Читать книгу The Knight Of Gwynne, Vol. 1 - Lever Charles James - Страница 3
CHAPTER II. A TRAVELLING ACQUAINTANCE
ОглавлениеWhatever the merits or demerits of the great question, the legislative union between England and Ireland, – and assuredly we have neither the temptation of duty nor inclination to discuss such here, – the means employed by Ministers to carry the measure through Parliament were in the last degree disgraceful. Never was bribery practised with more open effrontery, never did corruption display itself with more daring indifference to public opinion; the Treasury office was an open mart, where votes were purchased, and men sold their country, delighted, as a candid member of the party confessed, – delighted “to have a country to sell.”
The ardor of a political career, like the passion for the chase, would seem in its high excitement to still many compunctious murmurings of conscience which in calmer moments could not fail to be heard and acknowledged: the desire to succeed, that ever-present impulse to win, steels the heart against impressions which, under less pressing excitements, had been most painful to endure; and, in this way, honorable and high-minded men have often stooped to acts which, with calmer judgment to guide them, they would have rejected with indignation.
Such was Dick Forester’s position at the moment. An aide-de-camp on the staff of the Viceroy, a near relative of the Secretary, he was intrusted with many secret and delicate negotiations, affairs in which, had he been a third party, he would have as scrupulously condemned the tempter as the tempted; the active zeal of agency allayed, however, all such qualms of conscience, and every momentary pang of remorse was swallowed up in the ardor for success.
Few men will deny in the abstract the cruelty of many field-sports they persist in following; fewer still abandon them on such scruples; and while Forester felt half ashamed to himself of the functions committed to him, he would have been sorely disappointed if he had been passed over in the selection of his relative’s political adherents.
Of this nature were some of Dick Forester’s reflections as he posted along towards the West; nor was the scene through which he journeyed suggestive of pleasanter thoughts. If any of our readers should perchance be acquainted with that dreary line of country which lies along the great western road of Ireland, they will not feel surprised if the traveller’s impressions of the land were not of the brightest or fairest. The least reflective of mortals cannot pass through a dreary and poverty-stricken district without imbibing some of the melancholy which broods over the place. Forester was by no means such, and felt deeply and sincerely for the misery he witnessed on every hand, and was in the very crisis of some most patriotic scheme of benevolence, when his carriage arrived in front of the little inn of Kilbeggan. Resisting, without much violence to his inclinations, the civil request of the landlord to alight, he leaned back to resume the broken thread of his lucubrations, while fresh horses were put to. How long he thus waited, or what progress his benign devices accomplished in the mean while, this true history is unable to record; enough if we say that when he next became aware of the incidents then actually happening around him, he discovered that his carriage was standing fast in the same place as at the moment of his arrival, and the rain falling in torrents, as before.
To let down the glass and call out to the postilions was a very natural act; to do so with the addition of certain expletives not commonly used in good society, was not an extraordinary one. Forester did both; but he might have spared his eloquence and his indignation, for the postilions were both in the stable, and his servant agreeably occupied in the bar over the comforts of a smoking tumbler of punch. The merciful schemes so late the uppermost object of his thoughts were routed in a moment, and, vowing intentions of a very different purport to the whole household, he opened the door and sprang out. Dark as the night was, he could see that there were no horses to the carriage, and, with redoubled anger at the delay, he strode into the inn.
“Holloa, I say – house here! Linwood! Where the devil is the fellow?”
“Here, sir,” cried a smart-looking London servant, as he sprang from the bar with his eyes bolting out of his head from the heat of the last mouthful, swallowed in a second. “I’ve been a trying for horses, sir; but they’ve never got ‘em, though they ‘ve been promising to let us have a pair this half-hour.”
“No horses! Do you mean that they’ve not got a pair of posters in a town like this?”
