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Catherine: A Story

by William Makepeace Thackeray

November, 1999 [Etext #1969]

Project Gutenberg Etext Catherine: A Story, by William Thackeray

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Catherine: A Story

by William Makepeace Thackeray

Catherine, A Story by Ikey Solomons, Esq., Junior.

Contents

Advertisement

  1. Introducing to the reader the chief personages of this narrative.
  2. In which are depicted the pleasures of a sentimental attachment.
  3. In which a narcotic is administered, and a great deal of genteel

society depicted.

4. In which Mrs. Catherine becomes an honest woman again.

5. Contains Mr. Brock's autobiography, and other matter.

6. The adventures of the ambassador, Mr. MacShane.

7. Which embraces a period of seven years.

8. Enumerates the accomplishments of Master Thomas Billings--

introduces Brock as Doctor Wood--and announces the execution of

Ensign MacShane.

9. Interview between Count Galgenstein and Master Thomas Billings,

when he informs the Count of his parentage.

10. Showing how Galgenstein and Mrs. Cat recognise each other in

Marylebone Gardens--and how the Count drives her home in his carrige.

11. Of some domestic quarrels, and the consequence thereof.

12. Treats of love, and prepares for death.

13. Being a preparation for the end.

Chapter the Last.

Another Last Chapter.

ADVERTISEMENT

The story of "Catherine," which appeared in Fraser's Magazine in

1839-40, was written by Mr. Thackeray, under the name of Ikey

Solomons, Jun., to counteract the injurious influence of some

popular fictions of that day, which made heroes of highwaymen and

burglars, and created a false sympathy for the vicious and criminal.

With this purpose, the author chose for the subject of his story a

woman named Catherine Hayes, who was burned at Tyburn, in 1726, for

the deliberate murder of her husband, under very revolting

circumstances. Mr. Thackeray's aim obviously was to describe the

career of this wretched woman and her associates with such fidelity

to truth as to exhibit the danger and folly of investing such

persons with heroic and romantic qualities.

CHAPTER I. Introducing to the reader the chief personages of this

narrative.

At that famous period of history, when the seventeenth century

(after a deal of quarrelling, king-killing, reforming,

republicanising, restoring, re-restoring, play-writing, sermon-

writing, Oliver-Cromwellising, Stuartising, and Orangising, to be

sure) had sunk into its grave, giving place to the lusty eighteenth;

when Mr. Isaac Newton was a tutor of Trinity, and Mr. Joseph Addison

Commissioner of Appeals; when the presiding genius that watched over

the destinies of the French nation had played out all the best cards

in his hand, and his adversaries began to pour in their trumps; when

there were two kings in Spain employed perpetually in running away

from one another; when there was a queen in England, with such

rogues for Ministers as have never been seen, no, not in our own

day; and a General, of whom it may be severely argued, whether he

was the meanest miser or the greatest hero in the world; when Mrs.

Masham had not yet put Madam Marlborough's nose out of joint; when

people had their ears cut off for writing very meek political

pamphlets; and very large full-bottomed wigs were just beginning to

be worn with powder; and the face of Louis the Great, as his was

handed in to him behind the bed-curtains, was, when issuing thence,

observed to look longer, older, and more dismal daily. . . .

About the year One thousand seven hundred and five, that is, in the

glorious reign of Queen Anne, there existed certain characters, and

befell a series of adventures, which, since they are strictly in

accordance with the present fashionable style and taste; since they

have been already partly described in the "Newgate Calendar;" since

they are (as shall be seen anon) agreeably low, delightfully

disgusting, and at the same time eminently pleasing and pathetic,

may properly be set down here.

And though it may be said, with some considerable show of reason,

that agreeably low and delightfully disgusting characters have

already been treated, both copiously and ably, by some eminent

writers of the present (and, indeed, of future) ages; though to

tread in the footsteps of the immortal FAGIN requires a genius of

inordinate stride, and to go a-robbing after the late though

deathless TURPIN, the renowned JACK SHEPPARD, or the embryo DUVAL,

may be impossible, and not an infringement, but a wasteful

indication of ill-will towards the eighth commandment; though it

may, on the one hand, be asserted that only vain coxcombs would dare

to write on subjects already described by men really and deservedly

eminent; on the other hand, that these subjects have been described

so fully, that nothing more can be said about them; on the third

hand (allowing, for the sake of argument, three hands to one figure

of speech), that the public has heard so much of them, as to be

quite tired of rogues, thieves, cutthroats, and Newgate

altogether;--though all these objections may be urged, and each is

excellent, yet we intend to take a few more pages from the "Old

Bailey Calendar," to bless the public with one more draught from the

Stone Jug:*--yet awhile to listen, hurdle-mounted, and riding down

the Oxford Road, to the bland conversation of Jack Ketch, and to

hang with him round the neck of his patient, at the end of our and

his history. We give the reader fair notice, that we shall tickle

him with a few such scenes of villainy, throat-cutting, and bodily

suffering in general, as are not to be found, no, not in--; never

mind comparisons, for such are odious.

  • This, as your Ladyship is aware, is the polite name for Her

Majesty's Prison of Newgate.

In the year 1705, then, whether it was that the Queen of England did

feel seriously alarmed at the notion that a French prince should

occupy the Spanish throne; or whether she was tenderly attached to

the Emperor of Germany; or whether she was obliged to fight out the

quarrel of William of Orange, who made us pay and fight for his

Dutch provinces; or whether poor old Louis Quatorze did really

frighten her; or whether Sarah Jennings and her husband wanted to

make a fight, knowing how much they should gain by it;--whatever the

reason was, it was evident that the war was to continue, and there

was almost as much soldiering and recruiting, parading, pike and

gun-exercising, flag-flying, drum-beating, powder-blazing, and

military enthusiasm, as we can all remember in the year 1801, what

time the Corsican upstart menaced our shores. A recruiting-party

and captain of Cutts's regiment (which had been so mangled at

Blenheim the year before) were now in Warwickshire; and having their

depot at Warwick, the captain and his attendant, the corporal, were

used to travel through the country, seeking for heroes to fill up

the gaps in Cutts's corps,--and for adventures to pass away the

weary time of a country life.

Our Captain Plume and Sergeant Kite (it was at this time, by the

way, that those famous recruiting-officers were playing their pranks

in Shrewsbury) were occupied very much in the same manner with

Farquhar's heroes. They roamed from Warwick to Stratford, and from

Stratford to Birmingham, persuading the swains of Warwickshire to

leave the plough for the Pike, and despatching, from time to time,

small detachments of recruits to extend Marlborough's lines, and to

act as food for the hungry cannon at Ramillies and Malplaquet.

Of those two gentlemen who are about to act a very important part in

our history, one only was probably a native of Britain,--we say

probably, because the individual in question was himself quite

uncertain, and, it must be added, entirely indifferent about his

birthplace; but speaking the English language, and having been

during the course of his life pretty generally engaged in the

British service, he had a tolerably fair claim to the majestic title

of Briton. His name was Peter Brock, otherwise Corporal Brock, of

Lord Cutts's regiment of dragoons; he was of age about fifty-seven

(even that point has never been ascertained); in height about five

feet six inches; in weight, nearly thirteen stone; with a chest that

the celebrated Leitch himself might envy; an arm that was like an

opera-dancer's leg; a stomach so elastic that it would accommodate

itself to any given or stolen quantity of food; a great aptitude for

strong liquors; a considerable skill in singing chansons de table of

not the most delicate kind; he was a lover of jokes, of which he

made many, and passably bad; when pleased, simply coarse,

boisterous, and jovial; when angry, a perfect demon: bullying,

cursing, storming, fighting, as is sometimes the wont with gentlemen

of his cloth and education.

Mr. Brock was strictly, what the Marquis of Rodil styled himself in

a proclamation to his soldiers after running away, a hijo de la

guerra--a child of war. Not seven cities, but one or two regiments,

might contend for the honour of giving him birth; for his mother,

whose name he took, had acted as camp-follower to a Royalist

regiment; had then obeyed the Parliamentarians; died in Scotland

when Monk was commanding in that country; and the first appearance

of Mr. Brock in a public capacity displayed him as a fifer in the

General's own regiment of Coldstreamers, when they marched from

Scotland to London, and from a republic at once into a monarchy.

Since that period, Brock had been always with the army, he had had,

too, some promotion, for he spake of having a command at the battle

of the Boyne; though probably (as he never mentioned the fact) upon

the losing side. The very year before this narrative commences, he

had been one of Mordaunt's forlorn hope at Schellenberg, for which

service he was promised a pair of colours; he lost them, however,

and was almost shot (but fate did not ordain that his career should

close in that way) for drunkenness and insubordination immediately

after the battle; but having in some measure reinstated himself by a

display of much gallantry at Blenheim, it was found advisable to

send him to England for the purposes of recruiting, and remove him

altogether from the regiment where his gallantry only rendered the

example of his riot more dangerous.

Mr. Brock's commander was a slim young gentleman of twenty-six,

about whom there was likewise a history, if one would take the

trouble to inquire. He was a Bavarian by birth (his mother being an

English lady), and enjoyed along with a dozen other brothers the

title of count: eleven of these, of course, were penniless; one or

two were priests, one a monk, six or seven in various military

services, and the elder at home at Schloss Galgenstein breeding

horses, hunting wild boars, swindling tenants, living in a great

house with small means; obliged to be sordid at home all the year,

to be splendid for a month at the capital, as is the way with many

other noblemen. Our young count, Count Gustavus Adolphus Maximilian

von Galgenstein, had been in the service of the French as page to a

nobleman; then of His Majesty's gardes du corps; then a lieutenant

and captain in the Bavarian service; and when, after the battle of

Blenheim, two regiments of Germans came over to the winning side,

Gustavus Adolphus Maximilian found himself among them; and at the

epoch when this story commences, had enjoyed English pay for a year

or more. It is unnecessary to say how he exchanged into his present

regiment; how it appeared that, before her marriage, handsome John

Churchill had known the young gentleman's mother, when they were

both penniless hangers-on at Charles the Second's court;--it is, we

say, quite useless to repeat all the scandal of which we are

perfectly masters, and to trace step by step the events of his

history. Here, however, was Gustavus Adolphus, in a small inn, in a

small village of Warwickshire, on an autumn evening in the year

1705; and at the very moment when this history begins, he and Mr.

Brock, his corporal and friend, were seated at a round table before

the kitchen-fire while a small groom of the establishment was

leading up and down on the village green, before the inn door, two

black, glossy, long-tailed, barrel-bellied, thick-flanked,

arch-necked, Roman-nosed Flanders horses, which were the property of

the two gentlemen now taking their ease at the "Bugle Inn." The two

gentlemen were seated at their ease at the inn table, drinking

mountain-wine; and if the reader fancies from the sketch which we

have given of their lives, or from his own blindness and belief in

the perfectibility of human nature, that the sun of that autumn

evening shone upon any two men in county or city, at desk or

harvest, at Court or at Newgate, drunk or sober, who were greater

rascals than Count Gustavus Galgenstein and Corporal Peter Brock, he

is egregiously mistaken, and his knowledge of human nature is not

worth a fig. If they had not been two prominent scoundrels, what

earthly business should we have in detailing their histories? What

would the public care for them? Who would meddle with dull virtue,

humdrum sentiment, or stupid innocence, when vice, agreeable vice,

is the only thing which the readers of romances care to hear?

