登陆注册
5591300000071

第71章 Chapter 70

Mr Dennis having despatched this piece of business without any personal hurt or inconvenience,and having now retired into the tranquil respectability of private life,resolved to solace himself with half an hour or so of female society.With this amiable purpose in his mind,he bent his steps towards the house where Dolly and Miss Haredale were still confined,and whither Miss Miggs had also been removed by order of Mr Simon Tappertit.

As he walked along the streets with his leather gloves clasped behind him,and his face indicative of cheerful thought and pleasant calculation,Mr Dennis might have been likened unto a farmer ruminating among his crops,and enjoying by anticipation the bountiful gifts of Providence.Look where he would,some heap of ruins afforded him rich promise of a working off;the whole town appeared to have been ploughed and sown,and nurtured by most genial weather;and a goodly harvest was at hand.

Having taken up arms and resorted to deeds of violence,with the great main object of preserving the Old Bailey in all its purity,and the gallows in all its pristine usefulness and moral grandeur,it would perhaps be going too far to assert that Mr Dennis had ever distinctly contemplated and foreseen this happy state of things.

He rather looked upon it as one of those beautiful dispensations which are inscrutably brought about for the behoof and advantage of good men.He felt,as it were,personally referred to,in this prosperous ripening for the gibbet;and had never considered himself so much the pet and favourite child of Destiny,or loved that lady so well or with such a calm and virtuous reliance,in all his life.

As to being taken up,himself,for a rioter,and punished with the rest,Mr Dennis dismissed that possibility from his thoughts as an idle chimera;arguing that the line of conduct he had adopted at Newgate,and the service he had rendered that day,would be more than a set-off against any evidence which might identify him as a member of the crowd.That any charge of companionship which might be made against him by those who were themselves in danger,would certainly go for nought.And that if any trivial indiscretion on his part should unluckily come out,the uncommon usefulness of his office,at present,and the great demand for the exercise of its functions,would certainly cause it to be winked at,and passed over.In a word,he had played his cards throughout,with great care;had changed sides at the very nick of time;had delivered up two of the most notorious rioters,and a distinguished felon to boot;and was quite at his ease.

Saving--for there is a reservation;and even Mr Dennis was not perfectly happy--saving for one circumstance;to wit,the forcible detention of Dolly and Miss Haredale,in a house almost adjoining his own.This was a stumbling-block;for if they were discovered and released,they could,by the testimony they had it in their power to give,place him in a situation of great jeopardy;and to set them at liberty,first extorting from them an oath of secrecy and silence,was a thing not to be thought of.It was more,perhaps,with an eye to the danger which lurked in this quarter,than from his abstract love of conversation with the sex,that the hangman,quickening his steps,now hastened into their society,cursing the amorous natures of Hugh and Mr Tappertit with great heartiness,at every step he took.

When be entered the miserable room in which they were confined,Dolly and Miss Haredale withdrew in silence to the remotest corner.

But Miss Miggs,who was particularly tender of her reputation,immediately fell upon her knees and began to scream very loud,crying,'What will become of me!'--'Where is my Simmuns!'--'Have mercy,good gentlemen,on my sex's weaknesses!'--with other doleful lamentations of that nature,which she delivered with great propriety and decorum.

'Miss,miss,'whispered Dennis,beckoning to her with his forefinger,'come here--I won't hurt you.Come here,my lamb,will you?'

On hearing this tender epithet,Miss Miggs,who had left off screaming when he opened his lips,and had listened to him attentively,began again,crying:'Oh I'm his lamb!He says I'm his lamb!Oh gracious,why wasn't I born old and ugly!Why was Iever made to be the youngest of six,and all of 'em dead and in their blessed graves,excepting one married sister,which is settled in Golden Lion Court,number twenty-sivin,second bell-handle on the--!'

'Don't I say I an't a-going to hurt you?'said Dennis,pointing to a chair.'Why miss,what's the matter?'

'I don't know what mayn't be the matter!'cried Miss Miggs,clasping her hands distractedly.'Anything may be the matter!'

'But nothing is,I tell you,'said the hangman.'First stop that noise and come and sit down here,will you,chuckey?'

The coaxing tone in which he said these latter words might have failed in its object,if he had not accompanied them with sundry sharp jerks of his thumb over one shoulder,and with divers winks and thrustings of his tongue into his cheek,from which signals the damsel gathered that he sought to speak to her apart,concerning Miss Haredale and Dolly.Her curiosity being very powerful,and her jealousy by no means inactive,she arose,and with a great deal of shivering and starting back,and much muscular action among all the small bones in her throat,gradually approached him.

