I can conduct you, lady, to a low
But loyal cottage where you may be safe
Till further quest.--MILTON.
On a moorland slope where sheep and goats were dispersed among the
rocks, there lay a young lad on his back, in a stout canvas cassock
over his leathern coat, and stout leathern leggings over wooden
shoes. Twilight was fast coming on; only a gleam of purple light
rested on the top of the eastern hills, but was gradually fading
away, though the sky to the westward still preserved a little pale
golden light by the help of the descending crescent moon.
'Go away, horned moon,' murmured the boy. 'I want to see my stars
come out before Hob comes to call me home, and the goats are getting
up already. Moon, moon, thou mayst go quicker. Thou wilt have
longer time to-morrow--and be higher in the sky, as well as bigger,
and thou mightst let me see my star to-night! Ah! there is one high
in the sunset, pale and fair, but not mine! That's the evening star
--one of the wanderers. Is it the same as comes in the morning
betimes, when we do not have it at night? Like that it shines with
steady light and twinkles not. I would that I knew! There! there's
mine, my own star, far up, only paling while the sun glaring blazes
in the sky; mine own, he that from afar drives the stars in Charles's
Wain. There they come, the good old twinkling team of three, and the
four of the Wain! Old Billy Goat knows them too! Up he gets, and
all in his wake "Ha-ha-ha" he calls, and the Nannies answer. Ay, and
the sheep are rising up too! How white they look in the moonshine!
Piers--deaf as he is--waking at their music. Ba, they call the
lambs! Nay, that's no call of sheep or goat! 'Tis some child
crying, all astray! Ha! Hilloa, where beest thou? Tarry till I
come! Move not, or thou mayst be in the bogs and mosses! Come,
Watch'--to a great unwieldy collie puppy--'let us find her.'
A feeble piteous sound answered him, and following the direction of
the reply, he strode along, between the rocks and thorn-bushes that
guarded the slope of the hill, to a valley covered with thick moss,
veiling treacherously marshy ground in which it was easy to sink.
The cry came from the further side, where a mountain stream had force
enough to struggle through the swamp. There were stepping-stones
across the brook, which the boy knew, and he made his way from one to
the other, calling out cheerily to the little figure that he began to
discern in the fading light, and who answered him with tones
evidently girlish, 'O come, come, shepherd! Here I am! I am lost
and lorn! They will reward thee! Oh, come fast!'
'All in good time, lassie! Haste is no good here! I must look to my
footing.'
Presently he was by the side of the wanderer, and could see that it
was a maiden of ten or twelve years old, who somehow, even in the
darkness, had not the air of one of the few inhabitants of that wild
mountain district.
'Lost art thou, maiden,' he said, as he stood beside her; 'where is
thine home?'
'I am at Greystone Priory,' replied the girl. 'I went out hawking
to-day with the Mother Prioress and the rest. My pony fell with me
when we were riding after a heron. No one saw me or heard me, and my
pony galloped home. I saw none of them, and I have been wandering
miles and miles! Oh take me back, good lad; the Mother Prioress will
give thee--'
''Tis too far to take thee back to-night,' he said. 'Thou must come
with me to Hob Hogward, where Doll will give thee supper and bed, and
we will have thee home in the morning.'
'I never lay in a hogward's house,' she said primly.
'Belike, but there be worse spots to be harboured in. Here, I must
carry thee over the burn, it gets wider below! Nay, 'tis no use
trying to leap it in the dark, thou wouldst only sink in. There!'
And as he raised her in his arms, the touch of her garment was
delicate, and she on her side felt that his speech, gestures and
touch were not those of a rustic shepherd boy; but nothing was said
till he had waded through the little narrow stream, and set her down
on a fairly firm clump of grass on the other side. Then she asked,
'What art thou, lad?--Who art thou?'
'They call me Hal,' was the answer; 'but this is no time for
questions. Look to thy feet, maid, or thou wilt be in a swamp-hole
whence I may hardly drag thee out.'
He held her hand, for he could hardly carry her farther, since she
was almost as tall as himself, and more plump; and the rest of the
conversation for some little time consisted of, 'There!' 'Where?'
'Oh, I was almost down!' 'Take heed; give me thy other hand! Thou
must leap this!' 'Oh! what a place! Is there much more of it?'
'Not much! Come bravely on! There's a good maid.' 'Oh, I must get
my breath.' 'Don't stand still. That means sinking. Leap! Leap!
That's right. No, not that way, turn to the big stair.' 'Oh--h!'
'That's my brave wench! Not far now.' 'I'm down, I'm down!' 'Up!