“Yes, indeed, sir,” interposed a dirty waiter in a nankeen jacket; for the landlord was too indignant at the rejection of his proposal to appear again, “we’ve four pair, besides a mare in foal; but there’s a deal of business on the line this week past, and there’s a gentleman in the parlor now has taken four of them.”
“Taken four! Has he more than one carriage?”
“No, sir, a light chariot it is; but he likes to go fast.”
“And so do I – when I can,” muttered Forester, the last words being an addition almost independent of him. “Could n’t you tell him that there’s a gentleman here very much pressed to push on, and would take it as a great favor if he’d divide the team?”
“To be sure, sir, I’ll go and speak to him,” said the waiter, as he hurried away on the errand.
“I see how it is, sir,” said Linwood, who, with true servant dexterity, thought to turn his master’s anger into any other channel than towards himself, “they wants to get you to stop the night here.”
“Confound this trickery! I’ll pay what they please for the horses, only let us have them. – Well, waiter, what does he say?”
“He says, sir,” said the waiter, endeavoring to suppress a laugh, “if you ‘ll come in and join him at supper, you shall have whatever you like.”
“Join him at supper! No, no; I’m hurried, I’m anxious to get forward, and not the least hungry besides.”
“Hadn’t you better speak a word to him, anyhow?” said the waiter, half opening the parlor door. And Forester, accepting the suggestion, entered.
In the little low-ceilinged apartment of the small inn, at a table very amply and as temptingly covered, sat a large and, for his age, singularly handsome man. A forehead both high and broad surmounted two clear blue eyes, whose brilliancy seemed to defy the wear of time; regular and handsome teeth; and a complexion the very type of health appeared to vouch for a strength of constitution rare at his advanced age. His dress was the green coat so commonly worn by country gentlemen, with leather breeches and boots, nor, though the season was winter, did he appear to have any great-coat, or other defence against the weather. He was heaping some turf upon the fire as Forester entered, and, laughingly interrupting the operation, he stood up and bowed courteously.
“I have taken a great liberty, sir, first, to suppose that any man at this hour of the night is not the worse for something to eat and drink; and, secondly, that he might have no objection to partake of either in my company.” Forester was not exactly prepared for a manner so palpably that of the best society, and, at once repressing every sign of his former impatience, replied by apologizing for a request which might inconvenience the granter. “Let me help you to this grouse-pie, and fill yourself a glass of sherry; and by the time you have taken some refreshment, the horses will be put to. I am most happy to offer you a seat.”
“I am afraid there is a mistake somewhere,” said Forester, half timidly. “I heard you had engaged the only four horses here, and as my carriage is without, my request was to obtain two if you – ”
“But why not come with me? I ‘m pressed, and must be up, if possible, before morning. Remember, we are forty-eight miles from Dublin.”
“Dublin! But I’m going the very opposite road. I’m for Westport.”
“Oh, by Jove! that is different. What a stupid fellow the waiter is! Never mind; sit down. Let us have a glass of wine together. You shall have two of the horses. Old Wilkins must only make his spurs supply the place of the leaders.”
There was a hearty good-nature in every accent of the old man’s voice, and Forester drew his chair to the table, by no means sorry to spend some time longer in his company.
There is a kind of conversation sacred to the occupations of the table, – a mixture of the culinary and the social, the gustatory with the agreeable. And the stranger led the way to this, with the art of an accomplished proficient, and while recommending the good things to Forester’s attention, contrived to season their enjoyment by a tone at once pleasing and cordial.
“I could have sworn you were hungry,” said he, laughing, as Forester helped himself for the second time to the grouse-pie. “I know you did not expect so appetizing a supper in such a place; but Rickards has always something in the larder for an old acquaintance, and I have been travelling this road close upon sixty years now.”
“And a dreary way it is,” said Forester, “except for this most agreeable incident. I never came so many miles before with so little to interest me.”
“Very true; it is a flat, monotonous-looking country, and poor besides; but nothing like what I remember it as a boy.”