'Sit down,'said the hangman.

Suiting the action to the word,he thrust her rather suddenly and prematurely into a chair,and designing to reassure her by a little harmless jocularity,such as is adapted to please and fascinate the sex,converted his right forefinger into an ideal bradawl or gimlet,and made as though he would screw the same into her side--whereat Miss Miggs shrieked again,and evinced symptoms of faintness.

'Lovey,my dear,'whispered Dennis,drawing his chair close to hers.'When was your young man here last,eh?'

'MY young man,good gentleman!'answered Miggs in a tone of exquisite distress.

'Ah!Simmuns,you know--him?'said Dennis.

'Mine indeed!'cried Miggs,with a burst of bitterness--and as she said it,she glanced towards Dolly.'MINE,good gentleman!'

This was just what Mr Dennis wanted,and expected.

'Ah!'he said,looking so soothingly,not to say amorously on Miggs,that she sat,as she afterwards remarked,on pins and needles of the sharpest Whitechapel kind,not knowing what intentions might be suggesting that expression to his features:

'I was afraid of that.I saw as much myself.It's her fault.She WILL entice 'em.'

'I wouldn't,'cried Miggs,folding her hands and looking upwards with a kind of devout blankness,'I wouldn't lay myself out as she does;I wouldn't be as bold as her;I wouldn't seem to say to all male creeturs "Come and kiss me"'--and here a shudder quite convulsed her frame--'for any earthly crowns as might be offered.

Worlds,'Miggs added solemnly,'should not reduce me.No.Not if I was Wenis.'

'Well,but you ARE Wenus,you know,'said Mr Dennis,confidentially.

'No,I am not,good gentleman,'answered Miggs,shaking her head with an air of self-denial which seemed to imply that she might be if she chose,but she hoped she knew better.'No,I am not,good gentleman.Don't charge me with it.'

Up to this time she had turned round,every now and then,to where Dolly and Miss Haredale had retired and uttered a scream,or groan,or laid her hand upon her heart and trembled excessively,with a view of keeping up appearances,and giving them to understand that she conversed with the visitor,under protest and on compulsion,and at a great personal sacrifice,for their common good.But at this point,Mr Dennis looked so very full of meaning,and gave such a singularly expressive twitch to his face as a request to her to come still nearer to him,that she abandoned these little arts,and gave him her whole and undivided attention.

'When was Simmuns here,I say?'quoth Dennis,in her ear.

'Not since yesterday morning;and then only for a few minutes.Not all day,the day before.'

'You know he meant all along to carry off that one!'said Dennis,indicating Dolly by the slightest possible jerk of his head:--'And to hand you over to somebody else.'

Miss Miggs,who had fallen into a terrible state of grief when the first part of this sentence was spoken,recovered a little at the second,and seemed by the sudden check she put upon her tears,to intimate that possibly this arrangement might meet her views;and that it might,perhaps,remain an open question.

'--But unfort'nately,'pursued Dennis,who observed this:'somebody else was fond of her too,you see;and even if he wasn't,somebody else is took for a rioter,and it's all over with him.'

Miss Miggs relapsed.

'Now I want,'said Dennis,'to clear this house,and to see you righted.What if I was to get her off,out of the way,eh?'

Miss Miggs,brightening again,rejoined,with many breaks and pauses from excess of feeling,that temptations had been Simmuns's bane.That it was not his faults,but hers (meaning Dolly's).

That men did not see through these dreadful arts as women did,and therefore was caged and trapped,as Simmun had been.That she had no personal motives to serve--far from it--on the contrary,her intentions was good towards all parties.But forasmuch as she knowed that Simmun,if united to any designing and artful minxes (she would name no names,for that was not her dispositions)--to ANY designing and artful minxes--must be made miserable and unhappy for life,she DID incline towards prewentions.Such,she added,was her free confessions.But as this was private feelings,and might perhaps be looked upon as wengeance,she begged the gentleman would say no more.Whatever he said,wishing to do her duty by all mankind,even by them as had ever been her bitterest enemies,she would not listen to him.With that she stopped her ears,and shook her head from side to side,to intimate to Mr Dennis that though he talked until he had no breath left,she was as deaf as any adder.

'Lookee here,my sugar-stick,'said Mr Dennis,'if your view's the same as mine,and you'll only be quiet and slip away at the right time,I can have the house clear to-morrow,and be out of this trouble.--Stop though!there's the other.'

