawin' auld an' tootlish, I reckon,
else he'd never set her up afore you."

"She'm a crafty twoad," declared the other gloomily.
"I knaw she'm clever'n what I be, but flesh an' blood
counts for somethin'.  He sees me twice to her
wance—Gregory do; an', whether or no, the man's free as ban't
achsually married."

Mr. Collins grew warm again, to see the drift of his
lady's thoughts, and endeavoured to bring her conversation
back to the matter in hand.

"Ban't for me to speak nothin' 'gainst Libby or any
other man.  An' 'twouldn't be fair fightin' if I said what
I'd say wi' pleasure to the faace of un if he was here;
but I want 'ess' or 'no' for myself, an' I do pray, my
dear woman, as you'll consider of it afore you decide."

"Ban't no need, an' thank you kindly, I'm sure," said
Sally.  "But you must look some plaace else than me,
Henery; an' I'm sure you'll find many so gude, an'
plenty better."

He sat silent, staring and sniffing.

"Doan't 'e cry 'bout it," she said.

"I ban't cryin'—merely chap-fallen," he answered,
"an' theer's none 'pon the airth so gude as you that
ever I see; an' I do wish as you'd take your time an'
not be so sudden.  I can wait—I can wait if theer's
a shade of doubt in your mind.  Ess fay, I can wait
weeks, an' months, an' years, so easy as a tree, for you
to decide.  But do 'e take a bit of time.  'Tis cruel
short just to say 'no,' after all as I've felt for 'e so long."

She accepted the alternative, half from pity, half from
policy.  Any hint of an understanding might galvanise
the cold-blooded Libby into action.

"Wait then," she said, "an' us'll see what time sends."

"Thank you, I'm sure—cold comfort, but a thought
better'n nought.  Now, if you'll rise up off my coat
I might get 'e a few braave filbert nuts; then us'll join
the people."

Sally dusted the coat and helped its master into it.
They then returned towards the central festivity, and
upon the way, at the bend of a narrow path, came
suddenly upon Christopher Yeoland, Honor and her
husband, Mark Endicott, with his arm in that of
Mr. Scobell, Doctor Clack, and other local celebrities and
men of leading in the neighbourhood.

"Lard!  how can us pass all this mort o' gentlefolks
an' me that down-daunted," moaned Henry; but his
companion, secure in her pretty face and trustful of
her best gown, felt quite equal to the ordeal.

"So easy as they can pass us," she answered.
"They'm awnly men an' women when all's said, an'
us be so gude as them, 'pon a public holiday or in
church.  I mind a time when Squire Yeoland never
passed me by wi'out a civil word, an' I shouldn't wonder
if he didn't now for all his riches."

She was right.  Observing that no parent accompanied
her and recollecting her blue eyes very well,
Christopher stopped.

"Ah, Sally, glad to see you again.  Not married yet—eh?
But going to be, I'll warrant.  That's your man?
Lucky chap.  And remember, the day of the wedding
I've got twenty pounds for you to make the cottage
vitty."

Miss Cramphorn blushed and murmured something,
she knew not what, while Henry, now safely past his
betters, shook at these bold words.  Then the company
proceeded, and Myles Stapledon, recollecting when these
two had last met, mused upon the nature of the man,
while Honor chid him.

"That's the way you'll send your money spinning, by
putting a premium on improvident marriages.  Ask
Mr. Scobell what he thinks of such folly."

"A sentiment.  I've always liked Sally.  I kissed her
once and her father saw me.  Myles will tell you about
that.  Not that she ever liked me much—too good a
judge of character, I expect."

Meantime Mr. Collins and his companion passed back
to the tents and flags, and as they did so Henry could
not refrain from commenting upon the squire's
handsome promise.

"Did you hear what the man said?" he asked.

"Not being deaf, I did," answered Sally with evasion.
"A wonnerful offer.  Twenty pound!  An' just for to
make a place smart."

"Best to find a maid as won't keep 'e hanging round.
'Tis mere gapes-nestin' for you to wait for me—a
wild-goose chase for sartain."

"I hope not."

"Twenty pounds ban't much arter all's said."

"Not to your faither, as he be a snug man enough by
accounts; but 'tis tidy money to the likes of me—big
money to come in a heap an' all unearned.  Not as
I'd want it.  You should have every penny-piece if
you'd awnly—"

"I doan't want to hear no more 'pon that head.  I've
promised to think of it, an' I ax you not to speak
another word till I tell you to."

"'Twas the thought of the money that carried me
away like, an' I'll be dumb from to-day, I do assure 'e."

Somewhat later they met Mr. Cramphorn, but it was
significant of a lessened interest in his elder daughter
that Jonah, instead of reproaching her for thus walking
apart with one of the other sex, merely called to Collins
and bid him bring his strength where it was needed to
brace the tackle of a tent.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`DRIFTING`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER IV.


.. class:: center medium bold

   DRIFTING

.. vspace:: 2

With return of winter some temporary peace
descended upon Myles, and, looking back, he
felt ashamed at the storm and stress of spirit that
Yeoland's resurrection had awakened in him.  For a
season, as life returned to its level progress, he truly
told himself that he viewed the friendship between his
wife and her old lover without concern, because it was
natural and inevitable.  Honor's very frankness and
ingenuous pleasure in the wanderer's company shamed
a jealous attitude.  Some men, indeed, had gone further
and blessed Yeoland's home-coming.  Certainly that
event was in no small measure responsible for Honor's
renewed physical welfare, and the excitement acted
kindly upon a temperament that found food in novelty
and desired sweep and play of change for her soul's
health.  Stapledon's wife was well again, and soon she
discovered that life could still be full and sweet.  Into
a sort of lulled contentment he therefore sank, and
proclaimed to himself that all was well, that the
existence of the three, lived under present relations, was
natural and seemly.  He checked impatience at the
expeditions planned, listened to Christopher's endless
designs with respect to Godleigh, advised him and
endured from him the old, extravagant conceits and
jesting, specious views of life.  Yet the glamour was off
them now, and they only wearied Myles.  He believed
at first that Yeoland must be a changed man; but very
soon he found no such thing had happened.

Nevertheless, some parity of tastes obtained, as of
old, in divers directions.  Again they walked for many
miles together, each occupied with Nature from his
own standpoint; and again they met in the dawn hour
that possessed like fascination for both.  At such times,
under grey winter light, shrewd and searching, what
was best in the men stood first, and they almost
understood one another; but when they met, smudged by
long hours of the toilsome day, and especially when
they found each other in common company of Honor,
both lacked the former sympathy.

As for Christopher, he heartily appreciated Myles at
this period, and found the farmer's common sense a
valuable antidote to the somewhat too spacious ideas
of Doctor Clack in matters concerning betterment of
Godleigh.  And not seldom did Yeoland rejoice, with
a single eye, that his old love had such a steadfast
rock upon which to establish her life.

In his relations with Honor he had been a little
astonished to find the fact of her marriage not
recognised by his nature, as it was by his conscience.  That
Nature could dare to be herself surprised him, when her
wave throbbed through his being now and again upon
some rare, sweet note of voice or tinkle of laughter.
At such emotional moments he complimented the
character and heroic attributes of Myles, with a vigour
so crude that Honor might have suspected had not she
echoed the sentiment from her heart.  She never wearied
of her husband's praises, and had no discernment as to
what prompted Christopher's sudden overflowings of
admiration.  The man's return, as in the first instance
of his own juxtaposition with Myles, served to alter
Honor's inner attitude towards her husband.  It seemed,
in a sense, as she had fancied of old, that these two
were the complement each of the other.

And a result was that his wife became more to
Stapledon as the weeks passed.  Gradually—but not
so gradually that he failed to observe it—there came an
increase of consideration in small matters, a new softness
in her voice, a deeper warmth in her kisses.  He marked
her added joy in life, noted how she let her happiness
bubble over to make him more joyful; and at first
he was filled with satisfaction; and next he was
overclouded with doubt.  He tried to ascertain why her old
lover's return should increase Honor's liking for her
husband; he laboured gloomily upon a problem
altogether beyond his calibre of mind to solve.  He failed
to see that the subtle change in his wife extended
beyond him to the confines of her little world, that
some higher graciousness was bred of it, that the least
planet of which she was the sun now reaped new
warmth from her accession of happiness.  He puzzled
his intelligence, and arrived, through long fret and care,
at an erroneous solution.  Utterly unable to appraise the
delicate warp and poise of her humours, or gauge those
obscure escapements that control happiness in the
machinery of a woman's mind, Stapledon came to
pitiful and mistaken conclusions that swept from him all
content, all security, all further peace.  At the glimmer
of some devil's lantern he read into Honor's altered
bearing an act of deliberate simulation.  He denied
that this advent of the other could by any possibility
possess force to deepen or widen her affection for him;
and he concluded, upon this decision, that the alteration
must be apparent, not real.  Such was the man's poor
speed in the vital science of human nature.  Next, he
strove to explain the necessity for her pretence, with
the reason of it; and so he darkened understanding,
fouled his own threshold with fancied danger, and passed
gradually into a cloudy region of anxiety and gloom.
Excuse for speech or protest there was none; yet, unable
to discern in Honor's frank awakening to everyday life
and her renewed healthful bearing towards all her
environment an obvious purity of mind and thought, he
suffered his agitation to conquer him.  He lived and
waited, and sank into a chronic watchfulness that was
loathsome to him.  His fits of moody taciturnity
saddened his wife and astonished her above measure,
for it seemed that the old love of natural things was
dead in him.  In truth, his religion of the Moor—his
dogma of the granite and vast waste places—failed him
at this pinch.  His gods were powerless and dumb—either
that, or the heart of him had grown deaf for a season.

His unrest appeared, but the inner fires were hidden
very completely.  Then Mark Endicott, who knew that
Myles was disordered, and suspected the tissue of his
trouble, approached him, burrowed to his secret, and
held converse thereon through some hours of a stormy
night in January.

Stapledon at first evaded the issue, but he confessed
at length, and, when invited to name the exact nature of
his disquiet, merely declared the present position to be
impossible in his judgment.

"We can't live with the balance so exact," he said.
"I feel it and know it.  Honor and this man loved
one another once, and the natural attraction of their
characters may bring them to do so again, now that
such a thing would be sin."

"A big word—'sin,'" answered Mr. Endicott.  "If
that's all your trouble, the sooner you let sunshine
into your mind again the better.  Honor's an Endicott,
when all's said, though maybe one of the strangest
ever born under that name.  I'm astonished to hear
that this is the colour of your mind.  And the
man—queer though he is, too, and unlike most men I've
met with—yet he's not the sort to bring trouble on a
woman, last of all this woman."

"You prose on, uncle, not remembering what it felt
like to feel your blood run hot at a woman's voice,"
answered Myles with unusual impatience and a flash of
eye.  "I give him all the credit you desire and more; I
know he is honourable and upright and true.  What
then?  Highest honour has broken down before this
temptation.  He is made of flesh and blood after all,
and a man can't live within a span of a woman he loves
and be happy—not if that woman belongs to somebody
else.  I don't assert that his love still exists, yet it's an
immortal thing—not to be killed—and though he thinks
he has strangled it—who can say?  It may come to life
again, like he did."

"You judge others by your own honest character;
but I'm not so certain.  If there is a man who could
live platonically beside a woman he loves, that man
might be Yeoland.  There's something grotesque in
him there—some warp or twist of fibre.  Remember
how well content he was in the past to remain engaged
to her without rushing into her arms and marrying her.
He's cold-blooded—so to call it—in some ways.  I've
known other such men."

"It's contrary to nature."

"Contrary to yours, but temperaments are different
Don't judge him.  There may be a want in him, or he
may possess rare virtues.  Some are ascetic and
continent by disposition and starve Nature, at some secret
prompting of her own.  I don't say he is that sort of
man, but he may be.  Certainly his standpoint is far
less commonplace than yours."

"I caught him kissing a pretty milkmaid once, all the
same; and that after he was engaged to Honor," answered
the other gloomily.

"Exactly.  Now you would not do such a thing for
the world, and he would make light of it.  Beauty
merely intoxicates some men; but intoxicated men do
little harm as a rule.  He's irresponsible in many ways;
yet still I say the husband that fears such a man must
be a fool."

"I can't suppose him built differently to other people."

"Then assume him to be the same, and ask yourself
this question: Seeing what he did for love of her, and
granting he loves her still, has he come back to undo
what he did?  Would he change and steal her now, even
if he had the power to do so?  What has he done in the
past that makes you dream him capable of such a deed
in the future?"

"I don't say that he dreams that such a thing is
possible.  Probably the man would not have returned
into the atmosphere of Honor if he had dimly contemplated
such an event.  But I see nothing in his character
to lift him above the temptation, or to make me rest
sure he will be proof against it.  There's a danger of
his opening his eyes too late to find the thing which
he doubtless believes impossible at present an
accomplished fact."

"What thing?"

"Why, the wakening again of his love for her, the
returned knowledge that his life is empty and barren
and frost-bitten without her.  He felt that once.  What
more natural than that, here again, he should feel it
redoubled in the presence of his own good fortune in every
other direction?"

"If such a suspicion crossed his mind, he would depart
from Godleigh.  That I do steadfastly believe.
Understand, your welfare would not weigh with him; but
Honor's happiness—I feel more assured of it—is still
more to him than his own."

"I know—I know; yet how easily a man in love
persuades himself that a woman's vital welfare and real
happiness depends upon him."

"Now we argue in a circle, and are at the starting-point
again.  Yeoland believed so thoroughly that she
would be happier with you than with him that he
actually blotted himself out of her life, and, when he
heard she would not marry you while he lived, let it
be known that he was dead.  Solely for her sake he
played that cumbrous prank."

"That is so; yet remember what you told me years
ago.  Then you honestly believed that this man, from
the depths of his own peculiar nature, understood
Honor better than anybody else in the world did.  You
thought that, and you are seldom wrong about people.
So perhaps he has come to that conclusion too.  If I
was the wrong husband for her——"

"I never said such a thing."

"No, because I never asked you; but if it was so,
what more likely than that he has discovered it since
his return?  At any rate he may think that this is the
case—though I dispute it with all my heart—and he
may feel his sacrifice was vain.  Then, what more likely
than that he should ask himself if it is too late to amend
the position?"

Mr. Endicott's face expressed absolute surprise and
some scorn for the speaker.

"Do I hear Myles Stapledon?  Where have you
sucked poison since last we spoke together?  You, who
live in the fresh air and enjoy the companionship of
natural beasts and wholesome lives, to spin this trash!
And wicked trash, too, for what right have you to map
out evil roads for other people to follow?  What right
have you to foretell a man's plan and prophesy ill?
Have done with this dance of Jack-o'-lanterns, and get
upon the solid road again.  Look in your wife's
character.  No need to go further than that for
ointment to such a wound as you suffer from.  You have
let jealousy into the house, Myles, and the reek of it
and the blight of it will make your life rotten to the
marrow if you don't set to work and cleanse the
chamber again.  I know they are happy together; but
you've got to face that.  I know she's better for his
coming, and you've got to face that too.  These are
subtle things, and if you can't understand them, put
them behind you.  All this is false fire, and you're in a
ferment of windy misery brewed inside you—just wind,
because the home-coming of this native has upset your
digestion.  You ought to feel some shame to harbour
such a pack of imps.  Time was when a breath of air
from Cosdon Beacon would have blown them back to
their master.  How they got in I can't say; for it's not
part of your real character to make trouble.  You're
like the ploughboy who builds a ghostie with a sheet
and turnip and only frightens himself.  Get this weed
out of your heart at any cost.  Burn it out with the
caustic of common sense; and trust me, blind as I am,
to be quick enough to smell the smoke that tells of fire.
I mean in this matter.  Honor's only less to me than
she is to you.  And I know the truth about her as sure
as I know the sound of her voice and the things it says,
and the secrets it lets out, apart from the words her
tongue speaks."

"She's said many a queer thing on the subject of a
man and his wife and their relations each to the other.
I cannot easily forget them."

"It's her wide, healthy frankness in every affair of life
that might set you at rest, if you were not, as I hint to
you, a fool."

"If I were a fool, it might.  I know she holds the tie
lightly.  Any conventional sort of bondage angers her.
I won her by a trick—not of my hatching, God
knows—yet none the less a trick."

"You'd make Job lose his patience—you, that I
thought a man of ideas as fresh and wholesome as the
west wind!  Can't you see this cuts both ways?  She's
yours till death parts you, so have done whining.
You're stirring hell-broth, that's what you're doing, and
if you let Honor catch a sight of the brew, there will be
some real, live trouble very likely.  You, to break out
like this!  Well, it shows how true the saying runs: that
every man, from Solomon down, is mad when the wind
sets in one quarter.  Now you've found your
foul-weather wind, and it's like to blow you into some
play-acting if you don't pull yourself up.  You're the
luckiest man on the whole countryside, if you could
only see it so.  Be patient, and put your faith in your
wife, where it should be, and go your old gait again."

"I'll try your remedy—ignore the thing, banish it,
laugh at it."

"Laugh at yourself; if you could only learn to do
that, there'd be hope for you.  And take another point
to your comfort.  We're all agreed that Yeoland's no
hypocrite, whatever else he may be.  Three days since
I had speech with him, and your name was on his lips,
and he rejoiced that you were his friend and Honor's
husband.  He does not dream that his return to life has
either gladdened her or troubled you.  He only sees her
now pretty much as she was when he went away.  He
hasn't seen what you and I have—her sorrows.  But,
remember that Honor's real happiness rests with
you—nobody else—and she knows it, and trusts to you for it.
Nobody can ever take your place, and if she glimpses a
serious change in you, she'll soon be down in the mouth,
and, as like as not, a lie-abed again."

"She has seen a change.  She has asked me what was amiss."

"Then stir yourself, and make a giant's effort before
she finds out more than you want her to know.  I'm
glad I spoke to you to-night—wish I had sooner; but
it's not too late.  You've had tangles to untie in your
character before to-day—puzzles to pick—dirty corners
to let the light in upon.  Who hasn't?  And you're not
the one to fear such work, I should reckon.  So set
about it, and the Lord help you."

Myles Stapledon rose and took the old man's hand.

"Thank you," he said.  "You've done me good, and
I'll try to be worthy of your advice.  I don't quite know
what this place would be without you, Uncle Endicott."

"Quieter, my son—that's all.  I'm only a voice.
Words are poor things alongside actions.  The great
deeds of the world—the things achieved—are not
chattered by the tongue, but rise out of sweat, and
deep, long silences.  Yet I've given you advice worth
following, I do think, though, seeing that your blind
spot looks like jealousy, what I've bid you do may be
harder than you imagine.  So much more credit if you
do it."

Neither spoke again, and Stapledon, taking the candle,
soon went to his bed; but Mark sat on awhile over his
knitting in the dark, while the crickets chirruped
fearlessly about the dim and dying peat.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A HUNTING MORNING`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER V.


.. class:: center medium bold

   A HUNTING MORNING

.. vspace:: 2

On such a morning as hunting folk live for, some
ten days after the conversation between Stapledon
and Mr. Endicott, Christopher, who did not himself hunt,
drove Honor to a meet of the Mid Devon.  Taking
his dog-cart down a mossy by-path at the spinney-side,
he stopped not fifty yards distant from where a patch
of scarlet marked the huntsman's standpoint.  Above
was a race of broken clouds and gleam of sunshine
from pale blue sky; below spread opaline air and
naked boughs, save where great tods of ivy shone;
while underneath nervous tails twitched among brown
fern and wintry furzes.  Then a whimper came from
the heart of the wood, and two old hounds threw up
their heads, recognised the sound for a youngster's
excitement, and put nose to earth again.  A minute
later, however, and a full bay echoed deep and clear;
whereupon the pair instantly galloped whence the music came.

Honor and her companion sat in Christopher's dog-cart
behind a fine grey cob.

"They know that's no young duffer," said Yeoland,
as the melody waxed and the hounds vanished; "he's
one of their own generation and makes no mistake.  If
the fox takes them up to the Moor, sport is likely to be
bad, for it's a sponge just now, and the field won't live
with the hounds five minutes.  Ah! he's off!  And to
the Moor he goes."

Soon a business-like, hard-riding, West Country field
swept away towards the highlands, and silence fell
again.

Christopher then set out for Little Silver, while
conversation drifted to their personal interests and the
prosperity in which each now dwelt—a thing foreseen
by neither three short years before.  They had no
servant with them and spoke openly.

"My touchstone was gold; yours a husband of gold,"
said Christopher.  "Money he possessed too, but it is
the magic man himself who has made Endicott's what
it is now."

"Yes, indeed—dear Myles.  And yet I'm half afraid
that the old, simple joy in natural things passes him by
now.  It seems as though he and I could never be
perfectly, wholly happy at the same time.  While I went
dismal mad and must have made his life a curse, he kept
up, and never showed the tribulation that he felt, but
was always contented and cheerful and patient.  Now
that I am happier, I feel that he is not.  Yes, he is not
as happy as I am.  He has told me a thousand times
that content is the only thing to strive for; and certainly
he proved it, for he was well content once; but now our
positions are reversed, and I am contented with my life,
while daily he grows less so."

"He's a farmer, and a contented farmer no man ever
saw, because God never made one."

"It isn't that; the work never troubles him.  He looks
far ahead and seems to know, like a wizard, long before
the event just what is going to be successful and what
a failure.  I think I know him better than anybody in
the world, but I can't fathom him just now.  Something
is worrying him, and he tries hard not to let it worry
him and not to show that it does.  Partly he is successful,
for I cannot guess the trouble; but that there is
a trouble he fails to hide.  I must find it out and take
my share.  Sometimes I think——"

She broke off abruptly.

"What?  Nothing that involves me?  We're the best,
truest friends now, thank heaven."

"No, no.  Time will reveal it."

For a moment or two they were silent with their
thoughts.  It struck neither that such a conversation
was peculiar; it occurred to neither the man nor the
woman that in the very fact of their friendship—of
a friendship so close that the wife could thus discuss
her husband's trouble—there existed the seed of that
trouble.

Christopher mused upon the problem, and honestly
marvelled before it.

"I suppose nobody can be happy really, and he's
no exception to the rule.  Yet, looking at his life, I
should account him quite the luckiest man I ever heard
of.  Consider the perfection that he has crammed
into his existence.  He prospers in his farm; he has
Nestor under his roof in the shape of your wiseacre of
an uncle; and he has you!  Providence must have been
puzzled to find a way to hurt him.  And she hasn't hit
him under the belt either, for never a man enjoyed finer
health.  Now where can he have come across melancholy?
I suppose it's his hereafter, or non-hereafter,
that's bothering him.  Yet I should judge that the man
was too sane to waste good time in this world fretting
because he doesn't believe in another."

"It's a cloud-shadow that will pass, I hope."

"I hope so heartily—such a balanced mind as he has.
Now if I began to whine—one who never did carry
any ballast—you could understand it.  Look ahead and
compare our innings.  His will end gloriously with
children and grandchildren and all the rest of it.  And
I—but if I painted the picture you'd probably say I was
a morbid, ungrateful idiot."

"Very likely; and I should probably be quite right.
There's a great duty staring you in the face now, Christo,
and nobody who cares for you will be contented or
happy until you've tackled it like a man.  Don't look so
innocent; you know perfectly well what I mean."

"Indeed I do not.  I am doing my duty to Godleigh—that's
my life's work henceforth, and all anybody
can expect."

"But that is just what you are not doing.  You're
not everybody, remember; and even if you think you
are, you won't live for ever.  You'll have to go and
sleep in real earnest under the skulls with bats' wings,
poor Christo, some day, and Myles and I shall be
outside under the grass."

"Who is morbid now?"

"Don't evade the point.  I want you to think of the
thing you love best in the world—Godleigh."

"Well?"

"Godleigh has got to go on.  It won't stop because
you do—Godleigh's immortal.  When a tree falls there,
Nature will plant another.  Then what is to become
of the dearest, loveliest place in Devon after you are
gathered to your fathers?"

"I'm going to leave it to you and Myles and your
heirs for ever."

