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Richard Carvel
VOLUME 4   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XIX. A Man of Destiny
Winston Churchill
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       _ I was picked up and thrown into the brigantine's long-boat with a head
       and stomach full of salt water, and a heart as light as spray with the
       joy of it all. A big, red-bearded man lifted my heels to drain me.
       "The mon's deid," said he.
       "Dead!" cried I, from the bottom-board. "No more dead than you!"
       I turned over so lustily that he dropped my feet, and I sat up, something
       to his consternation. And they had scarce hooked the ship's side when I
       sprang up the sea-ladder, to the great gaping of the boat's crew, and
       stood with the water running off me in rivulets before the captain
       himself. I shall never forget the look of his face as he regarded my
       sorry figure.
       "Now by Saint Andrew," exclaimed he, "are ye kelpie or pirate?"
       "Neither, captain," I replied, smiling as the comical end of it came up
       to me, "but a young gentleman in misfortune."
       "Hoots!" says he, frowning at the grinning half-circle about us, "it's
       daft ye are--"
       But there he paused, and took of me a second sizing. How he got at my
       birth behind my tangled mat of hair and wringing linsey-woolsey I know
       not to this day. But he dropped his Scotch and merchant-captain's
       manner, and was suddenly a French courtier, making me a bow that had done
       credit to a Richelieu.
       "Your servant, Mr.--"
       "Richard Carvel, of Carvel Hall, in his Majesty's province of Maryland."
       He seemed sufficiently impressed.
       "Your very humble servant, Mr. Carvel. 'Tis in faith a privilege to be
       able to serve a gentleman."
       He bowed me toward his cabin, and then in sharp, quick tones he gave an
       order to his mate to get under way, and I saw the men turning to the
       braces with wonder in their eyes. My own astonishment was as great. And
       so, with my clothes sucking to my body and a trail of water behind me
       like that of a wet walrus, I accompanied the captain aft. His quarters
       were indeed a contrast to those of Griggs, being so neat that I paused at
       the door for fear of profaning them; but was so courteously bid to enter
       that I came on again. He summoned a boy from the round house.
       "William," said he, "a bottle of my French brandy. And my compliments to
       Mr. MacMuir, and ask him for a suit of clothes. You are a larger man
       than I, Mr. Carvel," he said to me, "or I would fit you out according to
       your station."
       I was too overwhelmed to speak. He poured out a liberal three fingers of
       brandy, and pledged me as handsomely as I had been an admiral come
       thither in mine own barge, instead of a ragged lad picked off a piratical
       slaver, with nothing save my bare word and address. 'Twas then I had
       space to note him more particularly. His skin was the rich colour of a
       well-seasoned ship's bell, and he was of the middle height, owned a
       slight, graceful figure, tapering down at the waist like a top, which had
       set off a silk coat to perfection and soured the beaus with envy. His
       movements, however, had all the decision of a man of action and of force.
       But his eye it was took possession of me--an unfathomable, dark eye,
       which bore more toward melancholy than sternness, and yet had something
       of both. He wore a clean, ruffled shirt, an exceeding neat coat and
       breeches of blue broadcloth, with plate burnished buttons, and white
       cotton stockings. Truly, this was a person to make one look twice, and
       think oftener. Then, as I went to pledge him, I, too, was caught for his
       name.
       "Paul," said he; "John Paul, of the brigantine John, of Kirkcudbright, in
       the West India trade."
       "Captain Paul--" I began. But my gratitude stuck fast in my throat and
       flowed out of my eyes. For the thought of the horrors from which he had
       saved me for the first time swept over me; his own kind treatment
       overcame me, and I blubbered like a child. With that he turned his back.
       "Hoots," says he, again, "dinna ye thank me. 'Tis naething to scuttle a
       nest of vermin, but the duty of ilka man who sails the seas." By this,
       having got the better of his emotion, he added: "And if it has been my
       good fortune to save a gentleman, Mr. Carvel, I thank God for it, as you
       must."