Here, this is safe! On that white stone! Now, here's sound ground!
Hark!' Wherewith he emitted a strange wild whoop, and added, 'That's
Hob come out to call me!' He holloaed again. 'We shall soon be at
home now. There's Mother Doll's light! Her light below, the star
above,' he added to himself.
By this time it was too dark for the two young people to see more
than dim shapes of one another, but the boy knew that the hand he
still held was a soft and delicate one, and the girl that those which
had grasped and lifted her were rough with country labours. She
began to assert her dignity and say again, 'Who art thou, lad? We
will guerdon thee well for aiding me. The Lord St. John is my
father. And who art thou?'
'I? Oh, I am Hob Hogward's lad,' he answered in an odd off-hand
tone, before whooping again his answer to the shouts of Hob, which
were coming nearer.
'I am so hungry!' said the little lady, in a weak, famished tone.
'Hast aught to eat?'
'I have finished my wallet, more's the pity!' said the boy, 'but
never fear! Hold out but a few steps more, and Mother Doll will give
thee bite and sup and bed.'
'Alack! Is it much further! My feet! they are so sore and weary--'
Hal took her up again, but they went more slowly, and were glad to
see a tall figure before them, and hear the cry, 'How now, Hal boy,
where hast been? What hast thou there?'
'A sorely weary little lady, Daddy Hob, lost from the hawking folk
from the Priory,' responded Hal, panting a little as he set his
burthen down, and Hob's stronger arms received her.
Hal next asked whether the flock had come back under charge of Piers,
and was answered that all were safely at home, and after 'telling the
tale' Hob had set out to find him. 'Thou shouldst not stray so far,'
he said.
'I heard the maid cry, and went after her,' said Hal, 'all the way to
the Blackreed Moss, and the springs, and 'twas hard getting over the
swamp.'
'Well indeed ye were not both swallowed in it,' said Hob; 'God be
praised for bringing you through! Poor wee bairn! Thou hast come
far! From whence didst say?'
'From Greystone Priory,' wearily said the girl, who had her head down
on Hob's shoulder, and seemed ready to fall asleep there.
'Her horse fell with her, and they were too bent on their sport to
heed her,' explained the boy, as he trudged along beside Hob and his
charge, 'so she wandered on foot till by good hap I heard her moan.'
'Ay, there will be a rare coil to-night for having missed her,' said
Hob; 'but I've heard tell, my Lady Prioress heeds her hawks more than
her nuns! But be she who she may, we'll have her home, and Mother
Doll shall see to her, for she needs it sure, poor bairn. She is
asleep already.'
So she was, with her head nestled into the shepherd's neck, nor did
she waken when after a tramp of more than a mile the bleatings of the
folded sheep announced that they were nearly arrived, and in the low
doorway there shone a light, and in the light stood a motherly form,
in a white woollen hood and dark serge dress. Tired as he was, Hal
ran on to her, exclaiming 'All well, Mammy Doll?'
'Ah well!' she answered, 'thank the good God! I was in fear for
thee, my boy! What's that Daddy hath? A strayed lamb?'
'Nay, Mammy, but a strayed maiden! 'Twas that kept me so long. I
had to bear her through the burn at Blackreed, and drag her on as
best I might, and she is worn out and weary.'
'Ay,' said Hob, as he came up. 'How now, my bit lassie?' as he put
her into the outstretched arms of his wife, who sat down on the
settle to receive her, still not half awake.
'She is well-nigh clemmed,' said Hal. 'She has had no bite nor sup
all day, since her pony fell with her out a-hawking, and all were so
hot on the chase that none heeded her.'
Mother Doll's exclamations of pity were profuse. There was a kettle
of broth on the peat fire, and after placing the girl in a corner of
the settle, she filled three wooden bowls, two of which she placed
before Hal and the shepherd, making signs to the heavy-browed Piers
to wait; and getting no reply from her worn-out guest, she took her
in her arms, and fed her from a wooden spoon. Though without clear
waking, mouthfuls were swallowed down, till the bowl was filled again
and set before Piers.
'There, that will be enough this day!' said the good dame. 'Poor
bairn! 'Twas scurvy treatment. Now will we put her to bed, and in
the morn we will see how to deal with her.'
Hal insisted that the little lady should have his own bed--a chaff-
stuffed mattress, covered with a woollen rug, in the recess behind
the projecting hearth--a strange luxury for a farm boy; and Doll
yielded very unwillingly when he spoke in a tone that savoured of
command. The shaggy Piers had already curled himself up in a corner
and gone to sleep.