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.
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.