The Knight Of The Golden Melice - John Turvill Adams (little red riding hood read aloud txt) 📗
- Author: John Turvill Adams
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Miles Arundel From The Colony. He Did Threaten Him, As I Have Heard,
With Some Law They Have Here Forbidding A Man To Pay His Court To A
Maid Without License From The Worshipful Magistrates."
"Did Ever Mortal Hear The Like!" Exclaimed Prudence. "O, The Weary
Magistrates And Elders! What Is The World Coming To?"
"To Nothing But Indians In These Parts, If They Go On In This Way, And
Not Let Young Folk Court, Unless They Keep Sending People From England
To Replenish The Stock, And They Will Get Tired Of Coming When They
Hear How Things Are Going On. But, Prudence, Banish Or No Banish, Law
Or No Law, They Shall Not, If Thou Art Agreed, Prevent My Seeing
Thee."
The Girl Looked Affectionately At Her Lover, And Gently Returned The
Pressure Of His Hand.
"I Will Hie Me To The Knight," Continued Philip. "I Happened Once To
Be Of Use To Him, And He Is Not A Man To Forget A Favor, Though He Is
Somewhat Changed Since The Time I First Saw Him. He Was Then A Fiery
Youth, For All He Can Look So Grave At Times Now. He Hath Some Credit,
For It Was By His Intercession With The Governor That My Imprisonment
Was Shortened. I Will Hie Me To Him, And Hear What He Advises, More
Especially As He Hath Sent For Me. And I Bethink Me, Prudence, It Were
No Bad Thing, If He Can Do So Much, To Get Him To Speak A Word For
Mistress Eveline."
"An' Thou Couldest, It Were A Good Deed, And Heaven Will Reward Thee
Therefor."
"I Will Look To Thee, Instead Of Heaven, For My Reward," Said The
Soldier. "Meanwhile Do Thou Have Thine Eyes Like Those In A Peacock's
Tail, All Around Thee, For This Master Spikeman Is Cunninger Than All
The Foxes Whose Tails Samson Tied Together."
"Trust Me, Philip, And Be Thou Discreet. And Now Must I Be Going Back,
For I Would Not Abuse The Liberty The Kind Heart Of Dame Spikeman
Gives Me By Loitering Too Long; So Good-Bye."
"And Is This The Way You Take Leave, When Perhaps You May Not See Me
Again For A Month? Not One Salute?"
"Methinks Thou Hast Been Firing Salutes Enough Already To Welcome A
Ship From England. Be Content, Sir Malapert, With Their Discharges;"
And Prudence Began Tripping It Away.
"I'll Not Be Content With Such A Discharge," Muttered The Soldier;
Then Raising His Voice, He Called After Her, "Prudence, Prudence,
Hasten Not Away So Fast; There Is One Thing I Forgot."
The Girl At The Sound Of His Voice Retraced Her Steps A Little, And
Met Philip.
"Harkee In Thine Ear," Said He, "For I Must Speak Low. I Did Omit To
Put My Seal To Our Covenant;" And Before Prudence Was Aware, He Had
Imprinted A Smack Upon Her Cheek.
"And There Is Mine," Cried Prudence, Hitting Him A Box Upon The Ear,
"And I Warrant It Will Be As Red As Thine," And With That She Bounded
Like A Deer Away.
"The Foul Fiend Fly Away With Me, An' I Love Not The Girl Dearly,"
Exclaimed The Soldier, Looking After Her With Admiring Eyes, As Like A
Red-Winged Butterfly She Flew Through The Green Bushes. "If I Ever
Have The Luck To Get Her, I Shall Have A Dame Strong Enough To Carry
Her Part Of Our Bundle. Well, Go Thy Ways, Prudence Rix, For As
Comely, And As Sweet-Breathed, And As Kind A Lass, Notwithstanding The
Weight Of Thy Hand, As Ever Milked A Cow In The Old Country."
The Frame Of Mind In Which The Soldier Now Pursued His Walk Was Very
Different From That In Which It Had Commenced. The Dampness Of The
Prison Which Had Begun To Affect His Health Was Forgotten, As The
Genial Sun Gradually Dried The Clamminess Out Of His Clothing, And He
Inspired The Reviving Morning Air. It Seemed To Him He Could Not Drink
Deep Enough Draughts Of The Woodland Scents, Which Flowed So
Deliciously Through His Lungs, As Almost To Compensate For The
Suffering Which He Had Endured. His Unexpected Interview With
Prudence, After He Had Given Up All Expectation Of It, Conduced Also
To Impart Vivacity To His Spirits, And He Advanced, Not With A Rapid
Pace, For Of That His Treatment In The Jail Had Made Him Incapable,
But Cheerfully And Resolutely.
