Part 11 (1/2)
”I'll sell you the lot,” he impulsively said to George Payne at Goodwood, ”from Bay Middleton to little Kitchener (his famous jockey), for 100,000. Yes or no?” Payne offered him 300 to have a few hours to think the offer over, and handed the sum over at breakfast the next morning. No sooner had the forfeit been paid than Mr Mostyn, who was sitting at the same table, looked up quietly and said: ”I'll take the lot, Bentinck, at 10,000, and will give you a cheque before you go on the course.” ”If you please,” was Lord George's placid answer; and thus ended one of the most brilliant Turf careers on record.
And now for the irony of Fate! Among the stud thus sold, in a fit of pique, for ”an old song” was Surplice, the winner of the next year's Derby and St Leger. Lord George had actually had the great prize in his hand and had let it go!
How keenly he felt the blow may be gathered from the following pa.s.sage in Lord Beaconsfield's biography:
”A few days before--it was the day after the Derby, May 25, 1848--the writer met Lord George Bentinck in the library of the House of Commons. He was standing before the bookshelves with a volume in his hand, and his countenance was greatly disturbed. His resolution in favour of the Colonial interest, after all his labours, had been negatived by the Committee on the 22nd; and on the 24th, his horse, Surplice, whom he had parted with among the rest of the stud, had won that paramount and Olympic stake, to gain which had been the object of his life. He had nothing to console him, and nothing to sustain him, except his pride. Even that deserted him before a heart, which he knew at least could yield him sympathy. He gave a sort of superb groan.
”'All my life I have been trying for this, and for what have I sacrificed it?' he murmured. It was in vain to offer solace.
”'You do not know what the Derby is,' he moaned.
”'Yes, I do; it is the Blue Riband of the Turf.'
”'It is the Blue Riband of the Turf,' he slowly repeated to himself; and, sitting down at a table, buried himself in a folio of statistics.”
Just a few months later, on 21st September 1848, his body was found lying, cold and stiff, in a meadow about a mile from Welbeck. That very morning he had risen full of health and spirits, and at four o'clock in the afternoon had set out to walk across country to Th.o.r.esby, Lord Manvers' seat, where he was to spend a couple of days. He had sent on his valet by road in advance; but the night fell, and Lord George never made his appearance. A search with lanterns was inst.i.tuted, and about midnight his body was discovered lying face downwards close to one of the deer-park gates. He had been dead for some hours.
What was the cause of his mysterious death? The coroner's jury appear to have found no difficulty in coming to a decision. Their verdict was, ”Died by the visitation of G.o.d--to wit, a spasm of the heart.” Thus vanished from the world one of its most brilliant and picturesque ornaments, in the very prime of his life and his powers (he was only forty-six), and when he seemed a.s.sured of a political future even more dazzling than his Turf fame.
But there were many, among the thousands who deplored the tragic eclipse of such a promising life, who were by no means satisfied with the vague verdict of the inquest. Lord George had always been a man of remarkable vigour and health, and never more so than on the day of his death. Was it at all likely that such a man would drop dead during a quiet and unexciting stroll across country? Later years, however, have brought new facts to light which suggest a very different explanation of this tragedy. ”The hand of G.o.d” it was, no doubt, which struck the fatal blow--it always must be; but was there no other agency, and that a human one? Could it not be the hand of a brother? Some have said it was; and although the story is involved in obscurity and may be open to grave doubt (indeed it has been more than once flatly contradicted) there can, perhaps, be no harm in including it in this volume. This is the story as it has been told.
Though Lord George Bentinck was the handsomest man, and one of the most eligible _partis_ of his day he never married; yet, no doubt, he had many an ”affair of the heart.” But not one of all the high-born ladies, who would have turned their backs on coronets to become ”Lady George,”
could in his eyes compare with Annie May Berkelay, a lovely and penniless girl, who could not even boast a ”respectable” parentage.
Miss Berkeley was, so it is said, a child of that most romantic union between the Earl of Berkeley and pretty Mary Cole, the butcher's daughter. This girl he professed to have made his countess shortly after in the parish church of Berkeley. That his lords.h.i.+p legally married his low-born bride at Lambeth eleven years later is beyond doubt, but that alleged first secret marriage was more than open to suspicion. There seems little doubt that the entry the in Berkeley church register was a forgery; and that, not until Mary Cole had borne several children to the Earl, did she become legally his wife by the valid knot tied at Lambeth.
