<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1 class="p4">CRADOCK NOWELL</h1>
<p class="pc2 mid">A Tale of the New Forest.</p>
<p class="pc4 reduct">BY</p>
<p class="pc1 large"><i>RICHARD DODDRIDGE BLACKMORE</i>,</p>
<p class="pc4">“You have said: whether wisely or no, let the forest judge.”</p>
<p class="pr2"><span class="smcap">As You Like It</span>, Act III. Sc. 2.</p>
<p class="pc4 mid">IN THREE VOLUMES.</p>
<p class="pc1 mid">VOL. III.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="pc4 xlarge">CRADOCK NOWELL.</p>
<p class="pc4">——◆——</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER I.</h2>
<p class="p2">Upon the Christmas morning the parish flocked
to church, and the church was dressed so beautifully
that every one was amazed. Amy and Eoa made
the wreaths, the garlands, and rosettes; there was
only one cross out of the lot, a badly–bred Maltese
one; and Eoa walked over the barbarous pewscreens
(like the travisses in a stable), springing
from one to another, with a cable of flowers and
evergreens, as easily and calmly as she would come
down–stairs to dinner. Of course she had never
heard of that sort of thing before, but she took to
it at once, as she did to anything pretty; and soon
she was Amyʼs mistress, as indeed she must be
every oneʼs, unless she could not bear them.</p>
<p>The sons of the Forest looked up with amazement
as they shambled in one after other, and an
old woodcutter went home for his axe, lest the ivy
should throttle the pillars. On the whole, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</SPAN></span>
parish attributed this great outburst of foliage to
the indignation of the pixies at Parson Johnʼs
going to London, and staying there so long.</p>
<p>The prayers were read by Mr. Pell, for the
rector was weary and languid; but he would not
forego his pleasant words to the well–known flock
that day. While the choir was making a stupendous
din out of something they called an
“anthem,” Octave slipped off to his Rushford
duty, through the chancel–door. Then, with his
silken gown on—given him years ago by subscription,
and far too grand for him to wear, except at
Christmas and Easter—John Rosedew mounted the
pulpit–stairs, and showed (as in a holy bower of
good–will and of gratitude) the loving–kindness of
his face and the grandeur of his forehead. As he
glanced from one to the other with a general welcome,
a genial interest in the welfare both of soul
and body, a stir and thrill ran through the church,
and many eyes were tearful. For already a rumour
was abroad that “Uncle John” must leave them,
that another Christmas Day would see a stranger in
his pulpit.</p>
<p>After dwelling briefly on his favourite subject,
Christian love, and showing (by quotations from
the noblest of heathen philosophers) how low and
false their standard was, how poor a keystone is
earthly citizenship, the patriotism of a pugnacious
village, or a little presumptuous Attica, to crown
and bind together the great arch of humanity;
after showing, too, with a depth of learning wasted<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</SPAN></span>
on his audience, how utterly false the assertion is
that the doctrines, or rather the principles, nay, the
one great principle of our New Testament, had
ever been anticipated on the banks of the Yellow
River—eloquently he turned himself to the application
of his subject.</p>
<p>With some unconscious yearning perhaps, or
perhaps some sense of home–truth, he gazed towards
the curtained pew where sat his ancient
friend, brought thither (it was too evident) by
tidings of his absence. As the eyes of the old men
met, for the first time after long estrangement—those
eyes that had met so frankly and kindly for
more than fifty years, during all which time each
to the other had been a “necessarius”—and as
each observed how pale and grey his veteran comrade
looked, neither heart was wholly free from
self–reproach and sorrow.</p>
<p>John Rosedewʼs mild eyes glistened so, and his
voice so shook and faltered, that all the parish
noticed it, and wondered what harm it had done
last week. For none of them had ever known his
voice shake, except when some parishioner had
done the unbecoming; and then the village mourned
it, because it vexed the parson so.</p>
<p>The next day, as soon as Parson John had found
that all parochial matters were in proper trim, and
that he might leave home again without neglect of
