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Barnaby Rudge
CHAPTER 54
Charles Dickens
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       _ Rumours of the prevailing disturbances had, by this time, begun to
       be pretty generally circulated through the towns and villages round
       London, and the tidings were everywhere received with that appetite
       for the marvellous and love of the terrible which have probably
       been among the natural characteristics of mankind since the
       creation of the world. These accounts, however, appeared, to many
       persons at that day--as they would to us at the present, but that
       we know them to be matter of history--so monstrous and improbable,
       that a great number of those who were resident at a distance, and
       who were credulous enough on other points, were really unable to
       bring their minds to believe that such things could be; and
       rejected the intelligence they received on all hands, as wholly
       fabulous and absurd.
       Mr Willet--not so much, perhaps, on account of his having argued
       and settled the matter with himself, as by reason of his
       constitutional obstinacy--was one of those who positively refused
       to entertain the current topic for a moment. On this very evening,
       and perhaps at the very time when Gashford kept his solitary watch,
       old John was so red in the face with perpetually shaking his head
       in contradiction of his three ancient cronies and pot companions,
       that he was quite a phenomenon to behold, and lighted up the
       Maypole Porch wherein they sat together, like a monstrous carbuncle
       in a fairy tale.
       'Do you think, sir,' said Mr Willet, looking hard at Solomon
       Daisy--for it was his custom in cases of personal altercation to
       fasten upon the smallest man in the party--'do you think, sir, that
       I'm a born fool?'
       'No, no, Johnny,' returned Solomon, looking round upon the little
       circle of which he formed a part: 'We all know better than that.
       You're no fool, Johnny. No, no!'
       Mr Cobb and Mr Parkes shook their heads in unison, muttering, 'No,
       no, Johnny, not you!' But as such compliments had usually the
       effect of making Mr Willet rather more dogged than before, he
       surveyed them with a look of deep disdain, and returned for answer:
       'Then what do you mean by coming here, and telling me that this
       evening you're a-going to walk up to London together--you three--
       you--and have the evidence of your own senses? An't,' said Mr
       Willet, putting his pipe in his mouth with an air of solemn
       disgust, 'an't the evidence of MY senses enough for you?'
       'But we haven't got it, Johnny,' pleaded Parkes, humbly.
       'You haven't got it, sir?' repeated Mr Willet, eyeing him from top
       to toe. 'You haven't got it, sir? You HAVE got it, sir. Don't I
       tell you that His blessed Majesty King George the Third would no
       more stand a rioting and rollicking in his streets, than he'd stand
       being crowed over by his own Parliament?'
       'Yes, Johnny, but that's your sense--not your senses,' said the
       adventurous Mr Parkes.
       'How do you know? 'retorted John with great dignity. 'You're a
       contradicting pretty free, you are, sir. How do YOU know which it
       is? I'm not aware I ever told you, sir.'
       Mr Parkes, finding himself in the position of having got into
       metaphysics without exactly seeing his way out of them, stammered
       forth an apology and retreated from the argument. There then
       ensued a silence of some ten minutes or a quarter of an hour, at
       the expiration of which period Mr Willet was observed to rumble and
       shake with laughter, and presently remarked, in reference to his
       late adversary, 'that he hoped he had tackled him enough.'
       Thereupon Messrs Cobb and Daisy laughed, and nodded, and Parkes was
       looked upon as thoroughly and effectually put down.
       'Do you suppose if all this was true, that Mr Haredale would be
       constantly away from home, as he is?' said John, after another
       silence. 'Do you think he wouldn't be afraid to leave his house
       with them two young women in it, and only a couple of men, or so?'
       'Ay, but then you know,' returned Solomon Daisy, 'his house is a
       goodish way out of London, and they do say that the rioters won't
       go more than two miles, or three at the farthest, off the stones.
       Besides, you know, some of the Catholic gentlefolks have actually
       sent trinkets and suchlike down here for safety--at least, so the
       story goes.'
       'The story goes!' said Mr Willet testily. 'Yes, sir. The story
       goes that you saw a ghost last March. But nobody believes it.'
       'Well!' said Solomon, rising, to divert the attention of his two
       friends, who tittered at this retort: 'believed or disbelieved,
       it's true; and true or not, if we mean to go to London, we must be
       going at once. So shake hands, Johnny, and good night.'
       'I shall shake hands,' returned the landlord, putting his into his
       pockets, 'with no man as goes to London on such nonsensical
       errands.'
       The three cronies were therefore reduced to the necessity of
       shaking his elbows; having performed that ceremony, and brought
       from the house their hats, and sticks, and greatcoats, they bade
       him good night and departed; promising to bring him on the morrow
       full and true accounts of the real state of the city, and if it
       were quiet, to give him the full merit of his victory.
       John Willet looked after them, as they plodded along the road in
       the rich glow of a summer evening; and knocking the ashes out of
       his pipe, laughed inwardly at their folly, until his sides were
       sore. When he had quite exhausted himself--which took some time,
       for he laughed as slowly as he thought and spoke--he sat himself
       comfortably with his back to the house, put his legs upon the
       bench, then his apron over his face, and fell sound asleep.