It Was Perhaps An Hour Afterwards, When Philip, As He Was Walking
Slowly On, Heard The Sounds Of A Person Coming After Him, And Looking
Round, He Beheld The Man Whom Of All The World He Least Desired To
See. The Whole Temper Of His Spirit Was At Once Changed. The Peace
Which, Like A Stream Of Perfumes, Had Been Flowing Into His Soul, Was
Checked, And The Atmosphere Became Hot And Suffocating Around Him. It
Was Spikeman Approaching, Who Was On His Way To A Plantation He Had In
The Neighborhood, For There Were Few Things Promising Profit To Which
The Adventurous Speculator Had Not Directed His Attention.
Philip Strove To Keep The Horns Of The Rising Devil Out Of His Heart,
And Averting His Head, Stepped On One Side To Allow The Other To Pass.
Spikeman Noticed The Desire,--For It Was Too Marked Not To Be
Observed; And In A New Country, Even Strangers Are Not In The Habit Of
Passing One Another Without Greeting,--But He Paid No Attention To It;
And As He Came Up, Laid His Hand On Philip's Shoulder, And Bade Him A
Good Morning.
The Soldier Started As Though Pierced By A Thorn, And Shaking Off The
Hand Roughly, Requested The Assistant To Go On His Way And Leave Him
To Himself.
"How Now," Exclaimed Spikeman. "Methinks This Is Cold Welcome For A
Friend."
"Pass On Thy Way," Said The Soldier. "I Desire Not Thy Company."
"Verily, Am I Amazed," Said Spikeman. "Surely, To Confer A Favor On
The Unthankful, Is Like Pouring Water On Sand."
"I Do Advise Thee, Master Spikeman," Said Philip, "To Cease Thine
Abuse. I Am No Longer A Fool Stumbling Along With His Eyes Blinded."
The Curiosity Of The Assistant Had Been Aroused At The Beginning, And
He Determined To Ascertain How Far Philip's Knowledge Of His Conduct
Extended, For His Guilty Conscience Whispered That Some Discovery Of
The Soldier Occasioned The Changed Behavior. It Might Be Caused Only
By Suspicion, And If So, He Trusted By His Ingenuity To Dispel It; But
If He Had Been Betrayed, It Was Important That He Should Know It. The
Assistant, Moreover, Was Curious To Learn From The Soldier Himself,
Why He Had Not Broken Jail As Advised. He Concluded That The Soldier
Had Not; For Had He Done So, The Escape Would Probably Have Been Known
By Morning; Yet Was Spikeman Confident That Philip At The Time Of
Their Interview In The Jail Had No Knowledge Of The Order For His
Release. Perhaps Bars Had Overcome In The Struggle, And Disregarded
It. With Doubts Like These Floating Through His Mind, He Began To
Probe Philip.
"What Ails Thee?" He Inquired. "It Would Seem As If You Took Me For An
Enemy, And Yet Have I Not Always Approved Myself Thy Friend, Even
Jeopardizing My Position As A Magistrate No Longer Ago Than
Yesternight To Release Thee From Jail?"
"Master Spikeman," Answered Philip, "Thou Dost Well Know, I Doubt Not,
That I Am At Liberty, Not Because I Did By Thy Advice Knock Out The
Brains Of Harmless Sam Bars, But By The Grace Of The Governor's
Order."
"I Counselled No More Violence Than Was Necessary To Effect Thy
Purpose; But Who Moved The Governor In Thy Case?
"Not Thou, As I Am Well Advised, But The Noble Knight Of The Golden
Melice, A Man As Much Superior To Thee, As I Am To An Indian."
"Thou Art Mad And Vituperative, Philip, And Were It Not So Early, I
Should Think Thou Hadst Been Indulging Too Liberally In Drafts Of Aqua
Vitae. It Is A Vile Habit. But As The Archangel Michael Returned Not A
Railing Accusation, But Said, The Lord Rebuke, Thee, Satan, So Say I
Unto Thee. Truly, I Comprehend Thy Game. Thou Art Weary Of Thy Old
Friends, And Being Desirous To Propitiate New, Dost Seek A Quarrel To
Mask Thine Ingratitude. But See Whether This Famous Knight Prove Not A
Broken Reed."
The Soldier, In Spite Of His Conviction Of The Villainy Of The Other,
Was Touched At The Taunt, And Hastened To Defend Himself.
"It Is False, Master Spikeman," He Cried. "If Thou Wert Truly A
Friend, Wherefore Advise Me To Break Jail, And Thus Expose Myself To
Be Hunted As A Malefactor, When I Had But To Wait Till Morning For
Deliverance?"
