icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

Ravenshoe

Chapter 6. The Warren Hastings

Word Count: 4744    |    Released on: 18/11/2017

hem all down but two or three, and mowed right into the morning when it was necessary that he should go home;

n love, and going to separate from the object of his affections for the first time; at which I r

calling out for him, and when he got into the hall, there was all the household to see him off. Everybody had a kind word for him; the old lady cried; Lord Saltire and the general shook hands; Lord Welter said it was a beastly sell; and Lord Ascot hummed and awed, and to

was such a naughty boy (not really naughty, you know), because she would be less likely to like him. And then he thought how glad the people at home would be to see him; and then he looked out of window. He had left Lord Ascot's carriage and got into the train some time before

y one when they spoke, and why the people looked scared and talked in knots. Then he found that it was the wind in t

rible night, and Charles slept. In the cold pitiless morning, as they were going over a loftily exposed moor, the coach, though only going foot's pace, stood for an instant on two wheels, and then fell crashing over on to a heap

e stinging rain, but turned his back to it; and then, for the first time, he became

t two hundred yards, and came to an alehouse, on the sight of which Charles knew that they were two stages short of where he thought th

the terrified family crouched down beneath the tottering walls. In the valleys great trees were down across the road, which were crosscut and moved by country men, who told of oaks of three hundred years, fallen in the

elf for Charles's arrival - so much so, that one would have thought she herself had single-handed dragged the coach from Exeter. "She had been sure all along that Mr. Charles would come." A speech winch, with the cutting glance that accompanied it, goaded the landlord to retort in a voice wheezy with good living, and

oked at the comfortable parlour and hesitated; but, happening to close his eyes an instant, he saw as plain as possible the library at home, and the flickering firelight falling on the crimson and

enty pounds; and that if he kept well under the walls going home he would be out of the wind; that his missis was took poorly in the night with spasms, and had been cured by two wine-gla

st of the pad grooms - a man with grizzled hair, looking like a whit

said Charley, "how

t's a awful day own there; there's abo

be able to

as we sha

Terrible se

. Mackworth and Mr. Cuthbe

aft as

ing a Pill boat, 52, stood in to see where she was and

they were well enough sheltered, and made capital way, till the wood began to grow sparer, and the road to rise abruptly. Here the blast began to be more sens

iving for the first time the terrible tornado full in their faces, the horses reared up and refused to proceed; but, being

d side, Charles looked up, and there was another horsema

. Lewis? Any ship a

good sailor gone to the bottom before tomorrow morning,

all. Charles was caught up by his father; Lloyd's agent was sent to the housekeeper's room; and very soon Charle

I'll be bound they liked you. You ought to

they are not at all clever people, bless you!" And on

re come back. Well, and what did you thin

funny, Cuthbert,"

sance," said Cuthbert. "I hope he hasn

, and when they went to complines, he went to bed. Up in his room he could hear that the wind was worse than ever, not rushing up in great

h had approached him unheard through the noise. He began, indeed, to meditate upon going

ld feel the wind of its heavy draperies as it moved. Moreover, a thing like a caterpillar, with a cat's head, about two feet long, came creep-creepi

and was cheered to find a light burning;

asked he, with

d Charles; "c

can hear people talking in the wind.

their father came in with a light from his bedroom next door, and sat on the bed t

r and started up. The wind was as bad as ever, but the whol

t?" whisper

s that which woke them. A sound like a single footstep on the floor above, light enough, but which shook the room.

g

in those words. The wind was N.W., setting into

they hardly knew hat. The men were pale, and some of the women were beginning to whimper and wring their hands; when Densil; Lewis the agent, and Mackworth, came rapidly down the staircase and passed out. Mackworth came back, and told the wome

ame way as themselves. The men were walking singly, either running, or going very fast; and the wome

e bound," Charles heard one woman say, "as

to rest sudden, like they're going to be, than dra

the China sea. Darn they lousy typhoons! I wonde

promontory, with their faces seaward, and the water right and left of them. The cape ran out about a third of a mile, rather low, and then abruptly ended in a cone of slate, beyond which, about two hundred yards at sea, was that terri

halted. Charles saw his father, the agent, Mackworth, and Cuthbert together, under a rock; the villagers were standing around, and th

d partly up it, if, perhaps, they might see further than their fellows; but in vain: they all saw and heard the sa

e must be carrying canvas and struggling for life, ignorant of the fou

bbub of talking from the men, and every one crowded on his neighbour and tried to get nearer. And the women moved hur

00 tons; that she was dismasted, and that her decks were crowded. I could see that she was unmanageable, turning her head hither and thither

aw a tear run down his cheek, and heard him say, "Poor fellows!" Cuthbert stood staring intently at the ship, with his lips slightly parted. Mackworth, li

e mad. Sad under any circumstances; how terrible it is when she is bearing on with her i

tripped. In front of the cuddy door, between the poop and the mainmast, about forty soldiers were drawn up, with whom were three officers, to be distinguished by their blue coats and swords. On the quarter-deck were seven or eight women, two appa

now a great sea struck her forward, and she swung with her bow towards the rock, from which she was distant not a hundred yards. The end was coming. Charles saw the mate slip off his coat and shirt, and take the little girl again. He saw the lady with the baby rise very q

ulwarks gone, sinking, and drifted out of sight round the headland, and, though they raced across the headland, and waited a few breathless minutes for her to float round into sight again, they never saw her any more. The Warren Hastings had gone down in fifteen fathom. And now there was a new passion introduced into the tragedy, to which it had hit

directly to leeward, the swell was tearing at the black slate rocks, and in ten minutes it wou

take 'em a ope! Fifty gold sove

He stepped from the bank of slippery seaweed into the heaving water, and then his magnificent limbs were in full battle with the tide. A roar announced his success. As h

