Jack Sheppard. Ainsworth William Harrison

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Jack Sheppard - Ainsworth William Harrison


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of this child?" inquired the person who had first spoken, addressing Mrs. Sheppard.

      "I am—I am!" cried the widow, snatching the babe, and pressing it to her breast with rapturous delight "God be thanked, I have found it!"

      "We have both good reason to be grateful," added the lady, with great emotion.

      "'Sblood!" cried Jonathan, who had listened to the foregoing conversation with angry wonder, "I've been nicely done here. Fool that I was to part with my lantern! But I'll soon set myself straight. What ho! lights! lights!"

      And, shouting as he went, he flung himself down stairs.

      "Where shall I fly?" exclaimed the lady, bewildered with terror. "They will kill me, if they find me, as they would have killed my husband and child. Oh God! my limbs fail me."

      "Make an effort, Madam," cried Mrs. Sheppard, as a storm of furious voices resounded from below, and torches were seen mounting the stairs; "they are coming!—they are coming!—fly!—to the roof! to the roof."

      "No," cried the lady, "this room—I recollect—it has a back window."

      "It is shut," said Mrs. Sheppard.

      "It is open," replied the lady, rushing towards it, and springing through the outlet.

      "Where is she?" thundered Jonathan, who at this moment reached Mrs. Sheppard.

      "She has flown up stairs," replied the widow.

      "You lie, hussy!" replied Jonathan, rudely pushing her aside, as she vainly endeavoured to oppose his entrance into the room; "she is here. Hist!" cried he, as a scream was heard from without. "By G—! she has missed her footing."

      There was a momentary and terrible silence, broken only by a few feeble groans.

      Sir Cecil, who with Rowland and some others had entered the room rushed to the window with a torch.

      He held down the light, and a moment afterwards beckoned, with a blanched cheek, to Rowland.

      "Your sister is dead," said he, in a deep whisper.

      "Her blood be upon her own head, then," replied Rowland, sternly. "Why came she here?"

      "She could not resist the hand of fate which drew her hither," replied Sir Cecil, mournfully.

      "Descend and take charge of the body," said Rowland, conquering his emotion by a great effort, "I will join you in a moment. This accident rather confirms than checks my purpose. The stain upon our family is only half effaced: I have sworn the death of the villain and his bastard, and I will keep my oath. Now, Sir," he added, turning to Jonathan, as Sir Cecil and his followers obeyed his injunctions, "you say you know the road which the person whom we seek has taken?"

      "I do," replied Jonathan. "But I give no information gratis!"

      "Speak, then," said Rowland, placing money in his hand.

      "You'll find him at St. Saviours's stairs," answered Jonathan. "He's about to cross the river. You'd better lose no time. He has got five minutes' start of you. But I sent him the longest way about."

      The words were scarcely pronounced, when Rowland disappeared.

      "And now to see the end of it," said Jonathan, shortly afterwards passing through the window. "Good night, Master."

      Three persons only were left in the room. These were the Master of the Mint, Van Galgebrok, and Mrs. Sheppard.

      "A bad business this, Van," observed Baptist, with a prolonged shake of the head.

      "Ja, ja, Muntmeester," said the Hollander, shaking his head in reply;—"very bad—very."

      "But then they're staunch supporters of our friend over the water," continued Baptist, winking significantly; "so we must e'en hush it up in the best way we can."

      "Ja," answered Van Galgebrok. "But—sapperment!—I wish they hadn't broken my pipe."

      "JONATHAN WILD promises well," observed the Master, after a pause: "he'll become a great man. Mind, I, Baptist Kettleby, say so."

      "He'll be hanged nevertheless," replied the Hollander, giving his collar an ugly jerk. "Mind, I, Rykhart Van Galgebrok predict it. And now let's go back to the Shovels, and finish our brandewyn and bier, Muntmeester."

      "Alas!" cried Mrs. Sheppard, relieved by their departure, and giving way to a passionate flood of tears; "were it not for my child, I should wish to be in the place of that unfortunate lady."

      CHAPTER V.

      The Denunciation

      For a short space, Mrs. Sheppard remained dissolved in tears. She then dried her eyes, and laying her child gently upon the floor, knelt down beside him. "Open my heart, Father of Mercy!" she murmured, in a humble tone, and with downcast looks, "and make me sensible of the error of my ways. I have sinned deeply; but I have been sorely tried. Spare me yet a little while, Father! not for my own sake, but for the sake of this poor babe." Her utterance was here choked by sobs. "But if it is thy will to take me from him," she continued, as soon as her emotion permitted her,—"if he must be left an orphan amid strangers, implant, I beseech thee, a mother's feelings in some other bosom, and raise up a friend, who shall be to him what I would have been. Let him not bear the weight of my punishment. Spare him!—pity me!"

      With this she arose, and, taking up the infant, was about to proceed down stairs, when she was alarmed by hearing the street-door opened, and the sound of heavy footsteps entering the house.

      "Halloa, widow!" shouted a rough voice from below, "where the devil are you?"

      Mrs. Sheppard returned no answer.

      "I've got something to say to you," continued the speaker, rather less harshly; "something to your advantage; so come out o' your hiding-place, and let's have some supper, for I'm infernally hungry.—D'ye hear?"

      Still the widow remained silent.

      "Well, if you won't come, I shall help myself, and that's unsociable," pursued the speaker, evidently, from the noise he made, suiting the action to the word. "Devilish nice ham you've got here!—capital pie!—and, as I live, a flask of excellent canary. You're in luck to-night, widow. Here's your health in a bumper, and wishing you a better husband than your first. It'll be your own fault if you don't soon get another and a proper young man into the bargain. Here's his health likewise. What! mum still. You're the first widow I ever heard of who could withstand that lure. I'll try the effect of a jolly stave." And he struck up the following ballad:—

      SAINT GILES'S BOWL.1

Transcribers Note: These versions of the music are included with this file:LilyPondMIDIAcrobat (PDF)PNG (page 1)PNG (page 2)
I

      Where Saint Giles' church stands, once a lazar-house stood;

      And, chain'd to its gates, was a vessel of wood;

      A broad-bottom'd bowl, from which all the fine fellows,

      Who pass'd by that spot, on their way to the gallows,

      Might tipple strong beer,

      Their spirits to cheer,

      And drown in a sea of good liquor all fear!

      For nothing the transit to Tyburn beguiles

      So well as a draught from the Bowl of Saint Giles!

II

      By many a highwayman many a draught

      Of nutty-brown ale at Saint Giles's was quaft,

      Until the old lazar-house chanced to fall down,

      And the broad-bottom'd bowl was removed to the Crown.

      Where the robber may cheer

      His spirit with beer,

      And drown in a sea of good liquor all fear!

      For nothing the transit to Tyburn beguiles

      So


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<p>1</p>

At the hospital of Saint Giles for Lazars, the prisoners conveyed from the City of London towards Tyburn, there to be executed for treasons, felonies, or other trespasses, were presented with a Bowl of Ale, thereof to drink, as their last refreshing in this life.—Strype's Stow. Book. IX. ch. III.