"Don't be ridiculous, Christo; you're going to leave
it to a rightful heir, and it's high time you began to
devote a little thought to him.  Don't wait until you're
a stupid, old, middle-aged thing of half a century.
Then you'll probably die in the gloomy conviction
that you leave your children mere helpless infants."

"So much the better for them, for they'd escape the
example of their father.  But, as a matter of fact,
I'm not going to marry.  Godleigh's my mother and
sister and brother and wife and family."

"Then you'll leave your family unprovided for, and
that's a very wicked thing to do.  We're growing old
and sensible nowadays, and there'll be plain speaking
between us as long as we live; so I tell you now that
I've thought of this very seriously indeed, and so has
Myles.  He quite agees with me; and my opinion is
that you ought to marry; the sooner the better."

"Don't," he said; "don't go in for having opinions.
When anybody begins to cultivate and profess opinions
their sense of humour must be on the wane.  Keep
your mind free of rooted ideas.  You were wont to
love the rainbow play of change, to welcome sudden
extremes as a sign of health and mental activity.
Before you married you hated opinions."

"That was before I grew happy, I think.  Happiness
runs one into a groove very quickly; it steadies our
ideas.  Now, you won't be perfectly happy until you
marry."

"To find her."

"Why, that's not so difficult."

"Never, Honor.  There was only one possible mother
for my children.  You are going over ground that I
travelled centuries ago; at least it seems centuries.
I told my fib and looked ahead, quite like a son of
wisdom for once, and counted the cost, or tried to.
Let all that sleep.  I shall never know to my dying
day how I brought it off, but I did.  Perhaps a
generous sympathy for unborn boys and girls had as
much to do with it as anything else.  Candidly and
without sentiment, it is time we Yeolands came to an
end.  For my part I shall die easier knowing that I'm
the last of them.  I never was very keen about living
for the mere sake of living, even in old days, and now
I care less than ever.  Not that I want to die either;
but I go wandering through this great, roaring, rollicking,
goose-fair of a world, stopping at a booth here, shooting
for nuts or something equally valuable there; and when
Dustman Death surprises me, pottering about and
wasting my money,—when he puts out his grey claws
and asks for his own again, I shall welcome him with
perfect cheerfulness."

"Nonsense—and wicked nonsense!  You—what?—thirty-two,
or some absurd age—trying to talk like
Uncle Mark!  And Godleigh free!  I won't have it,
Christo.  If ever you loved me, you must obey me in
this and find a wife."

"Can't; won't; too small-hearted.  I've got nothing
to give a girl; and all your fault.  Some of me really
died, you know, when I pretended that all of me did."

"Then I suppose that it's my turn to go away and
perish now?  Would you feel equal to marrying
anybody if I was dead?"

"Not a parallel instance at all.  For you there was
a grand chap waiting—a man worth having; else I should
not have died, I assure you.  In my case there's no
grand woman waiting; so if you expire, you will merely
be bringing a great deal of trouble upon many excellent
people and doing nobody the least good—not even my
nebulous prospective lady.  No, Myles and I would
merely share a mile of crape and live in black gloves
for ever.  You die!  What a thought!"

"Sometimes I wish I had long ago."

"No; you must live to brighten these dull Devonshire
winters and strew flowers upon your husband and
me when our turns come.  Dear old Stapledon!  I'm
really bothered to know that something is troubling
him.  I'd tackle him myself, only if you cannot win
the truth, I certainly should not.  I wish he'd be
confidential; I do like confidential men.  For my part
I haven't got a secret from him in the world."

"He works too hard."

"He does.  The man has a horrible genius for making
work.  It knocks the vitality out of him.  I hate this
modern gospel that sets all of us poor little
world-children to our lessons as a panacea for every evil
under the sun.  Just look what dull dogs all the hard
workers are."

"Well, you've played truant from your youth up."

"Deliberately, as an example to others.  But I'm
doing any amount of work now.  Brain-work too;
which is easily the most hateful sort of work.  And
all for my Godleigh.  Yet she doesn't thank me.  I see
poor Mother Nature stealing about miserably and
suspiciously when I go into the woods.  She liked me
better a pauper.  She doesn't know that I'm helping
her to make this little corner of earth more and more
perfect.  She doesn't look ahead and judge how much
toil and trouble I am saving her with the ruins of things
that must be cleared away—either by her method or
my quicker one.  She hates axes and ploughs and
pruning-hooks, old stick-in-the-mud that she is."

"Treason!"

"No treason at all.  Common sense I call it.  I'm
weary of this nonsense about going straight to Nature.
Australia taught me to suspect.  She's a bat, a mole;
she doesn't know her best friends.  She'll sink a saint
in mid-ocean—a real saint with an eighteen-carat
halo—and let a pirate come safely and happily to some
innocent merchantman stuffed with the treasures of
honest men, or her own priceless grains and seeds.
She'll put back the hand of progress at the smallest
opportunity; she'll revert to the primitive if you turn
your back on her for an instant; she'll conjure our
peaches into wild plums, our apples into crabs, man
into—God knows what—something a good deal lower
than the angels, or even the cave-dwellers.  If we let
her, she would hunt for and polish up the missing link
again, and huddle the world backwards faster than we
spin round the sun.  Nature is a grand fraud, Honor.
Take the personal attitude, for instance.  What has she
ever done for me?  Did she show me any of her
hoarded gold during the month I nearly killed myself
exploring in New South Wales?  Did she lead me to
the water-holes when I was thirsty, or lend me a cloud
to hide the sun when I was hot?  Has she opened
a flower-bud, or taught a bird to sing, or painted a
dawn, or ever led the wind out of the east, that I might
be the happier?  We fool ourselves that we are her
favourites.  Not so.  She is only our stepmother, and
behaves accordingly.  She knew that the advent of
conscious intelligence must be a death-blow to her, and
she has never forgiven man for exhibiting it."

"So I'm not the only one in Little Silver who is
developing opinions, I see," laughed Honor.  "You're
growing egotistical, Christo; you're expecting almost
too much, I fear.  Nature has something better to do
than plan your private fortune and convenience, or
arrange the winds of heaven to suit a cold in that
silly head of yours!  Never in my most dead-alive
moment did I grow so dull as that.  To be cross with
poor Nature—as if she had not to do what she is told,
like everybody else.  To blame her!"

"I don't blame her.  I know where to throw the blame
of things perfectly well."

"Then you're the only man in the world who does,
and you ought to tell everybody and so make yourself
famous."

Thus they prattled in the old manner, and, unconscious
of difficulty or danger, passed upon their way.
Much each saw of the other; much frank delight each
took in the other's company; and through the passage
of winter to the advent of spring they progressed,
coming nearer and nearer to discovery of the secret
tribulation in Stapledon's heart that each now
innocently, honestly mourned and misunderstood.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`LOVE OF MAN`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER VI.


.. class:: center medium bold

   LOVE OF MAN

.. vspace:: 2

Mr. Gregory Libby, to whom circumstance
denied any opportunity of close investigation,
at length came upon a conclusion respecting the
daughters of Jonah Cramphorn, and allowed his
judgment to be unconsciously influenced by his desire.
That is to say he arrived at a mistaken decision
because the balance of his feeble, physical emotions
weighed toward Sally.  She was the eldest and the
fairest; he concluded, therefore, that she enjoyed the
greater proportion of her parent's regard, and must
the more materially benefit under his will in time to
come.  He braced himself for the crucial question, and
it happened that he did so but two days after a very
significant symposium at Endicott's, during which
Mr. Cramphorn occupied the position of chief speaker, and
his daughters were the principal theme of conversation.
From discussion upon these primitive maids, and their
father's opinion concerning them, discourse had truly
ranged to higher subjects; but not before Jonah made
definite statements of a sort that deeply moved one
among his listeners.

Behind the obscurity blown from a clay tobacco-pipe,
Henry Collins sat, round-eyed and wretched.  He gasped
with most unselfish sorrow for the girl he loved, and
committed to memory certain surly assertions of
Mr. Cramphorn concerning her, with a purpose to forewarn
Sally of the fate her future held.  For Jonah spoke
definitely and doggedly.  He weighed the merits of his
own daughters with Spartan frankness, and, arriving at
judgment, declared Margery's filial conduct a lesson to
Little Silver, regretted Sally's indifference and
independence of manners, and concluded with complacent
hints that his knowledge of human nature was not wont
to be at fault, and that she best able to administer
wisely his worldly wealth should have it as a just
reward, when he passed beyond need of cottage or
savings bank.

These utterances Libby heard too late, but
Cramphorn's elder daughter became acquainted with them
immediately after they were spoken, thanks to the
enterprise of Henry Collins.  He felt it his duty to
the woman that she should be put in possession of
such gloomy predictions, while yet power might lie
with her to falsify them.

"Afore the whole comp'ny he said it," declared
Henry; "an' he'm a man as knaws no shadder of turning
most times.  An' he haven't got the wisdom of a
mouse neither—not in this matter; so it'll surely happen,
onless you fall in wi' his ways more an' knock onder
oftener than what you do."

"I've seed it comin', an' he'm a cruel wretch," answered
Sally with many pouts.  "An' her's worse—my sister, I
mean.  Sly minx, she've plotted an' worked for it wi'
low onderhand ways—cooing to un; an' glazin' at un
when he talked, as if he was King Solomon; an' spendin'
her pence in pipes for un; an' findin' his book-plaaces to
church—'Struth!  I could wring her neck, an' 'tis more'n
likely I shall do it wan day."

"But he doan't knaw—Libby, I mean—though he's
sartain to hear soon; an' your faither won't tell Margery
for fear she should give awver fussin' 'bout arter un,
when she knaws his will's writ an' signed an' can't be
called back.  So I comed to say that I doan't care a
feather for all his money, an' I loves you better'n
ever—better'n better now he'm set against 'e."

"Ess, I knaw all that; and doan't 'e tell this tale
to nobody else; an' bid them others, as heard my auld
beast of a faither, to keep it in an' tell nobody.  Wance
Libby knaws, 'tis——"

"All up.  Ess, so 'tis, Sally; an' doan't that shaw
'e what fashion o' dirt the man's made of?  Do 'e want
a chap to marry you for what you take to un in your
hand?  Do 'e——"

"Doan't ax no more questions now, theer's a dear
sawl.  I ban't in no fettle to answer 'em, an' I be sore
hurt along o' this.  A gude darter as I've been tu.  An'
her—no better'n a stinging long-cripple—a snake as'll
bite the hand that warms it.  I wish I was dead, I do.
Go away, caan't 'e?  I doan't want your 'ankersher.
Let my tears alone, will 'e?  I wish they was poison.
I'd mingle 'em wi' her food—then us would see.
Go—go away!  Be you deaf?  I'll scream my heart out in
a minute if you bide theer!"

Collins, desiring no such catastrophe, made haste to
disappear; and such is the rough-and-tumble of things
that chance willed this dramatic moment for the entrance
of Gregory Libby.  Big with fate he came from
hedge-trimming, and shone upon Sally's grief like the sun of
June upon a shower.  She was sobbing and biting her
red lips; and he, with the dignity of toil yet manifested
about him, dropped his sickle, flung off his gloves, led
Sally behind a haystack, and bid her sit down and relate
her sorrow.

"Just gwaine to take my bit of dinner," he said; "so
you can tell while I eat.  What's the matter?  You'm
wisht, an' your butivul cheeks be all speckly-like wi'
cryin'."

She swallowed her tears, sucked her lips, and smiled
through the storm.

"Nought—a flea kicked me.  Sit here an' I'll pull
down a bit o' dry out o' the stack for 'e."

"Ban't awften them wonnerful butcher-blue eyes o'
yourn shed tears, I'm sure," he mumbled with his mouth
full; "but we've all got our troubles no doubt.  An'
none more'n me.  I'm that lonesome wi'out mother
to do for me.  I never thought as I'd miss her cookin'
an' messin' 'bout the house so much.  An' what's
money wi'out a woman to spend it—to spend it on
me, I mean?" he added hastily.  "I want a wife.  A
gude woman stands between a man an' all the li'l
twopenny-ha'p'ny worrits as his mind be tu busy tu
trouble 'bout.  I want a useful gal around me, an' wan
as'll take the same view of me what mother done."

"You'm a marryin' man for sartain."

"I be.  An' I've thought an' thought on it till I got
the 'eadache; an' my thoughts doan't go no further'n
you, Sally."

"Lard, Gregory dear!"

"True's I'm eatin' onions.  I've been figuring you up
for years.  An' now I knaw we'm likely to be a very
fitting man an' wife.  You knawed mother; and you
knaw me, as ban't a common man ezacally, so say the
word."

"Oh, Gregory!  An' I thought you was after my sister!"

"She'm a very gude gal, an' a very nice gal tu," said
Mr. Libby with his usual caution.  "No word against
her would I say for money.  An' if you wasn't here, I'd
sooner have her than any other.  A brave, bowerly
maiden wi' butivul hands to her, an' a wonnerful
onderstandin' way, an'——"

"Ess, but 'tis me you love—me—not her?"

"Ban't I tellin' you so?  I say it in cold blood, after
thinkin' 'pon it, to an' from, for years.  An' I'll tell you
how mother treated me, for you couldn't do no better'n
what she did.  She onderstood my habits perfect."

"God knaws I'll make 'e a gude wife, Greg.  An' no
call to tell me nothin' of that 'bout your mother, 'cause
I'll be more to 'e than she; an' I'll think for 'e sleepin'
an' wakin', an' I'll work for 'e to my bones, an' love the
shadow of 'e."

"I'm glad to hear you say so, Sally, though mother's
ways was very well considered.  The thing be to make
up your mind as I'm in the right all times, as a thinking
man mostly is."

"I knaw you will be; an' a gude husband, as'll stand
up for me against all the world, an' see I ban't put upon
or treated cruel."

"I will do so.  An' 'tis odds if I'll let 'e do any work
at all arter you'm wedded to me—work 'cept about my
house, I mean."

"No, for 'twill take me all my time workin' for 'e, an'
makin' your home as it should be."

"Kiss me," he said suddenly, "an' kiss me slow while
I take my full of it.  Theer's blood 'pon your lips!
You've bited 'em.  What's fretted 'e this marnin'?  Not
love of me, I warn 'e?"

"'Twas, then—just love of you, Greg; an' fear that
the fallin' out of cruel things might make 'e turn away
from me."

He patted her cheek and stroked it; then her neck;
and then her plump bosom.

"So butivul an' fat as a pattridge you be!  An' I'm
sure I love 'e tremenjous; an' nothin' shall never part
us if you say so."

"Then all my tears was vain, an'—an' I'll grow a
better woman an' say longer prayers hencefarrard—for
thanksgivings 'cause I've got 'e."

"'Tis a gude match for you, Sally; an' I do trust as
you'll never make me to regret I spoke."

"Never, never; an' you'll never love nobody else, will 'e?"

"Not so long as you'm a gude wife an' a towser to
work.  My mind was always temperate 'an sober towards
petticoats, as be well knawn."

"Oh, I could sing an' dance for sheer joy, I could!
An' so chapfallen just afore you comed.  But what's a
faither to a lover—'specially such a sour faither as
mine?"

"Doan't you quarrel wi' Cramphorn, however," said
Gregory; "he'm the last man as I'd have you fall out
with."

"Quarrel!  I never quarrel with nobody.  But he
ban't like you—even-tempered an' fair.  A wan-sided,
cranky man, faither.  I be his eldest, yet Margery's put
afore me.  He can't see through her dirty, hookem-snivey
tricks an' lying speeches.  I be straight an' plain,
same as you, an' he hates me for it."

Mr. Libby's heart sank low.

"Hates you?  D'you say your faither hates you?"

"Well, the word ban't big enough seemin'ly.  I can
tell you now, because we'm tokened, an' my heart shan't
never have no secret from you.  But he likes Margery
best because she foxes him, an' fules him, an' tells him
he's a wonder of the world; an' he believes it.  An'
Collins says as he've awpenly gived out that she'm to
have all his gudes an' his money.  Why for do 'e give
awver lovin' me?"

For Mr. Libby's arm, which was round Sally's waist,
fell away from that pleasant circumference, and an
expression of very real misery spread over his face to
the roots of his yellow hair.

"'His gudes an' his money'?" he asked, in a faint
voice, that sounded as though he had been frightened.

"Ess.  Why, you'm as if somebody had suddenly
thrawed a bucket of water awver 'e!  Doan't think I care
'bout his money now.  You'll have to make him chaange
his mind bimebye.  When you'm my husband, you'll
have to tackle faither an' see he doan't cut me away."

The man's brain went cold.  Desire had vanished out
of his eyes, and Sally might have been a stone beside
him.  He flung away the remainder of his luncheon,
and uttered a hearty oath or two.

"'Tis a damned oncomely thing, an', as it takes two
to a quarrel, theer's some fault your side as well as his,
I reckon.  What be the reason as Margery's more to
him than you—his eldest?"

"Because she'm a lyin' slammockin' female twoad—that's
the reason; an' he caan't see through her."

There was a moment of heavy silence; then Gregory
Libby spoke.

"Doan't say nothin' 'bout what we've planned out
to-day.  Doan't tell nobody.  Time enough come Spring."

"Say nought!  I'd like to go up 'pon top the hill an'
sing out my gude fortune for all ears to hear!"

"No, bide quiet.  Us'll let 'em have the gert surprise
of it in church.  None shall knaw till we'm axed out
some Sunday marnin'."

"'Twill bust upon 'em like thunder.  I lay Margery
will faint if she'm theer."

"An' us'll have the laugh of 'em all."

"'Tis as you please, Greg."

"An' you'll take your oath not to tell?"

"Not even mistress?"

"Certainly not she."

"Nor yet Missis Loveys?"

"So soon tell all Little Silver."

"You might let me just whisper it to my awn sister.
'Twill be a cruel stroke if her hears it fust afore all the
people to church."

"If you say a syllable of it to Margery, 'tis off!"
declared Mr. Libby, and with such earnestness did he
speak that the girl was alarmed, and made hasty
assurances.

"Very well, I promise an' swear, since I must.  But
how long be I to go dumb?  Remember, 'tis tu gert a
thing for a woman to keep hid for long.  You'm cruel,
Greg, lovey, to ax it.  I'll have to blaze it out soon or
bust with it."

"Wait my time.  It ban't to be awver-long, that I
promise 'e."

"Kiss me again, Greg; an' cuddle me."

"You take your dyin' oath?"

"Ess, I said so."

"Very well; now I must go back to my work."

Presently they separated, and Sally, full of her secret,
walked upon air through a golden world, with her hot
heart's core aglow, while Mr. Libby bit his hare-lip,
employed many coarse words for the benefit of the
hedge he hacked at, and put a spite and spleen into
each stroke that soon blunted his bill-hook.  He was
now faced with a problem calling for some ingenuity.
He yearned to know how he might retrieve his error,
and get well free of Sally before approaching her sister
upon the same errand.  Where to turn for succour and
counsel he knew not.  "If mother was awnly alive for
ten minutes!" he thought.  As for another ancient
dame, Charity Grepe, she—publicly exposed as a fraud
and delusion by Jonah Cramphorn—had found her
occupation gone in earnest, and now reposed at
Chagford poor-house.  There was none to help the unhappy
orphan in his trouble.  The matter looked too delicate
for masculine handling; and even Gregory had sense
to perceive that it would be easy for others to take a
wrong attitude before his dilemma and judge him
harshly.  Then came an inspiration to this lack-lustre
son of the soil.

"No pusson else but she heard me tell her," he reflected.
"Theer's awnly her word for it, an' I'll up an'
say 'tis a strammin' gert lie, an' that she was mazed or
dreamin', an' that I wouldn't marry her for a hunderd
sovereigns!  I'll braave her to her faace, if it comes to
that.  Folks'll sooner believe a man than a woman most
times; an' if I ban't spry enough to awver-reach a fule
of a outdoor farm-gal on such a matter, 'tis pity."





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   CHAPTER VII.


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   LAPSES

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During early spring a new experience came to
Myles Stapledon.  Physically perfect, he had
known no ache or ill until now; but chance for once
found him vulnerable.  From a heavy downpour upon
the land he returned home, found matters to occupy
him immediately, and so forgot to doff wet clothes at
the earliest opportunity.  A chill rewarded his carelessness,
and a slight attack of pneumonia followed upon it.
For the first time within his recollection the man had
to stop in bed, but during the greater part of his
illness Myles proved patient enough.  Honor ministered
to him untiringly; Mr. Endicott was much in the
sick-room also; and from time to time, when the master
was returning towards convalescence, Cramphorn or
Churdles Ash would enter to see him with information
concerning affairs.

Then, during one of the last wearisome days in his
bed-chamber, at a season when the invalid was
somewhat worn with private thoughts and heartily sick of
such enforced idleness, an unfortunate misunderstanding
threw him off his mental balance and precipitated such
a catastrophe as those who knew Stapledon best had
been the least likely to foresee.  He was in fact
forgotten for many hours, owing to a common error of his
wife and uncle.  Each thought the other would tend
the sick man, so Honor departed to Newton Abbot
with Christopher Yeoland, and Mark, quite ignorant
of his niece's plans, was driven by Tommy Bates to
Okehampton.  The pitiful mistake had not dwelt an
hour in Stapledon's memory under ordinary circumstances,
but now, fretted by suffering and as ill able
to bear physical trouble as any other man wholly
unfamiliar with it, his lonely hours swelled and massed
into a mountain of bitter grievance.  He brooded and
sank into dark ways of thought.  Temptations got hold
upon him; the ever-present thorn turned in his flesh
and jealousy played with his weakness, like a cat with
a mouse.  Upon Honor's return the man afforded his
wife, a new sensation and one of the greatest surprises
that experience had ever brought to her.

Unaware of his lonely vigil, she returned home in
high good humour, kissed him, complimented him on
the fact that this was to be his last day in bed, and
remarked upon the splendour of the sunset.

"'At eventide it shall be light,'" she said; "and
Christo was so rapt in all the glory of gold and purple
over Cosdon, as we drove home from Moreton, that he
nearly upset me and his dog-cart and himself.  Yet I
wish you could see the sky.  It would soothe you."

"As winter sunshine soothes icicles—by making their
points sharper.  Nature's softest moods are cruellest if
your mind happens to be in torment."

"My dear!  Whatever is the matter?  And your fire
out—oh, Myles, how wrong!"

"Is it?  Then blame yourself.  Since my midday
meal and before it I have seen no soul this day, and
heard no voice but the clock.  Here alone, suffering
and chewing gall for six hours and more.  But what
does it matter so you were pleased with the sunset and
your company?"

"Then where is uncle?  Surely——?  I *am* so sorry,
dear one.  We've muddled it between us, and each
thought you were in the keeping of the other."

"Don't be sorry.  What do I matter?  Where have
you been?"

"To Newton with Christo.  And he sent you these
lovely black grapes.  I'm afraid I ate a few coming
home, but I haven't spoiled the bunch."

"Eat the rest, then, or fling them into the fire.  I
don't want them."

"You're angry, Myles; and you have a right to be;
yet it was only a dismal accident.  We must light the
fire, and I'll get you your tea, poor ill-used fellow.  It
was a shame, but I'm very, very penitent, and so will
uncle be."

"I wish I could get out of your way.  Such a bother
for you to come back to a sick-room; and a sick animal
in a house is a bore always—especially to you, who
don't love animals."

The woman's eyes opened wide and she stared at him.

"Whatever do you mean?"

"You know well enough.  I'm so exacting and my
cough keeps you awake at night, and these drives in the
fresh air behind Yeoland's big trotter must be such a
relief to you.  Why don't you ask him to drive you
right away—to hell, and have done with it?"

Honor looked at him, then turned her back and knelt
down by the fire.  Presently she spoke.

"Your thoughts have been ugly company I'm afraid.
This is a terrible surprise, Myles, for I know so well
how much you must have suffered before you could say
such things to me.  Will you never understand your
own wife?"

"I think I do—at last."

"You'll be sorry—very sorry that you could speak so,
and let an unhappy accident be the spark to this.  If
you had but heard what Christopher said of you this
very day driving home——"

"Don't begin that folly.  That he slights me enough
to praise me—and you listen to him and pretend to
think he is in earnest!"

She did not answer; then he sat up in bed and spoke
again.

