And now I gained more insight into my great enemy’s schemes and doings, than I could have acquired while engaged so much at ferry. For time allowed me to maintain that strict watch upon Narnton Court, which was now become my duty, as well as an especial pleasure, for the following reason. I began to see most clearly that the foul outrage upon my boat must have been perpetrated by one or both of those savage fellows who were employed as spies upon this great house, from the landward side. They must have forded the river, which is not more than three feet deep in places, when the tide is out, and no floods coming down. These two cunning barbarians came of course from the Nympton rookery, but were lodging for the present in a hole they had scooped for themselves in the loneliest part of Braunton Burrows. Of course they durst not go about in a peopled and civilised neighbourhood, with such an absence of apparel as they could indulge at home. Still they were unsightly objects; and decent people gave them a wide berth, when possible. But my firm intention was to grapple with these savage scoundrels, and to prove at their expense what a civilised Welshman is, and how capable of asserting his commercial privileges. Only as they carried knives, I durst not meet them both at once; and even should I catch them singly, some care was advisable, so as take them off their guard; because I would not lower myself to the use of anything more barbarous than an honest cudgel.
However, although I watched and waited, and caught sight of them more than once, especially at nighttime when they roved most freely, it was long before I found it prudent to bear down on the enemy. Not from any fear of them, but for fear of slaying them, as I might be forced to do, if they rushed with steel at me.
One night, after the turn of the days, and with mild weather now prevailing, and a sense of spring already fluttering in the valleys, I sat in a dark embrasure at the end of Narnton Court. There had been more light than usual in the windows of the great dining-room, which now was very seldom used for hospitable purposes. And now two gentlemen came forth, as if for a little air, to take a turn on the river-terrace. It did not cost me long to learn that one was good Sir Philip Bampfylde, and the other that very wicked Chowne. The latter had manifestly been telling some of his choicest stories, and held the upper hand as usual.
“General, take my arm. The flags are rough, and the night is of the darkest. You must gravel this terrace, for the sake of your guests, after your port-wine.”
“Dick,” said the General, with a sigh, for he was a most hospitable man, and accustomed to the army; “Dick, thou hast hardly touched my port; and I like not to have it slighted, sir.”
What excuse the Parson made I did not hear, but knew already that one of his countless villainies was his rude contempt of the gift of God, as vouchsafed to Noah, and confirmed by the very first rainbow, which continues the colours thereof up to this time of writing.
Sir Philip leaned on the parapet some twenty yards to windward of me, and he sniffed the fine fresh smell of seaweed and seawater coming up the river with a movement of four knots an hour. And in his heart he thanked the Lord, very likely without knowing it. Then he seemed to sigh a little, and to turn to Chowne, and say—
“Dick, this is not as it should be. Look at all this place, and up and down all this length of river; every light you can see burning, is in a house that ’longs to me. And who is now to have it all? It used to make me proud; but now it makes me very humble. You are a parson; tell me, Dick, what have I done to deserve it all?”
The Rev. Richard Stoyle Chowne had not—whatever his other vices were—one grain of pious hypocrisy in all his foul composition. If he had, he might have flourished, and with his native power, must have been one of the foremost men of this, or any other age. But his pride allowed him never to let in pretence religious into the texture of his ways. A worse man need not be desired: and yet he did abhor all cant, to such a degree that he made a mock of his own church-services.
“General, I have nought to say. You have asked this question more than once. You know what my opinion is.”
“I know that you have the confidence, sir, every honourable man must have, in my poor son’s innocence. You support it against everyone.”
“Against all the world: against even you, when you allow yourself to doubt it. Tush! I would not twice think of it. However many candles burn”—this was a touch of his nasty sarcasm, which he never could deny himself—“up and down the valley, General, no son of yours, however wild, and troubled in expenditure, could ever shape or even dream of anything dishonourable.”
“I hope not—I hope to God, not,” Sir Philip said, with a little gasp, as if he were fearing otherwise: “Dick, you are my godson, and you have been the greatest comfort to me; because you never would believe—”
“Not another word, General. You must not dwell on this matter so. The children were fine little dears of course, very clever and very precious—”
“Oh, if you only knew the words, Dick, my little granddaughter could come out with! Scarcely anything you could think of would have been too big for her little mouth. And if she could not do it once,
