Books: Under the Storm
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Charlotte M. Yonge >> Under the Storm
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If Patience crossed her she would have recourse to Stead, and he
could seldom resist her coaxing, or be entirely disabused of the
notion that his sister expected too much of her. And perhaps it was
true. Patience was scarcely likely to understand differences of
character and temperament, and not merely to recollect that Emlyn was
only eighteen months younger than she had been when she had been
forced into the position of the house mother. So, while Emlyn's
wayward fancies were a great trial, Steadfast's sympathy with them
was a greater one.
Stead continued to see Jeph when taking in the market produce, for
which he was always duly paid. Jeph also wished the whole family to
come in on Sunday to profit by the preaching of some of the great
Independent lights; but Stead, after trying it once, felt so sure
that Patience would be miserable at anything so unaccustomed, so
thunderous, and, as it seemed to him, so abusive, that he held to it
that the distance was too great, and that the cattle could not be
left. The soldiery seemed to him to spend their spare time in
defacing the many churches of the city, chiefly in order to do what
they called purifying them from all idols, in which term they
included every sort of carving or picture, or even figures on
monuments.
And in this work of destruction a chest containing church plate had
been come upon, making their work greedy instead of only mischievous.
When all the churches in Bristol had been ransacked, they began to
extend their search to the parish churches in the neighbourhood, and
Stead began to be very anxious, though he hoped and believed that the
cave was a perfectly safe place.
CHAPTER XIV.
THE QUESTION.
"Dogged as does it."--TROLLOPE.
Stead, Stead," cried Rusha, running up to him, as he was slowly
digging over his stubble field to prepare it for the next crop, "the
soldiers are in Elmwood."
"Yes," said Emlyn, coming up at the same time, "they are knocking
about everything in the church and pulling up the floor."
"Patience sent us to get some salt," explained Rusha, "and we saw
them from Dame Redman's door. She told us we had better be off and
get home as fast as we could."
"But I thought we would come and tell you," added Emlyn, "and then
you could get out the long gun and shoot them as they come into the
valley--that is if you can take aim--but I would load and show you
how, and then they would think it was a whole ambush of honest men."
"Aye, and kill us all--and serve us right," said Stead. "They don't
want to hurt us if we don't meddle with them. But there's a good
wench, Rusha, drive up the cows and sheep this way so that I can have
an eye on them, and shew Captain Venn's paper, if any of those
fellows should take a fancy to them."
"They are digging all over old parson's garden," said Rusha, as she
obeyed.
"Was Jeph there?" asked Stead.
"I didn't see him," said the child.
Steadfast was very uneasy. That turning up the parson's garden
looked as if they might be in search of the silver belonging to the
Church, but after all they were unlikely to connect him with it, and
it was wiser to go on with his regular work, and manifest no interest
in the matter; besides that, every spadeful he heaved up, every chop
he gave the stubble, seemed to be a comfort, while there was a prayer
on his soul all the time that he might be true to his trust.
By-and-by he saw Tom Oates running and beckoning to him, "Stead,
Stead Kenton, you are to come."
"What should I come for?" said Stead, gruffly.
"The soldiers want you."
"What call have they to me?"
"They be come to cleanse the steeple house, they says, and take the
spoil thereof, and they've been routling over the floor and parson's
garden like so many hogs, and are mad because they can't find
nothing, and Thatcher Jerry says, says he, 'Poor John Kenton as was
shot was churchwarden and was very great with Parson. If anybody
knows where the things is 'tis Steadfast Kenton.' So the corporal
says, 'Is this so, Jephthah Kenton?' and Jeph, standing up in his big
boots, says, 'Aye, corporal, my father was yet in the darkness of
prelacy, and was what in their blindness they call a Churchwarden,
but as to my brother, that's neither here nor there, he were but a
boy and not like to know more than I did.' But the corporal said,
'That we will see. Is the lad here?' So I ups and said nay, but I'd
seen you digging your croft, and then they bade me fetch you. So you
must come, willy-nilly, or they may send worse after you."
Stead was a little consoled by hearing that his brother was there.
He suspected that Jeph would have consideration enough for his
sisters and for the property that he considered his own to be
unwilling to show the way to their valley; and he also reflected that
it would be well that whatever might happen to himself should be out
of sight of his sisters. Therefore he decided on following Oates,
going through on the way the whole question whether to deny all
knowledge, and yet feeling that the things belonging to God should
not be shielded by untruth. His resolution finally was to be silent,
and let them make what they would out of that, and Stead, though it
was long since he had put it on, had a certain sullen air of
stupidity such as often belongs to such natures as his, and which
Jeph knew full well in him.
