登陆注册
5390200000027

第27章 CONTAINS MR. BROCK'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY, AND OTHER MATT

"Well, he was in disgrace, as you know, but he grew mighty fond of me, and--would you believe it?--nothing would satisfy him but presenting me at Court! Yes, to Her Sacred Majesty the Queen, and my Lady Marlborough, who was in high feather. Ay, truly, the sentinels on duty used to salute me as if I were Corporal John himself! I was on the high road to fortune. Charley Mordaunt used to call me Jack, and drink canary at my chambers; I used to make one at my Lord Treasurer's levee; I had even got Mr. Army-Secretary Walpole to take a hundred guineas as a compliment: and he had promised me a majority: when bad luck turned, and all my fine hopes were overthrown in a twinkling.

"You see, my dear, that after we had left that gaby, Galgenstein,--ha, ha--with a gag in his mouth, and twopence-halfpenny in his pocket, the honest Count was in the sorriest plight in the world; owing money here and there to tradesmen, a cool thousand to the Warwickshire Squire: and all this on eighty pounds a year! Well, for a little time the tradesmen held their hands;while the jolly Count moved heaven and earth to catch hold of his dear Corporal and his dear money-bags over again, and placarded every town from London to Liverpool with descriptions of my pretty person. The bird was flown, however,--the money clean gone,--and when there was no hope of regaining it, what did the creditors do but clap my gay gentleman into Shrewsbury gaol: where I wish he had rotted, for my part.

"But no such luck for honest Peter Brock, or Captain Wood, as he was in those days. One blessed Monday I went to wait on Mr. Secretary, and he squeezed my hand and whispered to me that I was to be Major of a regiment in Virginia--the very thing: for you see, my dear, Ididn't care about joining my Lord Duke in Flanders; being pretty well known to the army there. The Secretary squeezed my hand (it had a fifty-pound bill in it) and wished me joy, and called me Major, and bowed me out of his closet into the ante-room; and, as gay as may be, I went off to the 'Tilt-yard Coffee-house' in Whitehall, which is much frequented by gentlemen of our profession, where I bragged not a little of my good luck.

"Amongst the company were several of my acquaintance, and amongst them a gentleman I did not much care to see, look you! I saw a uniform that I knew--red and yellow facings--Cutts's, my dear; and the wearer of this was no other than his Excellency Gustavus Adolphus Maximilian, whom we all know of!

"He stared me full in the face, right into my eye (t'other one was patched, you know), and after standing stock-still with his mouth open, gave a step back, and then a step forward, and then screeched out, 'It's Brock!'

"'I beg your pardon, sir,' says I; 'did you speak to me?'

"'I'll SWEAR it's Brock,' cries Gal, as soon as he hears my voice, and laid hold of my cuff (a pretty bit of Mechlin as ever you saw, by the way).

"'Sirrah!' says I, drawing it back, and giving my Lord a little touch of the fist (just at the last button of the waistcoat, my dear,--a rare place if you wish to prevent a man from speaking too much: it sent him reeling to the other end of the room). 'Ruffian!'

says I. 'Dog!' says I. 'Insolent puppy and coxcomb! what do you mean by laying your hand on me?'

"'Faith, Major, you giv him his BILLYFUL,' roared out a long Irish unattached ensign, that I had treated with many a glass of Nantz at the tavern. And so, indeed, I had; for the wretch could not speak for some minutes, and all the officers stood laughing at him, as he writhed and wriggled hideously.

"'Gentlemen, this is a monstrous scandal,' says one officer. 'Men of rank and honour at fists like a parcel of carters!'

"'Men of honour!' says the Count, who had fetched up his breath by this time. (I made for the door, but Macshane held me and said, 'Major, you are not going to shirk him, sure?' Whereupon I gripped his hand and vowed I would have the dog's life.)"'Men of honour!' says the Count. 'I tell you the man is a deserter, a thief, and a swindler! He was my corporal, and ran away with a thou--'

"'Dog, you lie!' I roared out, and made another cut at him with my cane; but the gentlemen rushed between us.

"'O bluthanowns!' says honest Macshane, 'the lying scounthrel this fellow is! Gentlemen, I swear be me honour that Captain Wood was wounded at Barcelona; and that I saw him there; and that he and Iran away together at the battle of Almanza, and bad luck to us.'

"You see, my dear, that these Irish have the strongest imaginations in the world; and that I had actually persuaded poor Mac that he and I were friends in Spain. Everybody knew Mac, who was a character in his way, and believed him.

"'Strike a gentleman,' says I. 'I'll have your blood, I will.'

"'This instant,' says the Count, who was boiling with fury; 'and where you like.'

"'Montague House,' says I. 'Good,' says he. And off we went. In good time too, for the constables came in at the thought of such a disturbance, and wanted to take us in charge.

"But the gentlemen present, being military men, would not hear of this. Out came Mac's rapier, and that of half-a-dozen others; and the constables were then told to do their duty if they liked, or to take a crown-piece, and leave us to ourselves. Off they went; and presently, in a couple of coaches, the Count and his friends, I and mine, drove off to the fields behind Montague House. Oh that vile coffee-house! why did I enter it?

