William Harrison Ainsworth

The Essential Works of William Harrison Ainsworth


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made no answer. At that moment, the church clock struck two, breaking the stillness with an iron clang. Luke raised his eyes. A ray of moonlight, streaming obliquely through the painted window, fell upon the gilt lettering of a black mural entablature. The lower part of the inscription was in the shade, but the emblazonment, and the words —

      Orate pro anima Reginaldi Rookwood equitis aurati,

      were clear and distinct. Luke trembled, he knew not why, as the sexton pointed to it.

      “You have heard of the handwriting upon the wall,” said Peter. “Look there! —‘His kingdom hath been taken from him.’ Ha, ha! Listen to me. Of all thy monster race — of all the race of Rookwood I should say — no demon ever stalked the earth more terrible than him whose tablet you now behold. By him a brother was betrayed; by him a brother’s wife was dishonored. Love, honor, friendship, were with him as words. He regarded no ties; he defied and set at naught all human laws and obligations — and yet he was religious, or esteemed so — received the viaticum, and died full of years and honors, hugging salvation to his sinful heart. And after death he has yon lying epitaph to record his virtues. His virtues! ha, ha! Ask him who preaches to the kneeling throng gathering within this holy place what shall be the murderer’s portion — and he will answer —Death! And yet Sir Reginald was long-lived. The awful question, ‘Cain, where is thy brother?’ broke not his tranquil slumbers. Luke, I have told you much — but not all. You know not, as yet — nor shall you know your destiny; but you shall be the avenger of infamy and blood. I have a sacred charge committed to my keeping, which, hereafter, I may delegate to you. You shall be Sir Luke Rookwood, but the conditions must be mine to propose.”

      “No more,” said Luke; “my brain reels. I am faint. Let us quit this place, and get into the fresh air.” And striding past his grandsire he traversed the aisles with hasty steps. Peter was not slow to follow. The key was applied, and they emerged into the churchyard. The grassy mounds were bathed in the moonbeams, and the two yew-trees, throwing their black jagged shadows over the grave hills, looked like evil spirits brooding over the repose of the righteous.

      The sexton noticed the deathly paleness of Luke’s countenance, but he fancied it might proceed from the tinge of the sallow moonlight.

      “I will be with you at your cottage ere daybreak,” said Luke. And turning an angle of the church, he disappeared from view.

      “So,” exclaimed Peter, gazing after him, “the train is laid; the spark has been applied; the explosion will soon follow. The hour is fast approaching when I shall behold this accursed house shaken to dust, and when my long-delayed vengeance will be gratified. In that hope I am content to drag on the brief remnant of my days. Meanwhile, I must not omit the stimulant. In a short time I may not require it.” Draining the bottle to the last drop, he flung it from him, and commenced chanting, in a high key and cracked voice, a wild ditty, the words of which ran as follow:

      THE CARRION CROW

      The Carrion Crow is a sexton bold.

       He raketh the dead from out the mould;

       He delveth the ground like a miser old,

       Stealthily hiding his store of gold.

       Caw! Caw!

      The Carrion Crow hath a coat of black,

       Silky and sleek like a priest’s to his back;

       Like a lawyer he grubbeth — no matter what way —

       The fouler the offal, the richer his prey.

       Caw! Caw! the Carrion Crow! Dig! Dig! in the ground below!

      The Carrion Crow hath a dainty maw,

       With savory pickings he crammeth his craw;

       Kept meat from the gibbet it pleaseth his whim,

       It can never hang too long for him! Caw! Caw!

      The Carrion Crow smelleth powder, ’tis said,

       Like a soldier escheweth the taste of cold lead;

       No jester, or mime, hath more marvellous wit,

       For, wherever he lighteth, he maketh a hit!

       Caw! Caw! the Carrion Crow! Dig! Dig! in the ground below!

      Shouldering his spade, and whistling to his dog, the sexton quitted the churchyard.

      Peter had not been gone many seconds, when a dark figure, muffled in a wide black mantle, emerged from among the tombs surrounding the church; gazed after him for a few seconds, and then, with a menacing gesture, retreated behind the ivied buttresses of the gray old pile.

      * * * * *

      CHAPTER 3

       THE PARK

       Table of Contents

      Brian. Ralph! hearest thou any stirring?

      Ralph. I heard one speak here, hard by, in the hollow. Peace! master, speak low. Nouns! if I do not hear a bow go off, and the buck bray, I never heard deer in my life.

      Bri. Stand, or I’ll shoot.

      Sir Arthur. Who’s there?

      Bri. I am the keeper, and do charge you stand. You have stolen my deer.

      Merry Devil of Edmonton.

      Luke’s first impulse had been to free himself from the restraint imposed by his grandsire’s society. He longed to commune with himself. Leaping the small boundary-wall, which defended the churchyard from a deep green lane, he hurried along in a direction contrary to that taken by the sexton, making the best of his way until he arrived at a gap in the high-banked hazel hedge which overhung the road. Heedless of the impediments thrown in his way by the undergrowth of a rough ring fence, he struck through the opening that presented itself, and, climbing over the moss-grown paling, trod presently upon the elastic sward of Rookwood Park.

      A few minutes’ rapid walking brought him to the summit of a rising ground crowned with aged oaks and, as he passed beneath their broad shadows, his troubled spirit, soothed by the quietude of the scene, in part resumed its serenity.

      Luke yielded to the gentle influence of the time and hour. The stillness of the spot allayed the irritation of his frame, and the dewy chillness cooled the fever of his brow. Leaning for support against the gnarled trunk of one of the trees, he gave himself up to contemplation. The events of the last hour — of his whole existence — passed in rapid review before him. The thought of the wayward, vagabond life he had led; of the wild adventures of his youth; of all he had been; of all he had done, of all he had endured — crowded his mind; and then, like the passing of a cloud flitting across the autumnal moon, and occasionally obscuring the smiling landscape before him, his soul was shadowed by the remembrance of the awful revelations of the last hour, and the fearful knowledge he had acquired of his mother’s fate — of his father’s guilt.

      The eminence on which he stood was one of the highest points of the park, and commanded a view of the hall, which might be a quarter of a mile distant, discernible through a broken vista of trees, its whitened walls glimmering in the moonlight, and its tall chimney spiring far from out the round masses of wood in which it lay embosomed. The ground gradually sloped in that direction, occasionally rising into swells, studded with magnificent timber — dipping into smooth dells, or stretching out into level glades, until it suddenly sank into a deep declivity,