They came in sight of the village green where the soldiers were
refreshing themselves at what once had been the Elmwood Arms, for
though not given to excess, total abstinence formed no part of the
discipline of the Puritans; and one of the men started forward, and
seizing hold of Steadfast by the shoulder exclaimed--
"As I live, 'tis the young prelatist who bowed himself down in the
house of Rimmon! Come on, thou seed of darkness, and answer for
thyself."
If he had only known it, he was making the part of dogged silence and
resistance infinitely easier to Steadfast by the rudeness and abuse,
which, even in a better cause, would have made it natural to him to
act as he was doing now, giving the soldier all the trouble of
dragging him onward and then standing with his hands in his pockets
like an image of obstinacy.
"Speak," said the corporal, "and it shall be the better for thee.
Hast thou any knowledge where the priests of Baal have bestowed the
vessels of their mockery of worship."
Stead moved not a muscle of his face. He had no acquaintance with
priests of Baal or their vessels, so that he was not in the least
bound to comprehend, and one of them exclaimed "The oaf knows not
your meaning, corporal. Speak plainer to his Somerset ears. He
knows not the tongue of the saints."
"Ho, then, thou child of darkness. Know'st thou where the mass-
mongering silver and gold of this church be hidden from them of whom
it is written 'haste to the spoil.' Come, speak out. A crown if
thou dost speak--the lash if thou wilt not answer, thou dumb dog."
Stead was really not far removed from a dumb dog. All his faculties
were so entirely wrought up to resistance that he had hardly
distinguished the words.
"Come, come, Stead," said Jeph, "thou art too old for thine old sulky
moods. Speak up, and tell if thou know'st aught of the Communion Cup
and dish, or it will be the worse for thee. Yes or no?"
Stead made a move with his shoulder to push away his brother, and
still stood silent.
"There," said Jeph, "it is all Faithful's fault for his rough
handling. His back is set up. It was always so from a boy, and
you'll get nought out of him."
"Foolishness is bound in the heart of a child, but the rod of
correction shall drive it far from him," quoted the Corporal, taking
up a waggoner's whip which stood by the inn door, and the like of
which had no doubt once been a more familiar weapon to him than the
sword.
"Speak lad--or--" and as no speech came, the lash descended on
Stead's shoulders, not, however, hurting him much save where it
grazed the skin of his face.
"Now? Not a word? Take off his leathern coat, Faithful, then shall
he feel the reward of sullenness."
That Jeph did not interfere, while Faithful and another soldier
tugged off his leathern coat, buffeting and kicking him roughly as
they did so, brought additional hardness to Stead. He had been
flogged in his time before, and not without reason, and had taken a
pride in not giving in, or crying out for pain; and the ancient habit
acquired in a worse cause, came to his help. He scarcely recollected
the cause of his resistance; all his powers were concentrated in
holding out, and when after another "Now, vile prelatic spawn, is thy
heart still hardened? Yes or no?" the terrible whip came stinging
and biting down on his shoulders and back, only protected by his
shirt, he was entirely bound up in the determination to endure the
pain without a groan or cry.
But after blows enough had fallen to mark the shirt with streaks of
blood, Jeph could bear it no longer.
"Hold!" he said. "You will never make him speak that way. Father
and mother never could. Strokes do but harden him."
"The sure token of a fool," said the corporal, and prepared for
another lash.
"'Tis plain he knows," said one of the others. "He would never stand
this if a word would save him."
"Mere malice and obstinacy," said Faithful, "and wilfulness. He will
not utter a word. I would beat it out of him, as I was wont with our
old ass."
Another stroke descended, worse than all the others after the brief
interval, but Jeph again spoke, "Look you, I know the lad of old and
you'll get no more that way than if you were flogging the sign-post
there. Whether he knows where the things are or not, the temper that
is in him will never answer while you beat him, were it to save his
life. Leave him to me, and I'll be bound to get an answer from him."
"And I am constable, and I must say," said Blacksmith Blane, moving
forwards, with a bar of iron in his hand, and four or five stout men
behind him, "that to come and abuse and flog a hard-working,
fatherless lad, that never did you no harm, nor anyone else, is not
what honest men look for from soldiers that talk so big about
Parliament and rights and what not!"
