nine inches; and so notoriously timid, selfish, and stingy, that
   there was a kind of shame in receiving his addresses openly; and
   what encouragement Mrs. Catherine gave him could only be in secret.
   But no mortal is wise at all times:  and the fact was, that Hayes,
   who cared for himself intensely, had set his heart upon winning
   Catherine; and loved her with a desperate greedy eagerness and
   desire of possession, which makes passions for women often so fierce
   and unreasonable among very cold and selfish men.  His parents
   (whose frugality he had inherited) had tried in vain to wean him
   from this passion, and had made many fruitless attempts to engage
   him with women who possessed money and desired husbands; but Hayes
   was, for a wonder, quite proof against their attractions; and,
   though quite ready to acknowledge the absurdity of his love for a
   penniless alehouse servant-girl, nevertheless persisted in it
   doggedly.  "I know I'm a fool," said he; "and what's more, the girl
   does not care for me; but marry her I must, or I think I shall just
   die:  and marry her I will."  For very much to the credit of Miss
   Catherine's modesty, she had declared that marriage was with her a
   sine qua non, and had dismissed, with the loudest scorn and
   indignation, all propositions of a less proper nature.
   Poor Thomas Bullock was another of her admirers, and had offered to
   marry her; but three shillings a week and a puddn was not to the
   girl's taste, and Thomas had been scornfully rejected.  Hayes had
   also made her a direct proposal.  Catherine did not say no:  she was
   too prudent:  but she was young and could wait; she did not care for
   Mr. Hayes yet enough to marry him--(it did not seem, indeed, in the
   young woman's nature to care for anybody)--and she gave her adorer
   flatteringly to understand that, if nobody better appeared in the
   course of a few years, she might be induced to become Mrs. Hayes.
   It was a dismal prospect for the poor fellow to live upon the hope
   of being one day Mrs. Catherine's pis-aller.
   In the meantime she considered herself free as the wind, and
   permitted herself all the innocent gaieties which that "chartered
   libertine," a coquette, can take.  She flirted with all the
   bachelors, widowers, and married men, in a manner which did
   extraordinary credit to her years:  and let not the reader fancy
   such pastimes unnatural at her early age.  The ladies--Heaven bless
   them!--are, as a general rule, coquettes from babyhood upwards.
   Little SHE'S of three years old play little airs and graces upon
   small heroes of five; simpering misses of nine make attacks upon
   young gentlemen of twelve; and at sixteen, a well-grown girl, under
   encouraging circumstances--say, she is pretty, in a family of ugly
   elder sisters, or an only child and heiress, or a humble wench at a
   country inn, like our fair Catherine--is at the very pink and prime
   of her coquetry:  they will jilt you at that age with an ease and
   arch infantine simplicity that never can be surpassed in maturer
   years.
   Miss Catherine, then, was a franche coquette, and Mr. John Hayes was
   miserable.  His life was passed in a storm of mean passions and
   bitter jealousies, and desperate attacks upon the indifference-rock
   of Mrs. Catherine's heart, which not all his tempest of love could
   beat down.  O cruel cruel pangs of love unrequited!  Mean rogues
   feel them as well as great heroes.  Lives there the man in Europe
   who has not felt them many times?--who has not knelt, and fawned,
   and supplicated, and wept, and cursed, and raved, all in vain; and
   passed long wakeful nights with ghosts of dead hopes for company;
   shadows of buried remembrances that glide out of their graves of
   nights, and whisper, "We are dead now, but we WERE once; and we made
   you happy, and we come now to mock you:--despair, O lover, despair,
   and die"?--O cruel pangs!--dismal nights!--Now a sly demon creeps
   under your nightcap, and drops into your ear those soft
   hope-breathing sweet words, uttered on the well-remembered evening:
   there, in the drawer of your dressing-table (along with the razors,
   and Macassar oil), lies the dead flower that Lady Amelia Wilhelmina
   wore in her bosom on the night of a certain ball--the corpse of a
   glorious hope that seemed once as if it would live for ever, so
   strong was it, so full of joy and sunshine:  there, in your
   writing-desk, among a crowd of unpaid bills, is the dirty scrap of
   paper, thimble-sealed, which came in company with a pair of
   muffetees of her knitting (she was a butcher's daughter, and did all
   she could, poor thing!), begging "you would ware them at collidge,
   and think of her who"--married a public-house three weeks
   afterwards, and cares for you no more now than she does for the
   pot-boy.  But why multiply instances, or seek to depict the agony of
   poor mean-spirited John Hayes?  No mistake can be greater than that
   of fancying such great emotions of love are only felt by virtuous or
   exalted men:  depend upon it, Love, like Death, plays havoc among
   the pauperum tabernas, and sports with rich and poor, wicked and
   virtuous, alike.  I have often fancied, for instance, on seeing the
   haggard pale young old-clothesman, who wakes the echoes of our
   street with his nasal cry of "Clo'!"--I have often, I said, fancied
   that, besides the load of exuvial coats and breeches under which he
   staggers, there is another weight on him--an atrior cura at his
   tail--and while his unshorn lips and nose together are performing
   that mocking, boisterous, Jack-indifferent cry of "Clo', clo'!" who
   knows what woeful utterances are crying from the heart within?