“You surely do not mean that the people were ever worse off than they seem now to be?”
“Ay, a hundred times worse off. They may be rack-rented and over-taxed in some instances now, – not as many as you would suppose, after all, – but then, they were held in actual slavery, nearly famished, and all but naked; no roads, no markets; subject to the caprice of the landowners on every occasion in life, and the faction fights – those barbarous vestiges of a rude time – kept up and encouraged by those who should have set the better example of mutual charity and good feeling. These unhappy practices have not disappeared, but they are far less frequent than formerly; and however the confession may seem to you a sad one, to me there is a pride in saying, Ireland is improving.”
“It is hard to conceive a people more miserably off than these,” said Forester, with a sigh.
“So they seem to your eyes; but let me remark that there is a transition state between rude barbarism and civilization which always appears more miserable than either; habits of life which suggest wants that can rarely, if ever, be supplied. The struggle between poverty and the desire for better, is a bitter conflict, and such is the actual condition of this people. You are young enough to witness the fruits of the reformation; I am too old ever to hope to see them, but I feel assured that the day is coming.”
“I like your theory well; it has Hope for its ally,” said Forester, as he gazed on the benevolent features of the old squire.
“It has even better, sir, it has truth; and hence it is that the peasantry, as they approach nearer to the capital, – the seat of civilization, – have fewest of those traits that please or attract strangers; they are in the transition state I speak of; while down in my wild country, you can see them in their native freshness, reckless and improvident, but light-hearted and happy.”
“Where may the country be you speak of, sir?” said Forester.
“The Far West, beside the Atlantic. You have heard of Mayo?”
“Oh, that is my destination at this moment; I am going beyond Westport, to visit one of the chieftains there. I have not the honor to know him, but I conclude that his style of living and habits will not be a bad specimen of the gentry customs generally.”
“I know that neighborhood tolerably well. May I ask the name of your future host?”
“The Knight of Gwynne is his title – Mr. Darcy – ”
“Oh! an old acquaintance, – I may almost say an old friend of mine,” said the other, smiling. “And so you are going to pass some time at Gywnne?”
“A week or so; I scarcely think I can spare more.”
“They ‘ll call that a very inhospitable visit at Gwynne, sir; the Knight’s guests rarely stay less than a month. I have just left it, and there were some there who had been since the beginning of the partridge-shooting, and not the least welcome of the party.”
“I am sorry I had not the good fortune to meet you there,” said Forester.
“Make your visit a fortnight, and I ‘ll join you, then,” said the old man, gayly. “I ‘m going up to town to settle a wager, – a foolish excursion, you ‘ll say, at my time of life; but it’s too late to mend.”
“The horses is put to, sir,” said the waiter, announcing the fact for something like the fourth time, without being attended to.
“Well, then, it is time to start. Am I to take it as a pledge that I shall find you at Gwynne this day fortnight?”
“I cannot answer for my host,” said Forester, laughing.
“Oh! old Darcy is sure to ask you to stay. By the way, would you permit me to trouble you with five lines to a friend who is now stopping there?”
“Of course; I shall be but too happy to be of any service to you.”
The old gentleman sat down, and, tearing a leaf from a capacious pocket-book, wrote a few hurried lines, which, having folded and sealed, he addressed, “Bagenal Daly, Esquire, Gwynne Abbey.”
“There, that’s my commission; pray add my service to the Knight himself, when you see him.”
“Permit me to ask, how shall I designate his friend?”
“Oh! I forgot, you don’t know me,” said he, laughing. “I have half a mind to leave the identification with your own descriptive powers.”
“I’d wager five guineas I could make the portrait a resemblance.”
“Done, then; I take the bet,” said the other; “and I promise you, on the word of a gentleman, I am known to every visitor in the house.”
Each laughed heartily at the drollery of such a wager, and, with many a profession of the pleasure a future meeting would afford to both, they parted, less like casual acquaintances than as old and intimate friends.