CHAPTER XIX.
   A LETTER.
       "Has he so long held out with me untired,    And stops he now for breath?--Well--Be it so."
   _Richard III._
   Mowbray had no sooner left the Earl's apartment, than the lattercommenced an epistle to a friend and associate, which we lay before thereader, as best calculated to illustrate the views and motives of thewriter. It was addressed to Captain Jekyl, of the ---- regiment ofGuards, at the Green Dragon, Harrowgate, and was of the followingtenor:--
       "Dear Harry,
       "I have expected you here these ten days past, anxiously as ever man    was looked for; and have now to charge your absence as high treason    to your sworn allegiance. Surely you do not presume, like one of    Napoleon's new-made monarchs, to grumble for independence, as if    your greatness were of your own making, or as if I had picked you    out of the whole of St. James's coffee-house to hold my back-hand,    for your sake, forsooth, not for my own? Wherefore, lay aside all    your own proper business, be it the pursuit of dowagers, or the    plucking of pigeons, and instantly repair to this place, where I may    speedily want your assistance.--_May_ want it, said I? Why, most    negligent of friends and allies, I _have_ wanted it already, and    that when it might have done me yeoman's service. Know that I have    had an affair since I came hither--have got hurt myself, and have    nearly shot my friend; and if I had, I might have been hanged for    it, for want of Harry Jekyl to bear witness in my favour. I was so    far on my road to this place, when, not choosing, for certain    reasons, to pass through the old village, I struck by a footpath    into the woods which separate it from the new Spa, leaving my    carriage and people to go the carriage-way. I had not walked half a    mile when I heard the footsteps of some one behind, and, looking    round, what should I behold but the face in the world which I most    cordially hate and abhor--I mean that which stands on the shoulders    of my right trusty and well-beloved cousin and counsellor, Saint    Francis. He seemed as much confounded as I was at our unexpected    meeting; and it was a minute ere he found breath to demand what I    did in Scotland, contrary to my promise, as he was pleased to    express it.--I retaliated, and charged him with being here, in    contradiction to his.--He justified, and said he had only come down    upon the express information that I was upon my road to St.    Ronan's.--Now, Harry, how the devil should he have known this hadst    thou been quite faithful? for I am sure, to no ear but thine own did    I breathe a whisper of my purpose.--Next, with the insolent    assumption of superiority, which he founds on what he calls the    rectitude of his purpose, he proposed we should both withdraw from a    neighbourhood into which we could bring nothing but wretchedness.--I    have told you how difficult it is to cope with the calm and resolute    manner that the devil gifts him with on such occasions; but I was    determined he should not carry the day this time. I saw no chance    for it, however, but to put myself into a towering passion, which,    thank Heaven, I can always do on short notice.--I charged him with    having imposed formerly on my youth, and made himself judge of my    rights; and I accompanied my defiance with the strongest terms of    irony and contempt, as well as with demand of instant satisfaction.    I had my travelling pistols with me, (_et pour cause_,) and, to my    surprise, my gentleman was equally provided.--For fair play's sake,    I made him take one of my pistols--right Kuchenritters--a brace of    balls in each, but that circumstance I forgot.--I would fain have    argued the matter a little longer; but I thought at the time, and    think still, that the best arguments which he and I can exchange,    must come from the point of the sword, or the muzzle of the    pistol.--We fired nearly together, and I think both dropped--I am    sure I did, but recovered in a minute, with a damaged arm and a    scratch on the temple--it was the last which stunned me--so much for    double-loaded pistols.--My friend was invisible, and I had nothing    for it but to walk to the Spa, bleeding all the way like a calf, and    tell a raw-head-and-bloody-bone story about a footpad, which, but    for my earldom, and my gory locks, no living soul would have    believed.
       "Shortly after, when I had been installed in a sick room, I had the    mortification to learn, that my own impatience had brought all this    mischief upon me, at a moment when I had every chance of getting rid    of my friend without trouble, had I but let him go on his own    errand; for it seems he had an appointment that morning with a booby    Baronet, who is said to be a bullet-slitter, and would perhaps have    rid me of Saint Francis without any trouble or risk on my part.    Meantime, his non-appearance at this rendezvous has placed Master    Francis Tyrrel, as he chooses to call himself, in the worst odour    possible with the gentry at the Spring, who have denounced him as a    coward and no gentleman.--What to think of the business myself, I    know not; and I much want your assistance to see what can have    become of this fellow, who, like a spectre of ill omen, has so often    thwarted and baffled my best plans. My own confinement renders me    inactive, though my wound is fast healing. Dead he cannot be; for,    had he been mortally wounded, we should have heard of him somewhere    or other--he could not have vanished from the earth like a bubble of    the elements. Well and sound he cannot be; for, besides that I am    sure I saw him stagger and drop, firing his pistol as he fell, I    know him well enough to swear, that, had he not been severely    wounded, he would have first pestered me with his accursed presence    and assistance, and then walked forward with his usual composure to    settle matters with Sir Bingo Binks. No--no--Saint Francis is none    of those who leave such jobs half finished--it is but doing him    justice to say, he has the devil's courage to back his own    deliberate impertinence. But then, if wounded severely, he must be    still in this neighbourhood, and probably in concealment--this is    what I must discover, and I want your assistance in my enquiries    among the natives.--Haste hither, Harry, as ever you look for good    at my hand.