   There he is, chaffering with the footman at No. 7 about an old
   dressing-gown:  you think his whole soul is bent only on the contest
   about the garment.  Psha! there is, perhaps, some faithless girl in
   Holywell Street who fills up his heart; and that desultory Jew-boy
   is a peripatetic hell!  Take another instance:--take the man in the
   beef-shop in Saint Martin's Court.  There he is, to all appearances
   quite calm:  before the same round of beef--from morning till
   sundown--for hundreds of years very likely.  Perhaps when the
   shutters are closed, and all the world tired and silent, there is HE
   silent, but untired--cutting, cutting, cutting.  You enter, you get
   your meat to your liking, you depart; and, quite unmoved, on, on he
   goes, reaping ceaselessly the Great Harvest of Beef.  You would
   fancy that if Passion ever failed to conquer, it had in vain
   assailed the calm bosom of THAT MAN.  I doubt it, and would give
   much to know his history.
   Who knows what furious Aetna-flames are raging underneath the
   surface of that calm flesh-mountain--who can tell me that that
   calmness itself is not DESPAIR?
                       *          *          *
   The reader, if he does not now understand why it was that Mr. Hayes
   agreed to drink the Corporal's proffered beer, had better just read
   the foregoing remarks over again, and if he does not understand
   THEN, why, small praise to his brains 
					     					 			.  Hayes could not bear that
   Mr. Bullock should have a chance of seeing, and perhaps making love
   to Mrs. Catherine in his absence; and though the young woman never
   diminished her coquetries, but, on the contrary, rather increased
   them in his presence, it was still a kind of dismal satisfaction to
   be miserable in her company.
   On this occasion, the disconsolate lover could be wretched to his
   heart's content; for Catherine had not a word or a look for him, but
   bestowed all her smiles upon the handsome stranger who owned the
   black horse.  As for poor Tummas Bullock, his passion was never
   violent; and he was content in the present instance to sigh and
   drink beer.  He sighed and drank, sighed and drank, and drank again,
   until he had swallowed so much of the Corporal's liquor, as to be
   induced to accept a guinea from his purse also; and found himself,
   on returning to reason and sobriety, a soldier of Queen Anne's.
   But oh! fancy the agonies of Mr. Hayes when, seated with the
   Corporal's friends at one end of the kitchen, he saw the Captain at
   the place of honour, and the smiles which the fair maid bestowed
   upon him; when, as she lightly whisked past him with the Captain's
   supper, she, pointing to the locket that once reposed on the breast
   of the Dutch lady at the Brill, looked archly on Hayes and said,
   "See, John, what his Lordship has given me;" and when John's face
   became green and purple with rage and jealousy, Mrs. Catherine
   laughed ten times louder, and cried "Coming, my Lord," in a voice of
   shrill triumph, that bored through the soul of Mr. John Hayes and
   left him gasping for breath.
   On Catherine's other lover, Mr. Thomas, this coquetry had no effect:
   he, and two comrades of his, had by this time quite fallen under the
   spell of the Corporal; and hope, glory, strong beer, Prince Eugene,
   pair of colours, more strong beer, her blessed Majesty, plenty more
   strong beer, and such subjects, martial and bacchic, whirled through
   their dizzy brains at a railroad pace.