       Save for a slackness inside the leg and in the hips, Macbluir's clothes
       fitted me well enough, and presently I reappeared in the captain's cabin
       rigged out in the mate's shore suit of purplish drab, and brass-buckled
       shoes that came high over the instep, with my hair combed clear and tied
       with a ribbon behind. I felt at last that I might lay some claim to
       respectability. And what was my surprise to find Captain Paul buried to
       his middle in a great chest, and the place strewn about with laced and
       broidered coats and waistcoats, frocks and Newmarkets, like any tailor's
       shop in Church Street. So strange they looked in those tropical seas
       that he was near to catching me in a laugh as he straightened up. 'Twas
       then I noted that he was a younger man than I had taken him for.
       "You gentlemen from the southern colonies are too well nourished, by
       far," says he; "you are apt to be large of chest and limb. 'Odds bods,
       Mr. Carvel, it grieves me to see you apparelled like a barber surgeon.
       If the good Lord had but made you smaller, now," and he sighed, "how well
       this skyblue frock had set you off."
       "Indeed, I am content, and more, captain," I replied with a smile,
       "and thankful to be safe amongst friends. Never, I assure you,
       have I had less desire for finery."
       "Ay," said he, "you may well say that, you who have worn silk all your
       life, and will the rest of it, and we get safe to port. But believe me,
       sir, the pleasure of seeing one of your face and figure in such a coat as
       that would not be a small one."
       And disregarding my blushes and protests, he held up the watchet blue
       frock against me, and it was near fitting me but for my breadth,--the
       skirts being prodigiously long. I wondered mightily what tailor had
       thrust this garment upon him; its fashion was of the old king's time,
       the cuffs slashed like a sea-officer's uniform, and the shoulders made
       carefully round. But other thoughts were running within me then.
       "Captain," I cut in, "you are sailing eastward."
       "Yes, yes," he answered absently, fingering some Point d'Espagne.
       "There is no chance of touching in the colonies?" I persisted.
       "Colonies! No," said he, in the same abstraction; "I am making for the
       Solway, being long overdue. But what think you of this, Mr. Carvel?"
       And he held up a wondrous vellum-hole waistcoat of a gone-by vintage,
       and I saw how futile it were to attempt to lead him, while in that state
       of absorption, to topics which touched my affair. Of a sudden the
       significance of what he had said crept over me, the word Solway repeating
       itself in my mind. That firth bordered England itself, and Dorothy was
       in London! I became reconciled. I had no particle of objection to the
       Solway save the uneasiness my grandfather would come through, which was
       beyond helping. Fate had ordered things well.
       Then I fell to applauding, while the captain tried on (for he was not
       content with holding up) another frock of white drab, which, cuffs and
       pockets, I'll take my oath mounted no less than twenty-four: another
       plain one of pink cut-velvet; tail-coats of silk, heavily broidered with
       flowers, and satin waistcoats with narrow lace. He took an inconceivable
       enjoyment out of this parade, discoursing the while, like a nobleman with
       nothing but dress in his head, or, perhaps, like a mastercutter, about
       the turn of this or that lapel, the length from armpit to fold, and the
       number of button-holes that was proper. And finally he exhibited with
       evident pride a pair of doeskins that buttoned over the calf to be worn
       with high shoes, which I make sure he would have tried on likewise had he
       been offered the slightest encouragement. So he exploited the whole of
       his wardrobe, such an unlucky assortment of finery as I never wish to see
       again; all of which, however, became him marvellously, though I think he
       had looked well in anything. I hope I may be forgiven the perjury I did
       that day. I wondered greatly that such a foible should crop out in a man
       of otherwise sound sense and plain ability.
       At length, when the last chest was shut again and locked, and I had
       exhausted my ingenuity at commendation, and my patience also, he turned
       to me as a man come out of a trance.
       "Od's fish, Mr. Carvel," he cried, "you will be starved. I had forgot
       your state."
       I owned that hunger had nigh overcome me, whereupon he became very
       solicitous, bade the boy bring in supper at once, and in a short time we
       sat down together to the best meal I had seen for a month. It seemed
       like a year. Porridge, and bacon nicely done, and duff and ale, with the
       sea rushing past the cabin windows as we ate, touched into colour by the
       setting sun. Captain Paul did not mess with his mates, not he, and he
       gave me to understand that I was to share his cabin, apologizing
       profusely for what he was pleased to call poor fare. He would have
       it that he, and not I, were receiving favour.
       "My dear sir," he said once, "you cannot know what a bit of finery is to
       me, who has so little chance for the wearing of it. To discuss with a
       gentleman, a connoisseur (I know a bit of French, Mr. Carvel), is a
       pleasure I do not often come at."
