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<h2> V. THE DEVICE OF THE DORMOUSE </h2>
<p>When I had read the letter, I handed it up to Gabord without a word. A
show of trust in him was the only thing, for he had enough knowledge of
our secret to ruin us, if he chose. He took the letter, turned it over,
looking at it curiously, and at last, with a shrug of the shoulders,
passed it back.</p>
<p>“‘Tis a long tune on a dot of a fiddle,” said he, for indeed the letter
was but a small affair in bulk. “I’d need two pairs of eyes and telescope!
Is it all Heart-o’-my-heart, and Come-trip-in-dewy-grass—aho? Or is
there knave at window to bear m’sieu’ away?”</p>
<p>I took the letter from him. “Listen,” said I, “to what the lady says of
you.” And then I read him that part of her postscript which had to do with
himself.</p>
<p>He put his head on one side like a great wise magpie, and “H’m—ha!”
said he whimsically, “aho! Gabord the soldier, Gabord, thou hast a good
heart—and the birds fed the beast with plums and froth of comfits
till he died, and on his sugar tombstone they carved the words, ‘Gabord
had a good heart.’”</p>
<p>“It was spoken out of a true spirit,” said I petulantly, for I could not
bear from a common soldier even a tone of disparagement, though I saw the
exact meaning of his words. So I added, “You shall read the whole letter,
or I will read it to you and you shall judge. On the honour of a
gentleman, I will read all of it!”</p>
<p>“Poom!” said he, “English fire-eater! corn-cracker! Show me the ‘good
heart’ sentence, for I’d see how it is written—how GABORD looks with
a woman’s whimsies round it.”</p>
<p>I traced the words with my fingers, holding the letter near the torch.
“‘Yet he will not be rougher than his orders,’” said he after me, and “‘He
did me a good service once.’”</p>
<p>“Comfits,” he continued; “well, thou shalt have comfits, too,” and he
fished from his pocket a parcel. It was my tobacco and my pipe.</p>
<p>Truly, my state might have been vastly worse. Little more was said between
Gabord and myself, but he refused bluntly to carry message or letter to
anybody, and bade me not to vex him with petitions. But he left me the
torch and a flint and steel, so I had light for a space, and I had my
blessed tobacco and pipe. When the doors clanged shut and the bolts were
shot, I lay back on my couch.</p>
<p>I was not all unhappy. Thank God, they had not put chains on me, as
Governor Dinwiddie had done with a French prisoner at Williamsburg, for
whom I had vainly sought to be exchanged two years before, though he was
my equal in all ways and importance. Doltaire was the cause of that, as
you shall know. Well, there was one more item to add to his indebtedness.
My face flushed and my fingers tingled at thought of him, and so I
resolutely turned my meditations elsewhere, and again in a little while I
seemed to think of nothing, but lay and bathed in the silence, and
indulged my eyes with the good red light of the torch, inhaling its pitchy
scent. I was conscious, yet for a time I had no thought: I was like
something half animal, half vegetable, which feeds, yet has no mouth, nor
sees, nor hears, nor has sense, but only lives. I seemed hung in space, as
one feels when going from sleep to waking—a long lane of half-numb
life, before the open road of full consciousness is reached.</p>
<p>At last I was aroused by the sudden cracking of a knot in the torch. I saw
that it would last but a few hours more. I determined to put it out, for I
might be allowed no more light, and even a few minutes of this torch every
day would be a great boon. So I took it from its place, and was about to
quench it in the moist earth at the foot of the wall, when I remembered my
tobacco and my pipe. Can you think how joyfully I packed full the good
brown bowl, delicately filling in every little corner, and at last held it
to the flame, and saw it light? That first long whiff was like the indrawn
breath of the cold, starved hunter, when, stepping into his house, he sees
food, fire, and wife on his hearthstone. Presently I put out the
torchlight, and then went back to my couch and sat down, the bowl shining
like a star before me.</p>
<p>There and then a purpose came to me—something which would keep my
brain from wandering, my nerves from fretting and wearing, for a time at
least. I determined to write to my dear Alixe the true history of my life,
even to the point—and after—of this thing which now was
bringing me to so ill a pass. But I was in darkness, I had no paper, pens,
nor ink. After a deal of thinking I came at last to the solution. I would
compose the story, and learn it by heart, sentence by sentence, as I so
composed it.</p>
<p>So there and then I began to run back over the years of my life, even to
my first remembrances, that I might see it from first to last in a sort of
whole and with a kind of measurement. But when I began to dwell upon my
childhood, one little thing gave birth to another swiftly, as you may see
one flicker in the heaven multiply and break upon the mystery of the dark,
filling the night with clusters of stars. As I thought, I kept drawing
spears of the dungeon corn between my fingers softly (they had come to be
like comrades to me), and presently there flashed upon me the very first
memory of my life. It had never come to me before, and I knew now that it
was the beginning of conscious knowledge: for we can never know till we
can remember. When a child remembers what it sees or feels, it has begun
life.</p>
<p>I put that recollection into the letter which I wrote Alixe, and it shall
be set down forthwith and in little space, though it took me so very many
days and weeks to think it out, to give each word a fixed place, so that
it should go from my mind no more. Every phrase of that story as I told it
is as fixed as stone in my memory. Yet it must not be thought I can give
it all here. I shall set down only a few things, but you shall find in
them the spirit of the whole. I will come at once to the body of the
letter.</p>
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