"I'm glad that weakness has torn this out of me.  I
shall be sorry to-morrow, but I'm glad to-night.  Leave
the fire and come here.  I don't want to shout.  You
see what you've dragged me down to; you see what
a snarling cur with his bone stolen I look now.  That's
your work.  And I'll thank you to put a period to it.
I don't live any longer in this purgatory, however
greatly your fool's paradise may please you.  I'm
weary of it.  It's poisoning me.  Either you see too
much of this man or not enough.  That is what you
have to determine.  If too much, end it; if not enough,
mend it, and go to him, body and soul, for good—the
sooner the better."

"Myles!  You, of all men, to be so coarse!  Are you
mad?  Are you dreaming to speak to your wife so?
God knows that I've never done, or said, or thought
anything to anger you to this, or shadow your honour
for a second—nor has he."

"'He!'  Always 'he—he—he'—rooting at your
heart-strings, I suppose, like a ——.  What do you
know of his thoughts and dreams?  How comes it that
you are so read in his life and mind that you can say
whether my honour is so safe with him?  I'd sooner
trust it with my dogs.  Then it would be safe.  Who
are you to know what this man's mind holds?"

"I ought to know, if anybody does."

"Then go back to him, for God's sake, and let me
come to the end of this road.  Let all that is past
sink to a memory, not remain a raw, present wound,
that smarts from my waking moment until I sleep again."

"You are weary of me?"

"I'm weary of half of you, or a quarter of you, or
what particular proportion of you may still be supposed
to belong to me."

"I am all yours—heart and soul—and you know it;
or if you do not, Christopher Yeoland does."

"You love him too."

"That question was answered years ago.  I love him,
and always shall.  His welfare is much to me.  I have
been concerned with it to-day."

"Yet you dare to say you belong heart and soul to me."

"It is the truth.  If you don't understand that, I
cannot help you.  He does understand."

"I lack his fine intellect.  You must endeavour to
sink to my level and make this truth apparent to your
husband's blunter perceptions.  I must have more than
words.  Acts will better appeal to me.  After to-day
I forbid you to see or speak with Yeoland; and may
you never suffer as you have made me suffer."

"I will do what you wish.  If you had only spoken
sooner, Myles, some of this misery might have been
escaped.  I wish I had seen it."

"Any woman who loved honestly would have seen
it," he said, hard to the end.  Then, without answering,
she left him; and while he turned restlessly upon
himself and regret presently waxed to a deep shame at
this ebullition, she went her way and came to tears
leisurely along a path first marked by frank amazement.
Honor's surprise was unutterable.  Never, since the
moment of their meeting, had she dreamed or suspected
that any imaginable disaster could thus reduce
the high standard by which Myles conducted his mental
life and controlled his temperament.  That physical
suffering and a sharp illness should have power to
discover and reveal such a secret much surprised her.  She
remained incredulous that she had heard aright.  It was
as though she had dreamed the meeting and some
nightmare Myles—grotesque, rude, a very Caliban—had
taken shape while her mind ran riot in sleep.  Yet it
was true, for the measure of his lapse from customary
high courtesy, was the measure of the months that he
had suffered in silence, and the measure of his wrongs.
Wholly imaginary she held them; all he had said was
the outcome of a nature fretted by sickness and
reduced below itself, like a drunken man—this Honor
believed; but even so she remained in a stupor of
astonishment.  To see such a man with his armour off,
to hear strange words in his mouth, to watch passion on
his face, was an experience unutterably painful.  And
yet surprise transcended sorrow.  She was almost
stunned and dazed by this storm of thunder and
lightning from a mind whose weather had never promised
such a tempest.  Now the moody fits and evasive
humours could be read a little, for light fell every way.
And Honor sat an hour with her thoughts; then passed
from first emotions to others deeper and truer.  She
began to regret the past and blame her blindness.
Unconventional enough, she had acted with no thought of
any special significance being read into her
actions—least of all by her husband.  A woman of more
common mind and nature had seen the danger and
doubtfulness of such relations; but this was her first
revelation of it; and the sudden, somewhat brutal
disclosure opened her eyes widely indeed.  She set
herself to see and estimate from her husband's
standpoint, to gauge the extent of the justice that had
launched his pent-up outburst, and, upon a paltry
misunderstanding, loosed these tremendous charges, hugged
up and hidden within his heart till now.  She ignored
the cruel manner of his assault, and felt her heart beat
in fear at this shadow of a master passion.  Jealousy
was its name, and an accident of lonely hours with
the demon had suffered it to overwhelm him, tear him,
dominate him thus.

The thread of the woman's thoughts need not be
traced as she strove with these tangles, and slowly
restored the ravelled skein.  That Myles would regret
this hurricane she knew; that he would ask her
forgiveness, and probably desire her to disregard his demands
she suspected.  Self-control was a garment that her
husband could scarcely discard for long, even in sickness;
the amazing thing was that it should have proved a
garment at all; for Honor always believed it as much
a part of Myles as his other characteristics.  Meantime
she asked herself her duty, and justice spoke, while the
woman listened without impatience.

She understood in some degree the strenuousness of
many male characters upon the subject of ethics; she
conceded that men of her husband's stamp thought and
felt more deeply than most women; and she knew that
her own sense of proportion, or sense of humour—which
often amounts to the same thing—had inclined
her, rightly or wrongly, to view all relations of life from
an impersonal standpoint, including even those affairs in
which she herself participated.

She knew the absolute innocence of her inmost soul
with respect to Christopher, and her face flamed here at
the thought that her husband had dared to fear for her
honour and his own.  But she resolutely identified her
thoughts with his attitude; she reminded herself that
Myles was a bad student of character, and quite unable
to see the real nature of Christopher Yeoland, or
understand him as she did.  Her brain grew tired at last,
and pity led to tears; but the nature of the pity was
uncertain, and whether she cried for herself, for her
husband, or for both, Honor could not have declared
with any certainty.

That evening, while Mark Endicott was with Myles
and his wife sat alone in her parlour, Christopher
Yeoland strolled up to the farm with a parcel forgotten
and left in his vehicle.  The master of Godleigh stayed
for a brief chat, made inquiries after Stapledon, and very
quickly discovered that his companion laboured under
some secret emotion.  Honor thereupon changed her
mind.  She had not intended to whisper a hint of her
tragic discovery, but the other's ready sympathy proved
too much for her reserve.  Moreover, there was a thought
in her that perhaps the sooner Yeoland knew the truth
the better.  She told him a little of what had happened
and attributed it to her husband's great present
weakness; yet the thing sounded graver spoken aloud, even
in her very guarded version, and Christopher's forehead
showed that he, too, held it serious.

"Of course he didn't mean it," she concluded; "and
to-morrow he will be sorry for having spoken so.  But
I'm afraid that dear Myles will never understand that
we are different from other people."

"You think we are?"

"I know we are.  Surely we have proved that to one
another, if not to the world."

"We can't expect people to take us at our own
valuation.  This row comes appositely in a way.  God knows
the truth, but all the same, perhaps the position is
impracticable.  The world would say that Myles was right,
and that we were too—too original.  Only what's to be
done?  Of course he can't forbid us to speak to one
another—that's absurd.  But, for some reason, our
friendship makes him a miserable man.  He's let that out
to-night, poor dear chap."

"I wish I could understand his attitude; but I must
make myself understand it, Christo.  It is my duty."

"I believe I do know what he feels.  It's pride more
than jealousy.  His mind is too well hung to be jealous,
but pride is the bait to catch all big natures.  He doesn't
like to feel any other man has the power to please you."

"But remember the basis of our friendship.  It must
make a difference.  And I have always been so frank.
He knew—none better—what we were each to the other
once; and he knows that I am fond of you and always
must be so."

"Exactly; and that's not knowledge to make him
particularly happy.  We have accentuated it of late,
and hurt him.  He sees perils and troubles ahead that
don't really exist—mere phantoms—yet, from his point
of view, they look real enough.  He cannot see, and so
there's probably a growing inclination on his part to
kick me out of Little Silver, if such a thing could be
done.  Yes, I appreciate his attitude, though he can't
appreciate mine.  It comes to this: my deep content in
your society is making him very angry—and worse than
angry.  He's turning by slow degrees into a volcano.
To-day came the first little eruption—a mere nothing.
Myles will regret it, and to-morrow bank up the fire
again in his usual Spartan way; but he is powerless to
prevent the sequel.  There may be a regular Pompeii
and Herculaneum presently.  Your husband is built
that way, though I never guessed it.  If you were mine,
and he was in my position, I should not turn a hair,
knowing you and knowing him; but he is different.  He
doesn't know me at all, and he doesn't know you as well
as I do.  He must be blind to a nature like yours by
the accident of his own personal temperament."

"He understands me, I am sure—at least, I think so."

"Not all round.  But that's beside the mark.  The
question is, What next?"

"No question at all.  My whole life and soul must be
devoted to making him happy in spite of himself."

"And what must I do?"

She did not answer, and before need of a definite
decision and the necessity for action, Christopher fell
back upon his customary methods.

"Obviously I must do nothing.  Least done soonest
mended—a proverb quite as wise as the one I found it
on; for deeds make more bother in the world than the
loudest words.  I shall let Time try his hand.  It will
probably come out all right when Myles gets well.  He's
so sane in most things—only there's my volcano theory,
I tell you what; I'll speak to your uncle and ask him if
he sees any difficulty."

"Can't you make up your mind yourself?"

"No—unless you express a wish.  Otherwise I shall
go on as I am going.  I'll see Mr. Endicott, and when
Myles is fit again I'll see him.  Yes, that's the road of
wisdom.  I'll meet him and say, 'Now, old chap, explode
and give me the full force of the discharge.  Tell me
what you mean and what you want.'"

Honor, for her part, found loyalty wakened rather
than weakened by her husband's remonstrances.  She
desired to return to him—to get back to his heart.
Christopher wearied her just now, and when Mark
Endicott entered from the sick-room, Honor bid
Yeoland farewell and hastened to Myles.

Yeoland chatted awhile, shared some spirit and water
with the blind man, and then, on a sudden, after
private determination to do no such thing, broached the
problem in his mind.

"Look here," he said; "I've had a nasty jar to-night,
Mr. Endicott, and I'm in no end of a muddle.  You
know that I'm a well-meaning brute in my way, even
granted that the way is generally wrong.  But I wouldn't
really hurt a fly, whereas now, in blissful ignorance, I've
done worse.  I've hurt a man—-a man I feel the greatest
respect for—the husband of my best friend in the world.
It's jolly trying, because he and I are built so differently.
There's an inclination on his part to turn this thing into
the three-volume form apparently.  It's such ghastly rot
when you think of what I really am.  In plain English,
Stapledon doesn't like his wife to see so much of me.
She only discovered this deplorable fact to-day, and
it bewildered her as much as it staggered me.  Heaven's
my judge, I never guessed that he was looking at me so.
Nor did Honor.  Such kindred spirits as we are—and
now, in a moment of weakness, the man bid her see me
no more!  Of course, he's too big to go in for small
nonsense of that kind, and he'll withdraw such an
absurd remark as soon as he's cool again; but straws
show which way the wind blows, and I want to get
at my duty.  Tell me that, and I'll call you blessed."

"What is Honor to you?"

"The best part of my life, if you must know—on the
highest plane of it."

"Don't talk about 'planes'!  That's all tom-foolery!
You're a wholesome, healthy man and woman—anyway,
other people must assume so.  I'll give you credit for
believing yourself, however.  I'll even allow your twaddle
about planes does mean something to you, because honestly
you seem deficient—degenerate as far as your flesh
is concerned.  All the same, Stapledon is right in
resenting this arrangement with all his heart and soul.  His
patience has amazed me.  Two men can't share a woman
under our present system of civilisation."

"Which is to say a wife may not have any other
intellectual kindred spirit but her husband.  D'you mean
that?"

"No, I don't.  I mean that when a man openly says
that a woman is the best part of his life, her husband
can't be blamed for resenting it."

"But what's the good of lying about the thing?
Surely circumstances alter cases?  It was always so.
He knew that Honor and I loved each other in our
queer way long before he came on the scene.  She can't
stop loving me because she has married him."

"It isn't easy to argue with you, Yeoland," answered
Mark quietly; "but this I see clearly: your very
attitude towards the position proclaims you a man of
most unbalanced mind.  There's a curious kink in your
nature—that is if you're not acting.  Suppose Honor
was your wife and she found greater pleasure in the
society of somebody else, and gradually, ignorantly,
quite unconsciously slipped away and away from you;
imperceptibly, remember—so subtly that she didn't
know it herself—that nobody but you knew it.  How
much of that would you suffer without a protest?"

"I shouldn't bother—not if she was happy.  That's
the point, you see: her happiness.  I constitute it in
some measure—eh?  Or let us say that I contribute to
it.  Then why need he be so savage?  Surely her
happiness is his great ambition too?"

"Granted.  Put the world and common sense and
seemliness on one side.  They don't carry weight with
you.  Her happiness then—her lasting happiness—not
the trumpery pleasure of to-day and to-morrow."

"Is it wise to look much beyond to-morrow when
'happiness' is the thing to be sought?"

"Perhaps not—as you understand it—so we'll say
'content.'  Happiness is a fool's goal at best.  You love
Honor, and you desire for her peace of mind and a
steadfast outlook founded on a basis strong enough to
stand against the storms and sorrows of life.  I assume
that."

"I desire for her the glory of life and the fulness
thereof."

"You must be vague, I suppose; but I won't be,
since this is a very vital matter.  I don't speak without
sympathy for you either; but, in common with the two
of you—Myles and yourself—this silly woman is
uppermost in my mind—her and her good.  So, since you
ask, I tell you I'm disappointed with you; you've
falsified my predictions of late, and your present
relations with Honor have drifted into a flat wrong
against her husband, though you may be on a plane
as high as heaven, in your own flabby imagination.  This
friendship is not a thing settled, defined, marked off all
round by boundaries.  No friendship stands still, any
more than anything else in the universe.  Even if you're
built of uncommon mud, lack your share of nature, and
can philander to the end of the chapter without going
further, or thinking further, that is no reason why you
should do so.  The husband of her can't be supposed
to understand that you're a mere curiosity with peculiar
machinery inside you.  He gives you the credit of
being an ordinary man, or denies you the credit of being
an extraordinary one, which you please.  So it's
summed up in a dozen words: either see a great deal
less of Honor, or, if you can't breathe the same air with
her apart from her, go away, as an honourable man
must, and put the rim of the world between you.  Try
to live apart, and let that be the gauge of your true
feeling.  If you can bide at Godleigh happy from
month to month without sight of her or sound of her
voice, then I'll allow you are all you claim to be and
give you a plane all to yourself above the sun; but if
you find you can do no such thing, then she's more to
you by far than the wife of another man ought to be,
and you're not so abnormal as you reckon yourself.
This is going right back upon your renunciation in
the beginning—as pitiful a thing as ever I heard tell
about."

"Stay here and never see her!  How would you like
it?  I mean—you see and hear with the mind, though
your eyes are dark.  Of course I couldn't do that.
What's Godleigh compared to her?"

"And still you say that sight of her and sound of her
voice is all you want to round and complete your life?

"Emphatically."

"You're a fool to say so."

"You don't believe it?"

"Nor would any other body.  Least of all her husband."

"A man not soaked in earth would."

"Find him, then.  Human nature isn't going to put
off its garment at your bidding.  If you're only
half-baked—that's your misfortune, or privilege.  You'll
have to be judged by ordinary standards nevertheless."

"Then I must leave the land of my fathers—I must
go away from Godleigh because a man misunderstands me?"

"You must go away from Godleigh because, on your
own showing, you can't stop in it without the constant
companionship of another man's wife."

"What a brute you'd make me!  That's absolutely
false in the spirit, if true in the letter.  The letter killeth.
You to heave such a millstone!"

"You're a poorer creature than I thought," answered
Mark sternly, "much poorer.  Yet even you will allow
perhaps that it is to her relations with her husband, not
her relations with you, that Honor Endicott must look
for lasting peace—if she's to have it."

"Yet I have made her happier by coming back into
her life."

"It's doubtful.  In one way yes, because you did
things by halves—went out of her life and then came
back into it at the wrong moment.  I won't stop to
point out the probable course of events if you had kept
away altogether; that might not be fair to you perhaps,
though I marvel you missed the lesson and have
forgotten the punishment so soon.  Coming back to her,
ghost-haunted as she was, you did make her happier,
for you lifted the horror of fear and superstition from
her.  But now her lasting content is the theme.  How
does your presence here contribute to that?"

"It would very considerably if Stapledon was different."

"Or if he was dead—or if—a thousand 'ifs.'  But
Stapledon is Stapledon.  So what are you going to
do with the advice I've given you?"

"Not use it, I assure you.  Consider what it means
to drive me away from Godleigh!"

"For her lasting content."

"I don't know about that.  Of course, if it could
be proved."

"You do know; and it has been proved."

"Not to my satisfaction.  I resent your putting me
in a separate compartment, as if I was a new sort of
beast or a quaint hybrid.  I'm a very ordinary man—not
a phenomenon—and there are plenty more people
in the world who think and act as I do."

"Go and join them, then," said Mr. Endicott, "for
your own peace of mind and hers.  Get out of her life;
and remember that there's only one way—that leading
from here.  I'm sorry for you, but you'll live to know
I've spoken the truth, unless your conscience was
forgotten, too, when the Lord fashioned you."

Yeoland grumbled a little; then he brightened up.

"My first thought was best," he said.  "I should not
have bothered you with all this nonsense, for it really
is nonsense when you think of it seriously.  I should
have stuck to my resolve—to see Myles himself and
thrash this out, man to man.  And so I will the moment
he's up to it.  The truth is, we're all taking ourselves
much too seriously, which is absurd.  Good-night, my
dear sir.  And thank you for your wisdom; but I'll see
Stapledon—that is the proper way."





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.. _`THE ROUND ROBIN`:

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   CHAPTER VIII.


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   THE ROUND ROBIN

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Before they slept that night Myles had expressed
deep sorrow to Honor for his utterances and
declared contrition.

"The suffering is mine," he said; "to look back is
worse for me than for you."

His wife, however, confessed on her side to a fault,
and blamed herself very heartily for a lapse, not in her
love, but in her thoughtfulness and consideration.  She
declared that much he had spoken had been justified,
while he assured her that it was not so.

The days passed, and health returned to Myles; upon
which Christopher Yeoland, believing the recent
difficulty dead, very speedily banished it from his mind,
met Stapledon as formerly in perfect friendship, never
let him know that he had heard of the tribulation
recorded, and continued to lead a life quite agreeable
to himself, in that it was leavened from time to time
by the companionship of Honor.

Spring demanded that Myles should be much upon
the farm, and the extent of his present labours appeared
to sweep his soul clean again, to purify his mind and
purge it of further disquiet.  All that looked unusual
in his conduct was an increased propensity toward
being much alone, or in sole company of his dogs;
yet he never declined Honor's offers to join him.

She had not failed to profit vitally by the scene in
the sick-room, yet found herself making no return to
peace.  Now, indeed, Honor told herself that her
husband's state was more gracious than her own; for
there began dimly to dawn upon her heart the truth
of those things that Myles had hurled against her in
the flood of his wrath.  She divined the impossible
persistence of this divided love, and she felt fear.
She was sundered in her deepest affections, and knew
that her peace must presently suffer, as that of Myles
had already suffered.  Her peculiar attitude was unlike
that of her husband or the other man.  She saw them
both, received a measure of worship from both, and
grew specially impatient against the silent, pregnant
demeanour of Mark Endicott.  His regard for her was
steadily diminishing, as it seemed, and he took some
pains that she should appreciate the fact.

It grew slowly within her that the position was
ceasing to be tenable for human nature, and not
seldom she almost desired some shattering outburst
to end it.  She was greatly puzzled and oftentimes
secretly ashamed of herself; yet could she not lay
a finger on the point of her offending.  Nevertheless
she missed some attributes of a good wife, not from
the conventional standpoint, which mattered nothing
to her, but from her own standard of right-doing.

Meantime, behind the barriers now imperceptibly
rising and thickening between man and wife, behind
the calm and masklike face that he presented to the
world, Myles Stapledon suffered assault of storm upon
storm.  He knew his highest ambitions and hopes were
slipping out of reach; he marked with punctuations
of his very heart's throb the increasing loneliness and
emptiness of his inner life; and then he fought with
himself, while his love for Honor waxed.  In process of
time he came gradually to convince himself that the
problem was reduced to a point.  She loved Christopher
Yeoland better than she loved him, or, if not better,
then, at least, as well.  She did not deny this, and never
had.  Life with him under these circumstances doubtless
failed every way, because his own temperament was
such that he could not endure it placidly.  He doubted
not that his wife went daily in torment, that she saw
through him to the raging fire hidden from all other
eyes.  He gave her credit for that perspicacity, and
felt that her existence with him, under these
circumstances, must be futile.  He then convinced himself
that her life, if spent with Christopher, would be less
vain.  Through dark and hidden abodes of agony his
soul passed to this decision; he tried to make himself
feel that he loved her less by reason of these things;
and finally he occupied thought upon the means by
which he might separate himself from her and pass
out of her life.

In the misty spring nights, under budding woodland
green, or aloft in the bosom of silence upon the high
lands, he wandered.  A dog was his companion always,
and his thoughts were set upon the magic knife, that
should cut him clean out of his wife's existence with
least possible hurt to her.  By constitution, conviction,
instinct, the idea of suicide was vile to him.  He had
spoken of the abstract deed without detestation in Mark
Endicott's company, had even admitted the possibility
of heroic self-slaughter under some circumstances; but
faced with it, he turned therefrom to higher roads, not
in fear of such a course, but a frank loathing rather,
because, under conditions of modern life, and with his
own existence to be justified, he held it impossible to
vindicate such a step.  And that door closed; he
thought of modern instances, and could recall none to
serve as a precedent for him.  He turned, then, to
consider the mind of Christopher Yeoland, and endeavoured
to perceive his point of view.  Blank failure met him
there; but the thought of him clenched Stapledon's
hand, as it often did at this season, and he knew that
hate was growing—a stout plant of many
tendrils—from the prevalent fret and fever of his mind.  He
worked early and late to starve this passion, but toil
was powerless to come between his spirit and the
problem of his life for long.

His tribulation he concealed, yet not the outward
marks of it.  The eyes of the farm were bright, and
it was natural that he should be the focus of them
all.  There came a night when Myles and his wife
were gone to Chagford at the wish of others, to lend
weight in some parochial entertainment for a good
cause.  Mr. Endicott was also of the party, and so it
chanced that the work-folk had Bear Down house-place
to themselves.  The opportunity looked too good
to miss, and their master was accordingly discussed
by all.

"Some dark branch of trouble, no doubt," said Henry
Collins.  "Time was when he would smoke his pipe
and change a thought with the humblest.  Now he's
such a awnself man, wi' his eyes always turned into his
head, so to say."

"Broody-like," declared Churdles Ash; "an' do make
his friends o' dumb beasts more'n ever, an' looks to dogs
for his pleasure."

"Ess; an' wanders about on moony nights, an' hangs
awver gates, like a momet to frighten pixies, if wan
may say so without disrespect," continued Collins.

"A gert thinker he've grawed of late," said Cramphorn;
"an' if I doan't knaw the marks of thought, who
should?"

"Sure a common man might 'most open a shop with
the wisdom in his head," admitted Sam Pinsent; and
Jonah answered—

"He ban't wise enough to be happy, however.  A red
setter's a very gude dog, but no lasting company for a
married man—leastways, he shouldn't be.  Theer's
somethin' heavy as a millstone round his neck, an' dumb
beasts can't lift it, fond of 'em as he is.  The world's a
puzzle to all onderstandin' people; yet theer's none
amongst us havin' trouble but can find a wiser man
than hisself to lighten the load if he'll awnly look round
him.  Theer's Endicott, as have forgot more of the
puzzle of life than ever Stapledon knawed; an' theer's
Ash, a humble man, yet not without his intellects if
years count for anything; an' me, as have some credit
in company, I b'lieve.  Ess, theer's auld heads at his
sarvice, yet he goes in trouble, which is written on his
front and in his eyes.  Best man as ever comed to
Endicott's tu, present comp'ny excepted."