"It Is Much, Philip Joy, For One In My Condition To Condescend To
Explain, Especially After Thy Rudeness Of Speech; Yet Will I Do It,
That No Fancied Cause May Be Left For Thy Base Suspicions. Shortly,
Then, I Knew Not Of Gov. Winthrop's Intention, For When I Did Entreat
Him In Thy Behalf, He Spake In Such Ambiguous Phrase As Effectually To
Cloak His Thoughts. I Doubt Not, Now, That It Was To Make The Surprise
The More Agreeable."
This Was Said With Such An Appearance Of Innocence, That The
Simplicity Of The Soldier Was Confounded, And He Began To Doubt More
And More The Truth Of His Suspicions. But The Communication Of
Prudence Rankled In His Mind, And Though Disposed To Acquit The
Assistant Of Treachery Against Himself, He Could Not Forgive The
Treatment Of The Girl. He Did Not Doubt Her Word, And Yet Desired To
Hear The Assistant's Excuse, If He Had Any. He Shrunk From The
Subject, And Yet Was Drawn To It, Like A Moth Fascinated By A Light.
"There Is Another Thing I Like Not," He Said, Hesitatingly.
"And Pray, What May Thy Wisdom Have Discovered Now?"
"That It Is Not Becoming In A Grave Magistrate To Try To Cozen Servant
Girls," Burst From The Soldier.
"Has Prudence--?" But Here The Assistant, Sensible That He Had Already
Said Too Much, Suddenly Checked Himself, While His Sallow Cheek Looked
Still More Yellow. But The Escape Of The Girl's Name, Even Without The
Embarrassment, Was A Confession Of Guilt To The Soldier, Who, With
Rising Passion, Exclaimed--
"Away, Or I Shall Be Tempted To Do That Whereof I May Repent."
Spikeman Marked His Agitation, And Hesitated Whether To Come To An
Open Breach, Or Continue His System Of Deception. The Craft Of His
Nature Preponderated, And He Determined To Adopt The Latter Course.
"Gently, Philip," He Said. "Thy Prison Hath Strangely Affected Thee;
But Because I Pity, I Will Not Be Angry. At Least Let Me Finish The
Sentence Which I Begun. I Did Desire To Know Whether Prudence, Whom,
That Thou Dost Affect, I Have For Some Time Known, (Nay, Never Blush;
I Have Been Young Myself,) Whether Prudence, I Say, Gained Access To
Thy Prison To Tell Thee Of My Exertions In Thy Behalf?"
"Thou Exert Thyself For Me! Go To, Thou Wert More Busy For Thyself."
"I Understand Thee Not; Yet Hearken, For The Whole Truth Must Be
Revealed. I Say That I Have Done All That Man Could Do, And As The
Event Proves, Not In Vain. As For Prudence, I Will Confess To One
Impropriety, If It Be Thy Pleasure To Call It So, Though I Meant It
Not, And Whereof Thou Art In Some Sense The Cause. Knowing Thy Regard
For Her, I Did Speak One Day Of My Hopes For Thee, Whereat The Tears
Did Stand In Her Eyes, And I Was So Moved Thereat, That I Did Salute
Her Cheek, But Only As A Father Might Caress A Child."
The Soldier Was More Bewildered Than Ever. He Was Incapable Of
Conceiving Of Such Falsehood As The Other's. It Seemed To Him Now That
Prudence Might Be Mistaken, And Have Converted A Mere Compliment Into
An Insult, So Contrary Appeared, The Intimations Which She Had Made To
What Was To Be Expected From The Years And Gravity Of The Assistant.
The Freedom With Which Spikeman Spoke Of Kissing The Girl Confirmed
The Idea, And Philip Fancied That He Had Been Harsh.
"Master Spikeman," He Said At Length, "If I Have Unjustly Suspected
Thee, I Crave Pardon. There May Be Something In What You Said, But The
Prison Hath Clouded My Mind."
"Think No More Of It, Philip, Though Doubtless It Is So. I Have Known
Many A One Who, By Confinement, Hath Irretrievably Lost His Wits.
Therefore Will It Be Wise In Thee Not To Be Arrested Again."
"Wherefore Arrested, Since I Have An Order Of Release?"
"Alas, Thou Dost Forget Thy Banishment. If Thou Art Taken Within The
Forbidden Boundaries, Severe Will Be Thy Punishment. Attempt Not For
Prudence's Sake, Or Any Cause, To Return Without Apprising Me Thereof,
When I Will Endeavor To Provide For Thy Safety."
The Soldier Extended His Hand.
"This Is Kind," He Said, "And Be Assured, Master Spikeman, That I Will
Not Soon Conceive Suspicion Of Thee Again." These Women
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