The little horse-boy, who was leading the two black Flanders horses

up and down the green, might have put them in the stable for any

good that the horses got by the gentle exercise which they were now

taking in the cool evening air, as their owners had not ridden very

far or very hard, and there was not a hair turned of their sleek

shining coats; but the lad had been especially ordered so to walk

the horses about until he received further commands from the

gentlemen reposing in the "Bugle" kitchen; and the idlers of the

village seemed so pleased with the beasts, and their smart saddles

and shining bridles, that it would have been a pity to deprive them

of the pleasure of contemplating such an innocent spectacle. Over

the Count's horse was thrown a fine red cloth, richly embroidered in

yellow worsted, a very large count's coronet and a cipher at the

four corners of the covering; and under this might be seen a pair of

gorgeous silver stirrups, and above it, a couple of silver-mounted

pistols reposing in bearskin holsters; the bit was silver too, and

the horse's head was decorated with many smart ribbons. Of the

Corporal's steed, suffice it to say, that the ornaments were in

brass, as bright, though not perhaps so valuable, as those which

decorated the Captain's animal. The boys, who had been at play on

the green, first paused and entered into conversation with the

horse-boy; then the village matrons followed; and afterwards,

sauntering by ones and twos, came the village maidens, who love

soldiers as flies love treacle; presently the males began to arrive,

and lo! the parson of the parish, taking his evening walk with Mrs.

Dobbs, and the four children his offspring, at length joined himself

to his flock.

To this audience the little ostler explained that the animals

belonged to two gentlemen now reposing at the "Bugle:" one young

with gold hair, the other old with grizzled locks; both in red

coats; both in jack-boots; putting the house into a bustle, and

calling for the best. He then discoursed to some of his own

companions regarding the merits of the horses; and the parson, a

learned man, explained to the villagers, that one of the travellers

must be a count, or at least had a count's horsecloth; pronounced

that the stirrups were of real silver, and checked the impetuosity

of his son, William Nassau Dobbs, who was for mounting the animals,

and who expressed a longing to fire off one of the pistols in the

holsters.

As this family discussion was taking place, the gentlemen whose

appearance had created so much attention came to the door of the

inn, and the elder and stouter was seen to smile at his companion;

after which he strolled leisurely over the green, and seemed to

examine with much benevolent satisfaction the assemblage of

villagers who were staring at him and the quadrupeds.

Mr. Brock, when he saw the parson's band and cassock, took off his

beaver reverently, and saluted the divine: "I hope your reverence

won't baulk the little fellow," said he; "I think I heard him

calling out for a ride, and whether he should like my horse, or his

Lordship's horse, I am sure it is all one. Don't be afraid, sir!

the horses are not tired; we have only come seventy mile to-day, and

Prince Eugene once rode a matter of fifty-two leagues (a hundred and

fifty miles), sir, upon that horse, between sunrise and sunset."

"Gracious powers! on which horse?" said Doctor Dobbs, very solemnly.

"On THIS, sir,--on mine, Corporal Brock of Cutts's black gelding,

'William of Nassau.' The Prince, sir, gave it me after Blenheim

fight, for I had my own legs carried away by a cannon-ball, just as

I cut down two of Sauerkrauter's regiment, who had made the Prince

prisoner."

"Your own legs, sir!" said the Doctor. "Gracious goodness! this is

more and more astonishing!"

"No, no, not my own legs, my horse's I mean, sir; and the Prince

gave me 'William of Nassau' that very day."

To this no direct reply was made; but the Doctor looked at Mrs.

Dobbs, and Mrs. Dobbs and the rest of the children at her eldest

son, who grinned and said, "Isn't it wonderful?" The Corporal to

this answered nothing, but, resuming his account, pointed to the

other horse and said, "THAT horse, sir--good as mine is--that horse,

with the silver stirrups, is his Excellency's horse, Captain Count

Maximilian Gustavus Adolphus von Galgenstein, captain of horse and

of the Holy Roman Empire" (he lifted here his hat with much gravity,

and all the crowd, even to the parson, did likewise). "We call him

'George of Denmark,' sir, in compliment to Her Majesty's husband:

he is Blenheim too, sir; Marshal Tallard rode him on that day, and

you know how HE was taken prisoner by the Count."

"George of Denmark, Marshal Tallard, William of Nassau! this is

strange indeed, most wonderful! Why, sir, little are you aware that

there are before you, AT THIS MOMENT, two other living beings who

bear these venerated names! My boys, stand forward! Look here,

sir: these children have been respectively named after our late

sovereign and the husband of our present Queen."

"And very good names too, sir; ay, and very noble little fellows

too; and I propose that, with your reverence and your ladyship's

leave, William Nassau here shall ride on George of Denmark, and

George of Denmark shall ride on William of Nassau."

When this speech of the Corporal's was made, the whole crowd set up

a loyal hurrah; and, with much gravity, the two little boys were

lifted up into the saddles; and the Corporal leading one, entrusted

the other to the horse-boy, and so together marched stately up and

down the green.

The popularity which Mr. Brock gained by this manoeuvre was very

great; but with regard to the names of the horses and children,

which coincided so extraordinarily, it is but fair to state, that

the christening of the quadrupeds had only taken place about two

minutes before the dragoon's appearance on the green. For if the

fact must be confessed, he, while seated near the inn window, had

kept a pretty wistful eye upon all going on without; and the horses

marching thus to and fro for the wonderment of the village, were

only placards or advertisements for the riders.

There was, besides the boy now occupied with the horses, and the

landlord and landlady of the "Bugle Inn," another person connected

with that establishment--a very smart, handsome, vain, giggling

servant-girl, about the age of sixteen, who went by the familiar

name of Cat, and attended upon the gentlemen in the parlour, while

the landlady was employed in cooking their supper in the kitchen.

This young person had been educated in the village poor-house, and

having been pronounced by Doctor Dobbs and the schoolmaster the

idlest, dirtiest, and most passionate little minx with whom either

had ever had to do, she was, after receiving a very small portion of

literary instruction (indeed it must be stated that the young lady

did not know her letters), bound apprentice at the age of nine years

to Mrs. Score, her relative, and landlady of the "Bugle Inn."

If Miss Cat, or Catherine Hall, was a slattern and a minx, Mrs.

Score was a far superior shrew; and for the seven years of her

apprenticeship the girl was completely at her mistress's mercy. Yet

though wondrously stingy, jealous, and violent, while her maid was

idle and extravagant, and her husband seemed to abet the girl, Mrs.

Score put up with the wench's airs, idleness, and caprices, without

ever wishing to dismiss her from the "Bugle." The fact is, that

Miss Catherine was a great beauty, and for about two years, since

her fame had begun to spread, the custom of the inn had also

increased vastly. When there was a debate whether the farmers, on

their way from market, would take t'other pot, Catherine, by

appearing with it, would straightway cause the liquor to be

swallowed and paid for; and when the traveller who proposed riding

that night and sleeping at Coventry or Birmingham, was asked by Miss

Catherine whether he would like a fire in his bedroom, he generally

was induced to occupy it, although he might before have vowed to

Mrs. Score that he would not for a thousand guineas be absent from

home that night. The girl had, too, half-a-dozen lovers in the

village; and these were bound in honour to spend their pence at the

alehouse she inhabited. O woman, lovely woman! what strong resolves

canst thou twist round thy little finger! what gunpowder passions

canst thou kindle with a single sparkle of thine eye! what lies and

fribble nonsense canst thou make us listen to, as they were gospel

truth or splendid wit! above all what bad liquor canst thou make us

swallow when thou puttest a kiss within the cup--and we are content

to call the poison wine!

The mountain-wine at the "Bugle" was, in fact, execrable; but Mrs.

Cat, who served it to the two soldiers, made it so agreeable to

them, that they found it a passable, even a pleasant task, to

swallow the contents of a second bottle. The miracle had been

wrought instantaneously on her appearance: for whereas at that very

moment the Count was employed in cursing the wine, the landlady, the

wine-grower, and the English nation generally, when the young woman

entered and (choosing so to interpret the oaths) said, "Coming, your

honour; I think your honour called"--Gustavus Adolphus whistled,

stared at her very hard, and seeming quite dumb-stricken by her

appearance, contented himself by swallowing a whole glass of

mountain by way of reply.

Mr. Brock was, however, by no means so confounded as his captain:

he was thirty years older than the latter, and in the course of

fifty years of military life had learned to look on the most

dangerous enemy, or the most beautiful woman, with the like daring,

devil-may-care determination to conquer.

"My dear Mary," then said that gentleman, "his honour is a lord; as

good as a lord, that is; for all he allows such humble fellows as I

am to drink with him."

Catherine dropped a low curtsey, and said, "Well, I don't know if

you are joking a poor country girl, as all you soldier gentlemen do;

but his honour LOOKS like a lord: though I never see one, to be

sure."

"Then," said the Captain, gathering courage, "how do you know I look

like one, pretty Mary?"

"Pretty Catherine: I mean Catherine, if you please, sir."

Here Mr. Brock burst into a roar of laughter, and shouting with many

oaths that she was right at first, invited her to give him what he

called a buss.

Pretty Catherine turned away from him at this request, and muttered

something about "Keep your distance, low fellow! buss indeed; poor

country girl," etc. etc., placing herself, as if for protection, on

the side of the Captain. That gentleman looked also very angry; but

whether at the sight of innocence so outraged, or the insolence of

the Corporal for daring to help himself first, we cannot say. "Hark

ye, Mr. Brock," he cried very fiercely, "I will suffer no such

liberties in my presence: remember, it is only my condescension

which permits you to share my bottle in this way; take care I don't

give you instead a taste of my cane." So saying, he, in a

protecting manner, placed one hand round Mrs. Catherine's waist,

holding the other clenched very near to the Corporal's nose.

Mrs. Catherine, for HER share of this action of the Count's,

dropped another curtsey and said, "Thank you, my Lord." But

Galgenstein's threat did not appear to make any impression on Mr.

Brock, as indeed there was no reason that it should; for the

Corporal, at a combat of fisticuffs, could have pounded his

commander into a jelly in ten minutes; so he contented himself by

saying, "Well, noble Captain, there's no harm done; it IS an honour

for poor old Peter Brock to be at table with you, and I AM sorry,

sure enough."

"In truth, Peter, I believe thou art; thou hast good reason, eh,

Peter? But never fear, man; had I struck thee, I never would have

hurt thee."

"I KNOW you would not," replied Brock, laying his hand on his heart

with much gravity; and so peace was made, and healths were drunk.

Miss Catherine condescended to put her lips to the Captain's glass;

who swore that the wine was thus converted into nectar; and although

the girl had not previously heard of that liquor, she received the

compliment as a compliment, and smiled and simpered in return.

The poor thing had never before seen anybody so handsome, or so

finely dressed as the Count; and, in the simplicity of her coquetry,

allowed her satisfaction to be quite visible. Nothing could be more

clumsy than the gentleman's mode of complimenting her; but for this,

perhaps, his speeches were more effective than others more delicate

would have been; and though she said to each, "Oh, now, my Lord,"

and "La, Captain, how can you flatter one so?" and "Your honour's

laughing at me," and made such polite speeches as are used on these

occasions, it was manifest from the flutter and blush, and the grin

of satisfaction which lighted up the buxom features of the little

country beauty, that the Count's first operations had been highly

successful. When following up his attack, he produced from his neck

a small locket (which had been given him by a Dutch lady at the

Brill), and begged Miss Catherine to wear it for his sake, and

chucked her under the chin and called her his little rosebud, it was

pretty clear how things would go: anybody who could see the

expression of Mr. Brock's countenance at this event might judge of

the progress of the irresistible High-Dutch conqueror.

Being of a very vain communicative turn, our fair barmaid gave her

two companions, not only a pretty long account of herself, but of

many other persons in the village, whom she could perceive from the

window opposite to which she stood. "Yes, your honour," said she--

"my Lord, I mean; sixteen last March, though there's a many girl in

the village that at my age is quite chits. There's Polly Randall

now, that red-haired girl along with Thomas Curtis: she's seventeen

if she's a day, though he is the very first sweetheart she has had.