"Theer's nought as we could do for his betterment, I
s'pose?" asked Gaffer Ash.  "I've knawed chaps quick
to take fire at any advice, or such bowldaciousness from
theer servants; but if you go about such a deed in the
name of the Lard, nobody of right honesty can say
nothin' against you.  Now theer's a way to do such a
thing, an' that is by an approach all together, yet none
forwarder than t'others.  Then, if the man gets angry,
he can't choose no scapegoat.  'Tis all or none.  A
'round robin' they call the manifestation.  You puts a
bit of common sense, or a few gude Bible thoughts in
the middle, an' writes your names about, like the spokes
of a cart-wheel, or the rays of the sun sticking out all
around.  So theer's nothin' to catch hold of against
them as send it."

"Seein' we doan't knaw wheer the shoe pinches, the
thing be bound to fail," said Pinsent.  "If us knawed
wheer he was hit, I be sure auld blids like you an'
Jonah would have a remedy, an' belike might find the
very words for it in the Scriptures; but you caan't
offer medicine if you doan't know wheer a body's took to."

"'Tis the heart of un," said Cramphorn.  "I'm allowed
an eye, I think, an' I've seed very clear, if you younger
men have not, that this cloud have drifted awver him
since Squire Yeoland comed to his awn—an' more'n his
awn.  Stapledon be out o' bias wi' the world here an'
theer no doubt."

"I'm sure they'm gert friends, sir, an' awften to be
seed abroad of a airly mornin' together 'pon the lands,"
piped in Tommy Bates.

"Shut your mouth, bwoy, till us axes your opinion,"
retorted Jonah.  "An' come to think on't, seein' the
nature of the argeyment, you'd best clear out of this
an' go to bed."

"Let un listen to his betters," said Mr. Ash.  "'Tis
right he should, for the less he listens to men as a bwoy,
the bigger fule he'll be come he graws.  'Tis a falling
out contrary to all use," he continued.  "Missis was set
'pon squire fust plaace; then, second place, he died; an',
third place, she married t'other; fourth place, he comed
to life; an' fifthly an' lastly, 'pon this thumb of mine,
he graws rich as Solomon, an' bides in pomp an' glory
to Godleigh again."

"An' they'm awften about together, drivin' an' walkin'
for that matter; though God, He knaws I'd be the last
to smell a fault in missis," said Jonah.

"Damn bowldacious of the man, however," declared Pinsent.

"'Tis so; an' all of a piece wi' his empty life, fust to
last; an' that's what's makin' Myles Stapledon go heavy
an' forget to give me an' others 'Gude-marnin'' or
'Gude-evenin',' 'cordin' to the time of day.  He thinks—same
as I do—that theer's a sight tu much o' Yeoland in the
air; an' yet he's that worshipful of his wife that, though
maybe she frets him, he'd rather grizzle hisself to
fiddle-strings than say a word to hurt her.  'Mazin' what such
a wonnerful woman sees in that vain buzz-fly of a man."

"You'm right, no doubt, Jonah," assented Ash.  "An'
if 'tis as you say, an' we'm faaced wi' the nature of the
ill, us might do our little in all gude sarvice an'
humbleness towards the cure."

"The cure would be to knock that cockatrice 'pon the
head an' scat his empty brains abroad wance for all.
Then the fule would have to be buried fair an' square, wi'
no more conjuring tricks," declared Jonah Cramphorn.

"You'm an Auld Testament man, for sartain!" admitted
Collins in some admiration.

"Fegs!  So he be; but these here ain't Auld Testament
days," said Churdles Ash; "an' us caan't taake the
law in our awn hands, no matter how much mind we've
got to it.  'Tis a New Testament job in my judgment,
an' us'll do a 'round robin' to rights, an' set out chapter
an' verse, an' give the poor sawl somethin' very high an'
comfortin' to chew 'pon.  Truth to tell, he's a thought
jealous of his lady's likin' for t'other.  I mean no
rudeness, an' if I doan't know my place at fourscore, when
shall I?  But so it seems; an' the fact thraws un back
'pon dogs an' his awn devices, which is very bad for his
brain."

"What's the gude o' texts to a jealous man, whether
or no?" asked Jonah scornfully.

"Every gude; an' even a bachelor same as me can see
it.  Fust theer'll be the calm process o' handlin' the
Word an' lookin' up chapter an' verse, each in turn;
then the readin', larnin', markin', an' inwardly digestin';
then, if we pick the proper talk, he'll come to a mood
for Christ to get the thin end of the wedge in wi' un.
An' so us'll conquer in the name of the Lard."

"'Pears to me as a bloody text or two wouldn't be
amiss.  I'd like to fire the man up to go down-long to
Christopher Yeoland an' take a horse-whip to un, an' tan
the hide off un.  Theer's nought cools a lecherous heart
like a sore carcase," growled Jonah, reverting to his Old
Testament manner.

Then Mr. Collins created a diversion.

"I won't have no hand in it anyways," he said.  "'Tis
a darned sight tu perilous a deed to come between a
man and wife, even with a text of Scripture, 'specially
when you call home how hard 'tis to find lasting work.
Us might all get the sack for it; an' who'd pity us?"

"All depends 'pon how 'tis done.  Wi' a bit of round
writin' the blame doan't fall nowheers in partickler."

"'Tis the wise ch'ice of words such a contrivance do
depend on; an' what more wise than Paul?" inquired
Jonah Cramphorn.  "I read the seventh of Romans to
my wife 'pon our wedding night, and never regretted it.
He hits the nail on the head like a workman; an' if
theer's trouble arter, the chap will be fallin' out wi' an
anointed apostle, not us.  Ess, I be come round to your
opinion, Ash.  Us had better send it than not.  You
wouldn't have had the thing rise up in your head if
Providence didn't mean us to do it."

"Might be safer to send it wi'out names, come to
think of it," suggested Collins; but Gaffer Ash scorned
the cowardly notion.

"Wheer's the weight of that?  No more'n a leaf in
the wind wi'out names.  No sensible pusson would heed
advice, gude or ill, as comed so.  'Tis awnly evil-doers
as be feared to sign an' seal their actions."

"Us might send it to she, instead of he," suddenly
suggested Cramphorn.  "Her's more to us, God bless
her; an' a woman's better able to brook such a thing.
She doan't see how this here do 'pear to other people,
else she'd never give the chap as much as 'Gude-marnin''
again.  An' her'll be fust to mark the righteous
motives to the act.  Gimme the big Bible from the
dresser-drawer, Tom Bates; an' then go to your bed.
Us doan't want a green youth like you in the document.

"A dangerous thing to give advice wheer it ban't
axed," mused Pinsent; "an' specially to your betters."

"So dangerous that I'll have no part nor lot in it,"
declared Henry.  "The dear lady's temper ban't what
it was, so your darter tells me, Cramphorn; an' you've
got a mother an' sister to keep, Samuel, so you'd best
to bide out of it along wi' me."

Mr. Cramphorn was turning over the leaves of an old
Bible thoughtfully.

"Paul's amazin' deep versed in it, seemin'ly," he said.
"'Pears as he was faaced wi' just such a evil when he
wrote an' warmed up they Corinthians.  Listen to this
here.  'An' unto the married I command, yet not I, but
the Lard, Let not the wife depart from her husband:
But an' if she depart, let her remain unmarried.'"

"Awften had a mind 'pon that scripture myself,"
declared Mr. Ash.

"An' lower down he's at 'em again.  Hark to this:
'Art thou bound to a wife? seek not to be loosed.
Art thou loosed from a wife? seek not a wife.'  I
reckon most men doan't need to be told that last.
Then theer's another bracing word further on.  Parson
Scobell preached 'pon it awnly last month.  Ephesians,
fifteenth of five: 'See then that ye walk circumspectly,
not as fules, but as wise.'"

"Tu strong for a lady," said Mr. Ash.

"Not so, Churdles.  I'm the last to say or set a hand
to any awver-bitter speech.  'Tis what her wants to
awpen her butivul eyes, an' shaw her the right road,
same as them 'twas fust writ for.  An' here—same
chapter: 'Wives, submit yourselves to your awn
husbands, as unto the Lard.'  Ban't tawld to submit
theerselves to young, flauntin' bachelors, you see; an' then it
says how women should hold theer awn men in special
reverence."

"Theer's the twinge, an' I'd have 'e put that in for
sartain," declared Churdles.  "If her reverenced un, her
wouldn't go about in high-wheeled, cranky dog-carts with
t'other.  Ess, put that down; together wi' any light
hint against the lust of the flaish, so long as you can
find it set out in parlour language."

Mr. Cramphorn took pencil and paper to his task;
and Gaffer Ash, with the help of a round candlestick,
drew a shaky circle in the middle of a sheet of foolscap.
"Our names will all stick around," he said; "an' in
the midst Jonah will set chapter an' verse.  Perhaps
ten verses might be enough to right the wrong, an' if
you'm quick, Cramphorn, us'll get it in a henvelope an'
addressed to missis, then slip it off to bed an' leave the
manifestation 'pon the table against her comes home."

"More respectful to send it through the post," ventured
Collins; and Churdles admitted that it might be so.

"P'raps you'm right theer, Henery.  Ess, for sure
you be; an' you'm gwaine into Chaggyford wi' the cart
fust thing to-morrow, so you can post it theer; then
'twill come wi' all the dignity of the mail," he said.

Jonah finished his pious task and wrote his name;
Churdles Ash, who had only learned to write in middle-age,
set down a shaky signature, half schoolboy's, half
senile in its wavering line; Pinsent wrote a laboured
but well-regulated hand, and Mr. Collins also subscribed,
yet with such uneasiness that one might have imagined
he was signing his own death-warrant.

"Even now I'd like to hear Maister Endicott 'pon it,"
he murmured.  "If he was against it, I'd never willingly
countenance the step."

"He'm wan of the family; an' whenever was it knawn
as a female gived credit to them of her awn blood for
sense?" inquired Jonah.  "Why, 'tis last thing they
think of.  No; us o' the land will send this here for
gude or evil.  We'm doin' our duty an' shan't be no
worse thought of.  She'm a wonnerful woman—a queen
among 'em at her best—always was so—an' she'll think
the better of us for this transaction."

"She'm just the sort to put a bit on our wages if the
'round robin' worked to her betterment—a most
grateful woman," said Sam Pinsent, who from doubt had
suddenly sprung to the extremity of hope.

"Ess—an' if her didn't, he would, so like as not,"
declared Gaffer Ash.  "If this sets all right an' makes
'em happy an' sensible an' onderstandin', in the name of
the Lard and of Paul, how much smoother 'twill be for
all parties!"

"An' if all works well an' nobody don't do nothin',"
suggested Pinsent, "it might be a question whether us
shouldn't send in another to remind 'em of theer
well-wishers.  However, that's in the future."

"'Twould be like sendin' in a bill, an' not to be dreamt
of," answered Cramphorn.  "'Tis awnly a small-fashioned
mind as would think of such a thing."

Pinsent retorted; but at that moment footsteps and
voices warned the company.  Pipes were relighted; the
Bible was placed in the dresser-drawer; wide innocence
sat upon each brown face; and, like lead within the
breast pocket of Henry Collins, reposed the 'round
robin' destined, as all hoped, to such notable issues.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`RED DAWN`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER IX.


.. class:: center medium bold

   RED DAWN

.. vspace:: 2

The admonition culled from Paul was duly posted,
and henceforth Collins avoided his mistress with
utmost care, while Pinsent, fear again overtaking him,
did likewise.  Cramphorn, on the contrary, itched to
hear or see some definite result of his daring, while as
for the ancient Ash, he went unmoved upon his way.
To tell truth, the missive made an impression as deep
as any of those responsible for it could have desired;
but they never knew of its results, for the outgrowth of
them was swept away by greater concerns.  When
Honor first received the "round robin," she felt amused;
then she became annoyed; and, lastly, she grew anxious.
The sort of men responsible for this audacity she
understood, and she was aware the action sprang from honest
purpose and most laudable intent.  Cramphorn, the
master spirit, worshipped her with high devotion, and
she knew it; for the rest, they had but done as he bid
them.  The selected quotations, which Honor carefully
consulted, were not indeed apposite, yet had this value,
that they showed her how present relations appeared
in the eyes of an ignorant, though impartial
countryside.  She was astounded at such an uncharitable
and painful mistake; yet, seeing that the error existed,
and was probably widespread, the wife felt thankful to
know it.  She fluctuated between contempt and anger,
then finally fell back upon a condition of real concern.
First she thought of showing the paper to Myles, but
feared that his lack of humour might prompt him to
austere treatment of her censors.  To speak to
Christopher was out of the question, and Honor, after some
demur, decided that her uncle should know.  From him
she expected full measure of sympathy in her
embarrassment, but she was disappointed of this hope.

"Very interesting and instructive," said the old man,
after his niece had begun in laughter and ended with
recitation of every text to which the document referred;
"very interesting.  So we may learn from the mouths
of babes and sucklings."

"I ought to be cross with them.  Fancy Cramphorn
so greatly daring, despite his feudal instincts!"

"Shows how much and how deeply the man must
have felt constrained to act.  You say you should be
cross.  Why?  They only try to give you some practical
light.  There's a great, deep goodwill behind this."

"But it is such nonsense."

"They don't think so."

"Surely you're not going to take it seriously, Uncle Mark?"

"Most seriously; and so do you, though you pretend
to laugh—as if I didn't know every note in your
laughter, like every note in a ring of bells.  It is
serious.  You cannot defy simple, wholesome usage
and custom for ever."

"But who has a right to speak while Myles is silent?
If I hurt him, he would tell me.  He is quite himself
again."

"Shows how little you know him, for all your love of
him.  You are hurting him, and my ear tells me more
than all your senses can tell you.  He lives in a dreary
hell and speaks out of it.  I can almost see his face
when I hear his voice."

"I'm always thinking of him."

"Yes, with a moiety of your thoughts.  It isn't
allowed one woman to make two men wholly
happy—else you might succeed.  But you're only following the
old, stale road and making two men wholly miserable.
Any fool in a petticoat can manage as much.  That's
the foundation your present content is built upon.
There's awful wickedness in it, to my mind; and
double-distilled sin coming from such as you, because
you're not a fool at all, but have sense enough to profit
by experience.  You must be aware that Myles is a
wretched man; and, though you may not think it,
Yeoland knows very well he's living in a wrong
atmosphere—a mere shadow of happiness.  Better far you
make one happy, out-and-out, than keep each miserable.
One has got to smart, and the sooner you decide which,
the better for both."

"That you should ever speak so!"

"You've fallen away much of late—in mind and
conduct I mean.  Your fine, sharp instincts are grown
blunter.  You can live this mean, half-and-half life;
and you don't understand, or you won't.  There's no
passion in it, I do think, and I suppose you can go on
being fond of two men without disgracing Endicott
breed; but I'll speak plainly, since it's vital I should.
Men are different.  They're not built to go on mooning
with a talking doll for ever.  Even Christopher Yeoland
is made of flesh and blood.  A woman may be all
mind; a man never is.  Now, what are you, and what
are you doing?  You're a married woman, and you're
ruining the life of about the worthiest man I've been
happy to meet since my own brother—your dear
father—died.  End it—if Yeoland hasn't got strength and
determination sufficient to do so.  Tell him your mind;
be true to your husband, and bid the man go—if he is
a man."

Honor Stapledon listened to this grave rebuke with a
heaving breast.

"You call that justice!  You would ask him, after all
he has suffered and endured, to go away from his own?
You would coldly bid him turn his back on all that
makes life worth living for him—Godleigh?"

"Without the least remorse, if he can't stop decently."

"To judge so vilely!  If you cannot understand and
appreciate the fact that Christopher isn't made of common
clay, then the case is hopeless."

"Coarse clay or china clay, he's a callous, cruel
devil to do what he is doing; and you can tell him so
from me."

"I'm only sorry that you so hatefully misunderstand
Christo."

For once the blind man let his anger run over.  It
had been boiling for many days, and now, before this
attitude in Honor, he could restrain the explosion no more.

"Damn Christo!" he said.  "Damn him for a poor,
white-livered, whole cowardice of curs rolled into one!
Your husband's worth a wilderness of his sort, and you
ought to know it, and—there, I'll not say more.  I
blamed Myles first for being jealous of nought; now
I blame him no more.  Reason is with him.  And
though this boneless thing doesn't know better, you
ought to, if only to credit your stock.  What's come to
you?  What's sapped up all your old sense and self-respect?"

She stared at his wrath as at a new experience.

"I am unchanged," she answered, "though all the rest
of my little world is going mad it seems.  I have been
misled and mistaken, if you are right, though I am not
sure at all that you are.  Certainly I thought after his
illness, and the things he said to me then, that Myles
was looking at this matter from my own rational
stand-point.  He grew sensible again—the old, wise Myles.
But if you are correct in this monstrous belief, Myles
must have set my mind at rest at the cost of his own
peace.  Yet could he hide that from me?"

"Not if your eyes were as they used to be.  There
must be no more rest at any rate—neither rest nor
peace—till I'm proved right and the case is righted,
or I'm shown wrong, when I'll not be backward in
begging for forgiveness.  Only remember, it's got to
come from you—this clearing up.  Myles will do nothing
while he thinks your happiness is in blossom; he'll go
on silently fretting his soul sour; and t'other will do
nothing—that I'll swear to—unless a pitchfork be taken
to him.  Enough said now.  Have it out with your
husband, and first put yourself in his place so far as
your knowledge of him allows.  Look out of his eyes,
and try to feel what this means to such a man—ay, or
any other man worth calling one."

"I will think of what you say.  At least, you are
right when you tell me that I have degenerated.
Happiness means degeneration, I suppose."

"You're the last leaf of an old tree, and I'd have you
live beautifully, and make a good end, and leave a
fragrant memory to your children."

"He's the last of his line, too—Christopher."

"That rests with him probably.  It is well that he
should be if he's no more than appears.  But I have
done, and am cool again.  I'm sorry if I've hurt you.
I love you better far than anything in the world, yet
you've given me cause for deep mourning of late days."

Honor prepared to speak, but did not do so.  She
looked at her uncle's wrinkled, grey face and blind eyes,
bent down, kissed him on the forehead, and then
hastened away without any more words.

.. vspace:: 2

While the matter of this serious speech was in his
wife's mind, it chanced that Stapledon and the Squire
of Godleigh met after the dawn hour, each being led
to the same spot upon his homeward way.  Neither
had seen the other for some weeks, and by mutual
exchange of thought, a common subject leaped to the
mind of each.

Myles had been upon Kes Tor to see the sunrise;
Christopher was returning from a further point; and
now in the valley beneath Batworthy Farm they met,
where Teign, touched with ruddy gold of the morning,
wound murmuring along.  Upon one bank the hill
rose sharply under silver birch, mountain ash, oak, and
concourse of tall pines; to the north more gradual
acclivities of shaggy moor extended, and these were
broken into leek-green beds of sphagnums, and gemmed
with ruddy sundews, where springs opened or rivulets
wound with little bubbling whispers to the river.  A
red dawn scattered the stream with stars and sparks
reflected from low eastern clouds above the sunrise;
and this radiance, thrown upward from the water,
touched the under-leaf of the alders, where they hung
above the stream and slashed the shadows with sanguine
light.  A spirit, sweet, fresh and dewy as any naiad,
dwelt here; the place was bedecked with mossy greens
and olives, duns and transparent velvet-browns, all
softened and swept with the purest opaline blue, by
contrast of dawn shadows with dawn fire.  Rock shapes
upon the river-bed, perfect in their relations of colour
and of form, made most harmonious medley of manifold
planes.  They were touched by sunshine, modelled to
the outlines of their mosses by great violet shadows
spread between flame-lances from on high, blended by
ripple and shimmer of reflected light from the river,
broken in mass by the green rushes and tall grasses, by
the dancing briar, its point under a waterfall, by the
snowy blossoms of great umbel-bearers, and by the
majestic foliage of king fern.  Teign splashed and
spouted crystal-bright through this display of forms
and colours, and there was pleasant music of water and
murmur of new-born leaves, while red light came and
went through the dawn purity, soaked each dingle with
misty gold, and chequered the river with many shades
of ambers and agates and roses agleam together.

"Sons of the young morning—you and I!  This is our
hour, and we suck life from the risen day," said Christo,
extending a hand to the other as they met at stream-side.

"Rain's coming," answered Myles; "and this splendour
will be drowned long before noon."

"Then let us make the most of it.  I'm glad we met
here.  A happy place to talk in, with fair things to fill
one's eyes."

"What is there to talk about?  I'm afraid our interests
are too widely separated."

"Well, that will do for a start.  I want to talk, if you'll
listen.  Frankly, Stapledon, we are not what we might
be each to the other.  I wish I understood you better.
There's hardly a man in the world that I regard more
deeply.  Yet I know right well you don't echo the
sentiment.  We grow less intimate daily, instead of
better friends.  Yet we're bound together in a sort of
way by the past, however distasteful that may be to
you.  At least I should say we must be.  And so many
common interests—say what you please to the contrary.
Both fairly intelligent and intellectual, both prone to
probe under the surface of things.  What's the barrier?
Frankly I have no idea.  I thought at one time it might
have to do with Honor; and so did Mr. Endicott.  He
talked to me with amazing vigour and plain choice of
homely words.  Yes, honestly, he made me feel like
a criminal lunatic for about a week.  Then, thank God,
you recovered your health, and we met, and I saw at
a glance that the old man was utterly wrong and had
been engaged with a mare's nest.  Yet there's a gulf
between us, despite so much that we enjoy in common."

"Since you wish to speak of this, I say that there are
some things that cannot be enjoyed in common."

Yeoland started.

"You mean that I was wrong, then, and Mr. Endicott
right?  But don't you see how infernally greedy and
unreasonable you are?  Either that, or you continue to
misunderstand me of set purpose.  I gave you Honor
for your own; yet you grudge me my place at
Godleigh—at the footstool of the throne you share with her.
What do I rob you of?  Do the birds rob you when
they eat the crumbs fallen from your table?  I cannot
remotely judge of your attitude."

"That is true; but every other man can.  And it may
be that many do."

"Have you considered that this position you take is
in some measure a reflection on your wife?"

"I have not, and if I had, I do not ask your criticism
upon that."

"Well, I shall never see how you hold any ground
for this ridiculous animosity, Stapledon; but for the
sake of argument, you must be conceded a case.  What
is your exact grievance in English?  The thing I have
done I can do again: go; but before we imagine you
bidding me to do so, or picture me as obeying, out of
regard for Honor—before that climax, I say, consider
what you are doing in common justice.  By banishment
you take from me every temporal and spiritual treasure
worth living for.  As I stand here, I believe I am a
happy man—almost; happy in Godleigh; happy in
renewed intercourse with Honor; happy—on my oath
before Heaven—in the knowledge that she belongs to
you.  I may be unfinished and unfurnished—only half
a man, as Mark Endicott didn't hesitate to tell me; but,
such as I am, this hillside is my life, and, if you bade
me depart from it and I went, then I should presently die."

Myles lifted his head and looked from under his
brows half in contempt, half in dubiety.

"You're a slight thing to turn a man's hair grey—a
slight thing on your own showing," he answered.
"Can you dissect yourself so glibly and mean it?  You
parade your own emptiness without flinching.  Yet you
believe what you say, no doubt; and there may be truth
in it, but not all the truth.  I can't suppose you utterly
abnormal in your attitude towards other people, just
because you say you are."

"I say no such thing.  It was Endicott who said so.
I say that my view of life is very much more exalted
and my standards higher than—yours, for instance.  If
you could understand my plane, you would understand
me; but you can't.  The æsthetic habit of mind is
beyond your percipience."

"Then we can leave it out.  You may deceive yourself
with big words, nobody else.  What are you going
to do?  That is the question.  The fact that my peace
of mind and my salvation are bound up in my wife
is unfortunate, because I neither wish you to consider
me, nor do I desire to be under any further obligation.
But Honor is my wife, and, as that relationship is
understood by common men, it carries with it definite
limitations.  She loves you, and never attempts to hide
it.  Her primitive nature is big enough to find room in
her heart for us both; but my still more primitive nature
can't tolerate this attitude.  I'm not big enough to share
her with anybody else, not big enough to watch her
happier than the day is long in your company."