       His simplicity in this touched me; it was pathetic.
       "How know you I am a gentleman, Captain Paul?" I asked curiously.
       "I should lack discernment, sir," he retorted, with some heat, "if I
       could not see as much. Breeding shines through sack-cloth, sir.
       Besides," he continued, in a milder tone, "the look of you is candour
       itself. Though I have not greatly the advantage of you in age, I have
       seen many men, and I know that such a face as yours cannot lie."
       Here Mr. Lowrie, the second mate, came in with a report; and I remarked
       that he stood up hat in hand whilst making it, very much as if Captain
       Paul commanded a frigate. The captain went to a locker and brought forth
       some mellow Madeira, and after the mate had taken a glass of it standing,
       he withdrew. Then we lighted pipes and sat very cosey with a lanthorn
       swung between us, and Captain Paul expressed a wish to hear my story.
       I gave him my early history briefly, dwelling but casually upon the
       position enjoyed in Maryland by my family; but I spoke of my grandfather,
       now turning seventy, gray-haired in the service of King and province.
       The captain was indeed a most sympathetic listener, now throwing in a
       question showing keen Scotch penetration, and anon making a most
       ludicrous inquiry as to the dress livery our footmen wore, and whether
       Mr. Carvel used outriders when he travelled abroad. This was the other
       side of the man. As the wine warmed and the pipe soothed, I spoke at
       length of Grafton and the rector; and when I came to the wretched
       contrivance by which they got me aboard the Black Moll, he was stalking
       hither and thither about the cabin, his fists clenched and his voice
       thick, breaking into Scotch again and vowing that hell were too good for
       such as they.
       His indignation, which seemed real and generous, transformed him into
       another man. He showered question after question upon me concerning my
       uncle and Mr. Allen; declared that he had known many villains, but had
       yet to hear of their equals; and finally, cooling a little, gave it as
       his judgment that the crime could never be brought home to them. This
       was my own opinion. He advised me, before we turned in, to "gie the
       parson a Grunt" as soon as ever I could lay hands upon him.
       The John made a good voyage for that season, with fair winds and clear
       skies for the most part. 'Twas a stout ship and a steady, with generous
       breadth of beam, and kept by the master as clean and bright as his
       porringer. He was Emperor aboard her. He spelt Command with a large C,
       and when he inspected, his jacks stood to attention like man-o'-war's
       men. The John mounting only four guns, and but two of them ninepounders,
       I expressed my astonishment that he had dared attack a pirate craft like
       the Black Moll, without knowing her condition and armament.
       "Richard," says he, impressively, for we had become very friendly, "I
       would close with a thirty-two and she flew that flag. Why, sir, a bold
       front is half the battle, using circumspection, of a course. A pretty
       woman, whatever her airs and quality, is to be carried the same way, and
       a man ought never to be frightened by appearances."
       Sometimes, at our meals, we discussed politics. But he seemed lukewarm
       upon this subject. He had told me that he had a brother William in
       Virginia, who was a hot Patriot. The American quarrel seemed to interest
       him very little. I should like to underscore this last sentence, my
       dears, in view of what comes after. What he said on the topic leaned
       perhaps to the King's side, tho' he was careful to say nothing that would
       give me offence. I was not surprised, for I had made a fair guess of his
       ambitions. It is only honest to declare that in my soberer moments my
       estimate of his character suffered. But he was a strange man,--a genius,
       as I soon discovered, to rouse the most sluggish nature to enthusiasm.
       The joy of sailing is born into some men, and those who are marked for
       the sea go down thither like the very streams, to be salted. Whatever
       the sign, old Stanwix was not far wrong when he read it upon me, and
       'twas no great while before I was part and parcel of the ship beneath my
       feet, breathing deep with her every motion. What feeling can compare
       with that I tasted when the brigantine lay on her side, the silver spray
       hurling over the bulwarks and stinging me to life! Or, in the watches,
       to hear the sea lashing along her strakes in never ending music! I gave
       MacMuir his shore suit again, and hugely delighted and astonished Captain
       Paul by donning a jacket of Scotch wool and a pair of seaman's boots, and
       so became a sailor myself. I had no mind to sit idle the passage, and
       the love of it, as I have said, was in me. In a fortnight I went aloft
       with the best of the watch to reef topsails, and trod a foot-rope without
       losing head or balance, bent an easing, and could lay hand on any lift,
       brace, sheet, or haulyards in the racks. John Paul himself taught me to
       tack and wear ship, and MacMuir to stow a headsail. The craft came to
       me, as it were, in a hand-gallop.