"'Twas for contumacy," began the corporal.
"Contumacy forsooth, as though 'twas the will of the honest gentlemen
in Parliament that boys should be misused for nothing at all!"
"If the young dog would have spoken," began the corporal, but somehow
he did not like the look of Blane's iron bar, and thought it best to
look up at the sun, and discover that it was time to depart if the
party were to be in time for roll-call. As it was a private
marauding speculation, it might not be well to have complaints made
to Captain Venn, who never sanctioned plunder nor unnecessary
violence. Even Jeph had to march off, and Steadfast, who had no mind
to be pitied, nor asked by the neighbours what was the real fact, had
picked up his spade and jerkin, and was out of sight while the
villagers were watching the soldiers away.
The first thing he did was to give thanks in heart that he had been
aided thus far not to betray his trust, and then to feel that
Corporal Dodd's flogging was a far severer matter than the worst
chastisement he had ever received from his father, even when he kept
Jeph's secret about the stolen apples. Putting on his coat was
impossible, and he was so stiff and sore that he could not hope to
conceal his condition from Patience.
At home all were watching for him. They ran up in anxiety, for one
of the ever ready messengers of evil had rushed down the glen to tell
Patience that the soldiers were beating Stead shamefully, and Jeph
standing by not saying one word. Little Ben broke out with "Poor,
poor!" and Rusha burst into tears at sight of the blood, while Emlyn
said "Just what comes of going among the rascal Roundheads," and
Patience looked up at him and said "Was it--?" he nodded, and she
quietly said "I'm glad." He added, "Jeph's coming soon," and she
knew that the trial was not over. The brother and sister needed very
few words to understand one another, and they were afraid to say
anything that the younger ones could understand. Patience washed the
weals with warm water and milk, and wrapped a cloak round him, but
even the next morning, he could not use his arms without fresh
bleeding, and the hindrance to the work was serious. He could do
nothing but herd the cattle, and he was much inclined to drive them
to the further end of the moorland where Jephthah would hardly find
him, but then he recollected that Patience would be left to bear the
brunt of the attack, so that he would not go far off, never guessing,
poor fellow, that in his dull, almost blundering fashion, he was
doing like the heroes and the martyrs, but only feeling that he must
keep his trust at all costs. Jeph, however, did not come that day or
the next, so that inwardly, the wound-up feeling had passed into a
weariness of expectation, and outwardly the stripes had healed enough
for Stead to go about his work as usual only a little stiffly. He
went into Bristol on market day as usual, and then it was, on his way
out that Jeph joined him, saying it was to bid Patience and the
little ones farewell, since the marching orders were for the morrow.
He was unusually kind and good-natured; he had a load of comfits for
Rusha and Ben, and a stout piece of woollen stuff for Patience which
he said was such as he was told godly maidens wore, and which
possibly the terror of his steel cap and corslet had cheapened at the
mercer's; also he had a large packet of tractates for Stead's own
reading, and he enquired whether they possessed a Bible.
Stead wondered whether all this was out of regret at the treatment he
had undergone, or whether it was to put him off his guard, and this
occupied him when Jeph began to preach, as he did uninterruptedly for
the last mile, without any of the sense, if there were any, reaching
the mind of the auditor.
They reached the hut, the gifts were displayed; and when the young
ones, who were all a little afraid of the elder brother, had gone off
to feast upon the sweets, Jeph began with enquiries after Steadfast's
back, and he replied that it was mending fast, while Patience
exclaimed at the cruelty and wickedness of so using him.
"Why wouldn't he speak then?" said Jeph. "Yea or nay would have
ended it in a moment, but that's Stead's way. He looks like it now!"
and he did, elbows on knees, and chin on hands.
"Come now, Stead, thou canst speak to me! Was it all because
Faithful hauled thee about?"
"He did, and he had no call to," said Stead, surlily.
"Well, that's true, but I'm not hauling thee. Tell me, Stead, I mind
now that thou wast out with father that last day ere the Parson was
taken to receive his deserts. I don't believe that even thy
churlishness would have stood such blows if thou hadst known naught
of the idolatrous vessels, and couldst have saved thy skin by saying
so! No answer. Why, what have these malignants done for thee that
thou shouldst hold by them? Slain thy father! Burnt thine house!
No fault of theirs that thou art alive this day! Canst not speak?"