Well, as I am saying, I was bred up here in the village--father and

mother died very young, and I was left a poor orphan--well, bless

us! if Thomas haven't kissed her!--to the care of Mrs. Score, my

aunt, who has been a mother to me--a stepmother, you know;--and I've

been to Stratford fair, and to Warwick many a time; and there's two

people who have offered to marry me, and ever so many who want to,

and I won't have none--only a gentleman, as I've always said; not a

poor clodpole, like Tom there with the red waistcoat (he was one

that asked me), nor a drunken fellow like Sam Blacksmith yonder, him

whose wife has got the black eye, but a real gentleman, like--"

"Like whom, my dear?" said the Captain, encouraged.

"La, sir, how can you? Why, like our squire, Sir John, who rides in

such a mortal fine gold coach; or, at least, like the parson, Doctor

Dobbs--that's he, in the black gown, walking with Madam Dobbs in

red."

"And are those his children?"

"Yes: two girls and two boys; and only think, he calls one William

Nassau, and one George Denmark--isn't it odd?" And from the parson,

Mrs. Catherine went on to speak of several humble personages of the

village community, who, as they are not necessary to our story, need

not be described at full length. It was when, from the window,

Corporal Brock saw the altercation between the worthy divine and his

son, respecting the latter's ride, that he judged it a fitting time

to step out on the green, and to bestow on the two horses those

famous historical names which we have just heard applied to them.

Mr. Brock's diplomacy was, as we have stated, quite successful; for,

when the parson's boys had ridden and retired along with their mamma

and papa, other young gentlemen of humbler rank in the village were

placed upon "George of Denmark" and "William of Nassau;" the

Corporal joking and laughing with all the grown-up people. The

women, in spite of Mr. Brock's age, his red nose, and a certain

squint of his eye, vowed the Corporal was a jewel of a man; and

among the men his popularity was equally great.

"How much dost thee get, Thomas Clodpole?" said Mr. Brock to a

countryman (he was the man whom Mrs. Catherine had described as her

suitor), who had laughed loudest at some of his jokes: "how much

dost thee get for a week's work, now?"

Mr. Clodpole, whose name was really Bullock, stated that his wages

amounted to "three shillings and a puddn."

"Three shillings and a puddn!--monstrous!--and for this you toil

like a galley-slave, as I have seen them in Turkey and America,--ay,

gentlemen, and in the country of Prester John! You shiver out of

bed on icy winter mornings, to break the ice for Ball and Dapple to

drink."

"Yes, indeed," said the person addressed, who seemed astounded at

the extent of the Corporal's information.

"Or you clean pigsty, and take dung down to meadow; or you act

watchdog and tend sheep; or you sweep a scythe over a great field of

grass; and when the sun has scorched the eyes out of your head, and

sweated the flesh off your bones, and well-nigh fried the soul out

of your body, you go home, to what?--three shillings a week and a

puddn! Do you get pudding every day?"

"No; only Sundays."

"Do you get money enough?"

"No, sure."

"Do you get beer enough?"

"Oh no, NEVER!" said Mr. Bullock quite resolutely.

"Worthy Clodpole, give us thy hand: it shall have beer enough this

day, or my name's not Corporal Brock. Here's the money, boy! there

are twenty pieces in this purse: and how do you think I got 'em?

and how do you think I shall get others when these are gone?--by

serving Her Sacred Majesty, to be sure: long life to her, and down

with the French King!"

Bullock, a few of the men, and two or three of the boys, piped out

an hurrah, in compliment to this speech of the Corporal's: but it

was remarked that the greater part of the crowd drew back--the women

whispering ominously to them and looking at the Corporal.

"I see, ladies, what it is," said he. "You are frightened, and

think I am a crimp come to steal your sweethearts away. What! call

Peter Brock a double-dealer? I tell you what, boys, Jack Churchill

himself has shaken this hand, and drunk a pot with me: do you think

he'd shake hands with a rogue? Here's Tummas Clodpole has never had

beer enough, and here am I will stand treat to him and any other

gentleman: am I good enough company for him? I have money, look

you, and like to spend it: what should _I_ be doing dirty actions

for--hay, Tummas?"

A satisfactory reply to this query was not, of course, expected by

the Corporal nor uttered by Mr. Bullock; and the end of the dispute

was, that he and three or four of the rustic bystanders were quite

convinced of the good intentions of their new friend, and

accompanied him back to the "Bugle," to regale upon the promised

beer. Among the Corporal's guests was one young fellow whose dress

would show that he was somewhat better to do in the world than

Clodpole and the rest of the sunburnt ragged troop, who were

marching towards the alehouse. This man was the only one of his

hearers who, perhaps, was sceptical as to the truth of his stories;

but as soon as Bullock accepted the invitation to drink, John Hayes,

the carpenter (for such was his name and profession), said, "Well,

Thomas, if thou goest, I will go too."

"I know thee wilt," said Thomas: "thou'lt goo anywhere Catty Hall

is, provided thou canst goo for nothing."

"Nay, I have a penny to spend as good as the Corporal here."

"A penny to KEEP, you mean: for all your love for the lass at the

'Bugle,' did thee ever spend a shilling in the house? Thee wouldn't

go now, but that I am going too, and the Captain here stands treat."

"Come, come, gentlemen, no quarrelling," said Mr. Brock. "If this

pretty fellow will join us, amen say I: there's lots of liquor, and

plenty of money to pay the score. Comrade Tummas, give us thy arm.

Mr. Hayes, you're a hearty cock, I make no doubt, and all such are

welcome. Come along, my gentleman farmers, Mr. Brock shall have the

honour to pay for you all." And with this, Corporal Brock,

accompanied by Messrs. Hayes, Bullock, Blacksmith, Baker's-boy,

Butcher, and one or two others, adjourned to the inn; the horses

being, at the same time, conducted to the stable.

Although we have, in this quiet way, and without any flourishing of

trumpets, or beginning of chapters, introduced Mr. Hayes to the

public; and although, at first sight, a sneaking carpenter's boy may

seem hardly worthy of the notice of an intelligent reader, who looks

for a good cut-throat or highwayman for a hero, or a pickpocket at

the very least: this gentleman's words and actions should be

carefully studied by the public, as he is destined to appear before

them under very polite and curious circumstances during the course

of this history. The speech of the rustic Juvenal, Mr. Clodpole,

had seemed to infer that Hayes was at once careful of his money and

a warm admirer of Mrs. Catherine of the "Bugle:" and both the

charges were perfectly true. Hayes's father was reported to be a

man of some substance; and young John, who was performing his

apprenticeship in the village, did not fail to talk very big of his

pretensions to fortune--of his entering, at the close of his

indentures, into partnership with his father--and of the comfortable

farm and house over which Mrs. John Hayes, whoever she might be,

would one day preside. Thus, next to the barber and butcher, and

above even his own master, Mr. Hayes took rank in the village: and

it must not be concealed that his representation of wealth had made

some impression upon Mrs. Hall toward whom the young gentleman had

cast the eyes of affection. If he had been tolerably well-looking,

and not pale, rickety, and feeble as he was; if even he had been

ugly, but withal a man of spirit, it is probable the girl's kindness

for him would have been much more decided. But he was a poor weak

creature, not to compare with honest Thomas Bullock, by at least

nine inches; and so notoriously timid, selfish, and stingy, that

there was a kind of shame in receiving his addresses openly; and

what encouragement Mrs. Catherine gave him could only be in secret.

But no mortal is wise at all times: and the fact was, that Hayes,

who cared for himself intensely, had set his heart upon winning

Catherine; and loved her with a desperate greedy eagerness and

desire of possession, which makes passions for women often so fierce

and unreasonable among very cold and selfish men. His parents

(whose frugality he had inherited) had tried in vain to wean him

from this passion, and had made many fruitless attempts to engage

him with women who possessed money and desired husbands; but Hayes

was, for a wonder, quite proof against their attractions; and,

though quite ready to acknowledge the absurdity of his love for a

penniless alehouse servant-girl, nevertheless persisted in it

doggedly. "I know I'm a fool," said he; "and what's more, the girl

does not care for me; but marry her I must, or I think I shall just

die: and marry her I will." For very much to the credit of Miss

Catherine's modesty, she had declared that marriage was with her a

sine qua non, and had dismissed, with the loudest scorn and

indignation, all propositions of a less proper nature.

Poor Thomas Bullock was another of her admirers, and had offered to

marry her; but three shillings a week and a puddn was not to the

girl's taste, and Thomas had been scornfully rejected. Hayes had

also made her a direct proposal. Catherine did not say no: she was

too prudent: but she was young and could wait; she did not care for

Mr. Hayes yet enough to marry him--(it did not seem, indeed, in the

young woman's nature to care for anybody)--and she gave her adorer

flatteringly to understand that, if nobody better appeared in the

course of a few years, she might be induced to become Mrs. Hayes.

It was a dismal prospect for the poor fellow to live upon the hope

of being one day Mrs. Catherine's pis-aller.

In the meantime she considered herself free as the wind, and

permitted herself all the innocent gaieties which that "chartered

libertine," a coquette, can take. She flirted with all the

bachelors, widowers, and married men, in a manner which did

extraordinary credit to her years: and let not the reader fancy

such pastimes unnatural at her early age. The ladies--Heaven bless

them!--are, as a general rule, coquettes from babyhood upwards.

Little SHE'S of three years old play little airs and graces upon

small heroes of five; simpering misses of nine make attacks upon

young gentlemen of twelve; and at sixteen, a well-grown girl, under

encouraging circumstances--say, she is pretty, in a family of ugly

elder sisters, or an only child and heiress, or a humble wench at a

country inn, like our fair Catherine--is at the very pink and prime

of her coquetry: they will jilt you at that age with an ease and

arch infantine simplicity that never can be surpassed in maturer

years.

Miss Catherine, then, was a franche coquette, and Mr. John Hayes was

miserable. His life was passed in a storm of mean passions and

bitter jealousies, and desperate attacks upon the indifference-rock

of Mrs. Catherine's heart, which not all his tempest of love could

beat down. O cruel cruel pangs of love unrequited! Mean rogues

feel them as well as great heroes. Lives there the man in Europe

who has not felt them many times?--who has not knelt, and fawned,

and supplicated, and wept, and cursed, and raved, all in vain; and

passed long wakeful nights with ghosts of dead hopes for company;

shadows of buried remembrances that glide out of their graves of

nights, and whisper, "We are dead now, but we WERE once; and we made

you happy, and we come now to mock you:--despair, O lover, despair,

and die"?--O cruel pangs!--dismal nights!--Now a sly demon creeps

under your nightcap, and drops into your ear those soft

hope-breathing sweet words, uttered on the well-remembered evening:

there, in the drawer of your dressing-table (along with the razors,

and Macassar oil), lies the dead flower that Lady Amelia Wilhelmina

wore in her bosom on the night of a certain ball--the corpse of a

glorious hope that seemed once as if it would live for ever, so

strong was it, so full of joy and sunshine: there, in your

writing-desk, among a crowd of unpaid bills, is the dirty scrap of

paper, thimble-sealed, which came in company with a pair of

muffetees of her knitting (she was a butcher's daughter, and did all

she could, poor thing!), begging "you would ware them at collidge,

and think of her who"--married a public-house three weeks

afterwards, and cares for you no more now than she does for the

pot-boy. But why multiply instances, or seek to depict the agony of

poor mean-spirited John Hayes? No mistake can be greater than that

of fancying such great emotions of love are only felt by virtuous or

exalted men: depend upon it, Love, like Death, plays havoc among

the pauperum tabernas, and sports with rich and poor, wicked and

virtuous, alike. I have often fancied, for instance, on seeing the

haggard pale young old-clothesman, who wakes the echoes of our

street with his nasal cry of "Clo'!"--I have often, I said, fancied

that, besides the load of exuvial coats and breeches under which he

staggers, there is another weight on him--an atrior cura at his

tail--and while his unshorn lips and nose together are performing

that mocking, boisterous, Jack-indifferent cry of "Clo', clo'!" who

knows what woeful utterances are crying from the heart within?