       At first I could make nothing of the crew, not being able to understand a
       word of their Scotch; but I remarked, from the first, that they were sour
       and sulky, and given to gathering in knots when the captain or MacMuir
       had not the deck. For Mr. Lowrie, poor man, they had little respect.
       But they plainly feared the first mate, and John Paul most of all. Of me
       their suspicion knew no bounds, and they would give me gruff answers, or
       none, when I spoke to them. These things roused both curiosity and
       foreboding within me.
       Many a watch I paced thro' with MacMuir, big and red and kindly, and I
       was not long in letting him know of the interest which Captain Paul had
       inspired within me. His own feeling for him was little short of
       idolatry. I had surmised much as to the rank of life from which the
       captain had sprung, but my astonishment was great when I was told that
       John Paul was the son of a poor gardener.
       "A gardener's son, Mr. MacMuir!" I repeated.
       "Just that," said he, solemnly, "a guid man an' haly' was auld Paul.
       Unco puir, by reason o' seven bairns. I kennt the daddie weel. I mak
       sma' doubt the captain'll tak ye hame wi' him, syne the mither an'
       sisters still be i' the cot i' Mr. Craik's croft."
       "Tell me, MacMuir," said I, "is not the captain in some trouble?"
       For I knew that something, whatever it was, hung heavy on John Paul's
       mind as we drew nearer Scotland. At times his brow would cloud and he
       would fall silent in the midst of a jest. And that night, with the stars
       jumping and the air biting cold (for we were up in the 40's), and the
       John wish-washing through the seas at three leagues the hour, MacMuir
       told me the story of Mungo Maxwell. You may read it for yourselves, my
       dears, in the life of John Paul Jones.
       "Wae's me!" he said, with a heave of his big chest, "I reca' as yestreen
       the night Maxwell cam aboord. The sun gaed loon a' bluidy, an' belyve
       the morn rose unco mirk an' dreary, wi' bullers(rollers) frae the west
       like muckle sowthers(soldiers) wi' white plumes. I tauld the captain
       'twas a' the faut o' Maxwell. I ne'er cad bide the blellum. Dour an'
       din he was, wi' ae girn like th' auld hornie. But the captain wadna
       hark to my rede when I tauld him naught but dool wad cooin o' taking
       Mungo."
       It seemed that John Paul, contrary to MacMuir'sadvice, had shipped as
       carpenter on the voyage out--near seven months since--a man by the name
       of Mungo Maxwell. The captain's motive had nothing in it but kindness,
       and a laudable desire to do a good turn to a playmate of his boyhood. As
       MacMuir said, "they had gaed barefit thegither amang the braes." The man
       hailed from Kirkbean, John Paul's own parish. But he had within him
       little of the milk of kindness, being in truth a sour and mutinous devil;
       and instead of the gratitude he might have shown, he cursed the fate that
       had placed him under the gardener's son, whom he deemed no better than
       himself. The John had scarce cleared the Solway before Maxwell showed
       signs of impudence and rebellion.
       The crew was three-fourths made of Kirkcudbright men who had known the
       master from childhood, many of them, indeed, being older than he; they
       were mostly jealous of Paul, envious of the command he had attained to
       over them, and impatient under the discipline he was ever ready to
       inflict. 'Tis no light task to enforce obedience from those with whom
       one has birdnested. But, having more than once felt the weight of his
       hand, they feared him.
       Dissatisfaction among such spreads apace, if a leader is but given; and
       Maxwell was such a one. His hatred for John Paul knew no bounds, and,
       having once tasted of his displeasure, he lay awake o' nights scheming to
       ruin him. And this was the plot: when the Azores should be in the wake,
       Captain Paul was to be murdered as he paced his quarterdeck in the
       morning, the two mates clapt into irons, and so brought to submission.
       And Maxwell, who had no more notion of navigation than a carpenter
       should, was to take the John to God knows where,--the Guinea coast,
       most probably. He would have no more navy regulations on a merchant
       brigantine, he promised them, nor banyan days, for the matter o' that.