Jeph's temper giving way at the provocation, he forgot his
conciliatory intentions and seizing Stead by the collar shook him
violently. Growler almost broke his chain with rage, Patience
screamed and flew to the rescue, just as she had often done when they
were all children together, and Jeph threw his brother from him so
that he fell on the root of a tree, and lay for a moment or two
still, then picked himself up again evidently with pain, though he
answered Patience cheerfully that it was nought.
"Thou art enough to drive a man mad with thy surly silence,"
exclaimed Jeph, whom this tussle had rendered much more like his old
self, "and after all, knowing that even though thou art not one of
the holy ones, thou wilt not tell a lie, it comes to the same thing.
I know thou wottest where these things are, and it is only thy sullen
scruples that hinder thee from speaking. Nevertheless, I shall leave
no stone unturned till I find them! For what is written 'Thou shalt
break down their altars.'"
"Jeph," said Stead, firmly. "You left home because of your grief and
rage at father's death. Would you have me break the solemn charge he
laid on me?"
"Father was a good man after his light," said Jeph, a little
staggered, "but that light was but darkness, and we to whom the day
itself is vouchsafed are not bound by a charge laid on us in
ignorance. Any way, he laid no bonds on me, but I must needs leave
thee alone in thy foolishness of bondage! Come, Patience, wench, and
aid me, I know this rock is honeycombed with caves, like a rabbit
warren, no place so likely."
"I help thee--no indeed'" cried Patience. "Would I aid thee to do
what would most grieve poor father, that thou once mad'st such a work
about! I should be afraid of his curse."
Possibly if Jeph had not pledged himself to his comrades to overcome
his brother's resistance, and bring back the treasures, he might have
desisted; but what he did was to call to Rusha to bring him a
lantern, and show him the holes, promising her a tester if she would.
She brought the lantern, but she was a timid, little, unenterprising
thing, and was mortally afraid of the caverns, a fear that Patience
had thought it well not to combat. Emlyn who had already scrambled
all over the face of the slope, and peeped into all, could have told
him a great deal more about them; but she hated the sight of a rebel,
and sat on the ground making ugly faces and throwing little stones
after him whenever his back was turned.
Stead, afraid to betray by his looks of anxiety, when Jeph came near
the spot, sat all the time with his elbows on his knees, and his
hands over his face, fully trusting to what all had agreed at the
time of the burial of the chest, that there was no sign to indicate
its whereabouts.
He felt rather than saw that Jeph, after tumbling out the straw and
fern that served for fodder in the lower caves, where the sheep and
pigs were sheltered in winter, had scrambled up to the hermit's
chapel, when suddenly there was a shout, but not at all of
exultation, and down among the bushes, lantern and all came the
soldier, tumbling and crashing into the midst of an enormous bramble,
whence Stead pulled him out with the lantern flattened under him, and
his first breathless words were--
"Beelzebub himself!" Then adding, as he stood upright, "he made full
at me, and I saw his eyes glaring. I heard him groaning. It is an
unholy popish place. No wonder!"
Patience and Rusha were considerably impressed, for it was
astonishing to see how horribly terrified and shaken was the warrior,
who had been in two pitched battles, and Ben screamed, and needed to
be held in Stead's arms to console him.
Jeph had no mind to pursue his researches any further. He only
tarried long enough to let Patience pick out half-a-dozen thorns from
his cheeks and hands, and to declare that if he had not to march to-
morrow, he should bring that singular Christian man, Captain Venn, to
exorcise the haunt of Apollyon. Wherewith he bade them all farewell,
with hopes that by the time he saw them again, they would have come
to the knowledge of the truth.
No sooner was he out of sight among the bushes than Emlyn seized on
Rusha, and whirled her round in a dance as well as her more
substantial proportions would permit, while Steadfast let his
countenance expand into the broad grin that he had all this time been
stifling.
"What _do_ you think it was?" asked Patience, still awestruck.
"Why--the old owl--and his own bad conscience. He might talk big,
but he didn't half like going against poor father. Thank God! He
has saved His own, and that's over!"
CHAPTER XV.
A TABLE OF LOVE IN THE WILDERNESS.
"Yet along the Church's sky
Stars are scattered, pure and high;
Yet her wasted gardens bear
Autumn violets, sweet and rare,
Relics of a Spring-time clear,
Earnests of a bright New Year." KEBLE
No more was heard or seen of Jephthah, or of Captain Venn's troop.