   And now, if there had been a couple of experienced reporters present
   at the "Bugle Inn," they might have taken down a conversation on
   love and war--the two themes discussed by the two parties occupying
   the kitchen--which, as the parts were sung together, duetwise,
   formed together some very curious harmonies.  Thus, while the
   Captain was whispering the softest nothings, the Corporal was
   shouting the fiercest combats of the war; and, like the gentleman at
   Penelope's table, on it exiguo pinxit praelia tota bero.  For
   example:
   CAPTAIN.  What do you say to a silver trimming, pretty Catherine?
   Don't you think a scarlet riding-cloak, handsomely laced, would
   become you wonderfully well?--and a grey hat with a blue feather--
   and a pretty nag to ride on--and all the soldiers to present arms as
   you pass, and say, "There goes the Captain's lady"?  What do you
   think of a side-box at Lincoln's Inn playhouse, or of standing up to
   a minuet with my Lord Marquis at--?
   CORPORAL.  The ball, sir, ran right up his elbow, and was found the
   next day by Surgeon Splinter of ours,--where do you think, sir?--
   upon my honour as a gentleman it came out of the nape of his--
   CAPTAIN.  Necklace--and a sweet pair of diamond earrings,
   mayhap--and a little shower of patches, which ornament a lady's face
   wondrously--and a leetle rouge--though, egad! such peach-cheeks as
   yours don't want it;--fie! Mrs. Catherine, I should think the birds
   must come and peck at them as if they were fruit--
   CORPORAL.  Over the wall; and three-and-twenty of our fellows jumped
   after me.  By the Pope of Rome, friend Tummas, that was a day!--Had
   you seen how the Mounseers looked when four-and-twenty rampaging
   he-devils, sword and pistol, cut and thrust, pell-mell came tumbling
   into the redoubt!  Why, sir, we left in three minutes as many
   artillerymen's heads as there were cannon-balls.  It was, "Ah
   sacre!"  "D----- you, take that!"  "O mon Dieu!"  "Run him through!"
   "Ventrebleu!" and it WAS ventrebleu with him, I warrant you; for
   bleu, in the French language, means "through;" and ventre--why, you
   see, ventre means--
   CAPTAIN.  Waists, which are worn now excessive long; and for the
   hoops, if you COULD but see them--stap my vitals, my dear, but there
   was a lady at Warwick's Assembly (she came in one of my Lord's
   coaches) who had a hoop as big as a tent:  you might have dined
   under it comfortably;--ha! ha! 'pon my faith, now--
   CORPORAL.  And there we found the Duke of Marlborough seated along
   with Marshal Tallard, who was endeavouring to drown his sorrow over
   a cup of Johannisberger wine; and a good drink too, my lads, only
   not to compare to Warwick beer.  "Who was the man who has done
   this?" said our noble General.  I stepped up.  "How many heads was
   it," says he, "that you cut off?"  "Nineteen," says I, "besides
   wounding several." When he heard it (Mr. Hayes, you don't drink) I'm
   blest if he didn't burst into tears!  "Noble noble fellow," says he.
   "Marshal, you must excuse me if I am pleased to hear of the
   destruction of your countrymen.  Noble noble fellow!--here's a
   hundred guineas for you."  Which sum he placed in my hand.  "Nay,"
   says the Marshal "the man has done his duty:" and, pulling out a
   magnificent gold diamond-hilted snuff-box, he gave me--
   MR. BULLOCK.  What, a goold snuff-box?  Wauns, but thee WAST in
   luck, Corporal!
   CORPORAL.  No, not the snuff-box, but--A PINCH OF SNUFF,--ha!
   ha!--run me through the body if he didn't.  Could you but have seen
   the smile on Jack Churchill's grave face at this piece of
   generosity!  So, beckoning Colonel Cadogan up to him, he pinched his
   Ear and whispered--
   CAPTAIN.  "May I have the honour to dance a minuet with your
   Ladyship?"  The whole room was in titters at Jack's blunder; for, as
   you know very well, poor Lady Susan HAS A WOODEN LEG.  Ha! ha! fancy
   a minuet and a wooden leg, hey, my dear?--
   MRS. CATHERINE.  Giggle--giggle--giggle:  he! he! he!  Oh, Captain,
   you rogue, you--
   SECOND TABLE.  Haw! haw! haw!  Well you be a foony mon, Sergeant,
   zure enoff.
                       *          *          *
   This little specimen of the conversation must be sufficient.  It
   will show pretty clearly that EACH of the two military commanders
   was conducting his operations with perfect success.  Three of the
   detachment of five attacked by the Corporal surrendered to him:  Mr.