There he is, chaffering with the footman at No. 7 about an old

dressing-gown: you think his whole soul is bent only on the contest

about the garment. Psha! there is, perhaps, some faithless girl in

Holywell Street who fills up his heart; and that desultory Jew-boy

is a peripatetic hell! Take another instance:--take the man in the

beef-shop in Saint Martin's Court. There he is, to all appearances

quite calm: before the same round of beef--from morning till

sundown--for hundreds of years very likely. Perhaps when the

shutters are closed, and all the world tired and silent, there is HE

silent, but untired--cutting, cutting, cutting. You enter, you get

your meat to your liking, you depart; and, quite unmoved, on, on he

goes, reaping ceaselessly the Great Harvest of Beef. You would

fancy that if Passion ever failed to conquer, it had in vain

assailed the calm bosom of THAT MAN. I doubt it, and would give

much to know his history.

Who knows what furious Aetna-flames are raging underneath the

surface of that calm flesh-mountain--who can tell me that that

calmness itself is not DESPAIR?

  • * *

The reader, if he does not now understand why it was that Mr. Hayes

agreed to drink the Corporal's proffered beer, had better just read

the foregoing remarks over again, and if he does not understand

THEN, why, small praise to his brains. Hayes could not bear that

Mr. Bullock should have a chance of seeing, and perhaps making love

to Mrs. Catherine in his absence; and though the young woman never

diminished her coquetries, but, on the contrary, rather increased

them in his presence, it was still a kind of dismal satisfaction to

be miserable in her company.

On this occasion, the disconsolate lover could be wretched to his

heart's content; for Catherine had not a word or a look for him, but

bestowed all her smiles upon the handsome stranger who owned the

black horse. As for poor Tummas Bullock, his passion was never

violent; and he was content in the present instance to sigh and

drink beer. He sighed and drank, sighed and drank, and drank again,

until he had swallowed so much of the Corporal's liquor, as to be

induced to accept a guinea from his purse also; and found himself,

on returning to reason and sobriety, a soldier of Queen Anne's.

But oh! fancy the agonies of Mr. Hayes when, seated with the

Corporal's friends at one end of the kitchen, he saw the Captain at

the place of honour, and the smiles which the fair maid bestowed

upon him; when, as she lightly whisked past him with the Captain's

supper, she, pointing to the locket that once reposed on the breast

of the Dutch lady at the Brill, looked archly on Hayes and said,

"See, John, what his Lordship has given me;" and when John's face

became green and purple with rage and jealousy, Mrs. Catherine

laughed ten times louder, and cried "Coming, my Lord," in a voice of

shrill triumph, that bored through the soul of Mr. John Hayes and

left him gasping for breath.

On Catherine's other lover, Mr. Thomas, this coquetry had no effect:

he, and two comrades of his, had by this time quite fallen under the

spell of the Corporal; and hope, glory, strong beer, Prince Eugene,

pair of colours, more strong beer, her blessed Majesty, plenty more

strong beer, and such subjects, martial and bacchic, whirled through

their dizzy brains at a railroad pace.

And now, if there had been a couple of experienced reporters present

at the "Bugle Inn," they might have taken down a conversation on

love and war--the two themes discussed by the two parties occupying

the kitchen--which, as the parts were sung together, duetwise,

formed together some very curious harmonies. Thus, while the

Captain was whispering the softest nothings, the Corporal was

shouting the fiercest combats of the war; and, like the gentleman at

Penelope's table, on it exiguo pinxit praelia tota bero. For

example:

CAPTAIN. What do you say to a silver trimming, pretty Catherine?

Don't you think a scarlet riding-cloak, handsomely laced, would

become you wonderfully well?--and a grey hat with a blue feather--

and a pretty nag to ride on--and all the soldiers to present arms as

you pass, and say, "There goes the Captain's lady"? What do you

think of a side-box at Lincoln's Inn playhouse, or of standing up to

a minuet with my Lord Marquis at--?

CORPORAL. The ball, sir, ran right up his elbow, and was found the

next day by Surgeon Splinter of ours,--where do you think, sir?--

upon my honour as a gentleman it came out of the nape of his--

CAPTAIN. Necklace--and a sweet pair of diamond earrings,

mayhap--and a little shower of patches, which ornament a lady's face

wondrously--and a leetle rouge--though, egad! such peach-cheeks as

yours don't want it;--fie! Mrs. Catherine, I should think the birds

must come and peck at them as if they were fruit--

CORPORAL. Over the wall; and three-and-twenty of our fellows jumped

after me. By the Pope of Rome, friend Tummas, that was a day!--Had

you seen how the Mounseers looked when four-and-twenty rampaging

he-devils, sword and pistol, cut and thrust, pell-mell came tumbling

into the redoubt! Why, sir, we left in three minutes as many

artillerymen's heads as there were cannon-balls. It was, "Ah

sacre!" "D----- you, take that!" "O mon Dieu!" "Run him through!"

"Ventrebleu!" and it WAS ventrebleu with him, I warrant you; for

bleu, in the French language, means "through;" and ventre--why, you

see, ventre means--

CAPTAIN. Waists, which are worn now excessive long; and for the

hoops, if you COULD but see them--stap my vitals, my dear, but there

was a lady at Warwick's Assembly (she came in one of my Lord's

coaches) who had a hoop as big as a tent: you might have dined

under it comfortably;--ha! ha! 'pon my faith, now--

CORPORAL. And there we found the Duke of Marlborough seated along

with Marshal Tallard, who was endeavouring to drown his sorrow over

a cup of Johannisberger wine; and a good drink too, my lads, only

not to compare to Warwick beer. "Who was the man who has done

this?" said our noble General. I stepped up. "How many heads was

it," says he, "that you cut off?" "Nineteen," says I, "besides

wounding several." When he heard it (Mr. Hayes, you don't drink) I'm

blest if he didn't burst into tears! "Noble noble fellow," says he.

"Marshal, you must excuse me if I am pleased to hear of the

destruction of your countrymen. Noble noble fellow!--here's a

hundred guineas for you." Which sum he placed in my hand. "Nay,"

says the Marshal "the man has done his duty:" and, pulling out a

magnificent gold diamond-hilted snuff-box, he gave me--

MR. BULLOCK. What, a goold snuff-box? Wauns, but thee WAST in

luck, Corporal!

CORPORAL. No, not the snuff-box, but--A PINCH OF SNUFF,--ha!

ha!--run me through the body if he didn't. Could you but have seen

the smile on Jack Churchill's grave face at this piece of

generosity! So, beckoning Colonel Cadogan up to him, he pinched his

Ear and whispered--

CAPTAIN. "May I have the honour to dance a minuet with your

Ladyship?" The whole room was in titters at Jack's blunder; for, as

you know very well, poor Lady Susan HAS A WOODEN LEG. Ha! ha! fancy

a minuet and a wooden leg, hey, my dear?--

MRS. CATHERINE. Giggle--giggle--giggle: he! he! he! Oh, Captain,

you rogue, you--

SECOND TABLE. Haw! haw! haw! Well you be a foony mon, Sergeant,

zure enoff.

  • * *

This little specimen of the conversation must be sufficient. It

will show pretty clearly that EACH of the two military commanders

was conducting his operations with perfect success. Three of the

detachment of five attacked by the Corporal surrendered to him: Mr.

Bullock, namely, who gave in at a very early stage of the evening,

and ignominiously laid down his arms under the table, after standing

not more than a dozen volleys of beer; Mr. Blacksmith's boy, and a

labourer whose name we have not been able to learn. Mr. Butcher

himself was on the point of yielding, when he was rescued by the

furious charge of a detachment that marched to his relief: his wife

namely, who, with two squalling children, rushed into the "Bugle,"

boxed Butcher's ears, and kept up such a tremendous fire of oaths

and screams upon the Corporal, that he was obliged to retreat.

Fixing then her claws into Mr. Butcher's hair, she proceeded to drag

him out of the premises; and thus Mr. Brock was overcome. His

attack upon John Hayes was a still greater failure; for that young

man seemed to be invincible by drink, if not by love: and at the

end of the drinking-bout was a great deal more cool than the

Corporal himself; to whom he wished a very polite good-evening, as

calmly he took his hat to depart. He turned to look at Catherine,

to be sure, and then he was not quite so calm: but Catherine did

not give any reply to his good-night. She was seated at the

Captain's table playing at cribbage with him; and though Count

Gustavus Maximilian lost every game, he won more than he lost,--sly

fellow!--and Mrs. Catherine was no match for him.

It is to be presumed that Hayes gave some information to Mrs. Score,

the landlady: for, on leaving the kitchen, he was seen to linger

for a moment in the bar; and very soon after Mrs. Catherine was

called away from her attendance on the Count, who, when he asked for

a sack and toast, was furnished with those articles by the landlady

herself: and, during the half-hour in which he was employed in

consuming this drink, Monsieur de Galgenstein looked very much

disturbed and out of humour, and cast his eyes to the door

perpetually; but no Catherine came. At last, very sulkily, he

desired to be shown to bed, and walked as well as he could (for, to

say truth, the noble Count was by this time somewhat unsteady on his

legs) to his chamber. It was Mrs. Score who showed him to it, and

closed the curtains, and pointed triumphantly to the whiteness of

the sheets.

"It's a very comfortable room," said she, "though not the best in

the house; which belong of right to your Lordship's worship; but our

best room has two beds, and Mr. Corporal is in that, locked and

double-locked, with his three tipsy recruits. But your honour will

find this here bed comfortable and well-aired; I've slept in it

myself this eighteen years."

"What, my good woman, you are going to sit up, eh? It's cruel hard

on you, madam."

"Sit up, my Lord? bless you, no! I shall have half of our Cat's

bed; as I always do when there's company." And with this Mrs. Score

curtseyed and retired.

Very early the next morning the active landlady and her bustling

attendant had prepared the ale and bacon for the Corporal and his

three converts, and had set a nice white cloth for the Captain's

breakfast. The young blacksmith did not eat with much satisfaction;

but Mr. Bullock and his friend betrayed no sign of discontent,

except such as may be consequent upon an evening's carouse. They

walked very contentedly to be registered before Doctor Dobbs, who

was also justice of the peace, and went in search of their slender

bundles, and took leave of their few acquaintances without much

regret: for the gentlemen had been bred in the workhouse, and had

not, therefore, a large circle of friends.

It wanted only an hour of noon, and the noble Count had not

descended. The men were waiting for him, and spent much of the

Queen's money (earned by the sale of their bodies overnight) while

thus expecting him. Perhaps Mrs. Catherine expected him too, for

she had offered many times to run up--with my Lord's boots--with the

hot water--to show Mr. Brock the way; who sometimes condescended to

officiate as barber. But on all these occasions Mrs. Score had

prevented her; not scolding, but with much gentleness and smiling.

At last, more gentle and smiling than ever, she came downstairs and

said, "Catherine darling, his honour the Count is mighty hungry this

morning, and vows he could pick the wing of a fowl. Run down,

child, to Farmer Brigg's and get one: pluck it before you bring it,

you know, and we will make his Lordship a pretty breakfast."

