Part 23 (1/2)

XXV

CHURCH ARCHITECTURE

It was already eleven o'clock, the sun s.h.i.+ning in a bright sky, under which the country round the Waveney lay broad to the hills of mist which seemed to encompa.s.s the valley; yet, when one came to them no hills were there, but were still beyond. When Hogarth came out from the wood upon a footbridge, to his right a hand-sower was sowing broadcast, with a two-handed rhythm, taking seed, as he strode, from his scrip; and to the left ran a path between fields to an eminence with a little church on it; straight northward some Thring houses visible, and north-east, near the river, Lagden Dip orchard. Only two stooping women in fields near Thring could Hogarth see; also, still further, a gig-and-horse whose remote motion was imperceptible; also the trudging two-handed process of the sower nouris.h.i.+ng the furrows. But for these, England, supposed to be ”overcrowded”, seemed a land once inhabited, but abandoned.

To Hogarth the whole, so familiar, looked uplifted now, the sunlight of a more celestial essence. Westring he would buy--though one memorable night in Colmoor he had arrived at the knowledge that it was not just that Westring should be anyone's; but then what one bought with his own diamonds was surely his own--his name being Richard.

He had pa.s.sed the bridge, when, glancing to the left, he saw a fifth person in the landscape--a man under a sycamore near the church, gazing up, with hung jaw, at the apse window--dressed in a grey jacket, but a clerical hat, and he had a note-book, in which he wrote, or drew.

Hogarth, whose mind was in weatherc.o.c.k state, rolled the barrow to the hill, left it, went stealing fleetly up, and gripped the man's collar, to whisper: ”In the King's name I arrest you”.

The man's hand clapped his heart, as he turned a face of terror.

”There is--some mistake--My G.o.d! Are you--?”

”Yes”.

”Hogarth?”

”Who else?”

”But you have killed me! My heart--”

”Serves you right. Why didn't you give your right name to Loveday? And what are you doing here?”

”I was just examining this lovely old church, with its two south aisles, and one north, like St. John's at Cirencester. When the church fell in England, architecture was abolished--But as to why I am in Norfolk at all, I am skulking: and here is as another place. Your friend packed me off to America; but for some reasons I should prefer Golmoor--old Colmoor, eh? I fear I am a voluptuary, my son, fond of comfort, and old things, and pretty things. And all that I shall have yet! Tut, O'Hara is not done with the world, nor it with him. As to Norfolk, I once knew--a person--in this neighbourhood--”

The priest paused, regarding Hogarth with a smile, the ”person” meant being Hogarth's mother; and he said: ”But you are quite the Jew in dress: do you know now, then, that you are of the Chosen Race?”

”Singular notion! This is a mere disguise”.

”Ah. But you look quite radiant. You must have come into a fortune. When I heard of your escape, I said to myself--”

”How did you hear?”

”Why, from Harris”.

”Harris is drowned”.

”Harris is now under that little roof down there--there”--the prelate stabbed with his forefinger: ”Harris is my shadow; Harris is my master. He was picked up naked by the s.h.i.+p which ran down your vessel, recognized me one day in Broadway, and threatened to give me in charge if I did not adopt him 'as my well-beloved son'. Well, from him I heard all, how you called fire from Heaven--it was gallant. But aren't you afraid of capture down here in your own country?”

”I cannot be captured”.

Those stony eyeb.a.l.l.s of O'Hara, bulging from out circular trenches round their sockets, surveyed Hogarth, weighing, divining him, while his bottom lip, ma.s.sive as the mouth of Polynesian stone G.o.ds, trembled.

”How do you mean?”