"You think soberly and honestly that the world grows
too small for the three of us?"

"Little Silver does."

"We might toss up which of us blows his brains out."

"Try to feel as serious as I do, Christopher Yeoland.
Try to look at the future of this woman's life, since you
have approached me upon it."

"I do so, and I see a life not necessarily unhappy.
A woman heroic enough to love two men deserves
double share of happiness; don't you think so?"

"I suppose you're in earnest, though God knows it is
not easy to argue with such a babbler."

"No, I'm not flippant.  It is you who have got the
perspective of this thing all wrong.  If you were a little
older, you would see how absurd it is to try and turn
pure comedy into drama.  If you were only a better
judge of character—can't you understand that I'm
incapable of tragedy?  There's nothing hurting you, or
going to hurt you, but your own narrow nature.  When
we're all white-headed—the day after to-morrow, or
so—when we are all grown into the sere and yellow—you
will be the first to laugh, through toothless gums, at
this, and say that I was right."

"Well, we won't argue, because there's no solid
ground where we can meet as a foundation for any
possible sort of understanding.  You take such a view
of life and its responsibilities as I should have supposed
impossible for a reasonable being.  We're different to
the roots, and, materialist though I am, I recognise, a
million times more deeply than you can, the demands
of this existence and the need to justify it.  Now listen,
and then we will part: I tell you that in my judgment
as her husband, my wife's ultimate happiness and
content and mental health will be more nearly assured if
you go out of her life than if you stop in it.  I ask you
to go out of it.  I recognise all that this demand means,
especially as coming from me to you.  You'll gauge
the depth of my convictions that I can bring myself to
ask you so much—for her sake, not mine."

"You want me to turn my back upon Godleigh?"

"I do; as that is apparently the only way you can
turn your back on Bear Down."

"You have no right to ask such a thing."

"Under the circumstances I consider that I have."

"There is another alternative."

"I cannot see it then."

"You will though, before you sleep to-night.  I shall
not suggest it to you; but such a level-headed man as you
are must presently see it for himself.  I say I shall not
propose it, because my peace of mind is not at stake.
As a matter of fact, you're arguing for yourself now,
though you fancy you are speaking for Honor.  She's
very nearly happy, and would be perfectly so if you
were.  It is your five-act drama manner and general
tragic bearing that make her feel more or less
downcast.  And I am also happy.  Now, consider; if I clear
out, you'll be joyous again; I shall be in doleful dumps,
of course, and Honor——?"

"Well?"

"Don't you know?  She can't help loving us both.
She can't alter that now, poor girl.  If she knows I'm
miserable, she certainly won't be happy.'

"You are making your position clear to me.  She is
not unhappy now, though my life is dark; but if your
peace of mind was spoiled, then hers would suffer too.

"It may appear egotistical, but I think that nearly
defines the situation."

"Which is to say that you are more to her than I am?"

"Remorseless logic, but—no; I don't assert that for a
second.  You are her husband.  Such a delicate question
should not be raised."

"It is raised, and she must decide it."

"My dear Stapledon, let us have no brutality.  Do
try to catch a little of her big, pure spirit.  We may
both learn from her.  These earthly wranglings would
shock her immeasurably."

"You won't leave this place?"

"Not unless Honor asks me to do so, and without
inspiration.  Now, good-bye.  To think of the sweet air
we've wasted in such futilities!  You're right about the
rain.  Look away south."

Yeoland rose from the mossy stone whereon he had
pursued this matter, and quickly disappeared; Myles
also moved upon his way.  Great slate-coloured ledges
of cloud were already sliding upwards from the Moor,
and it was raining by the time the farmer returned
home to his breakfast.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A MAN OF COURAGE`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER X.


.. class:: center medium bold

   A MAN OF COURAGE

.. vspace:: 2

Sally Cramphorn found the secret of her
happiness hard to hide, and as the weeks lengthened
into months and Libby still bid her hold her
peace, yet would give no definite reason for the imposed
silence, she grew somewhat restive.  He refused to
discuss dates, and declared that a year at least ought
to pass in order that each should thoroughly
understand the other before irrevocable matrimony.  Under
these circumstances Sally found her engagement fall
something flat.  She was in no haste to marry, but
importunate that the world might learn of her good
fortune; and finally, after a decided difference or two
upon the question, Gregory realised that definite steps
must be taken, and at once.  First he thought of telling
Sally, with frankness, how he had made a mistake, and
was of opinion that, by reason of wide disparity in
their dispositions, she could be no bride for him; but,
to do Gregory justice, all manner of sincerity he
consistently abstained from, and, in the present case, more
than a candid bearing seemed necessary.  To throw
Sally over before her face called for full measure of
courage, and any such step, until he was thoroughly
established in Margery's good graces, must be highly
dangerous.  So Libby assured himself.  He determined,
therefore, first to propose to Sally's younger sister, win
to his side the strength of her personality and the
bitterness of her tongue, then explain his mistake to Margery
and leave her wit to solve and escape from present
entanglement with the wrong woman.

For once Mr. Libby acted speedily upon a decision,
sought out the other maiden, lured her from the sheltering
radius of the farm, and proceeded with his proposal
after a plan very similar to that which had conquered
Sally.

"It's took me a long time—I may say years—to make
up my mind," he said, chewing a blade of grass and
glancing sideways at the rather hard profile of Margery;
"but I do think as you'm the best maid in Little Silver,
cautious though I am by nature.  Ess, a wife's a solemn
thought, yet you come nearer my fancy than any gal
ever I seed or heard tell of, Margery Cramphorn.  You've
got a warm heart, as would make any man happy, I
should reckon; an' to cut a long story short, I've
ordained to marry you, if you'm willin'."

For answer Margery began to cry; but she let him
kiss her, so he knew that the response was favourable.

"Doan't blubber about it.  'Tis a joyful thing; an'
I'm sure I'm mazed wi' gladness to think as you can
care for me.  An' I hope as your love be big enough
to last."

"Always, always, till we'm auld mumpheads—so long
as ever I can see an' move an' love—so long I'll do for
you an' fight for you, dear Gregory."

"Caan't say no fairer, an' I b'lieve you mean it.  An'
the whole beauty of married life lies in the woman
putting the man fust—so my mother said; 'cause he'm
the bread-winner an' must be thought of all times.  An'
you might remember my mother's ways wi' me—a very
gude, comforting, proper woman.  I ban't a horse for
strength, an' comfort I must have."

"Which you shall have—love an' worship always,
dear Gregory; an' I'm a proud maiden to think such
a rich man as you could look to me for a helpmate.
An' you shan't never be sorry; an' faither do set me
higher'n Sally, so come presently I'll bring 'e more'n
myself."

"That's no odds.  A chap in love doan't heed no such
things as them; but theer's wan point as I ban't ezacally
clear on touchin' Sally.  I can't say nothin' now;
but—but next time we meet, I'll tell you how it stands—a
mystery like.  She'm a gude gal, no doubt, but tu apt
to run away with ideas an' misread a man's intentions,
an' take for facts things what she've dreamed in her
sleep, I reckon.  But bide till next Monday, then I'll
make it clear.  Now we'll just love each other an' tell
about marryin'."

"Oh, Greg, I do blush to think of it.  An' I've longed
for 'e, out o' sight, all these years an' years!  Won't her
be raw—Sally?  Her always thought as she was the
favoured piece."

"Ban't seemly in a woman to set her mind 'pon a
chap so outrageous.  But let her bide.  Now, when
shall us be man an' wife?  An' what fashion
wall-hangings would 'e like to the cottage-parlour?  For it
must be done again, 'cause theer's beastly grease 'pon
it, wheer my mother's head got against the wall on
Sundays.  She used to fall asleep regular in a auld
armchair, then roll to the left out o' the chair till the wall
stopped her head.  Done it for years.  An' her recipes
I've kept, an' the wan for herby-pie you'd best larn by
heart, for 'tis favourite food o' mine."

"I will, Greg.  You know how I can cook."

"Wi' a tender-stomached man, same as me, you'll
have to put your heart into the cooking."

"So I will then."

He squeezed her slowly until she gasped.

"You'm strong enough, I reckon, however," she said.
"Your arm be like a bar of steel around me!"

"'Tis love as hardens the sinews.  I've a gert gift
for lovin', an' if a man couldn't love the likes o' you,
he'd be a poor, slack-baked twoad, for sartain.  I'm
lucky to get 'e, an' I knaw it, an' us'll be a happy couple,
I lay—me a-doin' man's work an' makin' gude money,
an' you 'bout the house, so thrifty an' savin' that us
shall graw rich 'fore we knaw it, an' p'raps come to
keep a servant for you to order here an' theer.  An'
me wi' my awn hoss an' trap, so like as not, to drive
to cattle-shows an' junketings, an' taake my plaace in
the world."

"An' I'll sit beside 'e an' look down at the walkers."

"You'll be home-along wi' the childer more like.
That's the mother's plaace.  But us be lookin' a thought
tu far forrard now.  Wait till Bank Holiday anyway;
then I'll meet 'e quiet by the river—down where
Batworthy fishing right ends.  'Tis a private an' peaceful
plaace; an' theer you must fix the day."

"So I will then, an' a proud woman I am, an' a true
wife I'll make you; Lard's my judge."

"Mother——" began Mr. Libby; but he changed his
mind and declared that it was now time to turn homewards.

At Bear Down he left his new love, after cautioning
her by all holy things to keep their secret, and, ten
minutes later, met his old sweetheart returning from
Chagford.  Sally was heavily laden and in a bad
temper.  Indeed Mr. Libby's procrastination seemed
enough to try any woman who heartily worshipped
him.  Now he offered to carry her parcels up the steep
hill to the farm, and such unwonted civility soothed
her not a little.  Presently they rested awhile in the
gathering twilight, and Gregory, with cynic satisfaction,
kissed Sally's red lips while yet he tasted Margery's
caresses.  The experience fired him, and a wave of
fancied courage held his soul.  He told himself that
he was the strong, resolute spirit into whose hand
destiny had thrust the welfare of these simple maids.
He laughed to think what soft wax they were under
his control.  Then he determined to put Sally out of
her misery at once.  He began a sentence to that end;
but he changed his mind as her blue eyes fell full and
honest upon him.  After which she travelled the old,
weary ground and clamoured for a definite understanding
and definite date, superior to all self-respect
in her importunity.

"How long be I to go dumb, anyways?  An' how
long be I to wait?  Us doan't grow no younger, an'
you'm five-an'-thirty come September.  Ban't fair, I
reckon, an' theer's more in it than I can guess, for
you'm like no sweetheart ever I heerd tell 'bout.  So
cold as a newt seemin'ly.  But if your love's gone poor,
then best to say so.  If you'm shamed of me or you've
changed your mind——"

The opportunity was an excellent one, but Gregory's
courage had evaporated.  Moreover, there came into his
head an inspiration.  It occurred to him—while removed
from such an event by distance—that it would be an
exciting incident to invite Sally to the streamside also,
to confront the sisters and clear up the situation once
for all.  The vision of himself between the tearful twain
was pleasing rather than not.  He saw himself the
centre of an impressive scene.

"I'll play the man," he reflected; "an' set her down
handsome afore her sister.  'Tis awnly her word against
mine, an' Margery'll believe me quick enough, for 'tis
her interest so to do."

Upon this heroic resolution he spoke.

"I doan't say as you'm not in the right, Sally, to
ax for somethin' plain.  Us'll come to a fixture next
Monday, as be a holiday.  You meet me wheer
Batworthy fishing right do end, down in the valley onder
the roundy-poundies on the hill, at three o'clock in the
afternoon by my watch, an' us'll settle up 'bout the
axing out in church an' such like."

The girl could scarcely believe her ears.

"Really!  'Tis 'most tu gude to be true."

"I mean it.  Ess fay, I begin to want a wife 'bout
the place."

"I'll come down-long, then, Monday afternoon, rain or
shine."

"Very well.  An' now I'll bid you gude-night.  Mind
the spot an' doan't keep me waitin'; but if 'tis pourin'
cats an' dogs I shaan't be theer, for I've got to be
careful of my paarts, bein' a bit naish, as you knaw."

"Bless 'e, dear Greg; 'tis gert news to me.  An'
you'll never be sorry for it, wance I'm Mrs. Libby—that
I'll swear."

"Theer's awnly wan gal as be the wife for me," he
said, and grinned at his own wit.

So they parted; and while Sally went home all gladness,
forgetting the weight of her parcels in the lightness
of her heart, Gregory moved down the hill occupied
with a curious reflection.

"Theer'll be a 'mazin' tempest o' words between 'em,
I doan't mind a red rage, but I'm always terrible afeared
of a white wan.  Sally'll go so fiery as sunset, an' use
crooked language, no doubt; but that's nothin'.  Awnly
I couldn't cross t'other.  Her turns ash-colour when
her's vexed, an' her tongue's sharper'n a razor.  'Twill
be a gert battle to watch an' a very fine study of female
character, no doubt."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE ROAD TO PEACE`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XI.


.. class:: center medium bold

   THE ROAD TO PEACE

.. vspace:: 2

A month after his conversation with Christopher,
Myles Stapledon made definite and determined
advance upon the road to peace.  There came a night
when he and his wife lay in bed and a bright moon
fretted the wall opposite their eyes with the pattern of
the latticed window.  The man gazed upon this design
as it elongated and stole from left to right; then,
conscious that Honor was not asleep, he spoke gently
to her.

"You are waking," he said, "and I also.  Hear me a
little while, dear heart.  There's no shadow of anger in
what I'm going to say to you.  I'm cool in body and
brain, and I want to look at your life as it must seem in
other eyes—in the eyes of those who love you, though
not as I love you.  I want to be just—ay, and more
than just."

"You are always just, Myles—where you understand.
The hard, impossible thing is to be just where we don't
understand.  You're going to talk to me about Christo;
and I'm going to listen.  You've a right to speak—which
is more than anybody else in the world has, though
certain folks don't realise that.  I thought all was well,
but I am wrong.  You hide behind yourself so much—even
from me.  You are an unhappy man, and you have
not told me, but Uncle Mark has."

"I may be considered so.  And to know that I am
makes you unhappy and Yeoland uncomfortable.  I
have spoken to him recently.  I explained to him that
the present position, apart from my personal feelings
concerning it, was very undesirable and must be
modified, to say the least.  He seemed surprised, but quite
unprepared to make any suggestion.  A plan other
than my own proposal he hinted at, but he did not put
it before me."

"He can feel deeply too; this must have been a shock
and a grief to him."

"At least he recognised that it was so to me.  I think
he was neither shocked nor grieved himself.  If
anything, he felt incensed by my attitude.  The position is
not endurable to me, though you and he see no difficulty.
But I must be allowed the decision, and I say that this
state has to cease—selfish though that may seem to you."

"Then it shall cease.  You could not be selfish if you
tried, Myles.  I, too, can feel a little.  Uncle Mark began
what you are going to finish.  I'm probably faulty in
my intellect, or I should have seen all this sooner.  At
any rate I know what I owe to you—what a husband
you have been to me.  I won't talk of duty; I'll talk of
my love for you, Myles dearest.  That is a live, deep
thing at least."

"I never thought to doubt it, or ask proof of it.  I
knew it was real enough, and believed it immortal
until—not doubt—I won't say doubt came—but sorrow, and
a cloud, and a mist of the mind that was very chilling to
me.  I have lost my way in it of late, and have wandered
wondering how far off you were in the darkness, asking
myself if we were drifting further and further apart,
fearing that it was so."

"You have been too patient, and I too blind.  And I
have loved you more every day, not less."

"It is a question for your decision.  I don't like to
wound your ear with blunt words; but there must be no
more vague misery for want of speech after to-night.
Half the wretchedness of life happens because we're
frightened to speak out, and make a clean wound, and
have done with it.  You're my wife, for better or
worse—not necessarily for good and all.  My heart and soul
are wrapped up in your well-being; but I've got to live
my own life, not yours; I've got to do the unknown will,
and I've no right to let anything from outside come
between me and what I believe is my duty.  Nothing
outside a man can hurt him, unless he suffers it to do
so.  I must not let these troubles stand between me and
my road any longer.  I must go on with the light I
have—alone, if you say so; but I must go on."

"Alone?"

"If you say so.  Self-respect to a man with my
outlook is all he has.  And I'm losing it."

"To live without me?"

"If you say so.  I'm not as conventional as you think,
Honor.  You made certain promises to me under certain
impressions.  The fact that the man whom you believed
to be dead, when you married me, was not dead in reality
absolves you from your undertaking, if you wish to be
absolved.  So at least it stands in my judgment; and
mine is the only judgment, after your own, that you need
consider."

"I swore an oath before God!"

"You swore in the dark.  Now go back to the starting-point
and make up your mind anew.  Which of us is to
have you henceforth—all of you?"

"To think that I should hear you say that!  To know
my actions justify the words!"

"I can very easily teach myself to go without; I can
never tame myself to share.  No man could."

"You have all of me, for ever, and for ever, and for
ever.  I am your wife."

"Don't let that last accident influence you.  Argue as
if you were not; argue as if you were free.  Second
thoughts are often best.  You're linked to me by a chain
that can quite easily be broken if you desire to break it."

"Your words are blunt, as you said they should be;
but you're making the clean wounds you spoke of in my
heart.  They'll heal if they don't kill.  I'd rather
die—much rather die than leave you, Myles."

"Consider.  Yeoland will be just as ready to accept
and applaud your decision as I shall.  He, too, realises
at any rate that this isn't going on.  We don't stand at
the end of our lives; rather at the beginning of them.
We may have fifty years more of it yet—either together
or apart; but not like this."

"The alternatives?"

"We two are the alternatives.  Go to him, if you like,
and I shall know what to do; or stay with me and
abide by my will.  What comes afterwards you may
leave to me.  If you are to be my wife, Honor, you
must shut this man clean out of your existence, for
evermore, absolutely—never speak his name again, or
think it.  And for myself I shall be what I have always
been—neither better nor worse.  I can promise
nothing—nothing of the beautiful side of life.  No rainbows
ever play in my cloudy atmosphere, as they do in his
changeful, April weather.  I am plain, dull, uninteresting,
old-fashioned.  I know nothing, and go joylessly in
consequence—a cheerless soul with little laughter in
me.  Sometimes I think the east wind must blow
colder for touching me.  That's all I have to offer, and
you know it by this time.  What the other can give
you that is better, softer, sweeter for a beautiful woman,
I needn't tell you.  It's the difference all through the
piece between a working farmer and an accomplished
gentleman of no occupation—no occupation but to
make you happy.  And no need to study the world
in your choice; no need to think the accident of a
human contrivance that makes you my wife should
weigh with you.  It was under a wrong knowledge of
facts that you accepted me, and, in any case, we've gone
far beyond paltry conventions and customs.  I shall
respect you more if you fling away that ring and go to
him, than I do at present."

"Can you love me with all your heart and speak so?"

"You know whether I love you."

"And yet you talk so coldly of going on with your
life alone."

"The necessity of facing that has been forced upon
me, Honor."

"Do you think I am even without a sense of duty?"

"Don't let any trumpery consideration of duty weigh
with you.  You have to decide what is to become of
your life.  Consider only your duty to your soul.  Your
religion—of love and fear and belief in an eternity—should
be of service to you here, if ever, for your trust is
in a just Being who metes out reward or punishment
according to the record in the book.  That's a
wholesome assumption if you can accept it; but don't let
minor dogmas and man's additions interfere with your
decision.  By your record you will be judged—so you
believe.  Then create that record; set about it wisely
and decide which line of action leads to making of
the higher history.  If you can justify your existence
better with me, then stay with me; if life lived with
Christopher Yeoland will offer more opportunities of
doing something big and useful and beautiful—as very
likely it might, when we consider his money and
position and sympathetic nature—then it is your duty
to yourself to go to him.  Nobody can decide for
you; but use your best thought upon it and make no
mistake in this critical pass.  Look at it every way
impartially and distrust even your conscience, for that
has been educated by rote, like every other woman's
conscience."

"Your speech is very cynical, Myles; but your voice
is earnest enough."

"There is nothing ironical in what I say; only the
facts are ironical."

"Do you want me to go to him?"

"Yes—if your heartfelt conclusion is that you can
live a finer, worthier life so."

"Don't you know I love you dearly?"

"I know you love us both."

"I've never stopped to contrast or compare.  I was
your wife."

"But I ask you again not to remember that.  Decide
between us, or decide against us.  There's that
alternative.  I've thought of that for you.  Once you said
that, as you couldn't have both, you'd have neither.
That was in jest; but the course is still open in earnest
if the road to your peace points there."

"To leave you.  Oh, Myles, how you must have
suffered and suffered and thought before you could say
these things to me."

She put her arms about him and pressed close to
him.  The light had stolen round and, one by one, the
diamonds of wan silver were disappearing.  He showed
no responsive emotion, but stroked the small hand on
his breast wearily.

"Yes, I have thought a good deal.  Will you decide
what you are going to do in a week?  Is that long
enough?"

"How wicked—how wicked I have been in this.  To
think we can be wicked day after day and never know
it!  And your patience!  And how extraordinary that
you had it in you to speak in this cold, calculating way!"

"A stronger man might have borne it longer—into
old age, perhaps, as Yeoland said.  I could not.  I've got
nothing much beyond my self-respect.  That's the sole
thing that has kept me from destroying you, and him."

She thought upon this, but did not answer it.

"Sleep now," he said, after a pause.  "'Tis the
day-spring nearly.  I've wearied you, but it had to be.
Speak to me again about the matter in a week.  And
don't fear me any more.  Passion against him is clean
passed and gone.  Just a gust of nature, I suppose, that
makes the males fight in season.  I wouldn't hurt a
hair of your head—or his."

She nestled closer.

"Why wait a week when there is no need to wait
a day, or an hour?  I love you—better than anybody
in the world; and I'll tell Christopher that; also that I
have done great wrong in this matter; and I ask you,
Myles, to take me where I shall never see him
again—for his good and because I love you with my whole
heart—all, all of it.  And judge me by what I do
henceforth and not what I say now.  See how I shall
order my life—let that convince you."

He did not speak, but his silence was cardinal—a
hinge on which his whole spirit turned.

"You believe me, Myles?  You know that I have
never spoken an untruth to you."

A sigh rose, and seemed to pass away like an
embodied trouble under the first dawn light—to depart
like a presence from the man and leave him changed.

"I believe you—I believe you.  I wish I could feel
a personal God—to kneel to Him and thank Him, and
to let my life thank Him henceforth."

"I'm a very wicked woman, and I ought to have lived
in the Stone days, for I deserve nothing better than a
hut circle and a cruel master to beat me.  I should
have been kicked about by some old, Neolithic hero
with his dogs.  I'm not big enough to deserve the love
of a man like you, not wise enough even to rate the
depth and height of it.  But you shall see I can learn
still and be single-hearted too.  I'll live differently—higher;
I'll aim anew—at the sun—I'll—I'll——"

Here she broke down, and he comforted her in his
slow, stolid fashion.

"Honor, you are all the best part of me—the best
thing that my life has known, or can know.  Pray that
the time to come may shine brighter seen against gloom
gone.  I've never doubted your motives—never.  I've only
lived in torment, because—there, don't be unhappy any
more.  I could do great things—great things for sheer
thanksgiving.  I must try to pay the world back in coin
for this sunrise.  The rest will be easy now you have
spoken.  Thought can cut the knot that remains, and
I will take deep thought for all of us.  Nothing is left
to hurt us; think of that!  Here's a solid foundation to
work upon, now that you have decided to be my wife."

"What shall you do, Myles?"

"Think of him, and study how best to take you out
of his life with least wound to him.  I can be sorry
for him now."

"His life is to live as well as ours."

"He must learn how to live it; but not from me.  Sleep
now, my own woman, again.  Leave me to think out the
rest.  You don't know what this return means to me;
I can't find the words to thunder out such a heart-deep
thing.  I feel as I felt when first you promised to marry
me.  I am waking out of a long chaos into peace."