Catherine took up her basket, and away she went by the back-yard,

through the stables. There she heard the little horse-boy whistling

and hissing after the manner of horseboys; and there she learned

that Mrs. Score had been inventing an ingenious story to have her

out of the way. The ostler said he was just going to lead the two

horses round to the door. The Corporal had been, and they were

about to start on the instant for Stratford.

The fact was that Count Gustavus Adolphus, far from wishing to pick

the wing of a fowl, had risen with a horror and loathing for

everything in the shape of food, and for any liquor stronger than

small beer. Of this he had drunk a cup, and said he should ride

immediately to Stratford; and when, on ordering his horses, he had

asked politely of the landlady "why the d---- SHE always came up,

and why she did not send the girl," Mrs. Score informed the Count

that her Catherine was gone out for a walk along with the young man

to whom she was to be married, and would not be visible that day.

On hearing this the Captain ordered his horses that moment, and

abused the wine, the bed, the house, the landlady, and everything

connected with the "Bugle Inn."

Out the horses came: the little boys of the village gathered round;

the recruits, with bunches of ribands in their beavers, appeared

presently; Corporal Brock came swaggering out, and, slapping the

pleased blacksmith on the back, bade him mount his horse; while the

boys hurrah'd. Then the Captain came out, gloomy and majestic; to

him Mr. Brock made a military salute, which clumsily, and with much

grinning, the recruits imitated. "I shall walk on with these brave

fellows, your honour, and meet you at Stratford," said the Corporal.

"Good," said the Captain, as he mounted. The landlady curtseyed;

the children hurrah'd more; the little horse-boy, who held the

bridle with one hand and the stirrup with the other, and expected a

crown-piece from such a noble gentleman, got only a kick and a

curse, as Count von Galgenstein shouted, "D----- you all, get out of

the way!" and galloped off; and John Hayes, who had been sneaking

about the inn all the morning, felt a weight off his heart when he

saw the Captain ride off alone.

O foolish Mrs. Score! O dolt of a John Hayes! If the landlady had

allowed the Captain and the maid to have their way, and meet but for

a minute before recruits, sergeant, and all, it is probable that no

harm would have been done, and that this history would never have

been written.

When Count von Galgenstein had ridden half a mile on the Stratford

road, looking as black and dismal as Napoleon galloping from the

romantic village of Waterloo, he espied, a few score yards onwards,

at the turn of the road, a certain object which caused him to check

his horse suddenly, brought a tingling red into his cheeks, and made

his heart to go thump--thump! against his side. A young lass was

sauntering slowly along the footpath, with a basket swinging from

one hand, and a bunch of hedge-flowers in the other. She stopped

once or twice to add a fresh one to her nosegay, and might have seen

him, the Captain thought; but no, she never looked directly towards

him, and still walked on. Sweet innocent! she was singing as if

none were near; her voice went soaring up to the clear sky, and the

Captain put his horse on the grass, that the sound of the hoofs

might not disturb the music.

"When the kine had given a pailful,

And the sheep came bleating home,

Poll, who knew it would be healthful,

Went a-walking out with Tom.

Hand in hand, sir, on the land, sir,

As they walked to and fro,

Tom made jolly love to Polly,

But was answered no, no, no."

The Captain had put his horse on the grass, that the sound of his

hoofs might not disturb the music; and now he pushed its head on to

the bank, where straightway "George of Denmark" began chewing of

such a salad as grew there. And now the Captain slid off

stealthily; and smiling comically, and hitching up his great

jack-boots, and moving forward with a jerking tiptoe step, he, just

as she was trilling the last o-o-o of the last no in the above poem

of Tom D'Urfey, came up to her, and touching her lightly on the

waist, said,

"My dear, your very humble servant."

Mrs. Catherine (you know you have found her out long ago!) gave a

scream and a start, and would have turned pale if she could. As it

was, she only shook all over, and said,

"Oh, sir, how you DID frighten me!"

"Frighten you, my rosebud! why, run me through, I'd die rather than

frighten you. Gad, child, tell me now, am I so VERY frightful?"

"Oh no, your honour, I didn't mean that; only I wasn't thinking to

meet you here, or that you would ride so early at all: for, if you

please, sir, I was going to fetch a chicken for your Lordship's

breakfast, as my mistress said you would like one; and I thought,

instead of going to Farmer Brigg's, down Birmingham way, as she told

me, I'd go to Farmer Bird's, where the chickens is better, sir,--my

Lord, I mean."

"Said I'd like a chicken for breakfast, the old cat! why, I told her

I would not eat a morsel to save me--I was so dru--I mean I ate such

a good supper last night--and I bade her to send me a pot of small

beer, and to tell you to bring it; and the wretch said you were gone

out with your sweetheart--"

"What! John Hayes, the creature? Oh, what a naughty story-telling

woman!"

"--You had walked out with your sweetheart, and I was not to see you

any more; and I was mad with rage, and ready to kill myself; I was,

my dear."

"Oh, sir! pray, PRAY don't."

"For your sake, my sweet angel?"

"Yes, for my sake, if such a poor girl as me can persuade noble

gentlemen."

"Well, then, for YOUR sake, I won't; no, I'll live; but why live?

Hell and fury, if I do live I'm miserable without you; I am,--you

know I am,--you adorable, beautiful, cruel, wicked Catherine!"

Catherine's reply to this was "La, bless me! I do believe your

horse is running away." And so he was! for having finished his meal

in the hedge, he first looked towards his master and paused, as it

were, irresolutely; then, by a sudden impulse, flinging up his tail

and his hind legs, he scampered down the road.

Mrs. Hall ran lightly after the horse, and the Captain after Mrs.

Hall; and the horse ran quicker and quicker every moment, and might

have led them a long chase,--when lo! debouching from a twist in the

road, came the detachment of cavalry and infantry under Mr. Brock.

The moment he was out of sight of the village, that gentleman had

desired the blacksmith to dismount, and had himself jumped into the

saddle, maintaining the subordination of his army by drawing a

pistol and swearing that he would blow out the brains of any person

who attempted to run. When the Captain's horse came near the

detachment he paused, and suffered himself to be caught by Tummas

Bullock, who held him until the owner and Mrs. Catherine came up.

Mr. Bullock looked comically grave when he saw the pair; but the

Corporal graciously saluted Mrs. Catherine, and said it was a fine

day for walking.

"La, sir, and so it is," said she, panting in a very pretty and

distressing way, "but not for RUNNING. I do protest--ha!--and vow

that I really can scarcely stand. I'm so tired of running after

that naughty naughty horse!"

"How do, Cattern?" said Thomas. "Zee, I be going a zouldiering

because thee wouldn't have me." And here Mr. Bullock grinned. Mrs.

Catherine made no sort of reply, but protested once more she should

die of running. If the truth were told, she was somewhat vexed at

the arrival of the Corporal's detachment, and had had very serious

thoughts of finding herself quite tired just as he came in sight.

A sudden thought brought a smile of bright satisfaction in the

Captain's eyes. He mounted the horse which Tummas still held.

"TIRED, Mrs Catherine," said he, "and for my sake? By heavens! you

shan't walk a step farther. No, you shall ride back with a guard of

honour! Back to the village, gentlemen!--rightabout face! Show

those fellows, Corporal, how to rightabout face. Now, my dear,

mount behind me on Snowball; he's easy as a sedan. Put your dear

little foot on the toe of my boot. There now,--up!--jump! hurrah!"

"THAT'S not the way, Captain," shouted out Thomas, still holding on

to the rein as the horse began to move. "Thee woan't goo with him,

will thee, Catty?"

But Mrs. Catherine, though she turned away her head, never let go

her hold round the Captain's waist; and he, swearing a dreadful oath

at Thomas, struck him across the face and hands with his riding

whip. The poor fellow, who at the first cut still held on to the

rein, dropped it at the second, and as the pair galloped off, sat

down on the roadside and fairly began to weep.

"MARCH, you dog!" shouted out the Corporal a minute after. And so

he did: and when next he saw Mrs. Catherine she WAS the Captain's

lady sure enough, and wore a grey hat, with a blue feather, and red

riding-coat trimmed with silverlace. But Thomas was then on a

bare-backed horse, which Corporal Brock was flanking round a ring,

and he was so occupied looking between his horse's ears that he had

no time to cry then, and at length got the better of his attachment.

  • * *

This being a good opportunity for closing Chapter I, we ought,

perhaps, to make some apologies to the public for introducing them

to characters that are so utterly worthless; as we confess all our

heroes, with the exception of Mr. Bullock, to be. In this we have

consulted nature and history, rather than the prevailing taste and

the general manner of authors. The amusing novel of "Ernest

Maltravers," for instance, opens with a seduction; but then it is

performed by people of the strictest virtue on both sides: and

there is so much religion and philosophy in the heart of the

seducer, so much tender innocence in the soul of the seduced, that--

bless the little dears!--their very peccadilloes make one interested

in them; and their naughtiness becomes quite sacred, so deliciously

is it described. Now, if we ARE to be interested by rascally

actions, let us have them with plain faces, and let them be

performed, not by virtuous philosophers, but by rascals. Another

clever class of novelists adopt the contrary system, and create

interest by making their rascals perform virtuous actions. Against

these popular plans we here solemnly appeal. We say, let your

rogues in novels act like rogues, and your honest men like honest

men; don't let us have any juggling and thimble-rigging with virtue

and vice, so that, at the end of three volumes, the bewildered

reader shall not know which is which; don't let us find ourselves

kindling at the generous qualities of thieves, and sympathising with

the rascalities of noble hearts. For our own part, we know what the

public likes, and have chosen rogues for our characters, and have

taken a story from the "Newgate Calendar," which we hope to follow

out to edification. Among the rogues, at least, we will have

nothing that shall be mistaken for virtues. And if the British

public (after calling for three or four editions) shall give up, not

only our rascals, but the rascals of all other authors, we shall be

content:--we shall apply to Government for a pension, and think that

our duty is done.

CHAPTER II. IN WHICH ARE DEPICTED THE PLEASURES OF A SENTIMENTAL

ATTACHMENT.

It will not be necessary, for the purpose of this history, to follow

out very closely all the adventures which occurred to Mrs. Catherine

from the period when she quitted the "Bugle" and became the

Captain's lady; for although it would be just as easy to show as

not, that the young woman, by following the man of her heart, had

only yielded to an innocent impulse, and by remaining with him for a

certain period, had proved the depth and strength of her affection

for him,--although we might make very tender and eloquent apologies

for the error of both parties, the reader might possibly be

disgusted at such descriptions and such arguments: which, besides,

are already done to his hand in the novel of "Ernest Maltravers"

before mentioned.

From the gentleman's manner towards Mrs. Catherine, and from his

brilliant and immediate success, the reader will doubtless have

concluded, in the first place, that Gustavus Adolphus had not a very

violent affection for Mrs. Cat; in the second place, that he was a

professional lady-killer, and therefore likely at some period to

resume his profession; thirdly, and to conclude, that a connection

so begun, must, in the nature of things, be likely to end speedily.

And so, to do the Count justice, it would, if he had been allowed to

follow his own inclination entirely; for (as many young gentlemen

will, and yet no praise to them) in about a week he began to be

indifferent, in a month to be weary, in two months to be angry, in

three to proceed to blows and curses; and, in short, to repent most

bitterly the hour when he had ever been induced to present Mrs.

Catherine the toe of his boot, for the purpose of lifting her on to

his horse.

"Egad!" said he to the Corporal one day, when confiding his griefs

to Mr. Brock, "I wish my toe had been cut off before ever it served

as a ladder to this little vixen."