The garrison within Bristol was small and unenterprising, and in
point of fact the war was over. News travelled slowly, but Stead
picked up scraps at Bristol, by which he understood that things
looked very bad for the King. Moreover, Sir George Elmwood died of
his wounds; poor old Lady Elmwood did not long survive him, and the
estate, which had been left to her for her life, was sequestrated by
the Parliament, and redeemed by the next heir after Sir George, so
that there was an exchange of the Lord of the Manor. The new squire
was an elderly man, hearty and good-natured, who did not seem at all
disposed to interfere with any one on the estate. He was a
Presbyterian, and was shocked to find that the church had been unused
for three years. He had it cleaned from the accumulation of dirt and
rubbish, the broken windows mended with plain glass, and the altar
table put down in the nave, as it had been before Mr. Holworth's
time; and he presented to the living Mr. Woodley, a scholarly-looking
person, who wore a black gown and collar and bands.
The Elmwood folk were pleased to have prayers and sermon again, and
Patience was glad that the children should not grow up like heathens;
but her first church going did not satisfy her entirely.
"It is all strange," she said to Stead, who had stayed with the
cattle. "He had no book, and it was all out of his own head, not a
bit like old times."
"Of course not," said Emlyn. "He had got no surplice, and I knew him
for a prick-eared Roundhead! I should have run off home if you had
not held me, Patience. I'll never go there again."
"I am sure you made it a misery to me, trying to make Rusha and Ben
as idle and restless as yourself," said Patience.
"They ought not to listen to a mere Roundhead sectary," said Emlyn,
tossing her head. "I couldn't have borne it if I had not had the
young ladies to look at. They had got silk hoods and curls and lace
collars, so as it was a shame a mere Puritan should wear."
"O Emlyn, Emlyn, it is all for the outside," said Patience. "Now, I
did somehow like to hear good words, though they were not like the
old ones."
"Good, indeed! from a trumpery Puritan."
Stead went to church in the afternoon. He was eighteen now, and that
great struggle and effort had made him more of a man. He thought
much when he was working alone in the fields, and he had spent his
time on Sundays in reading his Bible and Prayer-book, and comparing
them with Jeph's tracts. Since Emlyn had come, he had made a corner
of the cowshed fit to sleep in, by stuffing the walls with dry
heather, and the sweet breath of the cows kept it sufficiently warm,
and on the winter evenings, he took a lantern there with one of
Patience's rush lights, learnt a text or two anew, and then repeated
passages to himself and thought over them. What would seem
intolerably dull to a lad now, was rest to one who had been rendered
older than his age by sorrow and responsibility, and the events that
were passing led people to consider religious questions a great deal.
But Stead was puzzled. The minister was not like the soldiers whom
he had heard raving about the reign of the saints, and abusing the
church. He prayed for the King's having a good deliverance from his
troubles, and for the peace of the kingdom, and he gave out that
there was to be a week of fasting, preaching, and preparation for the
Sacrament of the Lord's Supper.
The better sort of people in the village were very much pleased,
nobody except Goody Grace was dissatisfied, and people told her that
was only because she was old and given to grumbling at everything
new. Blane the Smith tapped Stead on the shoulder, and said, "Hark
ye, my lad. If it be true that thou wast in old Parson's secrets,
now's the time for thou know'st what."
Stead's mouth was open, and his face blank, chiefly because he did
not know what to do, and was taken by surprise, and Blane took it for
an answer.
"Oh! if you don't know, that's another thing, but then 'twas for
nothing that the troopers flogged you? Well," he muttered, as Stead
walked off, "that's a queer conditioned lad, to let himself be
flogged, as I wouldn't whip a dog, all out of temper, because he
wouldn't answer a question. But he's a good lad, and I'll not bring
him into trouble by a word to squire or minister."
The children went off to gather cowslips, and Stead was able to talk
it over with Patience, who at first was eager to be rid of the
dangerous trust, and added, with a sigh, "That she had never taken
the Sacrament since the Easter before poor father was killed, and it
must be nigh upon Whitsuntide now."
"That's true," said Stead, "but nobody makes any count of holy days
now. It don't seem right, Patience."
"Not like what it used to be," said Patience. "And yet this minister
is surely a godly man."
"Father and parson didn't say ought about a godly man. They made me
take my solemn promise that I'd only give the things to a lawfully
ordained minister."
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