Honor answered him, and their conversation presently
grew disjointed as slumber stole over her weary brain.
She sighed once or twice—the shaken sigh that follows
upon tears—then her hand, that held his, relaxed and
fell away.  But Stapledon did not sleep.  A thousand
blind alleys of future action he followed, and countless
possible operations pursued to barriers of difficulty.

At dawn he arose, and, leaving unconscious rest to
repair the fret and turmoil of his wife's mind, pressed
on to new problems.  For the storm-cloud of his
sorrows was touched with light; the ragged
soul-garden within him spread smoothed and purged of
deep-rooted weeds.  He found space for wholesome
seed therein, and passing into the air breathed
wordless prayers upon the pure morning and opened his
heart to the warmth of the sunrise fires.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`PEACE`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XII.


.. class:: center medium bold

   PEACE

.. vspace:: 2

The day was the first of the week, and Myles,
finding that no immediate plan entered his mind
under the risen sun, turned homeward to breakfast,
then announced a determination to take himself upon
the Moor for a tramp alone.  Thither he proposed to
carry his new-found peace, and, once there, he knew
that a final and just decision would reach him from
his counsellors of the granite and west wind.  After
dinner he set forth to spend some hours face to face
with the central fastnesses.  A dog—his great red
setter—accompanied him, and the beast was far less
easy at heart than the man, for storm threatened, and
since dawn sign upon sign had accumulated of electric
disturbances on high.  Thunder had growled about for
some days, yet night was wont to dispel the gloom.

"Gert bouldering clouds, maister," said Churdles Ash,
who met Myles setting forth.  "A savage, fantastic sky
out Cosdon way, and reg'lar conjuring time up-long
in the elements."

Thus this man unconsciously echoed a hoary superstition,
that lightning and thunder are the work of
malevolent spirits.

But Myles, for once much mistaken, saw no
immediate promise of storm.  To the north remote banks
of low cloud, with edges serrate and coppery, sulked
above the distant sea, and all manner of cloud
shapes—cumulus, stratus, and lurid nimbus—were flung and
piled together, indicating unusual turmoil aloft; but
similar threats had darkened several recent noons, and
Stapledon, in a mood most optimistic, trusted the
weather and foretold the storm would delay for many
hours until its purple heart was full to the bursting.

"Exmoor will hold it back as like as not," he said.

Ash, however, believed that he knew better; and it
was certain that the red dog did.  A silence not natural
to the time of day spread and deepened; and the wind
came to life strangely at corners and cross-roads, sighed
and eddied, then died again.

The farmer, with his thoughts busier than his eyes,
strode swiftly onward, for he pictured himself as coming
to great definite resolutions at some spot hid in the
heart of the heather, bosomed deep upon the inner
loneliness, beyond the sight of cattle and the sound of
bellwether.  He desired to reach a region familiar to him,
lying afar off to the south of Cranmere, that central
matrix of rivers.  Here the very note of a bird was
rare and signs of animate life but seldom seen.  The
pad-marks of some mountain fox upon the mire, or
a skeleton of beast, clean-picked, alone spoke of
living and dead creatures; sometimes a raven croaked
and brooded here; sometimes, from a great altitude
above the waste, fell cry of wild fowl that hastened
to some sequestered estuary or fruitful valley of waters
afar off.

Such stations brought sure content and clarity of
mind to this man; they rested his spirit and swept
foregrounds of small trouble clean away until he
found himself at the altar of his deity in mood for
worship.  It was only of late that the magic of the Moor
had failed him, and now, with new peace in his heart,
its power for good awakened, and he knew right well
that solution of the problem before him lay waiting his
advent in the solitudes.

Over Scor Hill he passed, among the old stones that
encompassed each supreme experience of his life with
their rugged circle; then, his leathern leggings dusted to
yellow by the ripe pollen of the ling, he walked onward
over a splendour of luminous pink, crossed northern Teign
under Watern, proceeded to Sittaford Tor, and, steadily
tramping westward, left man and all trace of man
behind him.  The unmarked road was familiar, and
every gaunt hill-crest about him stood for a steadfast
friend.  He crossed the infant Dart; he ploughed on
over the heavy peat hags, seamed and scarred, torn
and riddled by torrents; he leapt from tussock to
ridge, and made his way through gigantic ling, that
rose high above his knees.  Cranmere he discarded,
and now his intention was to reach the loneliest
and sternest of all these stern and lonely elevations.
He beheld the acclivities of Great and Little Kneeset
and other mountain anchorites of the inner Moor; he
passed the huge mass of Cut Hill by the ancient way
cleft into it, and from thence saw Fur Tor's ragged cone
ahead, grassy and granite-crowned.  Stapledon had
walked with great speed by the shortest route known to
him, yet suddenly to his surprise a darkness as of
evening shadowed him, and, lifting his head, he looked
around upon the sky, to regret instantly a preoccupation
that had borne him forward with such unthinking speed.

Strange phenomena were manifesting themselves
solemnly; and they offered opportunity to note the
difference between natural approach of night and the
not less natural but unaccustomed advent of a night-black
storm from the north.  Darkness gathered out of a
quarter whence the mind is not wont to receive it.  A
sudden gloom descended upon the traveller from
Cranmere, and under its oncoming the Moor heads seemed
massed closer together—-massed and thrust almost upon
the eye of the onlooker in strange propinquity each to
other.  A part of the sky's self they seemed—a nearer
billow of cloud burst from the rest, toppled together
like leaden waves on the brink of breaking, then
suddenly frozen along the close horizon—petrified in
horror at tremendous storm shapes now crowding above them.

On every side heath and marsh soaked up vanishing
day, and were nothing brightened by it.  The
amethyst of the ling spread wan and sickly upon this
darkness; only the granite, in studs and slabs far-strewn,
gathered up the light and reflected a fast-waning
illumination from the southern sky.  One sheep-track,
which Stapledon now traversed, was similarly luminous,
where the narrow pathway wound like a snake and
shone between sulky heather ridges, dark as the air
above them.  Over this region, now to a timid heart
grown tenebrous and appalling in its aspect, pale
lightning glared and, still remote, came the growl and jolt
of thunders reverberating above distant granite.  As
yet no rain broke from the upper gloom, and the Moor
retained its aspect of sentient and vigilant suspense.
All things were still clear cut, and to the eye abnormally
adjacent.  Like some incarnate monster, that cowered
under its master's uplifted lash, the desert seemed; and
the granite teeth of it snarled through the heather, and
shone steel-blue in the lightning, while a great storm
stretched its van nearer and nearer.  Yet no breath
stirred a grass blade, and between the intermittent
thunder from on high, a silence, tense and unbroken
by the murmur of an insect, magnified the listening
man's heart-beat into a throbbing upon his ear.

Stapledon now perceived from the congested accumulations
of the sky that a tempest of rare severity must
soon have him at the heart's core of it.  He increased
his pace therefore, and broke into a run.  To turn was
futile, and he hurried forward upon Fur Tor, wherein
some niche or rocky crevice might offer shelter.  Such
a spot he knew to the lee of the great hill; and now he
stumbled forward, while the black edge of the
thunderstorm billowed and tumbled to the zenith, and
swallowed up the daylight as it came.

Upon a tremendous gale, still unfelt at earth-level,
the clouds hurtled in precipices, in streaming black
wisps and ribbons, and in livid solitary patches over the
pallor of dying light behind them.  Then, half-way up
Fur Tor, as he stood panting to regain breath, the
wanderer felt the wind at last.  A hot puff struck his
hotter cheek, then another and another, each cooler and
stronger than the first.  His dog whimpered and crawled
close; there ran a sigh and a shiver through the heath;
grass blades and fragments of dead things floated and
whirled aloft upon little spiral wind-spouts; vague,
mysterious, and solemn—carried from afar, where
torrential rains and hail were already churning the
mosses and flogging stone and heath—there came
the storm murmur, like a tramp of approaching hosts,
or the pulsing of pinions unnumbered.

A grey curtain suddenly absorbed and obliterated
the purple horizon, and softened the sharp details;
lightning stabbed through and seared the watcher's
sight, while thunder immediately above his head
wounded the ear like discharge of ordnance.  He ran
for it, having difficulty to see his way.  The vanguard
of the wind buffeted him; the riot above his head
deafened him; the levin dazed his senses; then by
good chance that spot he sought was reached, and he
crept into a stony hollow opening upon the south-east—a
natural cave among the clatters of the tor, where
two masses of stone stood three yards apart, and a
block falling upon them from above made a pent-house
nearly weather-proof.  Growing heather and fern filled
the interstices, and the spot resembled a large natural
kistvaen of the sort not seldom discovered in the old
Moorland barrows, where Stone men laid the dust of
their heroic dead.

Hither came the raging spirit of this tempest and
looked into the eyes of Myles Stapledon.  Then, at
the moment of its prime fury, when the very roots of
the land were shaking, and its living pelt of heath and
rush seemed like to be stripped from its quivering
carcase by the hail, did Stapledon pluck a way to peace
through future action.  Ever curious, he picked up the
ice morsels, noted how the hailstones, frozen and frozen
again in some raging upper chamber of the air, were all
cast in like mould of twin cones set base to base; and
then, from this observation, his mind turned to the twin
life of a man and woman united indissolubly.  Out of
the uproar came a voice to him, and where the tors
tossed thunder back and forth, until it died among their
peaks, the watcher caught a message affirming his own
heart in its sudden determination.

The simplicity of his conclusion struck him as sure
criterion of its justness; and a mind possessed of one
humorous trait, one faint perception of the ludicrous,
had been surprised into some ghost of laughter before
the idea, had surely smiled—even in a hurricane—before
the inevitable contrast between its past long
intervals of mental misery and this bald, most
unromantic finger-post pointing to peace.  True, no
decision had been possible before Honor's determination
was made known and the nature of the final problem
defined; but now, under all this turmoil of sky and
groan of earth, from his hot mind came a course of
action, right and proper every way, reasonable and just
to each of the three souls involved, yet most unromantic
and obvious.  He stumbled, in fact, upon the manifest
alternative alluded to by Yeoland at their last meeting.
As the master of Godleigh would not depart therefrom,
Stapledon decided that he and Honor must leave Bear
Down.  That the labour of his brain-toil and deep
searching should produce no more notable birth than
this mouse of a plan, that the stupendous storm should
have uttered no greater thing, appeared small matter
to tempt one smile from Myles.  Indeed, he forgot the
weather and all other questions save this step ahead
of him, for upon nearer examination it appeared not at
all simple, but both complex and intricate.  Retreat
was the total of his intention; there appeared no other
way to conquer this difficulty than by flying from it.
He convinced himself that justice demanded this step,
because one must depart from Little Silver, and his
interests in that region could by no means be
compared with those of Christopher Yeoland.

Justice to Honor faced him; but Bear Down was less
to her than Godleigh to the owner, and never had
Stapledon known his wife to manifest the patrimonial
ardour of the man.  Leaving of her old home, therefore,
would be no excessive sorrow to her, and the fact
that such a course must impoverish them was not likely
to count for much with husband or wife.  His mind
ranged forward already.  The fair weather within it
laughed at the elemental chaos around him.  There
was sunshine in his heart, and the whole force and
centre of the storm failed to cloud that inner radiance.
He thought of the future, and in spirit plunged over
seas to the child-countries of the motherland, that he
might seek amongst them a new environment for his
life and Honor's—a new theatre for work.  But from
such flights to the far West and South he returned
upon these austere regions that now stretched around
him, and his heart much inclined to familiar scenes
on the fringe of the Moor hard by the place where he
was born.

Long he reflected until the night or the storm merged
into true dusk, and day closed untimely.  The thunder
passed, and the rain floods, having persisted far beyond
Stapledon's experience of such electric tempests, began
to lessen their volume.  Yet heavy downfalls steadily
drove across the twilight; the wind sank to a temperate
gale, and, below him, mists arose from the new-made
swamps, and woke, and stretched their tentacles, and crept
through desolation round about the footstool of the tor.

A space of five wild leagues now separated Myles
from his home, and he stood night-foundered in the
very capital of the central waste.  Alive to the concern
his absence must occasion, he yet hesitated but a moment
before declining the ordeal of a return journey.  The
man was too experienced to enter upon such a hazard.
He knew that radical changes had overtaken the low
marshes since he traversed them; that the quaking places
over which he had progressed by leaping from tussock
to tussock were now under water; that great freshets
had borne the least rivulets above their banks, and that
an element of danger must await any attempt to retrace
his way until the morning.

Viewed in the light of his new content, this tribulation
looked trumpery enough.  He lighted a pipe, regretted
his small dinner, and sorrowed more for his hungry dog
than himself, in that the great beast was denied
consolation of tobacco or the stimulant of an exalted heart.

Mapping the Moor in his mind, Stapledon considered
every possible way to food and shelter.  He knew more
than the actual roads or ridges, streams or natural tracks
and thoroughfares of beasts; for the inhabiting spirit
and essence of Dartmoor was his—a reward of lifelong
service.  He possessed some of that instinct of the dogs
and birds and ponies born to these conditions.  Like
them, he rarely erred, yet, like them, he often felt, rather
than recognised danger—if danger was abroad; while
he knew that widest experience and shrewdest natural
intuition are not always proof against those perils that
may spring into activity by day or night in these
tenantless, unfriended wastes.

Fur Tor stands near the heart of the Devonshire
moorland.  It is a place not easy to reach at all times,
and impossible to depart from under the conditions now
obtaining.  Water-springs unknown had burst their
founts, and the central sponges were overflowing in deep
murmurs from the hills.  Time must elapse, hours—the
number of which would depend upon future weather—must
pass by before any possibility of Stapledon's
retreat.  His mind drew pictures of the nearest human
habitations around him and the means by which they
might be reached.  Five miles away, by the western
fork of Dart, was "Brown's house"—a ruined abode
of one who had loved the Moor as well as Myles and
built his dwelling upon it.  Only shattered stones stood
there now; but further south, by Wistman's wood of
dwarf and ancient oaks, a warrener dwelt in a cabin on
the hillside.  Yet a network of young rivers and a
cordon of live bogs extended between that haven and
Myles.  Tavy's stream encircled him with its infant arms
and wound between him and safety beyond the forest
boundaries.  Approach to Mary Tavy or Princetown
was also impracticable, and, after very brief deliberations,
the wanderer decided that nothing could be done
until the morning.  This conclusion he announced aloud
to his dog—a pleasantry indicative of his happy mind,
for such an action from Stapledon's standpoint looked
a considerable jest.

Soon the man piled stones before the entrance of his
hiding-place, filled a draughty gap with fern and heather,
and made himself as comfortable as the circumstances
allowed.  Great content was in his heart, and when, near
midnight, the clouds passed, the moon rose and painted
with silver the waters spread below, with frosted silver
the fog that rolled above them, he deeply felt the silence
and peace, their contrast with the frenzy of the past
storm; he roamed in thought through the unutterable
silence of that moonlit loneliness; and presently he
slept, as he had not seldom slumbered on the high land
in time past—within some ruined hut circle, or where
the wolves, through long, primeval nights, once howled
around Damnonian folds.





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.. _`A SOUND OF SUFFERING`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XIII.


.. class:: center medium bold

   A SOUND OF SUFFERING

.. vspace:: 2

Stapledon slept well, and, awakening with the
light, found himself strengthened and refreshed.
The stiffness consequent on a hard bed soon passed
as he rose, stretched himself, strode sharply here and
there to restore circulation, and drank of the morning
air.  Sunlight warmed him, and his thoughts turned
homeward.  He thought first of descending to Two
Bridges and the hospitality that would there await him;
but the day was so brilliant after the storm, and in his
waking mood he felt so well furnished with strength,
that he abandoned this project and determined to tramp
back to Little Silver.  He tightened his belt on his
empty stomach, lighted a pipe, and set his face for home.
It was nearly seven o'clock when he started, and, allowing
for all reasonable interruptions of progress—incidents
inevitable after the storm—he believed that it would be
possible to make the shepherd's cot at Teign Head
under Watern Tor long before midday.

His road of the previous evening he found quite
impassable, and it was nearly nine o'clock before he fairly
escaped from the labyrinth of deep waters and greedy
bog now spread about Fur Tor.  The task of return
indeed proved far more difficult than he had anticipated,
for the present harmonious contentment of his mind,
despite hunger, induced an optimism rare enough in
Myles at any time.  But experience came to his aid,
and he set to work soberly to save his strength for a
toilsome journey.

It is unnecessary to describe the many turnings of
a tortuous way followed at mercy of the unloosened
waters.  Chance ultimately willed the man to Watern—a
craggy fastness familiar enough to him, yet somewhat
removed out of the direct course he had planned.
But Teign's birthplace was overflowing, and, to avoid
morasses beneath Sittaford, he had tended northerly
and so found himself not far from the tremendous and
stratified granite ledges that approach the magnitude of
cliffs on Watern's crown.

Weary enough by this time, and surprised to find
himself somewhat weakened from unusual exertions
and lack of food, Myles paused to rest a little while
on the northern side of the crags.  Here was grateful
shadow, and he reposed in the damp rushes, and felt
his heart weary and his head aching.  His dog similarly
showed weariness, but knew the horizon-line easterly
hid Bear Down, and marvelled why the master should
call this halt, within three miles of home.

Then, pleasantly conscious that the worst of his
difficult enterprise was over, Myles Stapledon suddenly
heard a sound of suffering.  There fell upon his ear
reiterated and hollow meanings, that might be expressions
of pain from man or beast.  Some creature in an
extremity of physical grief was certainly near at hand;
so he rose hastily, that he might minister to the
tortured thing, while his dog barked and ran before him.

And here it is necessary to leave the man for a period
of brief hours, for ancillary matters now merge into our
main theme at this—the climax of the record.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`FROM WORDS TO BLOWS`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XIV.


.. class:: center medium bold

   FROM WORDS TO BLOWS

.. vspace:: 2

Honor by no means enjoyed such easy sleep as
her husband after the thunderstorm; indeed it
can scarcely be said concerning her night's rest that it
held slumber.  The tempest and a belief that Myles
was alone in its midst, brought very real terror to
her; nor did she win much comfort from her uncle's
reiterated assurance that no ill could touch Myles
Stapledon upon Dartmoor.

"Return he won't for certain until morning," declared
the blind man.  "Full of thought he went his way and
forgot to raise a weather eye until suddenly surprised
by the storm.  Its loosened torrents cut him off on the
high land and drowned his way home, no doubt; but
whatever part of the waste he's upon, 'tis familiar
ground to him, and he'll know the nearest way to
shelter and doubtless take it."

In his mind, however, the speaker felt a cloud.  He
was alarmed rather for the storm that he believed
might have burst within Stapledon's heart than for any
chance accident of sudden tempest from without.  Quite
ignorant of the last phase of the other's trial; unaware
that Myles had passed the point of highest peril and
now approached happiness once more, old Endicott
only suspected that this man had reached the climax
of his tribulation, and believed Stapledon's long and
lonely expedition was undertaken that he might wrestle
with his fate and determine some final choice of way.
Herein he judged rightly, but he knew not the modified
enigma that lay before Myles upon that journey to the
desert, and remained wholly unaware that the major
problem stood solved.  Thought upon the matter took
Endicott along dark ways; he remembered words
spoken long ago; and for once a mind usually most
luminous in appraisement of human actions, deviated
from the truth.  Such a mistake had mattered little
enough; for Mark was no harbinger of gloomy
suspicions, and never word of his had made sorrow more
sad or deepened any wound; but a time came when his
conviction, supported by apparent evidence, was
confirmed in his own mind; and from thence cruel chances
willed that it should escape from him to another's
keeping, should hasten night over a life scarcely
advanced to its noon.

A morning of almost extravagant splendour followed
upon the storm, and the soaked world under sunshine
fortified human spirits unconsciously, wakened hopes
and weakened fears in the breast of Honor.  She
walked out before breakfast, and upon the way back
to Bear Down met Christopher Yeoland.

He was full of his own concerns, for the lightning
had fallen upon Godleigh, slain certain beasts, and
destroyed two ancient trees; but, hearing of Stapledon's
absence, Christopher forgot his troubles, mentioned
various comforting theories, and promised to ride far
afield after breakfast upon the Moor.

"He'll probably come back a roundabout way and
drive from Moreton," said Yeoland; "but there's a
ghost of a chance that he may walk direct, after having
put in a night at a cot or one of the miners' ruins.
In that case he'll be starving and wretched every way.
So I'll take a flask and some sandwiches.  Poor beggar!
I'm sorry for him; still he knows the Moor as well as
we know our alphabet, so there's very little need for
anxiety."

But the news of the thunderbolt in Godleigh Park by
no means tended to make Honor more content, and
she returned home in tribulation despite the sunshine.
After breakfast she went out alone, and Christopher,
true to his promise, made a wide perambulation on
horseback; while others, who had planned no special
pleasure for their holiday, also assisted the search, some
upon ponies and some upon foot.  Yet no news had
reached Bear Down by midday, and then Christopher
Yeoland arrived, after a ride of twenty miles.

"A good few wanderers I met and accosted—Moor
men out to look after their beasts and see what harm
last night was responsible for—but I saw nothing of
Myles," he said.  "Gone far down south, depend upon
it.  He'll be here in the course of the evening.  And
it's rum to see the flocks, for the storm has washed
them snow-white—a beautiful thing.  The hills are
covered with pearls where the sheep are grazing.  You
can count every beast in a flock three miles off."

Yeoland lunched at the farm, then trotted
homeward; but Collins and Pinsent, though they had
travelled far that morning, set out again after dinner,
being privately pressed to do so by Mark Endicott.

Elsewhere, true to his word, the man Gregory Libby
repaired to riverside that he might meet Sally and her
sister, and settle that great matter, once and for all,
at a spot quite bathed in sunlight and little framed
to harbour broils, though an ideal tryst for lovers.
Libby was first to arrive, and after waiting for five
minutes a twinge of fear shadowed his mind.  The
deed before him looked difficult and even dangerous
at this near approach.  Gregory, therefore, decided to
slink by awhile and hide himself where he might note
the sisters' arrival without being immediately observed.
They would doubtless prove much amazed each at
sight of the other; they would demand an explanation;
and then he would come forth and confront them.

He concealed himself with some care, put out his
pipe, that the reek of it might not betray him, and
settled down to watch and hear from a position of
personal safety.

Sally was the first to arrive—very hot and somewhat
out of spirits, as it seemed, because the way was rough
for a woman, and her green Sunday dress had suffered
among the bilberries, while a thorn still smarted in
her hand.  Libby saw her sit down, ruefully regard her
gown, and then fall to sucking at her wounded finger.

There followed a period of silence, upon which broke
a slow rustle, and Sally's eyes opened very widely as
another woman, cool and collected, appeared within the
glade.  But Margery also became an embodiment of
surprise as her sister rose and the two confronted each
other.  Then it was that a heartless rascal, from his
secure concealment, felt disposed to congratulate
himself upon it.  He stood two inches shorter than Sally
Cramphorn, and he realised that in her present formidable
mood the part he had planned might prove difficult
to play.

"Merciful to me!  What be you doin' in this brimbley
auld plaace?" asked the elder girl abruptly.

"My pleasure," answered Margery with cold reserve.
"'Pears you've comed a rough way by the looks of you.
That gown you set such store by be ruined wi' juice of
berries."

'"Your pleasure'!  Then perhaps you'll traapse off
some place else for your pleasure.  I'm here to meet a—a
friend of mine; an' us shaan't want you, I assure 'e."

Margery stared, and her face grew paler by a shade.

"By appointment—you—here?  Who be it, then, if
I may ax?"

"You may not.  Mind your awn business."

"I will do, so soon as I knaw it.  Awnly it happens
as I'm here myself to meet a friend, same as
you—an'—an'—is it Henery Collins you'm come to see?  You
might tell me if 'tis."

"Shaan't tell you nothin'—shaan't underman myself
to talk to 'e at all.  I'm sick of 'e.  You'm spyin' 'pon
me, an' I won't have it."

