Micah Clarke<br />His Statement as made to his three grandchildren Joseph, Gervas and Reuben During by Arthur Conan Doyle (read e books online free txt) ๐
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- Author: Arthur Conan Doyle
Read book online ยซMicah Clarke<br />His Statement as made to his three grandchildren Joseph, Gervas and Reuben During by Arthur Conan Doyle (read e books online free txt) ๐ยป. Author - Arthur Conan Doyle
โIt is as well, perhaps,โ said Saxon, โthat we gave them the slip, for that young springald might have smelled a rat and played us some ill-turn. Have you chanced to see my silken kerchief?โ
โNot I,โ I answered.
โNay, then, it must have fallen from my bosom during our ruffle. I can ill afford to leave it, for I travel light in such matters. Eight hundred men, quoth the major, and three thousand to follow. Should I meet this same Oglethorpe or Ogilvy when the little business is over, I shall read him a lesson on thinking less of chemistry and more of the need of preserving military precautions. It is well always to be courteous to strangers and to give them information, but it is well also that the information should be false.โ
โAs his may have been,โ I suggested.
โNay, nay, the words came too glibly from his tongue. So ho, Chloe, so ho! She is full of oats and would fain gallop, but it is so plaguy dark that we can scarce see where we are going.โ
We had been trotting down the broad high-road shimmering vaguely white in the gloom, with the shadowy trees dancing past us on either side, scarce outlined against the dark background of cloud. We were now coming upon the eastern edge of the great plain, which extends forty miles one way and twenty the other, over the greater part of Wiltshire and past the boundaries of Somersetshire. The main road to the West skirts this wilderness, but we had agreed to follow a less important track, which would lead us to our goal, though in a more tedious manner. Its insignificance would, we hoped, prevent it from being guarded by the Kingโs horse. We had come to the point where this byroad branches off from the main highway when we heard the clatter of horsesโ hoofs behind us.
โHere comes some one who is not afraid to gallop,โ I remarked.
โHalt here in the shadow!โ cried Saxon, in a short, quick whisper. โHave your blade loose in the scabbard. He must have a set errand who rides so fast oโ nights.โ
Looking down the road we could make out through the darkness a shadowy blur which soon resolved itself into man and horse. The rider was well-nigh abreast of us before he was aware of our presence, when he pulled up his steed in a strange, awkward fashion, and faced round in our direction.
โIs Micah Clarke there?โ he said, in a voice which was strangely familiar to my ears.
โI am Micah Clarke,โ said I.
โAnd I am Reuben Lockarby,โ cried our pursuer, in a mock heroic voice. โAh, Micah lad, Iโd embrace you were it not that I should assuredly fall out of the saddle if I attempted it, and perchance drag you along. That sudden pull up well-nigh landed me on the roadway. I have been sliding off and clambering on ever since I bade goodbye to Havant. Sure, such a horse for slipping from under one was never bestridden by man.โ
โGood Heavens, Reuben!โ I cried in amazement, โwhat brings you all this way from home?โ
โThe very same cause which brings you, Micah, and also Don Decimo Saxon, late of the Solent, whom methinks I see in the shadow behind you. How fares it, oh illustrious one?โ
โIt is you, then, young cock of the woods!โ growled Saxon, in no very overjoyed voice.
โNo less a person,โ said Reuben. โAnd now, my gay cavalieros, round with your horses and trot on your way, for there is no time to be lost. We ought all to be at Taunton to-morrow.โ
โBut, my dear Reuben,โ said I, โit cannot be that you are coming with us to join Monmouth. What would your father say? This is no holiday jaunt, but one that may have a sad and stern ending. At the best, victory can only come through much bloodshed and danger. At the worst, we are as like to wind up upon a scaffold as not.โ
โForwards, lads, forwards!โ cried he, spurring on his horse, โit is all arranged and settled. I am about to offer my august person, together with a sword which I borrowed and a horse which I stole, to his most Protestant highness, James, Duke of Monmouth.โ
โBut how comes it all?โ I asked, as we rode on together. โIt warms my very heart to see you, but you were never concerned either in religion or in politics. Whence, then, this sudden resolution?โ
โWell, truth to tell,โ he replied, โI am neither a kingโs man nor a dukeโs man, nor would I give a button which sat upon the throne. I do not suppose that either one or the other would increase the custom of the Wheatsheaf, or want Reuben Lockarby for a councillor. I am a Micah Clarke man, though, from the crown of my head to the soles of my feet; and if he rides to the wars, may the plague strike me if I donโt stick to his elbow!โ He raised his hand excitedly as he spoke, and instantly losing his balance, he shot into a dense clump of bushes by the roadside whence his legs flapped helplessly in the darkness.
โThat makes the tenth,โ said he, scrambling out and clambering into his saddle once more. โMy father used to tell me not to sit a horse too closely. โA gentle rise and fall,โ said the old man. Egad, there is more fall than rise, and it is anything but gentle.โ
โOddโs truth!โ exclaimed Saxon. โHow in the name of all the saints in the calendar do you expect to keep your seat in the presence of an enemy if you lose it on a peaceful high-road?โ
โI can but try, my illustrious,โ he answered, rearranging his ruffled clothing. โPerchance the sudden and unexpected character of my movements may disconcert the said enemy.โ
โWell, well, there may be more truth in that than you are aware of,โ quoth Saxon, riding upon Lockarbyโs bridle arm, so that there was scarce room for him to fall between us. โI had sooner fight a man like that young fool at the inn, who knew a little of the use of his weapon, than one like Micah here, or yourself, who know nothing. You can tell what the one is after, but the other will invent a system of his own which will serve his turn for the nonce. Ober-hauptmann Muller was reckoned to be the finest player at the small-sword in the Kaiserโs army, and could for a wager snick any button from an opponentโs vest without cutting the cloth. Yet was he slain in an encounter with Fahnfuhrer Zollner, who was a cornet in our own Pandour corps, and who knew as much of the rapier as you do of horsemanship. For the rapier, be it understood, is designed to thrust and not to cut, so that no man wielding it ever thinks of guarding a side-stroke. But Zollner, being a long-armed man, smote his antagonist across the face with his weapon as though it had been a cane, and then, ere he had time to recover himself, fairly pinked him. Doubtless if the matter were to do again, the Oberhauptmann would have got
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