Part 34 (1/2)
”Halloa, Hawkins! What, has Jack made you his prisoner? Ha! ha! Hold him, Jack; don't let him get away!”
Well, this went on for several weeks, what I think you call chaff, and at last I was allowed to go without the string. It happened that on the very first morning when I was thus given my liberty, whom should we meet but this same old Lord Grimthorpe.
”Halloa!” he cries again--”halloa, Hawkins! Does your keeper let you go without being attached to a string?”
”No, no,” says my lord--”no, no; Jack's attached to _me_ now.”
Thereupon dear old Grimthorpe, who loved a joke, laughed till his elbows rested on his knees as he stooped down.
”Well,” said he, ”that's good, Hawkins, very good indeed.”
On one occasion one of those country yokels who always met us at a.s.size towns, and got as close up to our javelin-men as they could, so that we could not only see them but indulge our other senses at the same time, seeing us get out of our carriage, said to another yokel, ”I say, Bill, blarmed if the old bloke ain't brought his dawg again--that there fox terrier--to go a-rattin'.”
I did not know what ”rattin'” meant at that time, and did not learn it till we got to Warwick. I thought it was rude to call my lord a ”bloke,” especially in his red robes; but did not quite know what ”bloke” meant, for I had seen so little of mankind.
One morning before we opened the Commission at Warwick--I may as well come to it at once--my lord and I went for a walk along the road that leads over the bridge by Warwick Castle towards Leamington. There is a turning to a village which belonged to the old days, but does not seem now to belong to anything, and looks something like a rural watering-place, quiet and unexciting. We turned down this quiet road, and came alongside a beautiful little garden covered with flowers of all kinds.
I had occasion afterwards to learn whom they belonged to; but I will tell you before we go further, so as to make the situation intelligible. He was a countryman who used to make it his boast that he never had a day's schooling in his life (so that he ought to have been leader of the most ignorant cla.s.ses), and this made him the independent man he was towards his betters. Then my Lady Warwick used to take notice of him, and this also gave him another lift in his own estimation. He learnt to read in the long run, for he really had a good deal of native talent for a man, and set himself up for a politician and a something they call a philosopher, which any man can be with a pint pot in front of him, I am told, especially at a village alehouse.
He was a great orator at the Gridiron beershop in the lane which runs round one part of my Lord Warwick's park, and it was said that old Gale--such was his name--had picked up most of his education from his own speeches. Gale was also the lawyer of the village--he could tell everybody what his rights were, if anybody had any besides Gale; but he declared he had been done out of _his_ rights by a man who had lent his old father some money on the bit of land I am coming to.
As we went along, what should we see but a rat! I knew what he was in a moment, although I had never seen such a thing before, and knew I had to hunt him. My lord cries, ”_Cis_!--_rat, Jack_--_rats_!”
Away I went after the rat--I did not care what his name was--and Sir Henry after me, with all the exuberance he used to show when he was following the ”Quorn.” Presently we heard the dreadful orator's voice using language only uttered, I am glad to say, amongst men.
”Where the h--l are you coming to like this?” he cried.
I forgot to say that our marshal was with us, and of course he took upon himself to explain how matters stood; indeed, it was one of his duties when Judges went out a-ratting to explain _who_ they were. So when we arrived at the place where they were talking together, I heard the dreadful man say,--
”Judge o' th' land! He ain't much of a judge o' th' land to tear my flowers to pieces like that. Look at these 'ere toolips.”
The marshal explained how that it was for the improvement of Sir Henry Hawkins's health that a little fresh air was taken every morning.
”Lookee 'ere,” says Gale, ”I didn't know it wur the Judge doin' me the honour to tear my flower-beds to pieces. I bin workin' at these 'ere beds for months, and here they are spilt in a minit; but I tell ee what, Orkins or no Orkins, he ain't gwine to play h.e.l.l with my flower-beds like that 'ere. If he wants the ground for public improvement, as you call it, well, you can take it under the Act.
There's room enough for improvement, I dessay.”
Now, instead of his lords.h.i.+p sending the man to prison, as I thought to be sure he must do, he speaks to him as mild as a lamb, and tells him he commends his spirit, and actually asks him what he valued the flowers at. A Judge condescending to do that! This mollified the old man's temper, and turned away his flowery wrath, so he said at once he wasn't the man to make a profit out o' the circ.u.m_starnce_; but right was right, and wrong worn't no man's right, with a great many other proverbs of a like nature, which are as hard to get rid of amongst men and women as precedents amongst Judges; and then the old man, much against his will and inclination, had a sovereign forced upon him by our marshal, which he put into his pocket, and then accompanied us to the gate.
Now came this remarkable circ.u.mstance. When we got back to our lodgings after being ”churched,” what should we find but a beautiful nosegay of cut flowers in our drawing-room from old Gale, and every morning came a similar token of his good-nature and admiration while we were there, and the same whenever we went on that circuit.
One of our servants was kind enough to make me a set of robes exactly like my lord's, which I used to wear in the Court of Crown Cases Reserved and at high functions, such as the Queen's Birthday or Chancellor's breakfast. In court I always appeared in mufti on ordinary occasions--that is to say, I did not appear at all ostentatiously, like some men, but sat quietly on my lord's robe close to his chair.
I well remember one occasion while we were at Hereford, a very pompous and extremely proper town, as all cathedral cities are; my lord and I were robed for the reception of the High Sheriff (as he is called) and his chaplain, who were presently coming with the great carriage to take us to be churched before we charged the grand jury.
Hereford is a very stately place, and enjoys a very high opinion of its own importance in the world. It is almost too respectable to admit of the least frivolity in any circ.u.mstances. You always seemed to be going to church at Hereford, or just coming out--the latter was nicest--so that there was, in my time, a sedateness only to be equalled by the hardness of a Brazil nut, which would ruin even my teeth to crack. I don't know if that is a proper way in which to describe a solid Herefordian; but if so, judge of the High Sheriff's surprise, as well as that of the chaplain, when I walked by the side of my lord into our drawing-room! I never saw a clergyman look so glum! We were both in robes, as I observed, and my lord was so pleased with my appearance that he held me up for the two dignitaries to admire. But Hereford does not admire other people; they confine their admirations within their own precincts.
On our way from the station to our lodgings, I ought to have said, both these gentlemen were full of praises. Who would not admire a Judge's companion?
Although Sheriff and chaplain were highly proper, the former could not restrain a hearty laugh, while the latter tightened his lips with a reproving smile. But then the chaplain, with a proper reverence for the State function, afterwards looked very straight down his nose, and, hemming a little, ventured to say,--
”My lord, are you _really_ going to take the little dog to divine service in the cathedral?”