duty, what did he do but order a fly, no less than
a one–horse fly, from the “Jolly Foresters;” which
fly should rush to the parsonage–door, as nearly as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</SPAN></span>
might be, at one oʼclock? Now why would not
Coræbus suffice to carry the rector and valise,
according to the laws of the Medes and Persians,
a distance of two parasangs?</p>
<p>Simply because our Amy was going, and had
every right to go. Beautiful Amy was going to
London, great fountain–head of all visions and
marvels, even from white long–clothes up to the
era of striped crinoline. And who shall object,
except on the ground that Amy was too good
to go?</p>
<p>If Amy were put down now in Hyde Park, Piccadilly,
or Regent–street, at the height and cream of
the season, when fop, and screw, and fogey, Frivolus
and Frivola, Diana Venatrix, Copa Syrisca,
Aphrodite Misthote, yea, and even some natural
honest girls moderately ticketed, are doing their
caravaning—if Amy were put on the pathway
there, in her simple grey hat and feather, and that
roundabout chenille thing which she herself had
made, and which followed the lines of her figure
so, fifty fellows, themselves of the most satisfactory
figure (at Drummondʼs, or at Couttsʼs), fifty fellows
who had slipped the hook fifty times apiece
(spite of motherly bend OʼShaugnessey) must
have received their stroke of grace, and hated
Cradock Nowell.</p>
<p>Although the South–Western Railway had been
open so many years, our forest–child had never
been further from green leaf and yellow gorse
than Winchester in the eastern hemisphere, and
Salisbury in the western. And now after all to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</SPAN></span>
think that she was going to London, not for joy,
but sorrow. Desperate coaxing it had cost; every
known or new device—transparent every one of
them, as the pleading eyes that urged it—every bit
of cozening learned from three years old and upward,
every girlish argument that never can hold
water, unless it be a tear–drop; and, better than a
million pleas, every soft caress and kiss, all loving,
all imploring—there was not one of these but
came to batter Amyʼs father, or ever he surrendered.
For Johnʼs ideas were very old–fashioned
as to maidenly decorum, and Aunt Eudoxiaʼs view
of the matter was even more prim and grim than
his. Yet (as Amy well remarked) if <i>she</i> could see
no harm in it, there certainly could be none; and
how could they insist so much on the <i>καλόν</i> and the
<i>πρέπον</i>, as if they over–rode <i>τὸ δέον</i>!</p>
<p>It is likely enough that this last stroke won the
palm of victory; for, though Miss Amy knew
little of Greek, and her father knew a great deal,
she often contrived, with true feminine skill, to
take his wicket neatly, before he had found his
block–hole. And then her father would smile and
chuckle, and ask to have his bat again; which
never was allowed him. To think that any man
should be the father of such <i>ἐυστοχία</i>!</p>
<p>Therefore, that father was compelled to throw
himself, flat as a flounder, on Eudoxiaʼs generosity;
for the leech–bottle now was dry.</p>
<p>“Darling Doxy, you know quite well you are
such a wonderful manager; you have got a little
cash somewhere<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</SPAN></span>?”</p>
<p>He put it with a twist of interrogation, a quivering
lever of doubt, and yet a grand fulcrum of
confidence, which were totally irresistible. No
wonder his daughter could coax. Oh that I were
like you, John, when I want a bit of money!</p>
<p>Hereupon Aunt Doxy smiled, with the perception
of superior mind, and the power of causing
astonishment. Never a word she said, but went
to some unknown recesses in holy up–stair adyta:
she fussed about with many keys, over sounding
boards and creaking ones, to signify her caution;
and at last came back with a leathern bag, wash–leather
tied with bobbin. Putting up her hands to
keep Amy at a distance, she pursed her lips, as if
to say, “Now donʼt be disappointed; there is
really nothing in it. Nothing, at least, I mean for
people of your extravagant ideas.”</p>
<p>Then, one by one, before Johnʼs eyes, which
enlarged with a geometric progression of amazement,
she laid a gorgeous train of gold, as if it
were but dominoes, beginning with half–sovereigns
first, then breaking into the broader gauge, until
there must have been twenty pounds, and John