"Or perhaps your honour would wish to kick her downstairs with it?"

delicately suggested Mr. Brock.

"Kick her! why, the wench would hold so fast by the banisters that I

COULD not kick her down, Mr. Brock. To tell you a bit of a secret,

I HAVE tried as much--not to kick her--no, no, not kick her,

certainly: that's ungentlemanly--but to INDUCE her to go back to

that cursed pot-house where we fell in with her. I have given her

many hints--"

"Oh, yes, I saw your honour give her one yesterday--with a mug of

beer. By the laws, as the ale run all down her face, and she

clutched a knife to run at you, I don't think I ever saw such a

she-devil! That woman will do for your honour some day, if you

provoke her."

"Do for ME? No, hang it, Mr. Brock, never! She loves every hair of

my head, sir: she worships me, Corporal. Egad, yes! she worships

me; and would much sooner apply a knife to her own weasand than

scratch my little finger!"

"I think she does," said Mr. Brock.

"I'm sure of it," said the Captain. "Women, look you, are like

dogs, they like to be ill-treated: they like it, sir; I know they

do. I never had anything to do with a woman in my life but I

ill-treated her, and she liked me the better."

"Mrs. Hall ought to be VERY fond of you then, sure enough!" said Mr.

Corporal.

"Very fond;--ha, ha! Corporal, you wag you--and so she IS very fond.

Yesterday, after the knife-and-beer scene--no wonder I threw the

liquor in her face: it was so dev'lish flat that no gentleman could

drink it: and I told her never to draw it till dinner-time--"

"Oh, it was enough to put an angel in a fury!" said Brock.

"Well, yesterday, after the knife business, when you had got the

carver out of her hand, off she flings to her bedroom, will not eat

a bit of dinner forsooth, and remains locked up for a couple of

hours. At two o'clock afternoon (I was over a tankard), out comes

the little she-devil, her face pale, her eyes bleared, and the tip

of her nose as red as fire with sniffling and weeping. Making for

my hand, 'Max,' says she, 'will you forgive me?' 'What!' says I.

'Forgive a murderess?' says I. 'No, curse me, never!' 'Your

cruelty will kill me,' sobbed she. 'Cruelty be hanged!' says I;

'didn't you draw that beer an hour before dinner?' She could say

nothing to THIS, you know, and I swore that every time she did so, I

would fling it into her face again. Whereupon back she flounced to

her chamber, where she wept and stormed until night-time."

"When you forgave her?"

"I DID forgive her, that's positive. You see I had supped at the

'Rose' along with Tom Trippet and half-a-dozen pretty fellows; and I

had eased a great fat-headed Warwickshire landjunker--what d'ye call

him?--squire, of forty pieces; and I'm dev'lish good-humoured when

I've won, and so Cat and I made it up: but I've taught her never to

bring me stale beer again--ha, ha!"

This conversation will explain, a great deal better than any

description of ours, however eloquent, the state of things as

between Count Maximilian and Mrs. Catherine, and the feelings which

they entertained for each other. The woman loved him, that was the

fact. And, as we have shown in the previous chapter how John Hayes,

a mean-spirited fellow as ever breathed, in respect of all other

passions a pigmy, was in the passion of love a giant, and followed

Mrs. Catherine with a furious longing which might seem at the first

to be foreign to his nature; in the like manner, and playing at

cross-purposes, Mrs. Hall had become smitten of the Captain; and, as

he said truly, only liked him the better for the brutality which she

received at his hands. For it is my opinion, madam, that love is a

bodily infirmity, from which humankind can no more escape than from

small-pox; and which attacks every one of us, from the first duke in

the Peerage down to Jack Ketch inclusive: which has no respect for

rank, virtue, or roguery in man, but sets each in his turn in a

fever; which breaks out the deuce knows how or why, and, raging its

appointed time, fills each individual of the one sex with a blind

fury and longing for some one of the other (who may be pure, gentle,

blue-eyed, beautiful, and good; or vile, shrewish, squinting,

hunchbacked, and hideous, according to circumstances and luck);

which dies away, perhaps, in the natural course, if left to have its

way, but which contradiction causes to rage more furiously than

ever. Is not history, from the Trojan war upwards and downwards,

full of instances of such strange inexplicable passions? Was not

Helen, by the most moderate calculation, ninety years of age when

she went off with His Royal Highness Prince Paris of Troy? Was not

Madame La Valliere ill-made, blear-eyed, tallow-complexioned,

scraggy, and with hair like tow? Was not Wilkes the ugliest,

charmingest, most successful man in the world? Such instances might

be carried out so as to fill a volume; but cui bono? Love is fate,

and not will; its origin not to be explained, its progress

irresistible: and the best proof of this may be had at Bow Street

any day, where if you ask any officer of the establishment how they

take most thieves, he will tell you at the houses of the women.

They must see the dear creatures though they hang for it; they will

love, though they have their necks in the halter. And with regard

to the other position, that ill-usage on the part of the man does

not destroy the affection of the woman, have we not numberless

police-reports, showing how, when a bystander would beat a husband

for beating his wife, man and wife fall together on the interloper

and punish him for his meddling?

These points, then, being settled to the satisfaction of all

parties, the reader will not be disposed to question the assertion

that Mrs. Hall had a real affection for the gallant Count, and grew,

as Mr. Brock was pleased to say, like a beefsteak, more tender as

she was thumped. Poor thing, poor thing! his flashy airs and smart

looks had overcome her in a single hour; and no more is wanted to

plunge into love over head and ears; no more is wanted to make a

first love with--and a woman's first love lasts FOR EVER (a man's

twenty-fourth or twenty-fifth is perhaps the best): you can't kill

it, do what you will; it takes root, and lives and even grows, never

mind what the soil may be in which it is planted, or the bitter

weather it must bear--often as one has seen a wallflower grow--out

of a stone.

In the first weeks of their union, the Count had at least been

liberal to her: she had a horse and fine clothes, and received

abroad some of those flattering attentions which she held at such

high price. He had, however, some ill-luck at play, or had been

forced to pay some bills, or had some other satisfactory reason for

being poor, and his establishment was very speedily diminished. He

argued that, as Mrs. Catherine had been accustomed to wait on others

all her life, she might now wait upon herself and him; and when the

incident of the beer arose, she had been for some time employed as

the Count's housekeeper, with unlimited superintendence over his

comfort, his cellar, his linen, and such matters as bachelors are

delighted to make over to active female hands. To do the poor

wretch justice, she actually kept the man's menage in the best

order; nor was there any point of extravagance with which she could

be charged, except a little extravagance of dress displayed on the

very few occasions when he condescended to walk abroad with her, and

extravagance of language and passion in the frequent quarrels they

had together. Perhaps in such a connection as subsisted between

this precious couple, these faults are inevitable on the part of the

woman. She must be silly and vain, and will pretty surely therefore

be fond of dress; and she must, disguise it as she will, be

perpetually miserable and brooding over her fall, which will cause

her to be violent and quarrelsome.

Such, at least, was Mrs. Hall; and very early did the poor vain

misguided wretch begin to reap what she had sown.

For a man, remorse under these circumstances is perhaps uncommon.

No stigma affixes on HIM for betraying a woman; no bitter pangs of

mortified vanity; no insulting looks of superiority from his

neighbour, and no sentence of contemptuous banishment is read

against him; these all fall on the tempted, and not on the tempter,

who is permitted to go free. The chief thing that a man learns

after having successfully practised on a woman is to despise the

poor wretch whom he has won. The game, in fact, and the glory, such

as it is, is all his, and the punishment alone falls upon her.

Consider this, ladies, when charming young gentlemen come to woo you

with soft speeches. You have nothing to win, except wretchedness,

and scorn, and desertion. Consider this, and be thankful to your

Solomons for telling it.

It came to pass, then, that the Count had come to have a perfect

contempt and indifference for Mrs. Hall;--how should he not for a

young person who had given herself up to him so easily?--and would

have been quite glad of any opportunity of parting with her. But

there was a certain lingering shame about the man, which prevented

him from saying at once and abruptly, "Go!" and the poor thing did

not choose to take such hints as fell out in the course of their

conversation and quarrels. And so they kept on together, he

treating her with simple insult, and she hanging on desperately, by

whatever feeble twig she could find, to the rock beyond which all

was naught, or death, to her.

Well, after the night with Tom Trippet and the pretty fellows at the

"Rose," to which we have heard the Count allude in the conversation

just recorded, Fortune smiled on him a good deal; for the

Warwickshire squire, who had lost forty pieces on that occasion,

insisted on having his revenge the night after; when, strange to

say, a hundred and fifty more found their way into the pouch of his

Excellency the Count. Such a sum as this quite set the young

nobleman afloat again, and brought back a pleasing equanimity to his

mind, which had been a good deal disturbed in the former difficult

circumstances; and in this, for a little and to a certain extent,

poor Cat had the happiness to share. He did not alter the style of

his establishment, which consisted, as before, of herself and a

small person who acted as scourer, kitchen-wench, and scullion; Mrs.

Catherine always putting her hand to the principal pieces of the

dinner; but he treated his mistress with tolerable good-humour; or,

to speak more correctly, with such bearable brutality as might be

expected from a man like him to a woman in her condition. Besides,

a certain event was about to take place, which not unusually occurs

in circumstances of this nature, and Mrs. Catherine was expecting

soon to lie in.

The Captain, distrusting naturally the strength of his own paternal

feelings, had kindly endeavoured to provide a parent for the coming

infant; and to this end had opened a negotiation with our friend Mr.

Thomas Bullock, declaring that Mrs. Cat should have a fortune of

twenty guineas, and reminding Tummas of his ancient flame for her:

but Mr. Tummas, when this proposition was made to him, declined it,

with many oaths, and vowed that he was perfectly satisfied with his

present bachelor condition. In this dilemma, Mr. Brock stepped

forward, who declared himself very ready to accept Mrs. Catherine

and her fortune: and might possibly have become the possessor of

both, had not Mrs. Cat, the moment she heard of the proposed

arrangement, with fire in her eyes, and rage--oh, how bitter!--in

her heart, prevented the success of the measure by proceeding

incontinently to the first justice of the peace, and there swearing

before his worship who was the father of the coming child.

This proceeding, which she had expected would cause not a little

indignation on the part of her lord and master, was received by him,

strangely enough, with considerable good-humour: he swore that the

wench had served him a good trick, and was rather amused at the

anger, the outbreak of fierce rage and contumely, and the wretched

wretched tears of heartsick desperation, which followed her

announcement of this step to him. For Mr. Brock, she repelled his

offer with scorn and loathing, and treated the notion of a union

with Mr. Bullock with yet fiercer contempt. Marry him indeed! a

workhouse pauper carrying a brown-bess! She would have died sooner,

she said, or robbed on the highway. And so, to do her justice, she

would: for the little minx was one of the vainest creatures in

existence, and vanity (as I presume everybody knows) becomes THE

principle in certain women's hearts--their moral spectacles, their

conscience, their meat and drink, their only rule of right and

wrong.

As for Mr. Tummas, he, as we have seen, was quite unfriendly to the

proposition as she could be; and the Corporal, with a good deal of

comical gravity, vowed that, as he could not be satisfied in his

dearest wishes, he would take to drinking for a consolation: which

he straightway did.

"Come, Tummas," said he to Mr. Bullock "since we CAN'T have the girl

of our hearts, why, hang it, Tummas, let's drink her health!" To

which Bullock had no objection. And so strongly did the

disappointment weigh upon honest Corporal Brock, that even when,

after unheard-of quantities of beer, he could scarcely utter a word,

he was seen absolutely to weep, and, in accents almost

unintelligible, to curse his confounded ill-luck at being deprived,

not of a wife, but of a child: he wanted one so, he said, to

comfort him in his old age.

