It Is Never Too Late to Mend - BestLightNovel.com
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THE inexperienced in jails would take for granted that the death of Josephs gave Mr. Hawes's system a fatal check. No such thing. He was staggered. So was Pharaoh staggered several times, yet he always recovered himself in twenty-four hours. Hawes did not take so long as that. A suicide was no novelty under his system. Six hours after he found his victim dead he had a man and a boy crucified in the yard, swore horribly at Fry, who, for the first time in his life, was behind time, and tore out of his hands "Uncle Tom," which was the topic that had absorbed Fry and made him two minutes behind him; went home and wrote a note to his friend Williams informing him of the suicide that had taken place, and reflecting severely upon Josephs for his whole conduct, with which this last offense against discipline was in strict accordance. Then he had his grog, and having nothing to do he thought he would see what was that story which had prevailed so far over the stern realities of system as to derange that piece of clock work that went by the name of Fry. He yawned over the first pages, but as the master hand unrolled the great chromatic theory, he became absorbed, and devoured this great human story till his candles burned down in their sockets and sent him to bed four hours later than usual.
The next morning soon after chapel a gentleman's servant rode up to the jail and delivered a letter for Mr. Hawes. It was from Justice Williams.
That worthy expressed in polysyllables his sorrow at the death of Josephs after this fas.h.i.+on:
"A circ.u.mstance of this kind is always to be deplored, since it gives occasion to the enemies of the system to cast reflections, which, however unphilosophical and malignant, prejudice superficial judgments against our salutary discipline."
He then went on to say that the visiting justices would be at the jail the next day at one o'clock to make their usual report, in which Mr.
Hawes might be sure his zeal and fidelity would not pa.s.s unnoticed. He concluded by saying that Mr. Hawes must on that occasion present his charges against the chaplain in a definite form, and proceedings would be taken on the spot.
"Aha! aha! So I shall get rid of him. Confound him! he makes me harder upon the beggars than I should be. Fry, put these numbers on the cranks and bring me your report after dinner."
With these words Mr. Hawes vanished, and to the infinite surprise of the turnkeys was not seen in the jail for many hours. At two o'clock, as he was still not in the prison, Fry went to his house. He found Mr. Hawes deep in a book.
"Brought the report, sir."
"Give it to me. Humph! No. 40 and 45 refractory at the crank. No. 65 caught getting up to his window; says he wanted to feel the light.
65--that is one of the boys, isn't it?"
"Yes, sir."
"How old is the young varmint?"
"Eleven, sir."
"No. 14 heard to speak to a prisoner that was leaving the jail, his term being out. What did he say to him?"
"Said 'Good-by! G.o.d bless you!'"
"I'll shut his mouth. Confound the beggars! how fond they are of talking. I think they would rather go without their food than without their jaw.
"No. 19 caught writing a story. It is that fellow Robinson, one of the parson's men. I'll write something on his skin. How did he get the things to write with?"
"Chaplain gave them him."
"Ah! I am glad of that. You brought them away, of course?"
"Yes, sir; here they are. He made a terrible fuss about parting with them."
"What did he say?"
"He said Heaven was to judge between me and him."
"Blaspheming dog! ---- him! I'll break him. What else?"
"'Get out of my sight,' said he, 'for fear I do you a mischief.' So then down he pops on his knees in a corner and turns his back on me, like an ignorant brute that he is."
"Never mind, Fry, I'll break him."
"I suppose we shall see you in the prison soon, shan't we, sir? The place looks strange to me without you."
"By-and-by--by-and-by. This confounded book sticks to me like a leech.
How far had you got when you lent it me?"
"Got just to the most interesting part," said Fry dolefully, "where he comes under a chap called Legree; and then you took it away."
"Well, you'll have it again as soon as I have done with it. I say, what do you think of this book? is it true do you think?"
"Oh! it is true--I'd take my oath of that."
"Why how do you know?"
"Because it reads like true."
"That is no rule, ye fool."
"Well, sir, what do you think?"
This question staggered Hawes for a moment. However he a.s.sumed an oracular look, and replied, "I think some of it is true and some isn't."
"Do you think it is true about their knocking down blackee in one lot, and his wife in another, and sending 'em a thousand miles apart?"
"Oh, that is true enough! I daresay."
"And running them down with bloodhounds?"
"Why not; they look upon the poor devils as beasts. If you tell a Yankee a n.i.g.g.e.r is a man he thinks you are poking fun at him."
"It is a cursed shame!"
"Of course it is! but I'll tell you what I can't swallow in this book.
Hem! did you ever fall in with any Yankees?"
"One or two, sir."
"Were they green at all?"
"That they weren't. They were rather foxy, I should say."
"Rather. Why one of them would weather upon any three Englishmen that ever were born. Now here is a book that as good as tells me it is a Yankee custom to disable their beasts of burden. Gammon! they can't afford to do it. I believe," continued this candid personage (who had never been in any of the States), "they are the cruelest set on the face of the earth, but then they are the 'cutest (that is their own word), and they are a precious sight too 'cute to disable the beast that carries the grist to the mill."
"Doesn't seem likely--now you put it to me."
"Have a gla.s.s of grog, Fry."
"Thank you, sir."
"And there is the paper. Run your eye over it and don't speak to me for ten minutes, for I must see how Tom gets on under this b.l.o.o.d.y-minded heathen."
Fry read the paper; but although he moistened it with a gla.s.s of grog, he could not help casting envious glances from his folio at Mr. Hawes's duodecimo.