"Spyin' on a fule!  Do 'e thinks I care a farthin'-piece
what you do or what trash you meet?  I'll be
plain, anyways, though you'm 'shamed of your company
whoever 'tis, by the looks of it.  I'm here to meet Greg
Libby; so I'll thank you to go!"

"Him?"

"Ess—him.  He's a right to ax me to meet him
wi'out your leave, I s'pose?"

"No fay, he haven't!  No right at all, as I'll soon
larn him."

Margery blazed.

"An' why for not, you gert haggage of a woman?
Who be you to have the man 'pon your tongue—tell
me that?"

"Who be I?  I be his gal, that's who I be—have been
for months."

"You damn lyin' cat!  *Your* man!  He'm mine—mine!
Do 'e hear?  An' us be gwaine to be axed out
in church 'fore summer's awver."

"Gar! you li'l pin-tailed beast—dreamin'—that's
what you be—sick for un—gwaine mad for un!
We'm tokened these months, I tell 'e; an' he'll tell
'e same."

Awed by such an exhibition, and amazed at rousing
greater passions in others than he himself was capable
of feeling, Gregory sank closer and held his breath.

"'Tis for you to ax him, not me, you blowsy gert
female," screamed Margery, now grown very white.
"Long he's feared you was on a fule's errand.  He
knaws you, an' the worth of you.  An' he an' faither's
friends again, thanks to me.  An' he'm not gwaine to
marry a pauper woman when he can get one as'll be
well-to-do.  You—you—what's the use of you but to
feed pigs an' wring the necks of fowls for your betters
to eat?  What sober man wants a slammockin' gert
awver-grawn——?"

A scream of agony cut short the question, for Sally
beside herself at this outburst, and but too conscious
through her rage that she heard the truth, set her
temper free, flew at her sister like a fiend, and scratched
Margery's face down from temple to chin with all the
strength of a strong hand and sharp nails.  Blood
gushed from this devil's trident stamped into a soft
cheek, and the pain was exquisite; then the sufferer,
half blinded, bent for a better weapon, picked up a
heavy stone, and flung it at close quarters with her
best strength.  It struck Sally fairly over the right
eye, and, reeling from this concussion, she staggered,
held up for a moment, then gave at knee and waist
and came down a senseless heap by the edge of the
water.

Margery stared at this sudden work of her hands;
she next made some effort to wipe the blood off her
face, and then hastened away as fast as she could.
Mr. Libby also prepared to fly.  For the unconscious
woman at his feet he had no thought.  He believed
that Sally must be dead, and the sole desire in his
mind was to vanish unseen, so that if murder had been
done none could implicate him.  He determined not
to marry Margery, even if she escaped from justice,
for he feared a temper so ferocious upon provocation.
Gregory, then, stole away quickly, and prepared to
perambulate round the farm of Batworthy, above the
scene of this tragic encounter, and so return home
secretly.

But circumstances cut short his ambition and spoiled
his plan.  When Margery left her sister, she had not
walked far before chance led her to Henry Collins.  He
was on the way to the Moor once again, that he might
pursue search for Stapledon, when Margery's white face,
with the hideous wales upon it, her shaking gait and
wild eyes, arrested him.  He stopped her and asked
what had happened.

"I've fought my sister an' killed her," she said; "killed
her dead wi' a gert stone.  She'm down to the river
onder Batworthy Farm; an' if 'twas to do awver again,
I'd do it."

He shrank from her, and thought of Sally with a
great heart-pang.

"Wheer be she?  For God's love tell me quick."

"Down below the fishing notice-board, wi' her head
in the watter.  She'm dead as a nail, an' I'm glad 'twas
I as cut her thread, an' I'm——"

But he heard only the direction and set off running.
So it came about that Gregory Libby had not left the
theatre of the tragedy five minutes when Collins reached
it, and saw all that made his life worth living lying
along procumbent beside Teign.  One of Sally's arms
was in the river, and the stream leapt and babbled
within six inches of her mouth.  Her hair had fallen
into the water, and it turned and twisted like some
bright aquatic weed a-gleaming in the sun.

Even as Henry approached the woman moved and
rolled nearer the river; but its chill embrace helped to
restore consciousness, and she struggled to her side,
supported herself with one arm and raised the other to
her head.

Mr. Collins praised the Almighty.  He cried—

"God's grace!  God's gudeness!  Her ban't dead!
Glory be to Faither, Son an' Ghost—her'm alive—poor,
dear, darlin' maid!"

Then he fished Sally from the stream, and hugged
her closer to himself than necessary in the act.  Next
he set her with her back against a tree, and presently
she opened her eyes and sighed deeply, and gazed upon
Henry with a vacant stare.  Then Sally felt warm
blood stealing from her forehead to the corner of her
mouth, and put up her hand to the great contusion
above her eye, and remembered.  Collins, seeing that
her eyes rolled up, and fearing another fainting fit for
her, dipped his Sunday handkerchief in the river and
wiped her face.

"A gashly auld bruise, sure enough; but it haven't
broke your head bones, my dear woman; you'll recover
from it by the blessing o' the Lard."

She became stronger by degrees, and memory painted
the picture of the past with such vivid colours that a
passionate flush leapt to her cheek again.

"Blast him!  The dog—the cruel wretch—to kindiddle
me so—an' play wi' her same time.  What had
I done but love him—love him wi' all my heart?  To
fling us together that way, so us might tear each other
to pieces!  I wish I could break his neck wi' my awn
hands, or see him stringed up by it.  I'll—I'll—wheer's
Margery to?  Not gone along wi' him?"

"No.  I met her 'pon the way to home.  She reckons
she've killed you."

"An' be happy to think so, no doubt.  I sclummed
her faace down—didn't I?"

"Doan't let your rage rise no more.  You've had a
foot in the graave for sartain.  Be you better?  Or
shall I carry 'e?"

She rose weakly, and he put his arm around her and
led her away.  They moved along together until, coming
suddenly above the ridge of the hill, Mr. Libby appeared
within two hundred yards of them.  He had made his
great detour, and was slipping stealthily homeward,
when here surprised.

Sally saw him and screamed; whereupon he stopped,
lost his nerve, and, turning, hastened back towards the
Moor.

"Theer! the snake!  That's him as fuled me an'
brawk my heart, an' wouldn't care this instant moment
if I was dead!"

"'Tis Greg Libby," said Collins, gazing at the
retreating figure with great contempt.  "A very poor
fashion o' man as I've always held."

But Sally's mind was running forward with speed.

"Did you ever love me?" she asked suddenly, with
her eyes on the departing hedge-tacker.

"You knaw well enough—an' allus shall so long as
I've got sense."

"Then kill him!  Run arter un, if it takes e' a week
to catch un, an' kill un stone dead; an' never draw
breath till you've a-done it."

Mr. Collins smiled like a bull-dog and licked his
hands.

"You bid me?"

"Ess, I do; an' I'll marry you arter."

"Caan't kill un, for the law's tu strong; but I'll give
un the darndest dressin' down as ever kept a man
oneasy in his paarts for a month o' Sundays.  If that'll
comfort 'e, say so."

"Ess—'twill sarve.  Doan't stand chatterin' 'bout it,
or he'll get off."

Henry shook his head.

"No, he won't—not that way.  The man's afeared,
I reckon—smells trouble.  He's lost his small wits, an'
gone to the Moor, an' theer ban't no chance for escape
now."

"Let un suffer same as he've made me—smash un
to pieces!"

"I'll do all that my gert love for 'e makes reasonable
an' right," said Collins calmly.  Then he took off his
coat and soft hat, and asked Sally if she was strong
enough to carry them back to the farm for him.

"'Tis the coat what you sat upon to Godleigh merry-making,
an' I wouldn't have no harm come to it for anything."

She implored Henry to waste no more time, but
hurry on the road to vengeance; for Mr. Libby was
now a quarter of a mile distant, and his retreating
figure already grew small.  Collins, however, had other
preparations to make.  He took a knife from his pocket,
went to a blackthorn, hacked therefrom a stout stick,
and spoke as he did so.

"Doan't you fret, my butivul gal.  Ban't no hurry
now.  Us have got all the afternoon afore us.  'Tis
awnly a question of travellin'.  Poor gawk—he've
gone the wrong way, an' theer won't be no comin'
home till I've had my tell about things.  You go
along quick, an' get Mrs. Loveys to put a bit of
raw meat to your poor faace; an' I'll march
up-along.  'Twill be more'n raw meat, or brown paper'n
vinegar, or a chemist's shop-load o' muck, or holy
angels—to say it wi'out disrespect—as'll let Greg lie
easy to-night.  Now I'm gwaine.  Us'll have un stugged
in a bog directly minute, if he doan't watch wheer he'm
runnin' to, the silly sawl."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`WATERN TOR`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XV.


.. class:: center medium bold

   WATERN TOR

.. vspace:: 2

Desperate was the flight, deliberate the pursuit
of Gregory Libby.  He had started without more
purpose than that of a hare at first death-knell from
hounds, and now, too late, he realised that by heading
directly for the open Moor, his enemy must get the
opportunity he needed to make a capture.  Mr. Libby
indeed was lighter and fleeter than Henry Collins, and
at a mile or two the bigger man had stood no chance,
but now, with Dartmoor before them, the question was
one of endurance, and in that matter Henry held the
advantage.  He would lumber along in pursuit until
dark, if necessary, and it was impossible for the other
to hide from him.  But the probable result of capture
lent Libby wings.  He pushed forward, yet wasted
precious breath by cursing himself for a fool as he ran.
Across the wastes, where old-time miners streamed for
tin, he went, and gained a little as he did so.  Then it
struck him that at climbing his slighter build would win
great advantage, so he headed for the rocky foot-hills of
Watern Tor.  The extra labour told upon Gregory's
lungs, however; he had soon been running for half an
hour—a performance without parallel in his career—and
he found that hoped-for vantage of ground by no means
crowned his supreme effort.  Henry came along with a
steady shamble.  He was blowing like a roaring horse,
but his huge chest proved equal to the strain, and he
grinned to find himself steadily decreasing the gap
between his stick and Sally's enemy.  Presently the
fugitive caught his foot in a rabbit hole, fell, and hit
his shins on stone.  He groaned and swore, for the
accident cost him fifty yards, and quite shook his
scanty pluck.  His breath began to come hard, and
he felt his heart flogging against his ribs very painfully.
A mist filled his eyes, and it was lurid and throbbed
with a red pulse at every stride.  Nervous twitchings
overtook him, and his knees and elbows jerked
spasmodically.  He grew unsteady and giddy, fell again,
and then got upon his feet once more.  Turning to
avoid a bog, and splashing through the fringe of it, he
still kept running, but his pace was dwindling to a slow
trot, and his force was spent.  Now he could hear the
other snort within a hundred yards of him.

Then Mr. Collins hazarded a request.

"Stop!" he bawled.  "Best to draw up, for I be
gwaine to give 'e worst walloping ever you had, an' 'tis
awnly puttin' off the hour."

But Libby did not answer.  Terror added a last
impetus, and he reached the summit of the hill, under
those low precipices of granite that surmount it.  Here
rises a huge mass of stratified rock, beside which a
smaller fragment, the Thirlestone named, ascends like a
pinnacle, and stands separated at the summit by a few
feet only from the main mass.  Moved by physical fear
and a desire to get as far as possible from Collins and
the blackthorn, did Gregory struggle hither, and over
rough granite steps crawled and jumped on to the great
crown of the tor.  A last effort took him to the top of
the Thirlestone, and there, stranded between earth and
sky, at an elevation of some forty feet from the turf
below, he assumed a very tragical attitude.  Frightened
sheep leapt away from the granite plateau, and bounded
down, sure-footed, from the northern ledges, where they
found cool shadows.  Bleating, they regained the earth,
and so scampered off as Henry, his man safe, stopped
to blow and recover necessary energy.  For the victim
there was no escape; the path to the summit of
Thirlestone was the sole way back again.  Turning up his
sleeves the pursuer advanced from ledge to ledge until
only the dizzy aperture between the pinnacle and its
parent tor separated him from Mr. Libby.  To stride
across would be the work of a moment; but Collins
felt haste was unnecessary.  He sat down, therefore,
recovered his wind, and volunteered some advice.

"Best come down-along wi' me quiet.  I caan't do
what I be gwaine to do on this here gert rock.  Us
might fall awver an' break our necks."

"If you move a step towards me, God's my witness
I'll jump off an' slay myself; an' 'twill be brought home
against you as murder," declared Libby.  "S'elp me I
will; an' who are you to do violence against me, as never
hurt you in word or deed?"

"Us won't talk 'bout that.  I've got to larrup 'e to
the point wheer 'twould be dangerous to give 'e any
worse; an' I be gwaine to do it, because I knaw you
desarve it—never no chap more.  So come awver an'
us'll get back to the grass."

"What for do 'e want to bruise a man 'cause a
rubbishy gal be vexed wi' un?  Females is allus
wrong-headed an' onreasonable.  You ain't heard the rights,
I'll swear."

"An' ban't likely to from such a gert liar as you, I
reckon.  Come awver, will 'e, an' shut your damn mouth!"

"I'll jump—I'll jump an' kill myself!"

But the other knew his man too well.  Even Henry's
customary caution did not interfere between him and
instant action now.

"You ban't built to do no such reckless deed," he
answered calmly.  "You wouldn't be in such a boilin'
fright of a thrashin' else.  I'm sick of the sight of your
snivelling, yellow face an' rabbit mouth—lyin', foxin'
varmint that you be!"

He strode across the gap, and Mr. Libby, abandoning
all thought of self-destruction, merely dropped where he
stood and grovelled.

"I'll give 'e money—anything I've got—a gawlden
pound—two—five!  Doan't—doan't for Christ's love!
'Tis tu hurtful, an' me a orphan, an' weak from my
youth.  Oh—my God—it'll kill me—you'll do murder
if you touch me—it'll——"

At this point, and during a pause in the scuffling and
screaming of the sufferer, circumstances very startling
were forced upon the attention of both men.  Collins
had made the other rise and get back to the tor, at risk
of falling to earth if he refused the jump.  He had then
gripped Gregory by the collar, and was cautiously
dragging him down the granite ledges to earth, when a
strange noise stayed his progress.  It was the same sound
that had arrested Stapledon upon his homeward way.

"Gude Lard!" exclaimed Collins, dropping the other
as he spoke; "theer's somebody groanin' horrid near by.
God send it ban't maister!"

They listened, and the mournful cry of suffering was
repeated.

It seemed to rise from the heart of the great cliff on
which they stood, and while in measure human, yet
vibrated with the mechanical resonance of a beast's
voice.  Collins returned to the summit, crept towards
its edge, and peered over where the tor terminated in
abrupt western-facing cliffs.  Then the mystery was
explained, and he saw a dying creature beneath him.
Midway between his standpoint and the turf below
there stretched a narrow ledge or shelf, weathered out
through the centuries, and upon this excrescence lay a
mortally injured sheep.  The poor brute—probably
scared by flash of lightning or roar of thunder
overnight—had made a perilous leap and broken both
forelegs in its tremendous descent.  Now, helpless, in agony
and awful thirst, it lay uttering mournful cries, that
grew fainter as the sun scorched life out of it.

But Collins, attracted by a barking, gazed beyond,
and his eyes filled with active concern at sight of a thing,
motionless and distorted as a scarecrow, upon the rocks
and turf below.  Beside it a red setter sat and barked.
Then the creature rose and ran round and round, still
barking.  Collins knew the broad shape below, and the
brown, upturned face.  He nearly fell forward, then
turned, leapt to safety, and, forgetting the other man,
hastened down to earth.

And there he found Myles Stapledon, unconscious if
not a corpse.  Upon his open eyes was peace, and the
Death that must have looked into them had lacked
power to leave there any stamp of terror or impress of
fear.  He had fallen backwards and so remained, supine.
No visible violence marked his pose, yet a general
undefined distortion pervaded it.

"God's holy will!" murmured the living man to
himself.  "An' he heard the same cry as us did, an' quick
to end the sorrow of the beast, tried to get to un.  Cruel
plain; but 'twas no job for a gert, heavy piece like him.
An' he slipped, an' failed backward on the bones of his
neck 'fore he could say the words."

Libby shivered at the other's elbow.

"Be you sure he'm truly dead?" he asked

"The gen'leman's warm, but the faace of un tells
death, I be feared; an' his niddick's scatted in somethin'
awful.  But the dog do think he's alive by the looks of
un; an' such things is awften hid from us an' shawed to
beastes."

"Please God he've enough heat in un to bring back life."

"It may be so.  Anyway, 'tis for us to be doin'.  I'll
bide along wi' un, an' you slip it back quicker'n you
comed.  Run for your life, or his'n, to the farm, an' tell
what's failed, an' send folks here an' a man 'pon a hoss
for a doctor, an' bid 'em bring brandy."

Collins spoke with extraordinary passivity.  He
received this tremendous impression with grief indeed, but
no shock.  Fear before any plain, daylight event, however
horrible, his nature was incapable of suffering; only
the night unnerved him.

"Go!" he said.  "Doan't stand starin', an' keep out of
Missis Stapledon's way, but see the men.  An' tell
Pinsent, or the bwoy, to bring a gun along wi' 'em.  'Twas
his dyin' deed to try an' put thicky sheep out of sufferin';
an' I'll see 'tis done my awn self, for respect of the man."

Gregory answered nothing, but departed.  In the
excitement of this event he forgot his own pending
discomfiture and escape.  But he remembered these things
half-way back to Little Silver.  Then he had time for
personal satisfaction.

"'Tis a ill wind as blaws gude to none," he thought.

And the other ordered the body of his master in
seemly pose, and placed a pillow of fern under the
battered skull, and sat down and waited.  Not all the
mellow sunset light could bring warmth to the face
of Myles Stapledon.  An evening wind blew over the
Moor; the mist, generating and growing visible at close
of day, stole here and there, and spread silver curtains,
and wound about her familiar playthings of granite.
She hid the heath, and transformed the stone, brushed
by the living, and glazed the placid eyes of the dead.

With profound respect, but no active emotion of sorrow,
Henry Collins sat and watched; yet bitter mourning did
not lack, for the great red dog still ran up and down,
nosed his master, then lifted up his voice and howled as
the cold truth struck into him.  His wonderful eyes
imaged a world of misery and his face showed agonies
far more acute than the moonlike countenance of the man.

But Collins had come correctly to the truth, and, in
his speech, accurately described an incident that here,
upon thresholds of renewed hope and peace, had ended
the days of Myles Stapledon.

At sudden cry from a brute in pain above him, Myles
climbed Watern, realised the sheep's sad plight, and
immediately essayed to throw it down, that its miseries
might be ended.  But at unguessed personal disadvantages,
from a protracted fast and recent physical exertions,
the man over-estimated his strength, nor took account
of the serious difficulties attending such a climb.
Half-way to the ledge, he grew suddenly giddy, and, for the
first time, realised that though he might descend, return
must be for him impossible.  A desperate effort to get
back proved futile; he slipped, struggled, slipped again,
and found his hands and arms powerless to serve or
save.  And then he heard the unexpected Message and
knew that his hours were told.

Now he slept where he had fallen, below the unchanging
granite.  His life was done with; its tribulations
and sunrise of new hope alike quenched.  Yet no pang
of mental sorrow marked his dead face, and physical
suffering was likewise absent from it.  The man lay
calm of feature, contented of aspect.  His eyebrows
were arched and normal, his hands were unflexed.  One
had guessed that he made no effort to question the
mandate, but rather, in a phrase of Aurelius, had yielded
up life with serenity complete as His who issued the
discharge.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THRENODY`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER XVI.


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   THRENODY

.. vspace:: 2

"In all my life, and long it has been, I never met
a particular good man, nor yet a particular bad
one.  Maybe each sort's rare as t'other, for black and
white mixed is the common dirt-colour of human nature.
Yet—him—him we've laid to his rest—I do think
he was good.  He was better than sight to me—that
I know."

The men in Bear Down kitchen were clad in black, for
that noon they had buried their master, not without
tears.  He lay in Little Silver churchyard beside his
wife's father; but Honor had not attended the funeral.

"Ess, a very gude, upright man, I think.  A man as
stood to work in season, and never bid none do a job
what he couldn't have done better hisself," said Churdles
Ash mournfully.

"A man of far-seeing purposes, as allus carried
through whatever he ordained; an' could tell when rain
was comin' to a day," added Samuel Pinsent.  He knew
of no higher praise than that.

"An' so soft-hearted wi' the beasts what perish that
he comed by his death for a silly auld sheep.  Who but
him would have thrawed away life on such a fool's
errand?" asked Cramphorn bitterly.

"No other man for sartain, sir," answered the boy Bates.

"Very fine to bring it in death by misadventure,"
continued Jonah, "an' I'm not saying 'twas anything
but seemly so to do; but all the same, if the maister
had lived an' come off wi' a mere brawken leg or arm,
I'd have been the fust to tell un as he was riskin' his
life in a fule's trick, even if he'd been a lighter built
an' spryer man."

"A plaace as looks much easier than 'tis," said
Tommy Bates.  "I climbed it next day an' done it easy
gwaine down, but 'twas all I could do, hangin' on by
my claws like a cat, to get up 'pon top again."

'"Twas playin' wi' his life, I say, an' though he'm
dead, worse luck, theer's blame still falls against un.
What do 'e say, maister?"

Mark Endicott's face wore a curious expression as the
question reached him.  The blind man had preserved an
unusual silence before this tragedy, and while the real
explanation of Stapledon's death was accepted by all,
from Honor to those amongst whom the farmer was
no more than a name, yet Endicott had at no time
discussed the matter, though he exhibited before it
an amount of personal emotion very rare from him.
The sudden end of Myles had aged Mark obviously,
shaken him, and set deep currents surging under the
surface of him.  Even his niece in her own stricken
heart could find room for wonder at her uncle's bitter
expressions of sorrow and self-pity before his personal
loss.  After the first ebullition of grief, when tears were
seen to flow from his eyes for the first time in man's
recollection, he relapsed into a condition of taciturnity
and accepted the verdict brought at the inquest with
a relief not understood by those who observed it.  He
kept much alone and spoke but seldom with Honor,
who rarely left her room through the days that passed
between her husband's death and burial.  Out of the
darkness of his own loss Mark seemed powerless to
comfort another, even though she might be supposed
to suffer in a degree far keener than his own; and the
men of Bear Down, noting his attitude, whispered that
old Endicott was beginning to break up.  Yet this
was but partly the case, for private convictions and
an erroneous conclusion before mentioned were in the
main responsible for the blind man's great concern;
and the impossibility of sharing his burden with any
other at this moment weighed heavily upon him.
Spartan he still stood under the blow and that worse
thing behind the blow; but the night of his affliction
was darker than a whole lifetime of blindness, and the
signs of it could not be hidden.  The man began to
grow aged, and his vigour and self-control were alike
abating a little under steady pressure of time.

Now each of the toilers assembled there uttered
some lament; each found a word of praise for his dead
master.

"The auld sayin' stood gude of un," declared Churdles
Ash.  "'The dust from the farmer's shoes be the best
manure for his land.'  Ess fay, everywheer he was; an'
no such quick judge of a crop ever I seed afore."

"Never begrudged a chap a holiday, I'm sure," declared
Pinsent.

"Would to God it had been t'other," growled
Mr. Cramphorn.  It was a vain desire that he had openly
expressed on every possible occasion, and once to
Christopher Yeoland's face.

"Don't wish him back, lads," answered Mark Endicott.
"His life's work was done nearly perfect—by
the light of a poor candle, too; an' that's to say there
was a deal of pain hidden away deep in it.  For pain is
the mother of all perfect work.  He's out of it.  We
that have lost the man are to be pitied.  We cannot
pity him if we're good Christians."

"A cruel beast of a world 'tis most times," declared
Cramphorn, as he lighted his pipe.  "Takin' wan thing
with another, 'tis a question if a man wouldn't be
happier born a rabbit, or some such unthinking item."

"World's all right," answered Ash.  "You'm acid
along o' your darters.  'Tis the people in the world
makes the ferment.  'Twas a very gude plaace when
fust turned out o' hand, if Scripture's to count; for
God A'mighty seed it spread out like a map, wi' its
flam-new seas an' mountains an' rivers; an' butivul
tilth—all ripe for sowin', no doubt; an' He up an' said
'twas vitty."