   Bullock, namely, who gave in at a very early stage of the evening,
   and ignominiously laid down his arms under the table, after standing
   not more than a dozen volleys of beer; Mr. Blacksmith's boy, and a
   labourer whose name we have not been able to learn.  Mr. Butcher
   himself was on the point of yielding, when he was rescued by the
   furious charge of a detachment that marched to his relief:  his wife
   namely, who, with two squalling children, rushed into the "Bugle,"
   boxed Butcher's ears, and kept up such a tremendous fire of oaths
   and screams upon the Corpo 
					     					 			ral, that he was obliged to retreat.
   Fixing then her claws into Mr. Butcher's hair, she proceeded to drag
   him out of the premises; and thus Mr. Brock was overcome.  His
   attack upon John Hayes was a still greater failure; for that young
   man seemed to be invincible by drink, if not by love:  and at the
   end of the drinking-bout was a great deal more cool than the
   Corporal himself; to whom he wished a very polite good-evening, as
   calmly he took his hat to depart.  He turned to look at Catherine,
   to be sure, and then he was not quite so calm:  but Catherine did
   not give any reply to his good-night.  She was seated at the
   Captain's table playing at cribbage with him; and though Count
   Gustavus Maximilian lost every game, he won more than he lost,--sly
   fellow!--and Mrs. Catherine was no match for him.
   It is to be presumed that Hayes gave some information to Mrs. Score,
   the landlady:  for, on leaving the kitchen, he was seen to linger
   for a moment in the bar; and very soon after Mrs. Catherine was
   called away from her attendance on the Count, who, when he asked for
   a sack and toast, was furnished with those articles by the landlady
   herself:  and, during the half-hour in which he was employed in
   consuming this drink, Monsieur de Galgenstein looked very much
   disturbed and out of humour, and cast his eyes to the door
   perpetually; but no Catherine came.  At last, very sulkily, he
   desired to be shown to bed, and walked as well as he could (for, to
   say truth, the noble Count was by this time somewhat unsteady on his
   legs) to his chamber.  It was Mrs. Score who showed him to it, and
   closed the curtains, and pointed triumphantly to the whiteness of
   the sheets.
   "It's a very comfortable room," said she, "though not the best in
   the house; which belong of right to your Lordship's worship; but our
   best room has two beds, and Mr. Corporal is in that, locked and
   double-locked, with his three tipsy recruits.  But your honour will
   find this here bed comfortable and well-aired; I've slept in it
   myself this eighteen years."
   "What, my good woman, you are going to sit up, eh?  It's cruel hard
   on you, madam."
   "Sit up, my Lord? bless you, no!  I shall have half of our Cat's
   bed; as I always do when there's company."  And with this Mrs. Score
   curtseyed and retired.
   Very early the next morning the active landlady and her bustling
   attendant had prepared the ale and bacon for the Corporal and his
   three converts, and had set a nice white cloth for the Captain's
   breakfast.  The young blacksmith did not eat with much satisfaction;
   but Mr. Bullock and his friend betrayed no sign of discontent,
   except such as may be consequent upon an evening's carouse.  They
   walked very contentedly to be registered before Doctor Dobbs, who
   was also justice of the peace, and went in search of their slender
   bundles, and took leave of their few acquaintances without much
   regret:  for the gentlemen had been bred in the workhouse, and had
   not, therefore, a large circle of friends.
   It wanted only an hour of noon, and the noble Count had not
   descended.  The men were waiting for him, and spent much of the
   Queen's money (earned by the sale of their bodies overnight) while
   thus expecting him.  Perhaps Mrs. Catherine expected him too, for
   she had offered many times to run up--with my Lord's boots--with the
   hot water--to show Mr. Brock the way; who sometimes condescended to
   officiate as barber.  But on all these occasions Mrs. Score had
   prevented her; not scolding, but with much gentleness and smiling.
   At last, more gentle and smiling than ever, she came downstairs and
   said, "Catherine darling, his honour the Count is mighty hungry this
   morning, and vows he could pick the wing of a fowl.  Run down,
   child, to Farmer Brigg's and get one:  pluck it before you bring it,
   you know, and we will make his Lordship a pretty breakfast."
   Catherine took up her basket, and away she went by the back-yard,
   through the stables.  There she heard the little horse-boy whistling