thought of all his poor people. Verily then she
stopped awhile, to enhance her climax; or perhaps
she hesitated, as was only natural. But now
the pleasure of the thing was too much for her
prudence. Looking at John and then at Amy,
and wanting to look at both at once, she drew
from a little niche in the bag, with a jerk (as if it
were nothing) a dainty marrowfat ten–pound note<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</SPAN></span>
of the Bank of England, with a name of substance
upon the back, and an authenticity of grease
grander than any water–mark. She tried very
hard to make light of it, and not wave it in the air
even; but the tide of her heart was too strong for
her, and she turned away, and cried as hard as if
she had no money.</p>
<p>Who may pretend to taste and tell every herb
in the soup of nature? There is no sovereign
moly, no paramount amellus; even basil (the herb
of kings) may be lost in garlic. Blest are they
who seek not ever for the forced–meat balls, but
find some good in every brewis, homely, burnt, or
overstrained. John Rosedew, putting on his boots
for the road to London, felt himself, at every tug,
quite as rich as Megacles—that man of foremost
Athenian blood, but none the more a gentleman,
who walked capaciously into, and rapaciously
walked out of, the gold–granaries of Crœsus. A
delightful sense of having gotten great money out
of Eudoxia—a triumph without historic parallel—inspired
him, away with that overdone word!—aerated
him with glory. Thirty pounds, and some
odd shillings, wholly at John Rosedewʼs mercy
(who never gave quarter to money, but hewed it
as small as Agag when anybody asked him),—thirty
pounds, with no duty upon it, no stamp of
responsibility, and a peculiar and peppery piquancy
in the spending of every halfpenny, to wonder
what sister Doxy would think if she could only
know it! He gave careful Amy the note to keep,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</SPAN></span>
and 15<i>l.</i> to go inside it, because he had promised
to do so, for Doxy knew his nature.</p>
<p>In that noble fly from the “Foresters,” which
had only two springs broken, John and his daughter
went away to catch the train at Brockenhurst.
Out of the windows dangerously they pushed their
beautiful heads—the beauty of youth on one side,
the beauty of age on the other—although the
coachman had specially warned them that neither
door would fasten. But what could they do, when
Aunt Doxy was there by the great rhododendron,
with a kettle–holder over her mouth because it was
so cold; fat Jemima too, and Jenny, and Jem Pottles
leading Coræbus to shake off his dust at the
shay–horse, and learn what he might come to?</p>
<p>Some worthy people had journeyed up from the
further end of the village, to bid an eternal farewell
to Amy, and to take home the washing. They
knew she would never come back again; she would
never be let go again; folks in London were so
wicked, and parson was so innocent. Evil though
the omens were, as timidly blushing she went away,
tearfully leaving her fatherʼs hearth, though a daw
on the left hand forbade her to go, and a wandering
chough was overheard, and a croaking raven
whirled away into the wilds of the woodland—for
whom shall I fear, I the cannie seer, while Amy
smiles dexter out of the cab, and wraps her faith
around her?</p>
<p>Make we not half our life here, according as we
receive it? Is it not as the rain that falls, softly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</SPAN></span>
when softly taken, as of leaves and grass and
water; but rattling and flying in mud and foul
splashes, when met at wrong angles repulsively?</p>
<p>My little daughter, if you cannot see your way
in that simile—a very common–place one,—take a
still more timeworn and venerable illustration.
Our life is but a thread, my child, at any moment
snappable, though never snapped unwisely; and
true as it is that we cannot spin and shape it (as
does the spider) out of our own emotions, yet we
have this gift of God, that we can secrete some
gold along it, some diamonds fetching the sunlight.
Knowing, then, in whose Hand we are, and feeling
how large that Hand is, let us know and feel
therewith that He will not crush us; that He loves
us to rejoice therein, and tamely to regard Him;
with confidence in adoration, a smile in every bow
to Him.</p>
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