The sailors lay about upon the sand, and the mate, untying the shawl that bound her t

an, "I should like to go to mamma. She is standing with baby on the quarter-deck. Mr. A

n, "she'll break my heart, a darling; ma

eagerly; "she's on the quarter

d-faced an, about six-and-twenty, who had

, Mr. Archer?"

my ladybird? Oh,

p, and Captain Dixon

he good ship, Warren Hastings, Dixon master, is a-sunk beneath the briny waves, my darling; and a

of all present; then the women carried her away, and the mate, walking

as I do. This little girl is daughter to Captain Corby, in command of the troops. She was always a favourite of mine, and I determined to get her through. How steady those sojers stood, by jingo, as though they wer

n less than a month. Periodically, unto this day, there arrive at Raven shoe, bows and arrows (supposed to be poisoned), paddles, punkahs, rice-paper screens; a malignant kind of pickle, which causeth the bowels of him that eateth of it to bur

graves in the churchyard, nothing remained to tell of the Warren Has

ntaneously loved her with all her great warm heart, and about three weeks after the wreck gave Cha

, "and comes and sees his old nurse, and who loves him so well, alanna? It's little I can tell ye about the little girl, me darlin'. She's nine years old, and a heretic, like yer own darlin' self, and who's to gainsay ye from it? She's book-learned enough,

s's ear, and whispered, "If my boy was lo

l about Adelaide, which attachment Norah highly approved of, and rema

she should be taken from him, for he had got wonderfully fond of the quiet, pale, bright-eyed little creature. In three months she was considered as a permanent member of the household, and the night before Charles went to school he told her of his grand passion. His lordsh

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
1 Preface2 Chapter 1. An Account of the Family of Ravenshoe3 Chapter 2. Supplementary to the Foregoing4 Chapter 3. In which Our Hero's Troubles Begin5 Chapter 4. Father Mackworth6 Chapter 5. Ranford7 Chapter 6. The Warren Hastings8 Chapter 7. In which Charles and Lord Welter Distinguish Themselves at the University9 Chapter 8. John Marston10 Chapter 9. Adelaide11 Chapter 10. Lady Ascot's Little Nap12 Chapter 1113 Chapter 1214 Chapter 13. The Black Hare15 Chapter 14. Lord Saltire's Visit, and Some of His Opinions16 Chapter 15. Charles's "Liddell and Scott."17 Chapter 16. Marston's Arrival18 Chapter 17. In which There is Another Shipwreck19 Chapter 18. Marston's Disappointment20 Chapter 19. Ellen's Flight21 Chapter 20. Ranford Again22 Chapter 21. Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos23 Chapter 22. The Last Glimpse of Oxford24 Chapter 23 The Last Glimpse of the Old World25 Chapter 24. The First Glimpse of the New World26 Chapter 2527 Chapter 26. The Grand Crash28 Chapter 27 The Coup De Grace29 Chapter 28. Flight30 Chapter 29. Charles's Retreat Upon London31 Chapter 30. Mr. Sloane32 Chapter 31. Lieutenant Hornby33 Chapter 32. Some of the Humours of a London Mews34 Chapter 33 A Glimpse of Some Old Friends35 Chapter 34. In which Fresh Mischief is Brewed36 Chapter 3537 Chapter 36. The Derby38 Chapter 37. Lord Welter's Menage39 Chapter 38. The House Full of Ghosts40 Chapter 39 Charles's Explanation with Lord Welter41 Chapter 40. A Dinner Party Among Some Old Friends42 Chapter 41. Charles's Second Expedition to St. John's Wood43 Chapter 42. Ravenshoe Hall, During All this44 Chapter 43. A Meeting45 Chapter 44. Another Meeting46 Chapter 45. Half a Million47 Chapter 46. To Lunch with Lord Ascot48 Chapter 47. Lady Hainault's Blotting-book49 Chapter 48. In which Cuthbert Begins to See Things in a New Light50 Chapter 4951 Chapter 50. Shreds and Patches52 Chapter 51. In which Charles Comes to Life Again53 Chapter 5254 Chapter 53. Captain Archer Turns up55 Chapter 54. Charles Meets Hornby at Last56 Chapter 55. Archer's Proposal57 Chapter 56. Scutari58 Chapter 57. What Charles Did with His Last Eighteen Shillings59 Chapter 58. The North Side of Grosvenor Square60 Chapter 59. Lord Ascot's Crowning Act of Folly61 Chapter 60. The Bridge at Last62 Chapter 61. Saved63 Chapter 62. Mr. Jackson's Big Trout64 Chapter 63. In which Gus Cuts Flora's Doll's Corns65 Chapter 64. The Allied Armies Advance on Ravenshoe66 Chapter 6567 Chapter 66