'Which other,sir?'asked Miggs--still with her fingers in her ears and her head shaking obstinately.

'Why,the tallest one,yonder,'said Dennis,as he stroked his chin,and added,in an undertone to himself,something about not crossing Muster Gashford.

Miss Miggs replied (still being profoundly deaf)that if Miss Haredale stood in the way at all,he might make himself quite easy on that score;as she had gathered,from what passed between Hugh and Mr Tappertit when they were last there,that she was to be removed alone (not by them,but by somebody else),to-morrow night.

Mr Dennis opened his eyes very wide at this piece of information,whistled once,considered once,and finally slapped his head once and nodded once,as if he had got the clue to this mysterious removal,and so dismissed it.Then he imparted his design concerning Dolly to Miss Miggs,who was taken more deaf than before,when he began;and so remained,all through.

The notable scheme was this.Mr Dennis was immediately to seek out from among the rioters,some daring young fellow (and he had one in his eye,he said),who,terrified by the threats he could hold out to him,and alarmed by the capture of so many who were no better and no worse than he,would gladly avail himself of any help to get abroad,and out of harm's way,with his plunder,even though his journey were incumbered by an unwilling companion;indeed,the unwilling companion being a beautiful girl,would probably be an additional inducement and temptation.Such a person found,he proposed to bring him there on the ensuing night,when the tall one was taken off,and Miss Miggs had purposely retired;and then that Dolly should be gagged,muffled in a cloak,and carried in any handy conveyance down to the river's side;where there were abundant means of getting her smuggled snugly off in any small craft of doubtful character,and no questions asked.With regard to the expense of this removal,he would say,at a rough calculation,that two or three silver tea or coffee-pots,with something additional for drink (such as a muffineer,or toast-rack),would more than cover it.Articles of plate of every kind having been buried by the rioters in several lonely parts of London,and particularly,as he knew,in St James's Square,which,though easy of access,was little frequented after dark,and had a convenient piece of water in the midst,the needful funds were close at hand,and could be had upon the shortest notice.With regard to Dolly,the gentleman would exercise his own discretion.

He would be bound to do nothing but to take her away,and keep her away.All other arrangements and dispositions would rest entirely with himself.

If Miss Miggs had had her hearing,no doubt she would have been greatly shocked by the indelicacy of a young female's going away with a stranger by night (for her moral feelings,as we have said,were of the tenderest kind);but directly Mr Dennis ceased to speak,she reminded him that he had only wasted breath.She then went on to say (still with her fingers in her ears)that nothing less than a severe practical lesson would save the locksmith's daughter from utter ruin;and that she felt it,as it were,a moral obligation and a sacred duty to the family,to wish that some one would devise one for her reformation.Miss Miggs remarked,and very justly,as an abstract sentiment which happened to occur to her at the moment,that she dared to say the locksmith and his wife would murmur,and repine,if they were ever,by forcible abduction,or otherwise,to lose their child;but that we seldom knew,in this world,what was best for us:such being our sinful and imperfect natures,that very few arrived at that clear understanding.

Having brought their conversation to this satisfactory end,they parted:Dennis,to pursue his design,and take another walk about his farm;Miss Miggs,to launch,when he left her,into such a burst of mental anguish (which she gave them to understand was occasioned by certain tender things he had had the presumption and audacity to say),that little Dolly's heart was quite melted.

Indeed,she said and did so much to soothe the outraged feelings of Miss Miggs,and looked so beautiful while doing so,that if that young maid had not had ample vent for her surpassing spite,in a knowledge of the mischief that was brewing,she must have scratched her features,on the spot.

同类推荐
  • 達海叢書總目提要

    達海叢書總目提要

    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。
  • 自闲觉禅师语录

    自闲觉禅师语录

    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。
  • 济生集

    济生集

    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。
  • 许真君受炼形神上清毕道法要节文

    许真君受炼形神上清毕道法要节文

    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。
  • 汉宫春色

    汉宫春色

    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
  • 从练习生到影帝

    从练习生到影帝

    粉丝眼里他是偶像,公司眼里他是偶尔闹别扭的员工,前辈眼里他是努力的后辈妈妈眼里他是改变的孩子,市场眼里他是幸运的宠儿。从偶像练习生开始一步步走上演绎的道路。
  • 左宗棠传

    左宗棠传

    《左宗棠传》是以晚清重臣左宗棠为主角的人物传记,从他出生前后的中外格局说起,沿着他的生命轨迹,记述了他一生的不凡经历,历数他所作的贡献。
  • 青少年知识博览4