"Ah!  Awnly wan man an' wan woman in it then—wi'out
any fam'ly," commented Jonah.  "The Lard
soon chaanged His tune when they beginned to increase
an' multiply.  Disappointing creations all round, them
Israelites.  God's awn image spoiled—as they be to this
day for that matter."

"Pegs! an' us little better'n them judged in the lump.
Take I—as'll be next to go onderground by the laws
of nature.  What have I to shaw for all my years?"
asked Ash sadly.

"You've done a sight o' small, useful jobs in your
time—things as had to be done by somebody; an'
you've worked no ill to my knowledge.  'Tis somethin'
to have bided on the airth eighty year an' never woke
no hate in a human breast," said Jonah.  "Very
differ'nt to the chap that mourned in his Lunnon
clothes at the graave-side, an' cried his crocodile tears
into a cambric 'ankersher for all to see," he added.

"They was real, wet tears, for I catched the light
of the sun on 'em," said Tommy Bates.  "An' he shook
grevous at 'dust to dust,' as if the dirt was falling 'pon
him 'stead of the coffin."

"He'm gone since—drove off to Okington, they tell
me; an' Brimblecombe says he be off to furrin paarts
again to roam the world," murmured Samuel Pinsent.

"Like the Dowl in Job, no doubt," declared Jonah;
"though 'tis question whether he'll see worse wickedness
than he knaws a'ready—even among they Turks.

"The man stopped in the yard till the graave was
all suent, an' smooth, an' covered to the last turf,
however," answered Collins; "for I bided tu, an' I watched
un out the tail o' my eye; an' he was cut deep an'
couldn't hide it even from me."

"No gude for you to spit your spite 'gainst him,
Jonah," summed up Churdles Ash.  "It caan't be no
use, an' 'tis last thing as dead maister would have
suffered from 'e."

There was a silence; then Collins spoke in musing
accents, to himself rather than for any listener.

"Really gone—dust—that gert, strong frame—an' us
shan't see the swinging gait of un, or the steady eye of
un, nor hear the slow voice of un calling out upon the
land no more."

"Gone for ever an' ever, amen, Henery," answered
Ash.  "Gone afore; an' I like to be the fust to shaake
his hand, in my humble way, t'other side the river."

"An' his things a mouldering a'ready," whispered
Tommy Bates with awe.  "I found the leggings what
he died in behind easy-chair in the parlour, wheer he
wus took fust; an' they'm vinnied all o'er."

Jonah Cramphorn nodded.

"'Tis a terrible coorious fact," he said, "as dead folks'
things do mildew 'mazin' soon arter they'm took off
of 'em."

The talk fell and rose, flickering like a fire; then
silence crowded upon all, and presently every man, save
only Mark Endicott, departed; while he was left with a
horror of his own imagining, to mourn the last
companion spirit his age would know.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE PASSAGE OF TWO YEARS`:

.. class:: center large bold

   BOOK IV.

.. vspace:: 3

.. class:: center largebold

   CHAPTER I.

.. class:: center medium bold

   THE PASSAGE OF TWO YEARS

.. vspace:: 2

Upon the death of Myles Stapledon great changes
marked the administration of Bear Down.  The
event stood for a landmark in the history of the farm,
and served as an occasion from which its old, familiar
name of 'Endicott's' fell into disusage; for the place
now passed into alien hands, and from it departed the
last of the old stock, together with not a few of those
whose fortunes had been wrapped up with the farm for
generations.

Honor determined to leave her home within a month
of her husband's death.  To roam awhile alone seemed
good to her, and, for a space of time that extended into
years before her return, she absented herself from
Devon.  Her farm had appreciated much in value of
late years, and a tenant for it did not lack long; but
the new power brought new servants, and certain of the
older workers took this occasion to retire from active
service.  Churdles Ash went to live with an elderly
nephew at Little Silver; Mr. Cramphorn also resigned,
but he continued to dwell in his cottage at Bear Down
and was content that Sally and Margery should still
work upon the farm.  Collins, promoted to deputy
headman, took his life with increasing seriousness—a
circumstance natural when it is recorded that matrimony
with Sally Cramphorn had now become only a question
of time.

Mark Endicott also left Bear Down for a cottage
at Chagford, and Mrs. Loveys accompanied him as
housekeeper.  This great uprooting of his life and
necessary change of habits bewildered the old man at
first; but his native courage aided him, and he unfolded
his days in faith and fortitude.  From Honor he heard
erratically, and gathered that she drifted rudderless
amid new impressions now here, now there.  Then, as
the months passed by, into the texture of her
communications came flashes or shadows of herself, and the
blind man perceived that Time was working with her;
that her original, unalterable gift of mind was awakening
and leavening her life as of yore.

Humour she still possessed, for it is an inherent
faculty, that sticks closer than a spouse to the heart
that holds it from puberty to the grave.  It wakens
with the dawn of adult intelligence, and neither time
nor chance, neither shattering reverse nor unexpected
prosperity can rob the owner of it.  Earthly success
indeed it brightens, and earthly failure it sets in true
perspective; it regulates man's self-estimate and personal
point of view; enlarges his sympathies; adjusts the
too-staring splendours of sudden joys; helps to dry the
bitterest tears humanity can shed.  For humour is an
adjunct divine, and as far beyond the trivial word for
it as "love" is, or "charity."  No definition or happy
phrase sums it correctly, or rates it high enough; it is
a balm of life; it makes for greater things than clean
laughter from the lungs; it is the root of tolerance, the
prop of patience; it "suffers long and is kind"; serves
to tune each little life-harmony with the world-harmony
about it; keeps the heart of man sweet, his soul modest.
And at the end, when the light thickens and the mesh
grows tight, humour can share the suffering vigils of the
sleepless, can soften pain, can brighten the ashy road to
death.

In the softness of the valley air lived Mark Endicott,
and still knitted comforters for the Brixham fishers.

His first interest was Honor and her future.  Of
these, he prophesied to those few who loved her and
who came to see her uncle from time to time.  To
Mrs. Loveys, to Ash, to Jonah Cramphorn the old man
foretold a thing not difficult of credence.  Indeed,
eighteen months after the death of her husband, a
letter from Honor, despatched at Geneva, came as
confirmation, and informed Mark that she had met
Christopher Yeoland there.

"They will part no more," said he when the letter
was read to him; and he was right.

An interval of six months separated this communication
from the next, and when his niece wrote again, she
signed herself "Honor Yeoland."  The missive was
tinctured with some unusual emotion, and woke the
same in Mrs. Loveys as she rehearsed it, and in Mark
as he listened.  "I am just twenty-seven," said the
writer.  "Do not tell me that it is too late in life to
seek for a little happiness still.  At least I know what
Myles would think."

But the deed demanded no excuse in her uncle's
judgment, for he had long anticipated it, and was well
content that matters should thus fall out.

And a few months later, when August had passed
again, the master of Godleigh and his lady returned
home.  Special directions prevented any sort of formal
welcome, and the actual date of their arrival was only
known to a few.  Through a twilight of late summer
they came, unseen and unwelcomed; and one day later,
upon a fair afternoon in mid-September, Honor, escaping
from the flood of new cares and responsibilities, slipped
valleywards away to traverse the woods alone and visit
her uncle at Chagford.

A chill touched her heart as she proceeded, for in
these dear glades, at Doctor Clack's command, the
woodmen had been zealous to help Nature during the
preceding spring.  Wide, new-made spaces innocent of
trees awaited her; light and air had taken the place
of many an old giant, and raw tablets of sawn wood,
rising in the vigour of bramble, and refreshed
undergrowths were frequent beside her path.  Then, at a
familiar spot, no pillar of grey supporting clouds of
mast and foliage met Honor's eyes.  Instead there
opened a little clearing, created by one effort of the
axe, with the frank sky above and a fallen column
below—a column shorn of branch and lopped of bough—a
naked, shattered thing lying in a dingle of autumn
grasses and yellow, autumn flowers, like, yet unlike, the
old nest of memories.

And this fallen tree, so unexpected, came as right
prelude to the matter that awaited her beside it.  The
beech of her joy and sorrow was thrown down, and its
apparition awakened in her heart none of that gentle
and subdued melancholy she anticipated.  Rather, such
emotions were smothered in active regret at its
downfall.  And now a howling, winter storm descended upon
her spirit—a tempest very diverse from the silver-grey,
autumnal rainfall of placid sadness that here she had
foreseen and expected.

The stricken tree struck a chord of deeper passion
than it had done beheld in prosperity; whereupon,
looking forward, Honor found herself not alone.  Close
at hand, in a spot that he had favoured through the
past summer, sat Mark Endicott with his knitting; and
a hundred yards away, beside the river, a boy, successor
to Tommy Bates, stood with his back turned watching
the trout.

Mark sat in the sunshine with his head uplifted.

There was speculation in his face, but his hands were
busy, and the old wooden needles flashed in white wool.

She watched him a moment, then her eyes caught
sight of something nearer at hand.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`NO AFTER-GLOW`:

.. class:: center large bold

   CHAPTER II.


.. class:: center medium bold

   NO AFTER-GLOW

.. vspace:: 2

The object that had attracted Honor's attention
was an inscription carved upon the fallen beech
tree.  Ignorant of the interest awakened by that ancient
work of Christopher's hand, when the same came to
be discovered by woodmen, she glanced hurriedly at
the initials and love-knot, now weathered and toned
by time and the tree's growth; then she produced
a little pocket-knife, and, not without difficulty, erased
the record of her husband's red-letter day in a vanished
summer.

Mark Endicott sat within ten yards of Honor while
she worked; but he continued unconscious of her near
presence, for the song of a robin and the music of
Teign muffled the small noise she made.  Moreover,
the blind man's own voice contributed to deaden all
other sound, for, following his ancient use, he thought
aloud.  This Honor discovered, hesitated a moment,
then, her task upon the tree completed, listened to
Mark Endicott.

There are blind, dark forces that spin the fabric of
man's day and night from his own emotions and sudden
promptings.  In thoughtless action and unconsidered
deed; in impulse born of high motive or of low, they
find their material, weave our garments; and, too often,
led by destiny, steep most innocent white robes in
poisoned blood, as Deianira that of Hercules.  Thus
they fashion man's black future out of his sunny past,
breed his tears from his laughter, his enduring sorrows
from fleeting whims, and tangle him soul-deep in
networks of his own idle creation.  Our secure hour is the
signal to their activities; they sleep while we are
watchful; they wake when we enter upon our pleasures and
seek for joy.

Moved by a sentiment that herself might be the
object of his thoughts, and her heart yearning to him
as he sat there alone, Honor gave heed to the slow
voice and listened to Mark Endicott's oral musings
upon the time that was past.  Fitfully he spoke, with
unequal intervals of silence between the sentences.
But his thoughts were of a piece; he dwelt upon a
theme that he could now endure to handle—a theme
rendered familiar to his mind by constant repetition
and convictions rooted beyond power of further
argument.  Of Honor indeed he had been thinking; for the
sound of her voice and the touch of her hand he had
greatly longed.  These were numbered first among the
few good things left to him; but from reflection upon
his niece he had now passed to her dead husband, and
he spoke and thought of Myles Stapledon.  His voice,
though he communed with himself, was so clear that
no word escaped the listener; and every utterance came
as cloud upon cloud to darken her day and deepen her
night henceforward.

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"A man good in the grain—frugal—industrious—patient—yet
the one thing needful denied him—held
out of his reach.  Maybe faith had made him almost a
hero—maybe not.  Anyway, there was strong meat in
the rule he set himself; and he didn't swerve even to
the bitter end of it....  Strange, strange as human
nature, that his way of life could reach to that.  Yet
I heard the words upon his lips; I heard him say how
self-slaughter might be a good, high deed.  And certain
'tis the Bible has no word against it.  Little he thought
then—or I—that he'd take that road himself.......
And the foundations of his life so simple as they were.
His pleasures to find out flowers and seeds in season,
and the secret ways of wild creatures.  To think that
'twas only the Moor, and the life of it, and the moods
of it, that he sucked such iron from.  'I will lift up
mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help.'  That
it should have been help to do such a thing as
he did!  All a big mind turned to ruination for lack
of faith.....  Close touch with natural things taught
him the killing meaning of selfishness; for everything
in nature is selfish but Nature's self.  Out of the
innocence of barren heaths, the honesty of the sky,
the steadfastness of the seasons and the obedience of
green things to the sun—out of all these he gathered
up the determination to do a terrible deed.......
'Twas all they taught him, for Nature's a heathen.
Yet a wonderful departure; and the heart of him held
him up at the last, for his face was happy, his eyes
at peace, so they said.  'Twas a glimpse of that life
to come he could never believe in here that made his
eyes at peace.  God spoke to him I doubt.  Yet never
a glimmer of promise did he see, or a whisper of hope
did he hear in this life.  And he gave up the only life
he knew for her—died brave enough, to the tune of
his own words spoken long, long since....  And the
suicide of him not guessed, thank God.  Even she
couldn't see—so quick as she is.  The dust was flung
in her eyes by a kind angel.  Yes, surely she was
blinded by some holy, guardian thing, for his great
nature was understood by her.  She had sense enough
for that."

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He shook his head for a space, then fell into silence
again.

He had uttered his conclusion—this old, wise man—in
the ear of the soul on earth most vitally involved.
He had been for long years a voice that conjured some
sense out of his own darkness; he had lightened the
difficulties of others; he had spoken not seldom to the
purpose and won a measure of love and respect; yet
here, by same flaw of mind, or by the accident of
blindness; by weakness that hinted approaching senility,
or by mere irony of chance, he had taken a wrong
turning and missed the transparent truth concerning
Myles Stapledon.  The dead man's own past utterances
were in a measure responsible; and upon them
Mark had long since built this edifice of error; he
had lived in the belief for two years; had accepted it
as life's most tragic experience, to be taken by him in
silence to the grave.

But now this opinion crashed into the mind of Honor
Yeoland, and she reeled before it and was overwhelmed.
Up into the blue sky she looked blankly, with a face
suddenly grown old.  For an instant she fought to
reject the word; for an instant she had it in her to cry
out aloud that the old man lied; then the life of Mark
Endicott—the sure bulwark of his unfailing wisdom and
right judgment rose before her, and she believed that
what he said was true.  Not in her darkest hour had the
possibility of such an event entered Honor's thoughts.
Agony she had suffered at Stapledon's death, and the
mark of it was on her face for ever, but he had left her
for the last time at peace to seek a course that might
maintain peace; he had departed full of awakened
content to find the road to new life, not death.

Yet this utterance under the woods made her uncertain
of her better knowledge; this remorseless, unconscious
word, thrown by a voice that had never spoken untruth,
was, as it seemed, a blind oracle above appeal from
human suffering, an inspired breath sent at God's
command to reveal this secret in her ear alone.  The glare
suddenly thrown upon her mind she held to be truth's
own most terrible white light; and she stood helpless
and confounded, with her future in ruins.  At least some
subdued Indian summer of promised content with
Christopher had seemed to await her.  Now that, too,
was torn away and whelmed in frost and snow; for
Myles had killed himself to give it to her; Myles had
not believed her solemn assurance, but, convinced that
she still placed him second in her affection, had set her
free.  With steady heart and clear eye he had gone to
death, so ordering his end that none should guess the
truth of it.  And none had guessed, save only this
ancient man, whose judgment within Honor's knowledge
was never at fault.

She believed him; she saw that her present state, as
the wife of Christopher, could only confirm him in his
conviction; she pictured Mark Endicott waiting to hear
how, all unconsciously, she had followed the path Myles
Stapledon marked out for her when he died.  And then
she looked forward and asked herself what this must mean.

A part of her answer appeared in the old man who
sat, ignorant of her presence, before her.  He—the
instrument of this message—had spoken his belief
indeed, but with no thought of any listener other than
himself.  She knew Mark Endicott; she was aware that
he had rather himself suffered death than that this
matter should have reached her ear.  Loyalty to him
was not the least part of her determination now.  He
must never know what he had done.

Neither could she tell her husband for a kindred
reason.  Such news would cloud his mind for ever, and
lessen all his future joy in living.

Before the loneliness of such an unshared grief the
woman's soul rose up in arms, and, for one brief moment,
she rebelled against her lot, told herself that the evangel
of evil had spoken falsely, determined with herself to
reject and cast aside this thought as a suspicion
unworthy, a lie and a libel on the dead.  But the unhappy
soul of her was full of the fancied truth.  Had she
possessed power to turn deaf ears and reject this theory
as vain and out of all harmony with her own knowledge
of Myles Stapledon, Honor's state had been more
gracious; but it was beyond her mental strength to do
so.  Understanding the dead man no less and no more
than her uncle, she read new subtleties into the past
before this bitterness, credited Myles with views that
never existed in his mind at all, and concluded with
herself that he had indeed taken his own life that she
might be what she now was—the wife of Christopher
Yeoland.

Therefore her own days stretched before her evermore
overshadowed until the end of them, and her thoughts
leapt whole abysses of despair, as the revelation
gradually permeated her being.  Seed was sown in that
moment, as she stood with the blue sky mirrored in her
brown eyes, and a growth was established, whose roots
would keep the woman's heart aching till age blunted
sensibility, whose fruits would drop gall upon her thirst
while life lasted.  Unshared darkness must be her
portion—darkness and cruel knowledge to be revealed
to none, to be hidden out of all searching, to be
concealed even beyond the reach of Christopher's love and
deepest sympathy.  He indeed had her heart now, and
knew the secret places of it; therefore, in a sort of
frenzy, she prayed to God at that moment, and called
upon Him to show her where she might hide this thing
and let it endure unseen.

The boy by the river had not observed Honor, and
her uncle remained ignorant of her presence.  She
turned, therefore, and departed, lacking strength at that
moment to speak or hearten his desolate life with the
music of her voice.  She stole away; and in the woods,
returning, her husband met her and rejoiced in the
accidental encounter.

"Good luck!" he cried.  "I'd lost half myself the
moment you disappeared, and had made up my mind
to mourn unobtrusively till you came back to me.
Why hasn't outraged Nature sent a thunderbolt to
suppress Courteney Clack?  I might have known that
desperate surgeon would have prescribed amputation
upon most shadowy excuse."

"He has been very busy."

"And done absolutely the right thing, viewed from
standpoint of forestry; which makes it impossible to
say what one feels.  But forget all that.  Home we
won't go yet.  Come and see the sunset."

A promise of great aerial splendours filled the sky as
the day waned, and Yeoland, to whom such spectacles
were precious as formerly, hastened upwards to the
high lands with his wife by his side.

Together they passed through the wood of pines
above Godleigh, then, pursuing their way onwards, the
man caught a shadow of sobriety from Honor, being
quick at all times to note the colour of her thoughts.
The fact that she was sad called for no wonder where
they then stood, for now in her eyes were mirrored Bear
Down's wind-worn sycamores, ripe thatches, whitewashed
farm-buildings, and grey walls.  The relinquished home
of her forefathers lay there, and she had now come from
visiting the last of her line.  This Christopher supposed,
and so understood her demeanour.

Overhead a splendid turmoil of gloom and fire waxed
heavenwide, where wind and cloud and sinking sun
laboured magnificently together.

"I know every strand in your dear thoughts, love; I
could write the very sequence of them, and take them
down in shorthand from your eyes."

She smiled at him.  That favourite jest of his had been
nearly true until now.  Henceforth it could be true no
more.  It was not the picture of home and the thirsty,
shorn grass lands spread around it that made her soul
sink so low.  Even Christopher henceforth was outside
the last sanctuary of her heart, and must so remain.
There had come a new sorrow of sorrows, to be hidden
even from her second self—a grief not to be shared
by him, a legacy of tears whose secret fountains he must
never find.

She held his hand like a child, and something of her
woe passed into him; then he knew that she was very
sad, and suspected that her unhappiness had source in
deeper things than the renewed spectacle of her home.
He instantly fell into sympathy; but it was only a little
deeper than that of an artist.  What she felt
now—walking where Myles Stapledon had so often walked—he
could readily conceive; and it made him sad also, with
a gentle, æsthetic melancholy that just fell short of
pain.  For him and for Honor he believed that a future
of delicate happiness was spread.  These clouds were
natural, inevitable; but they scarcely obscured the blue.
So he argued, ignorant of that anguish in the mind
of his wife.  For her the anticipated summer of peace
appeared not possible.  Now her future stretched
before her—ghost-haunted in sober truth.  Here was
such a mournful twilight as broods over all personifications
of highest grief; for her, as for those Titan figures—each
an incarnate agony—who pace the aisles of
olden drama, there could be no removal into the
day-spring of hope, no departure into any night of
indifference.  Only an endless dusk of sorrow awaited
her.  Western light was upon her face; but not the
glory of evening, nor yet the whole pageant of the sun's
passing, could pierce the darkness of her heart.

They stood upon Scor Hill above the Moor; and
Christopher spoke—

"This was his god—poor old Myles!  This was a
symbol to him of the Creator.  A great, restful god,
yet alive and alert.  A changeless god—a god to pray
to even—a listening god."

"He would have given all that he had to know a
listening god," she said.

"And yet who is there but has sometimes seen his
god, moving dimly, awfully, behind the veil?  A
flash—a divine gleam at higher moments.  We fall on our
knees, but the vision has gone.  We yearn—we yearn
to make our crying heard; but the clay comes between.
That was his case.  You and I have our Christ to cling
to.  He sweetens our cup of life—when we let Him.
But Myles—he walked alone.  That is among my
saddest thoughts—among the very saddest thoughts
that Nature and experience bring to me."

"The earth is very full of things that bring sad
thoughts."

"Yes, and a man's heart still more full.  There are
plaintive sorrows I could tell you about—the sadness of
hidden flowers, that no human eye ever looks upon—the
sadness of great, lonely mists on lonely lands; the
sadness of trees sleeping in moonlight; the sadness of a
robbed bird; the eternal sadness and pathos of man's
scant certainties and undying hopes.  How wonderful
he is!  Nothing crushes him; nothing stills the little
sanguine heart of him, throbbing on, beating on through
all the bitter disillusions of this our life from generation
to generation."

Far below them, in fulvous light of a wild sunset,
the circle of Scor Hill appeared.  Concerning the
memories its granite girded, Christopher knew little;
but, at sight of Watern's crest, now dark against the
flaming sky, he remembered that there lay the scene of
Stapledon's end, and regretted that he had come within
sight of it that night.  To him the distant mountain was
a theatre of tragedy; to Honor, an altar of sacrifice.

Without words they waited and gazed upon the sky
to witness after-glow succeed sunset.  Over the Moor a
vast and radiant mist burnt under the sun and faded to
purple where it stretched beneath the shadows of the
hills; and the earth, taking this great light to her bosom,
veiled herself within it.  All detail vanished, all fret of
incident disappeared, while the inherent spirit of the place
stood visible, where loneliness and vastness stretched
to the sunset and heaved up their huge boundaries
clad only in a mystery of ruddy haze.  Particulars
departed from the wilderness, save where, through
alternate masses of gloom and transparent vapour,
carrying their harmonies of orange and tawny light to
culmination and crown of fire, there twinkled a
burn—twinkled and tumbled and flashed, under mellow
drapery of air and cloud, beneath flaming depths of
the sunset, and through the heart of the earth-born
mist, like a thread of golden beads.  Here colour
made a sudden music, sang, and then sank back into
silence.

For heavy clouds already reared up out of the West
to meet the sun; and amid far-flung banners and pennons
and lances of glory he descended into darkness.  Then
the aspect of earth and heaven changed magically; day
waned and grew dense, while a great gloom swept over
the heath and rose to the zenith under a cowl of rain.
Dim radii still turned upon the clouds where light
fought through them; but their wan illumination was
sucked away and they died before their shafts had
roamed full course.  The cry of the river rose and fell,
the rain began to whisper, and all things merged with
unaccustomed speed into formless chaos of twilight.

"No after-glow—then we must look within our own
breasts for it—or, better still, each other's breasts," said
the man.

But neither heart nor voice of the woman answered him.

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.. class:: center

   THE END

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