The time of Mrs. Catherine's couche drew near, arrived, and was gone

through safely. She presented to the world a chopping boy, who

might use, if he liked, the Galgenstein arms with a bar-sinister;

and in her new cares and duties had not so many opportunities as

usual of quarrelling with the Count: who, perhaps, respected her

situation, or, at least, was so properly aware of the necessity of

quiet to her, that he absented himself from home morning, noon, and

night.

The Captain had, it must be confessed, turned these continued

absences to a considerable worldly profit, for he played

incessantly; and, since his first victory over the Warwickshire

Squire, Fortune had been so favourable to him, that he had at

various intervals amassed a sum of nearly a thousand pounds, which

he used to bring home as he won; and which he deposited in a strong

iron chest, cunningly screwed down by himself under his own bed.

This Mrs. Catherine regularly made, and the treasure underneath it

could be no secret to her. However, the noble Count kept the key,

and bound her by many solemn oaths (that he discharged at her

himself) not to reveal to any other person the existence of the

chest and its contents.

But it is not in a woman's nature to keep such secrets; and the

Captain, who left her for days and days, did not reflect that she

would seek for confidants elsewhere. For want of a female

companion, she was compelled to bestow her sympathies upon Mr.

Brock; who, as the Count's corporal, was much in his lodgings, and

who did manage to survive the disappointment which he had

experienced by Mrs. Catherine's refusal of him.

About two months after the infant's birth, the Captain, who was

annoyed by its squalling, put it abroad to nurse, and dismissed its

attendant. Mrs. Catherine now resumed her household duties, and

was, as before, at once mistress and servant of the establishment.

As such, she had the keys of the beer, and was pretty sure of the

attentions of the Corporal; who became, as we have said, in the

Count's absence, his lady's chief friend and companion. After the

manner of ladies, she very speedily confided to him all her domestic

secrets; the causes of her former discontent; the Count's ill-

treatment of her; the wicked names he called her; the prices that

all her gowns had cost her; how he beat her; how much money he won

and lost at play; how she had once pawned a coat for him; how he had

four new ones, laced, and paid for; what was the best way of

cleaning and keeping gold-lace, of making cherry-brandy, pickling

salmon, etc., etc. Her confidences upon all these subjects used to

follow each other in rapid succession; and Mr. Brock became, ere

long, quite as well acquainted with the Captain's history for the

last year as the Count himself:--for he was careless, and forgot

things; women never do. They chronicle all the lover's small

actions, his words, his headaches, the dresses he has worn, the

things he has liked for dinner on certain days;--all which

circumstances commonly are expunged from the male brain immediately

after they have occurred, but remain fixed with the female.

To Brock, then, and to Brock only (for she knew no other soul), Mrs.

Cat breathed, in strictest confidence, the history of the Count's

winnings, and his way of disposing of them; how he kept his money

screwed down in an iron chest in their room; and a very lucky fellow

did Brock consider his officer for having such a large sum. He and

Cat looked at the chest: it was small, but mighty strong, sure

enough, and would defy picklocks and thieves. Well, if any man

deserved money, the Captain did ("though he might buy me a few yards

of that lace I love so," interrupted Cat),--if any man deserved

money, he did, for he spent it like a prince, and his hand was

always in his pocket.

It must now be stated that Monsieur de Galgenstein had, during Cat's

seclusion, cast his eyes upon a young lady of good fortune, who

frequented the Assembly at Birmingham, and who was not a little

smitten by his title and person. The "four new coats, laced, and

paid for," as Cat said, had been purchased, most probably, by his

Excellency for the purpose of dazzling the heiress; and he and the

coats had succeeded so far as to win from the young woman an actual

profession of love, and a promise of marriage provided Pa would

consent. This was obtained,--for Pa was a tradesman; and I suppose

every one of my readers has remarked how great an effect a title has

on the lower classes. Yes, thank Heaven! there is about a freeborn

Briton a cringing baseness, and lickspittle awe of rank, which does

not exist under any tyranny in Europe, and is only to be found here

and in America.

All these negotiations had been going on quite unknown to Cat; and,

as the Captain had determined, before two months were out, to fling

that young woman on the pave, he was kind to her in the meanwhile:

people always are when they are swindling you, or meditating an

injury against you.

The poor girl had much too high an opinion of her own charms to

suspect that the Count could be unfaithful to them, and had no

notion of the plot that was formed against her. But Mr. Brock had:

for he had seen many times a gilt coach with a pair of fat white

horses ambling in the neighbourhood of the town, and the Captain on

his black steed caracolling majestically by its side; and he had

remarked a fat, pudgy, pale-haired woman treading heavily down the

stairs of the Assembly, leaning on the Captain's arm: all these Mr.

Brock had seen, not without reflection. Indeed, the Count one day,

in great good-humour, had slapped him on the shoulder and told him

that he was about speedily to purchase a regiment; when, by his

great gods, Mr. Brock should have a pair of colours. Perhaps this

promise occasioned his silence to Mrs. Catherine hitherto; perhaps

he never would have peached at all; and perhaps, therefore, this

history would never have been written, but for a small circumstance

which occurred at this period.

"What can you want with that drunken old Corporal always about your

quarters?" said Mr. Trippet to the Count one day, as they sat over

their wine, in the midst of a merry company, at the Captain's rooms.

"What!" said he. "Old Brock? The old thief has been more useful to

me than many a better man. He is as brave in a row as a lion, as

cunning in intrigue as a fox; he can nose a dun at an inconceivable

distance, and scent out a pretty woman be she behind ever so many

stone walls. If a gentleman wants a good rascal now, I can

recommend him. I am going to reform, you know, and must turn him

out of my service."

"And pretty Mrs. Cat?"

"Oh, curse pretty Mrs. Cat! she may go too."

"And the brat?"

"Why, you have parishes, and what not, here in England. Egad! if a

gentleman were called upon to keep all his children, there would be

no living: no, stap my vitals! Croesus couldn't stand it."

"No, indeed," said Mr. Trippet: "you are right; and when a

gentleman marries, he is bound in honour to give up such low

connections as are useful when he is a bachelor."

"Of course; and give them up I will, when the sweet Mrs. Dripping is

mine. As for the girl, you can have her, Tom Trippet, if you take a

fancy to her; and as for the Corporal, he may be handed over to my

successor in Cutts's:--for I will have a regiment to myself, that's

poz; and to take with me such a swindling, pimping, thieving,

brandy-faced rascal as this Brock will never do. Egad! he's a

disgrace to the service. As it is, I've often a mind to have the

superannuated vagabond drummed out of the corps."

Although this resume of Mr. Brock's character and accomplishments

was very just, it came perhaps with an ill grace from Count Gustavus

Adolphus Maximilian, who had profited by all his qualities, and who

certainly would never have given this opinion of them had he known

that the door of his dining-parlour was open, and that the gallant

Corporal, who was in the passage, could hear every syllable that

fell from the lips of his commanding officer. We shall not say,

after the fashion of the story-books, that Mr. Brock listened with a

flashing eye and a distended nostril; that his chest heaved

tumultuously, and that his hand fell down mechanically to his side,

where it played with the brass handle of his sword. Mr. Kean would

have gone through most of these bodily exercises had he been acting

the part of a villain enraged and disappointed like Corporal Brock;

but that gentleman walked away without any gestures of any kind, and

as gently as possible. "He'll turn me out of the regiment, will

he?" says he, quite piano; and then added (con molta espressione),

"I'll do for him."

And it is to be remarked how generally, in cases of this nature,

gentlemen stick to their word.

CHAPTER III. IN WHICH A NARCOTIC IS ADMINISTERED, AND A GREAT DEAL

OF GENTEEL SOCIETY DEPICTED.

When the Corporal, who had retreated to the street-door immediately

on hearing the above conversation, returned to the Captain's

lodgings and paid his respects to Mrs. Catherine, he found that lady

in high good-humour. The Count had been with her, she said, along

with a friend of his, Mr. Trippet; had promised her twelve yards of

the lace she coveted so much; had vowed that the child should have

as much more for a cloak; and had not left her until he had sat with

her for an hour, or more, over a bowl of punch, which he made on

purpose for her. Mr. Trippet stayed too. "A mighty pleasant man,"

said she; "only not very wise, and seemingly a good deal in liquor."

"A good deal indeed!" said the Corporal. "He was so tipsy just now

that he could hardly stand. He and his honour were talking to Nan

Fantail in the market-place; and she pulled Trippet's wig off, for

wanting to kiss her."

"The nasty fellow!" said Mrs. Cat, "to demean himself with such low

people as Nan Fantail, indeed! Why, upon my conscience now,

Corporal, it was but an hour ago that Mr. Trippet swore he never saw

such a pair of eyes as mine, and would like to cut the Captain's

throat for the love of me. Nan Fantail, indeed!"

"Nan's an honest girl, Madam Catherine, and was a great favourite of

the Captain's before someone else came in his way. No one can say a

word against her--not a word."

"And pray, Corporal, who ever did?" said Mrs. Cat, rather offended.

"A nasty, ugly slut! I wonder what the men can see in her?"

"She has got a smart way with her, sure enough; it's what amuses the

men, and--"

"And what? You don't mean to say that my Max is fond of her NOW?"

said Mrs. Catherine, looking very fierce.

"Oh, no; not at all: not of HER;--that is--"

"Not of HER!" screamed she. "Of whom, then?"

"Oh, psha! nonsense! Of you, my dear, to be sure; who else should

he care for? And, besides, what business is it of mine?" And

herewith the Corporal began whistling, as if he would have no more

of the conversation. But Mrs. Cat was not to be satisfied,--not

she,--and carried on her cross-questions.

"Why, look you," said the Corporal, after parrying many of

these,--"Why, look you, I'm an old fool, Catherine, and I must blab.

That man has been the best friend I ever had, and so I was quiet;

but I can't keep it in any longer,--no, hang me if I can! It's my

belief he's acting like a rascal by you: he deceives you,

Catherine; he's a scoundrel, Mrs. Hall, that's the truth on't."

Catherine prayed him to tell all he knew; and he resumed.

"He wants you off his hands; he's sick of you, and so brought here

that fool Tom Trippet, who has taken a fancy to you. He has not the

courage to turn you out of doors like a man; though indoors he can

treat you like a beast. But I'll tell you what he'll do. In a

month he will go to Coventry, or pretend to go there, on recruiting

business. No such thing, Mrs. Hall; he's going on MARRIAGE

business; and he'll leave you without a farthing, to starve or to

rot, for him. It's all arranged, I tell you: in a month, you are

to be starved into becoming Tom Trippet's mistress; and his honour

is to marry rich Miss Dripping, the twenty-thousand-pounder from

London; and to purchase a regiment;--and to get old Brock drummed

out of Cutts's too," said the Corporal, under his breath. But he

might have spoken out, if he chose; for the poor young woman had

sunk on the ground in a real honest fit.

"I thought I should give it her," said Mr. Brock as he procured a

glass of water; and, lifting her on to a sofa, sprinkled the same

over her. "Hang it! how pretty she is."