    青少年知识博览4

    本书几乎囊括了自然天地与人类生活的方方面面,可谓名副其实的“百科全书”。它涉及的知识点较全:每一个知识面都包含若干知识点,知识点语言生动、内容严谨,又配以图片说明,足以让读者一目了然,可谓不折不扣的“百科全书”。本书每章都是一个特定的知识领域,章内再按各知识领域的内容特点分类一一展开细述,便于读者查找、阅读。
  • 企业物流管理实务

    企业物流管理实务

    本书按照高职教育培养目标的要求,以“教程” 方式重点突出企业物流管理的操作技能知识,以实际工作“案例”和“问题” 介绍企业采购与供应物流管理、企业生产物流管理、企业销售物流管理等基本技能知识,为学习企业物流管理知识和掌握企业物流管理技能提供有力支撑。
  • bickerstaff-partridge papers

    bickerstaff-partridge papers

    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。
  • 魔凰无泪:冷血圣尊,凌天下

    魔凰无泪:冷血圣尊,凌天下

    漫漫长生,有始无终弹指一笑间,众生殁九天宫上仙人叹,堕入地府鬼门关有朝一日,御火而归,笑靥如花猖狂不改!“本尊曾为九天之傲,亦坠入地狱作鬼煞。可笑,不论人仙皆可笑!”本尊曾擒过星辰千坠,斩过万道生灵;亦曾陪你看过日出日落,捉过在水鲤鱼。“我,来接你了……要跟我走吗?”————“这三杯酒敬殿下!”“第一杯,恭喜殿下寻得所爱……”“第二杯,祝殿下与良人白头偕老,厮守终生……”“这第三杯……愿殿下永世无恙,万寿无疆!”“殿下。臣,退了。”
  • 悬在半空中的天堂

    悬在半空中的天堂

    本书记录了北大女生四年大学丰富的经历,她所接触的世界、所接触的人物、所遭遇的事件,有每个大学生共同的经历,同时,作为最高学府北大的学生,又有她特殊的经历。故事情节精彩纷呈、人物性格各具特色:世事看透的学长,为何放荡不羁?诗人般情怀、但神经质的清华自动化雪莱,为何四年荒寂于清华园?单纯简单的剑桥交流生丁强,又会有怎样的情感遭遇?文坛黑马,为何写出满纸宁静?北大高干高枫身患癌症,相恋多年的女友会做出怎样的抉择?大四,工作、读研、出国,他们又该何去何从?
  • 步步掠爱:爵爷情迷私宠

    步步掠爱:爵爷情迷私宠

    苏小媛八岁时,双亲突然失踪,她从富家千金沦落成为被人收养的孤女。名义上的义兄从未出现,任她自生自灭。直到她十八岁,男人突然回国,强行侵入她的生活。明知对方为复仇而来,但她还是沉入片刻温存不能自拔。告白99次,却都被无情推开,甚至被当成工具,送上别的男人的床……当夜,大火吞噬一切。几年后,她顶着超模的皇冠而来,悠然自得落落大方。“先生,我们认识吗?”“忘记我没关系,你不认我,但是你身体会很诚实的。”男子邪邪一笑,轻松将其推倒。
  • 天空与云的距离

    天空与云的距离

    安佑辰和宁夏熙是从初中开始认识的朋友,一个天才画手和一个学霸少女的故事。明明看上去是天才画手高高在上得多,到了情之所至的时候,最先动心的那个人,却是他。傲娇的画家,笨拙的少女,家庭的变故,等到他们慢慢长大,两个人都变得不一样。情感是不是还在呢?故事分三个层次,回忆学校生活,职场故事和在一起之后的番外。
  • 重生之倾杯天下

    重生之倾杯天下

    大陆中央,生有四国,分别为隐雾国、忘炎国、琉风国、启习国。四大强国以绝对的优势主宰天下,虽然看似和平年代,但战争的苗头却是隐隐若现。江湖中形成一股新的势力影响政治,其中最为突出的是以白诗缨为首的雨缨宫。白诗缨,天煞之星,生得绝美冷艳,因女扮男装而被成为被世人所知的“魔君”,她一生无情,逍遥天地,唯一能留住她的心的只有自己的好姐妹夏晓雨。夏晓雨,琉风国的帝姬,与白诗缨青梅竹马,彼此依靠与珍惜。两个姐妹性格迥异,却对彼此爱护欣赏,在这一片乱世之中,情关重重,挫折不断,她们两人又将会遇上什么样的事情?