       "A good player, Harry, always studies to make the best of bad    cards--and so I have endeavoured to turn my wound to some account;    and it has given me the opportunity to secure Monsieur le Frere in    my interests. You say very truly, that it is of consequence to me to    know the character of this new actor on the disordered scene of my    adventures.--Know, then, he is that most incongruous of all    monsters--a Scotch Buck--how far from being buck of the season you    may easily judge. Every point of national character is opposed to    the pretensions of this luckless race, when they attempt to take on    them a personage which is assumed with so much facility by their    brethren of the Isle of Saints. They are a shrewd people, indeed,    but so destitute of ease, grace, pliability of manners, and    insinuation of address, that they eternally seem to suffer actual    misery in their attempts to look gay and careless. Then their pride    heads them back at one turn, their poverty at another, their    pedantry at a third, their _mauvaise honte_ at a fourth; and with    so many obstacles to make them bolt off the course, it is positively    impossible they should win the plate. No, Harry, it is the grave    folk in Old England who have to fear a Caledonian invasion--they    will make no conquests in the world of fashion. Excellent bankers    the Scots may be, for they are eternally calculating how to add    interest to principal;--good soldiers, for they are, if not such    heroes as they would be thought, as brave, I suppose, as their    neighbours, and much more amenable to discipline;--lawyers they are    born; indeed every country gentleman is bred one, and their patient    and crafty disposition enables them, in other lines, to submit to    hardships which other natives could not bear, and avail themselves    of advantages which others would let pass under their noses    unavailingly. But assuredly Heaven did not form the Caledonian for    the gay world; and his efforts at ease, grace, and gaiety, resemble    only the clumsy gambols of the ass in the fable. Yet the Scot has    his sphere too, (in his own country only,) where the character which    he assumes is allowed to pass current. This Mowbray, now--this    brother-in-law of mine--might do pretty well at a Northern Meeting,    or the Leith races, where he c 
					     					 			ould give five minutes to the sport of    the day, and the next half hour to county politics, or to farming;    but it is scarce necessary to tell you, Harry, that this half    fellowship will not pass on the better side of the Tweed.
       "Yet, for all I have told you, this trout was not easily tickled;    nor should I have made much of him, had he not, in the plenitude of    his northern conceit, entertained that notion of my being a good    subject of plunder, which you had contrived (blessings on your    contriving brain!) to insinuate into him by means of Wolverine. He    commenced this hopeful experiment, and, as you must have    anticipated, caught a Tartar with a vengeance. Of course, I used my    victory only so far as to secure his interest in accomplishing my    principal object; and yet, I could see my gentleman's pride was so    much injured in the course of the negotiation, that not all the    advantages which the match offered to his damned family, were able    entirely to subdue the chagrin arising from his defeat. He did gulp    it down, though, and we are friends and allies, for the present at    least--not so cordially so, however, as to induce me to trust him    with the whole of the strangely complicated tale. The circumstance    of the will it was necessary to communicate, as affording a    sufficiently strong reason for urging my suit; and this partial    disclosure enabled me for the present to dispense with farther    confidence.
       "You will observe, that I stand by no means secure; and besides the    chance of my cousin's reappearance--a certain event, unless he is    worse than I dare hope for--I have perhaps to expect the fantastic    repugnance of Clara herself, or some sulky freak on her brother's    part.--In a word--and let it be such a one as conjurers raise the    devil with--Harry Jekyl, I _want_ you.
       "As well knowing the nature of my friend, I can assure you that his    own interest, as well as mine, may be advanced by his coming hither    on duty. Here is a blockhead, whom I already mentioned, Sir Bingo    Binks, with whom something may be done worth _your_ while, though    scarce worth _mine_. The Baronet is a perfect buzzard, and when I    came here he was under Mowbray's training. But the awkward Scot had    plucked half-a-dozen penfeathers from his wing with so little    precaution, that the Baronet has become frightened and shy, and is    now in the act of rebelling against Mowbray, whom he both hates and    fears--the least backing from a knowing hand like you, and the bird    becomes your own, feathers and all.--Moreover,
               ----'by my life,    This Bingo hath a mighty pretty wife.'
       A lovely woman, Harry--rather plump, and above the middle    size--quite your taste--A Juno in beauty, looking with such scorn on    her husband, whom she despises and hates, and seeming, as if she    _could_ look so differently on any one whom she might like better,    that, on my faith, 'twere sin not to give her occasion. If you    please to venture your luck, either with the knight or the lady, you    shall have fair play, and no interference--that is, provided you    appear upon this summons; for, otherwise, I may be so placed, that    the affairs of the knight and the lady may fall under my own    immediate cognizance. And so, Harry, if you wish to profit by these    hints, you had best make haste, as well for your own concerns, as to    assist me in mine.--Yours, Harry, as you behave yourself,
       "ETHERINGTON."
   Having finished this eloquent and instructive epistle, the young Earldemanded the attendance of his own valet Solmes, whom he charged to putit into the post-office without delay, and with his own hand.