It was, in fact, decided by the House of Peers that the Berkeley marriage was not proven, and thus seven of the children were illegitimate.
It was one of Lord Berkeley's children thus branded to the world who is said to have won the heart and the homage of Lord George Bentinck. And little wonder; for Annie May Berkeley had inherited more than her mother's beauty of face and of figure, with the patrician air and refinement which came from generations of n.o.ble ancestors.
But handsome Lord George was only one of many wooers whom her charms had enslaved. There were others equally ardent, if less favoured; and among them none other than the Marquess of t.i.tchfield, Lord George's elder brother, and the future ”eccentric Duke” of Portland, often referred to as ”The Wizard of Welbeck.” The Marquess and his younger brother had never been on the best of terms. They had little in common; and when they found themselves rival suitors for the smiles of the same maiden this incompatibility gave place to a bitter estrangement.
It was not, however, until Lord George discovered that the Marquess was more intimate with his ladylove than he should be, that their mutual relations became strained to a dangerous degree. It is said that the brothers quarrelled fiercely whenever they met, and that Lord George, whose temper was violent, frequently struck his brother, who was no physical match for him. One day, so the story goes, their constant squabbles reached a climax. After a fiercer quarrel than usual Lord George struck his brother and rival repeatedly, until the latter, roused to fury, struck back and landed a heavy blow on his brother's chest, over the heart. Lord George's heart was diseased, and the blow proved fatal.
This, then, is said to be the true explanation of the tragedy of that September day in 1848; of that ”spasm of the heart” which, according to the verdict of the coroner's jury, was the cause of Lord George Bentinck's death. If this story is true, much that has been so long mysterious becomes clear. Lord George's sudden and tragic death is explained; as also the fact that it was from this period that the Duke of Portland's moroseness and shunning of the world became so marked as to be scarcely distinguishable from insanity. If the death of a brother, however provoked and accidental, had been on his conscience, what could be more natural than that the fratricide should thus shut himself from the world in sorrow and remorse?
CHAPTER XIII
THE WICKED BARON
The British Peerage, like most other human flocks, has had many black sheep within its fold; but few of them have been blacker than Charles, fifth Baron Mohun of Okehampton, who shocked the world by his violence and licentiousness a couple of centuries ago.
Charles Mohun had in his veins the blood of centuries of gallant men and fair women, from Sir William de Mohun, who fought so bravely for the Conqueror on the field of Hastings, to his father, the fourth Lord of Okehampton, who took to wife a daughter of the first Earl of Anglesey, a man who won fame in his day by his statesmans.h.i.+p and his pen. But there was also in his veins a black strain which branded the Mohun 'scutcheon with the stigma of eternal shame.
From his early youth he exhibited an unbridled temper and a pa.s.sion for low pursuits. In an age when loose morals and violence were winked at, he soon won an unenviable notoriety by his excesses in both. Wine and women, gambling and duelling, were the breath of life to him, and in each indulgence he was infamously supreme. He was twice arraigned for murder, and in the prime of life he died a murderer.
Such was the fifth Lord Mohun when our story opens, towards the close of his shameless career; and in the first of the disgraceful episodes that marked its close, as in so many others of his career, a beautiful woman figures prominently--none other than the celebrated Mrs Bracegirdle, the most fascinating actress of her day, whose witcheries made a lover of every man who came under the spell of her charms.
Her army of lovers ranged from Congreve and Rowe, who wrote inspired and pa.s.sionate plays for her, to the Dukes of Dorset and Devons.h.i.+re and Lord Lovelace (among a hundred other t.i.tled gallants), who were ready to shed their last drop of blood in defence of her fair fame; though each sought in vain to besmirch it in his own person. But her virtue was reputed to be ”as impregnable as the rock of Gibraltar.” Dr Doran describes her as ”that Diana of the stage, before whom Congreve and Lord Lovelace, at the head of a troop of bodkined fops, wors.h.i.+pped in vain”; although, with all her una.s.sailable propriety, she did not escape outspoken suspicions of being Congreve's mistress all the time.