       How long he slept, matters not; but it was for no brief space, for
       when he awoke, the rich light had faded, the sombre hues of night
       were falling fast upon the landscape, and a few bright stars were
       already twinkling overhead. The birds were all at roost, the
       daisies on the green had closed their fairy hoods, the honeysuckle
       twining round the porch exhaled its perfume in a twofold degree, as
       though it lost its coyness at that silent time and loved to shed
       its fragrance on the night; the ivy scarcely stirred its deep green
       leaves. How tranquil, and how beautiful it was!
       Was there no sound in the air, besides the gentle rustling of the
       trees and the grasshopper's merry chirp? Hark! Something very
       faint and distant, not unlike the murmuring in a sea-shell. Now it
       grew louder, fainter now, and now it altogether died away.
       Presently, it came again, subsided, came once more, grew louder,
       fainter--swelled into a roar. It was on the road, and varied with
       its windings. All at once it burst into a distinct sound--the
       voices, and the tramping feet of many men.
       It is questionable whether old John Willet, even then, would have
       thought of the rioters but for the cries of his cook and housemaid,
       who ran screaming upstairs and locked themselves into one of the
       old garrets,--shrieking dismally when they had done so, by way of
       rendering their place of refuge perfectly secret and secure. These
       two females did afterwards depone that Mr Willet in his
       consternation uttered but one word, and called that up the stairs
       in a stentorian voice, six distinct times. But as this word was a
       monosyllable, which, however inoffensive when applied to the
       quadruped it denotes, is highly reprehensible when used in
       connection with females of unimpeachable character, many persons
       were inclined to believe that the young women laboured under some
       hallucination caused by excessive fear; and that their ears
       deceived them.
       Be this as it may, John Willet, in whom the very uttermost extent
       of dull-headed perplexity supplied the place of courage, stationed
       himself in the porch, and waited for their coming up. Once, it
       dimly occurred to him that there was a kind of door to the house,
       which had a lock and bolts; and at the same time some shadowy ideas
       of shutters to the lower windows, flitted through his brain. But
       he stood stock still, looking down the road in the direction in
       which the noise was rapidly advancing, and did not so much as take
       his hands out of his pockets.
       He had not to wait long. A dark mass, looming through a cloud of
       dust, soon became visible; the mob quickened their pace; shouting
       and whooping like savages, they came rushing on pell mell; and in a
       few seconds he was bandied from hand to hand, in the heart of a
       crowd of men.
       'Halloa!' cried a voice he knew, as the man who spoke came cleaving
       through the throng. 'Where is he? Give him to me. Don't hurt
       him. How now, old Jack! Ha ha ha!'
       Mr Willet looked at him, and saw it was Hugh; but he said nothing,
       and thought nothing.
       'These lads are thirsty and must drink!' cried Hugh, thrusting him
       back towards the house. 'Bustle, Jack, bustle. Show us the best--
       the very best--the over-proof that you keep for your own drinking,
       Jack!'
       John faintly articulated the words, 'Who's to pay?'
       'He says "Who's to pay?"' cried Hugh, with a roar of laughter which
       was loudly echoed by the crowd. Then turning to John, he added,
       'Pay! Why, nobody.'
       John stared round at the mass of faces--some grinning, some fierce,
       some lighted up by torches, some indistinct, some dusky and
       shadowy: some looking at him, some at his house, some at each
       other--and while he was, as he thought, in the very act of doing
       so, found himself, without any consciousness of having moved, in
       the bar; sitting down in an arm-chair, and watching the destruction
       of his property, as if it were some queer play or entertainment, of
       an astonishing and stupefying nature, but having no reference to
       himself--that he could make out--at all.
       Yes. Here was the bar--the bar that the boldest never entered
       without special invitation--the sanctuary, the mystery, the
       hallowed ground: here it was, crammed with men, clubs, sticks,
       torches, pistols; filled with a deafening noise, oaths, shouts,
       screams, hootings; changed all at once into a bear-garden, a
       madhouse, an infernal temple: men darting in and out, by door and
       window, smashing the glass, turning the taps, drinking liquor out
       of China punchbowls, sitting astride of casks, smoking private and
       personal pipes, cutting down the sacred grove of lemons, hacking
       and hewing at the celebrated cheese, breaking open inviolable
       drawers, putting things in their pockets which didn't belong to
       them, dividing his own money before his own eyes, wantonly wasting,
       breaking, pulling down and tearing up: nothing quiet, nothing
       private: men everywhere--above, below, overhead, in the bedrooms,
       in the kitchen, in the yard, in the stables--clambering in at
       windows when there were doors wide open; dropping out of windows
       when the stairs were handy; leaping over the bannisters into chasms
       of passages: new faces and figures presenting themselves every
       instant--some yelling, some singing, some fighting, some breaking
       glass and crockery, some laying the dust with the liquor they
       couldn't drink, some ringing the bells till they pulled them down,
       others beating them with pokers till they beat them into fragments:
       more men still--more, more, more--swarming on like insects: noise,
       smoke, light, darkness, frolic, anger, laughter, groans, plunder,
       fear, and ruin!