"We came to the ground. Honest Macshane was my second, and much disappointed because the second on the other side would not make a fight of it, and exchange a few passes with him; but he was an old major, a cool old hand, as brave as steel, and no fool. Well, the swords are measured, Galgenstein strips off his doublet, and I my handsome cut-velvet in like fashion. Galgenstein flings off his hat, and I handed mine over--the lace on it cost me twenty pounds.

I longed to be at him, for--curse him!--I hate him, and know that he has no chance with me at sword's-play.

"'You'll not fight in that periwig, sure?' says Macshane. 'Of course not,' says I, and took it off.

同类推荐
  • 愚庵智及禅师语录

    愚庵智及禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说无量功德陀罗尼经

    佛说无量功德陀罗尼经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 明高僧传

    明高僧传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 养生秘旨

    养生秘旨

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 季总彻禅师语录

    季总彻禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 三洞赞颂灵章

    三洞赞颂灵章

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 深海里的星光鱼

    深海里的星光鱼

    三年前,手无缚鸡之力的她被伤的体无完肤,无尽的嘲笑、背叛与欺诈。经年后,她再次回归。洛梓潼发誓,她所承受的痛苦,要让他们生不如死……“洛梓潼,既然选择了逃跑又何必再回来”。我对于你又算什么?男人妖冶的眸子注视着她。爱上你,是我一生无法抹去的耻辱……
  • 凤临都市之无敌娇妻

    凤临都市之无敌娇妻

    天地生人,人衍万物。上神赐四方血脉,东青龙,西白虎,北玄武,南朱雀。然则漫漫数亿年过去,血脉渐微,四方神兽命数将尽。怀朱雀血脉者,主解困厄。“朱雀,人间应自立自强,自尊自爱,和平美满。但你看,自私贪婪,虚伪浮夸,浊气直冲九天。”“困于己,厄难不断。吾愿往人间,解人之困厄。”“朱雀,天下当阴阳平衡,生老病死,悲欢离合轮回。但你看,阴阳乱,轮回断,平衡摇……
  • 情非得已:江少的白发前妻

    情非得已:江少的白发前妻

    新婚之夜,乔初颜抛下她和满堂宾客不顾。形婚两年,虞清清本分地扮演乔家少夫人的角色,却换来他一句冰冷的离婚。江子曦如裂缝里的阳光闯进她的世界,爱她、宠她,极尽所能。他说:“只要清清要的,我江子曦都会双手奉上。”后来,父亲被举报为亚洲头号毒枭,锒铛入狱;母亲突发脑溢血撒手人寰,哥哥车祸昏迷不醒;一夕之间,虞清清的世界天崩地裂。虞清清永远都想不到,这一切都是拜他所赐,那个宠她到心尖的男人,真相如一把尖刀剜着她的心。她红着眼睛问:“江子曦,你就是这么爱我的吗?”媒体闻风而至,舆论的浪尖之上,逼问、讽刺,如尖锐的钢针插进她的身体,一瞬间,她满头白发……
  • 快穿之狐狸是女主

    快穿之狐狸是女主

    借用别人的身体,完成她们的心愿,找回华真殿下的魂魄碎片。什么?!魂魄碎片都已经转世!
  • 静默笙箫人已殇

    静默笙箫人已殇

    她没有记忆,不懂过去,能记得的是他为自己奔波劳碌的身影。口不能言,使她成为上京后宫里的“哑妃”,但是只因能在他身边,流言蜚语都甘之如饴。只是三年,那个深情地唤她妻的帝王为何不曾看顾?伤了的心,错了的情。她原不是她;他本不是他。情到深处已是殇,帝王人家莫道恩。
  • 霸天帝神

    霸天帝神

    方俊遭情敌陷害,却大难不死,巧得神秘石人入体。从此练就龙魂武道,天下功法融会贯通!诛仇敌,斩妖魔,踏上一条大帝之路!
  • 主宰的永恒之路

    主宰的永恒之路

    玩游戏也有罪,李玉就是个被来自游戏里的雷电劈死的倒霉蛋,不过幸运的是,它继承了游戏角色的能力。却被送到了漫威这个大宇宙。为了回家,他不得不好好的经营这个世界,他掠夺其他维度来增加自己的底蕴,就是为了强大自己,以后还有机会看到属于自己的那个故乡!
  • 有你陪伴,一路上充满阳光

    有你陪伴,一路上充满阳光

    本书所选均为古今中外优秀的友情故事,如俞伯牙和钟子期、马克思与恩格斯等。在这些故事中,既有孩童之间的真挚友情,又有成年人之间的深厚情谊,让孩子们在阅读的同时领会到正确的交友方法,并使孩子们懂得珍惜来之不易的纯洁友谊。
  • 新闻历史足迹:项孔言新闻作品选

    新闻历史足迹:项孔言新闻作品选

    新闻与政治有着密切的关系。毋庸讳言,项孔言先生的新闻作品,尤其是其20世纪40年代和50年代的新闻作品,政治色彩是十分强烈的,是那个时代中剧烈动荡的政治在他新闻作品中的折射,反映了那个时代中社会变迁的某些方面。如果日后有学者要研究那个时代的新闻事业,如果日后有学者要研究那个时代的社会变迁,如果日后有学者要研究那个时代中普通知识分子的心路历程,项孔言先生的新闻作品是值得一看的。