       Happily, MacMuir himself discovered the affair on the eve of its
       perpetration, overhearing two men talking in the breadroom, and he ran to
       the cabin with the sweat standing out on his forehead. But the captain
       would have none of the precautions he urged; declared he would walk the
       deck as usual, and vowed he could cope single-handed with a dozen cowards
       like Maxwell. Sure enough, at crowdie-time, the men were seen coming
       aft, with Maxwell in the van carrying a bowl, on the pretext of a
       complaint against the cook.
       "John Paul," said MacMuir, with admiration in his voice and gesture,
       "John Paul wasna feart a pickle, but gaed to the mast, whyles I stannt
       chittering i' my claes, fearfu' for his life. He teuk the horns from
       Mungo, priet(tasted) a soup o' the crowdie, an' wi' that he seiz't haut
       o' the man by baith shouthers ere the blastie(scoundrel) raught for 's
       knife. My aith upo't, sir, the lave(rest) o' the batch cowert frae his
       e'e for a' the wand like thumpit tykes.'"
       So ended that mutiny, by the brave act of a brave man. The carpenter was
       clapt into irons himself, and given no less of the cat-o'-nine-tails than
       was good for him, and properly discharged at Tobago with such as had
       supported him. But he brought Captain Paul before the vice-admiralty
       court of that place, charging him with gross cruelty, and this proceeding
       had delayed the brigantine six months from her homeward voyage, to the
       great loss of her owners. And tho' at length the captain was handsomely
       acquitted, his character suffered unjustly, for there lacked not those
       who put their own interpretation upon the affair. He would most probably
       lose the brigantine. "He expected as much," said MacMuir.
       "There be mony aboord," he concluded, with a sigh, "as'll muckle
       gash(gossip) when we win to Kirkcudbright." _
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Foreword
VOLUME 1
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER I. Lionel Carvel, of Carvel Hall
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER II. Some Memories of Childhood
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER III. Caught by the Tide
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER IV. Grafton would heal an Old Breach
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER V. "If Ladies be but Young and Fair"
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER VI. I first suffer for the Cause
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER VII. Grafton has his Chance
VOLUME 2
   VOLUME 2 - CHAPTER VIII. Over the Wall
   VOLUME 2 - CHAPTER IX. Under False Colours
   VOLUME 2 - CHAPTER X. The Red in the Carvel Blood
   VOLUME 2 - CHAPTER XI. A Festival and a Parting
   VOLUME 2 - CHAPTER XII. News from a Far Country
VOLUME 3
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XIII. Mr. Allen shows his Hand
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XIV. The Volte Coupe
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XV. Of which the Rector has the Worst
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XVI. In which Some Things are made Clear
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XVII. South River
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XVIII. The Black Moll.
VOLUME 4
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XIX. A Man of Destiny
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XX. A Sad Home-coming
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XXI. The Gardener's Cottage
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XXII. On the Road
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XXIII. London Town
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XXIV. Castle Yard
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XXV. The Rescue
VOLUME 5
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXVI. The Part Horatio played
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXVII. In which I am sore tempted
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXVIII. Arlington Street
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXIX. I meet a very Great Young Man
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXX. A Conspiracy
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXXI. "Upstairs into the World"
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXXII. Lady Tankerville's Drum-major
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXXIII. Drury Lane
VOLUME 6
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXIV. His Grace makes Advances
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXV. In which my Lord Baltimore appears .
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXVI. A Glimpse of Mr. Garrick
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXVII. The Serpentine
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXVIII. In which I am roundly brought to task
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXIX. Holland House
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XL. Vauxhall
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XLI. The Wilderness
VOLUME 7
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLII. My Friends are proven
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLIII. Annapolis once more
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLIV. Noblesse Oblige
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLV. The House of Memories
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLVI. Gordon's Pride
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLVII. Visitors
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLVIII. Multum in Parvo
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLIX. Liberty loses a Friend
VOLUME 8
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER L. Farewell to Gordon's
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LI. How an Idle Prophecy came to pass
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LII. How the Gardener's Son fought the Serapis
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LIII. In which I make Some Discoveries
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LIV. More Discoveries.
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LV. The Love of a Maid for a Man
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LVI. How Good came out of Evil
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LVII. I come to my Own again
   Afterward