  • * *

When Mrs. Catherine came to herself again, Brock's tone with her was

kind, and almost feeling. Nor did the poor wench herself indulge in

any subsequent shiverings and hysterics, such as usually follow the

fainting-fits of persons of higher degree. She pressed him for

further explanations, which he gave, and to which she listened with

a great deal of calmness; nor did many tears, sobs, sighs, or

exclamations of sorrow or anger escape from her: only when the

Corporal was taking his leave, and said to her point-blank,--" Well,

Mrs. Catherine, and what do you intend to do?" she did not reply a

word; but gave a look which made him exclaim, on leaving the room,--

"By heavens! the woman means murder! I would not be the Holofernes

to lie by the side of such a Judith as that--not I!" And he went

his way, immersed in deep thought. When the Captain returned at

night, she did not speak to him; and when he swore at her for being

sulky, she only said she had a headache, and was dreadfully ill;

with which excuse Gustavus Adolphus seemed satisfied, and left her

to herself.

He saw her the next morning for a moment: he was going a-shooting.

Catherine had no friend, as is usual in tragedies and romances,--no

mysterious sorceress of her acquaintance to whom she could apply for

poison,--so she went simply to the apothecaries, pretending at each

that she had a dreadful toothache, and procuring from them as much

laudanum as she thought would suit her purpose.

When she went home again she seemed almost gay. Mr. Brock

complimented her upon the alteration in her appearance; and she was

enabled to receive the Captain at his return from shooting in such a

manner as made him remark that she had got rid of her sulks of the

morning, and might sup with them, if she chose to keep her good-

humour. The supper was got ready, and the gentlemen had the

punch-bowl when the cloth was cleared,--Mrs. Catherine, with her

delicate hands, preparing the liquor.

It is useless to describe the conversation that took place, or to

reckon the number of bowls that were emptied; or to tell how Mr.

Trippet, who was one of the guests, and declined to play at cards

when some of the others began, chose to remain by Mrs. Catherine's

side, and make violent love to her. All this might be told, and the

account, however faithful, would not be very pleasing. No, indeed!

And here, though we are only in the third chapter of this history,

we feel almost sick of the characters that appear in it, and the

adventures which they are called upon to go through. But how can we

help ourselves? The public will hear of nothing but rogues; and the

only way in which poor authors, who must live, can act honestly by

the public and themselves, is to paint such thieves as they are:

not, dandy, poetical, rose-water thieves; but real downright

scoundrels, leading scoundrelly lives, drunken, profligate,

dissolute, low; as scoundrels will be. They don't quote Plato, like

Eugene Aram; or live like gentlemen, and sing the pleasantest

ballads in the world, like jolly Dick Turpin; or prate eternally

about "to kalon,"* like that precious canting Maltravers, whom we

all of us have read about and pitied; or die whitewashed saints,

like poor "Biss Dadsy" in "Oliver Twist." No, my dear madam, you

and your daughters have no right to admire and sympathise with any

such persons, fictitious or real: you ought to be made cordially to

detest, scorn, loathe, abhor, and abominate all people of this

kidney. Men of genius like those whose works we have above alluded

to, have no business to make these characters interesting or

agreeable; to be feeding your morbid fancies, or indulging their

own, with such monstrous food. For our parts, young ladies, we beg

you to bottle up your tears, and not waste a single drop of them on

any one of the heroes or heroines in this history: they are all

rascals, every soul of them, and behave "as sich." Keep your

sympathy for those who deserve it: don't carry it, for preference,

to the Old Bailey, and grow maudlin over the company assembled

there.

  • Anglicised version of the author's original Greek text.

Just, then, have the kindness to fancy that the conversation which

took place over the bowls of punch which Mrs. Catherine prepared,

was such as might be expected to take place where the host was a

dissolute, dare-devil, libertine captain of dragoons, the guests for

the most part of the same class, and the hostess a young woman

originally from a country alehouse, and for the present mistress to

the entertainer of the society. They talked, and they drank, and

they grew tipsy; and very little worth hearing occurred during the

course of the whole evening. Mr. Brock officiated, half as the

servant, half as the companion of the society. Mr. Thomas Trippet

made violent love to Mrs. Catherine, while her lord and master was

playing at dice with the other gentlemen: and on this night,

strange to say, the Captain's fortune seemed to desert him. The

Warwickshire Squire, from whom he had won so much, had an amazing

run of good luck. The Captain called perpetually for more drink,

and higher stakes, and lost almost every throw. Three hundred, four

hundred, six hundred--all his winnings of the previous months were

swallowed up in the course of a few hours. The Corporal looked on;

and, to do him justice, seemed very grave as, sum by sum, the Squire

scored down the Count's losses on the paper before him.

Most of the company had taken their hats and staggered off. The

Squire and Mr. Trippet were the only two that remained, the latter

still lingering by Mrs. Catherine's sofa and table; and as she, as

we have stated, had been employed all the evening in mixing the

liquor for the gamesters, he was at the headquarters of love and

drink, and had swallowed so much of each as hardly to be able to

speak.

The dice went rattling on; the candles were burning dim, with great

long wicks. Mr. Trippet could hardly see the Captain, and thought,

as far as his muzzy reason would let him, that the Captain could not

see him: so he rose from his chair as well as he could, and fell

down on Mrs. Catherine's sofa. His eyes were fixed, his face was

pale, his jaw hung down; and he flung out his arms and said, in a

maudlin voice, "Oh, you byoo-oo-oo-tifile Cathrine, I must have a

kick-kick-iss."

"Beast!" said Mrs. Catherine, and pushed him away. The drunken

wretch fell off the sofa, and on to the floor, where he stayed; and,

after snorting out some unintelligible sounds, went to sleep.

The dice went rattling on; the candles were burning dim, with great

long wicks.

"Seven's the main," cried the Count. "Four. Three to two against

the caster."

"Ponies," said the Warwickshire Squire.

Rattle, rattle, rattle, rattle, clatter, NINE. Clap, clap, clap,

clap, ELEVEN. Clutter, clutter, clutter, clutter: "Seven it is,"

says the Warwickshire Squire. "That makes eight hundred, Count."

"One throw for two hundred," said the Count. "But stop! Cat, give

us some more punch."

Mrs. Cat came forward; she looked a little pale, and her hand

trembled somewhat. "Here is the punch, Max," said she. It was

steaming hot, in a large glass. "Don't drink it all," said she;

"leave me some."

"How dark it is!" said the Count, eyeing it.

"It's the brandy," said Cat.

"Well, here goes! Squire, curse you! here's your health, and bad

luck to you!" and he gulped off more than half the liquor at a

draught. But presently he put down the glass and cried, "What

infernal poison is this, Cat?"

"Poison!" said she. "It's no poison. Give me the glass." And she

pledged Max, and drank a little of it. "'Tis good punch, Max, and

of my brewing; I don't think you will ever get any better." And she

went back to the sofa again, and sat down, and looked at the

players.

Mr. Brock looked at her white face and fixed eyes with a grim kind

of curiosity. The Count sputtered, and cursed the horrid taste of

the punch still; but he presently took the box, and made his

threatened throw.

As before, the Squire beat him; and having booked his winnings, rose

from table as well as he might and besought to lead him downstairs;

which Mr. Brock did.

Liquor had evidently stupefied the Count: he sat with his head

between his hands, muttering wildly about ill-luck, seven's the

main, bad punch, and so on. The street-door banged to; and the

steps of Brock and the Squire were heard, until they could be heard

no more.

"Max," said she; but he did not answer. "Max," said she again,

laying her hand on his shoulder.

"Curse you," said that gentleman, "keep off, and don't be laying

your paws upon me. Go to bed, you jade, or to--,for what I care;

and give me first some more punch--a gallon more punch, do you

hear?"

The gentleman, by the curses at the commencement of this little

speech, and the request contained at the end of it, showed that his

losses vexed him, and that he was anxious to forget them

temporarily.

"Oh, Max!" whimpered Mrs. Cat, "you--don't--want any more punch?"

"Don't! Shan't I be drunk in my own house, you cursed whimpering

jade, you? Get out!" and with this the Captain proceeded to

administer a blow upon Mrs. Catherine's cheek.

Contrary to her custom, she did not avenge it, or seek to do so, as

on the many former occasions when disputes of this nature had arisen

between the Count and her; but now Mrs. Catherine fell on her knees

and, clasping her hands and looking pitifully in the Count's face,

cried, "Oh, Count, forgive me, forgive me!"

"Forgive you! What for? Because I slapped your face? Ha, ha!

I'll forgive you again, if you don't mind."

"Oh, no, no, no!" said she, wringing her hands. "It isn't that.

Max, dear Max, will you forgive me? It isn't the blow--I don't mind

that; it's--"

"It's what, you--maudlin fool?"

"IT'S THE PUNCH!"

The Count, who was more than half seas over, here assumed an air of

much tipsy gravity. "The punch! No, I never will forgive you that

last glass of punch. Of all the foul, beastly drinks I ever tasted,

that was the worst. No, I never will forgive you that punch."

"Oh, it isn't that, it isn't that!" said she.

"I tell you it is that,--you! That punch, I say that punch was no

better than paw--aw-oison." And here the Count's head sank back,

and he fell to snore.

"IT WAS POISON!" said she.

"WHAT!" screamed he, waking up at once, and spurning her away from

him. "What, you infernal murderess, have you killed me?"

"Oh, Max!--don't kill me, Max! It was laudanum--indeed it was. You

were going to be married, and I was furious, and I went and got--"

"Hold your tongue, you fiend," roared out the Count; and with more

presence of mind than politeness, he flung the remainder of the

liquor (and, indeed, the glass with it) at the head of Mrs.

Catherine. But the poisoned chalice missed its mark, and fell right

on the nose of Mr. Tom Trippet, who was left asleep and unobserved

under the table.

Bleeding, staggering, swearing, indeed a ghastly sight, up sprang

Mr. Trippet, and drew his rapier. "Come on," says he; "never say

die! What's the row? I'm ready for a dozen of you." And he made

many blind and furious passes about the room.

"Curse you, we'll die together!" shouted the Count, as he too pulled

out his toledo, and sprang at Mrs. Catherine.

"Help! murder! thieves!" shrieked she. "Save me, Mr. Trippet, save

me!" and she placed that gentleman between herself and the Count,

and then made for the door of the bedroom, and gained it, and bolted

it.

"Out of the way, Trippet," roared the Count--"out of the way, you

drunken beast! I'll murder her, I will--I'll have the devil's

life." And here he gave a swinging cut at Mr. Trippet's sword: it

sent the weapon whirling clean out of his hand, and through a window

into the street.

"Take my life, then," said Mr. Trippet: "I'm drunk, but I'm a man,

and, damme! will never say die."

"I don't want your life, you stupid fool. Hark you, Trippet, wake

and be sober, if you can. That woman has heard of my marriage with

Miss Dripping."

"Twenty thousand pound," ejaculated Trippet.

"She has been jealous, I tell you, and POISONED us. She has put

laudanum into the punch."

"What, in MY punch?" said Trippet, growing quite sober and losing

his courage. "O Lord! O Lord!"

"Don't stand howling there, but run for a doctor; 'tis our only

chance." And away ran Mr. Trippet, as if the deuce were at his

heels.

The Count had forgotten his murderous intentions regarding his

mistress, or had deferred them at least, under the consciousness of

his own pressing danger. And it must be said, in the praise of a

man who had fought for and against Marlborough and Tallard, that his

courage in this trying and novel predicament never for a moment

deserted him, but that he showed the greatest daring, as well as

ingenuity, in meeting and averting the danger. He flew to the

sideboard, where were the relics of a supper, and seizing the

mustard and salt pots, and a bottle of oil, he emptied them all into

a jug, into which he further poured a vast quantity of hot water.

This pleasing mixture he then, without a moment's hesitation, placed

to his lips, and swallowed as much of it as nature would allow him.

But when he had imbibed about a quart, the anticipated effect was

produced, and he was enabled, by the power of this ingenious

extemporaneous emetic, to get rid of much of the poison which Mrs.

Catherine had ad