       Nearly all the time while John looked on at this bewildering scene,
       Hugh kept near him; and though he was the loudest, wildest, most
       destructive villain there, he saved his old master's bones a score
       of times. Nay, even when Mr Tappertit, excited by liquor, came up,
       and in assertion of his prerogative politely kicked John Willet on
       the shins, Hugh bade him return the compliment; and if old John had
       had sufficient presence of mind to understand this whispered
       direction, and to profit by it, he might no doubt, under Hugh's
       protection, have done so with impunity.
       At length the band began to reassemble outside the house, and to
       call to those within, to join them, for they were losing time.
       These murmurs increasing, and attaining a high pitch, Hugh, and
       some of those who yet lingered in the bar, and who plainly were the
       leaders of the troop, took counsel together, apart, as to what was
       to be done with John, to keep him quiet until their Chigwell work
       was over. Some proposed to set the house on fire and leave him in
       it; others, that he should be reduced to a state of temporary
       insensibility, by knocking on the head; others, that he should be
       sworn to sit where he was until to-morrow at the same hour; others
       again, that he should be gagged and taken off with them, under a
       sufficient guard. All these propositions being overruled, it was
       concluded, at last, to bind him in his chair, and the word was
       passed for Dennis.
       'Look'ee here, Jack!' said Hugh, striding up to him: 'We are going
       to tie you, hand and foot, but otherwise you won't be hurt. D'ye
       hear?'
       John Willet looked at another man, as if he didn't know which was
       the speaker, and muttered something about an ordinary every Sunday
       at two o'clock.
       'You won't be hurt I tell you, Jack--do you hear me?' roared Hugh,
       impressing the assurance upon him by means of a heavy blow on the
       back. 'He's so dead scared, he's woolgathering, I think. Give him
       a drop of something to drink here. Hand over, one of you.'
       A glass of liquor being passed forward, Hugh poured the contents
       down old John's throat. Mr Willet feebly smacked his lips, thrust
       his hand into his pocket, and inquired what was to pay; adding, as
       he looked vacantly round, that he believed there was a trifle of
       broken glass--
       'He's out of his senses for the time, it's my belief,' said Hugh,
       after shaking him, without any visible effect upon his system,
       until his keys rattled in his pocket. 'Where's that Dennis?'
       The word was again passed, and presently Mr Dennis, with a long
       cord bound about his middle, something after the manner of a friar,
       came hurrying in, attended by a body-guard of half-a-dozen of his
       men.
       'Come! Be alive here!' cried Hugh, stamping his foot upon the
       ground. 'Make haste!'
       Dennis, with a wink and a nod, unwound the cord from about his
       person, and raising his eyes to the ceiling, looked all over it,
       and round the walls and cornice, with a curious eye; then shook his
       head.
       'Move, man, can't you!' cried Hugh, with another impatient stamp of
       his foot. 'Are we to wait here, till the cry has gone for ten
       miles round, and our work's interrupted?'
       'It's all very fine talking, brother,' answered Dennis, stepping
       towards him; 'but unless--' and here he whispered in his ear--
       'unless we do it over the door, it can't be done at all in this
       here room.'
       'What can't?' Hugh demanded.
       'What can't!' retorted Dennis. 'Why, the old man can't.'
       'Why, you weren't going to hang him!' cried Hugh.
       'No, brother?' returned the hangman with a stare. 'What else?'
       Hugh made no answer, but snatching the rope from his companion's
       hand, proceeded to bind old John himself; but his very first move
       was so bungling and unskilful, that Mr Dennis entreated, almost
       with tears in his eyes, that he might be permitted to perform the
       duty. Hugh consenting, be achieved it in a twinkling.
       'There,' he said, looking mournfully at John Willet, who displayed
       no more emotion in his bonds than he had shown out of them.
       'That's what I call pretty and workmanlike. He's quite a picter
       now. But, brother, just a word with you--now that he's ready
       trussed, as one may say, wouldn't it be better for all parties if
       we was to work him off? It would read uncommon well in the
       newspapers, it would indeed. The public would think a great deal
       more on us!'
       Hugh, inferring what his companion meant, rather from his gestures
       than his technical mode of expressing himself (to which, as he was
       ignorant of his calling, he wanted the clue), rejected this
       proposition for the second time, and gave the word 'Forward!' which
       was echoed by a hundred voices from without.
       'To the Warren!' shouted Dennis as he ran out, followed by the
       rest. 'A witness's house, my lads!'
       A loud yell followed, and the whole throng hurried off, mad for
       pillage and destruction. Hugh lingered behind for a few moments to
       stimulate himself with more drink, and to set all the taps running,
       a few of which had accidentally been spared; then, glancing round
       the despoiled and plundered room, through whose shattered window
       the rioters had thrust the Maypole itself,--for even that had been
       sawn down,--lighted a torch, clapped the mute and motionless John
       Willet on the back, and waving his light above his head, and
       uttering a fierce shout, hastened after his companions. _