登陆注册
26517900000030

第30章 ADVENTURES OF THE AMBASSADOR, MR. MACSHANE.(1)

If we had not been obliged to follow history in all respects, it is probable that we should have left out the last adventure of Mrs.

Catherine and her husband, at the inn at Worcester, altogether; for, in truth, very little came of it, and it is not very romantic or striking. But we are bound to stick closely, above all, by THETRUTH--the truth, though it be not particularly pleasant to read of or to tell. As anybody may read in the "Newgate Calendar," Mr. and Mrs. Hayes were taken at an inn at Worcester; were confined there;were swindled by persons who pretended to impress the bridegroom for military service. What is one to do after that? Had we been writing novels instead of authentic histories, we might have carried them anywhere else we chose: and we had a great mind to make Hayes philosophising with Bolingbroke, like a certain Devereux; and Mrs.

Catherine maitresse en titre to Mr. Alexander Pope, Doctor Sacheverel, Sir John Reade the oculist, Dean Swift, or Marshal Tallard; as the very commonest romancer would under such circumstances. But alas and alas! truth must be spoken, whatever else is in the wind; and the excellent "Newgate Calendar," which contains the biographies and thanatographies of Hayes and his wife, does not say a word of their connections with any of the leading literary or military heroes of the time of Her Majesty Queen Anne.

The "Calendar" says, in so many words, that Hayes was obliged to send to his father in Warwickshire for money to get him out of the scrape, and that the old gentleman came down to his aid. By this truth must we stick; and not for the sake of the most brilliant episode,--no, not for a bribe of twenty extra guineas per sheet, would we depart from it.

Mr. Brock's account of his adventure in London has given the reader some short notice of his friend, Mr Macshane. Neither the wits nor the principles of that worthy Ensign were particularly firm: for drink, poverty, and a crack on the skull at the battle of Steenkirk had served to injure the former; and the Ensign was not in his best days possessed of any share of the latter. He had really, at one period, held such a rank in the army, but pawned his half-pay for drink and play; and for many years past had lived, one of the hundred thousand miracles of our city, upon nothing that anybody knew of, or of which he himself could give any account. Who has not a catalogue of these men in his list? who can tell whence comes the occasional clean shirt, who supplies the continual means of drunkenness, who wards off the daily-impending starvation? Their life is a wonder from day to day: their breakfast a wonder; their dinner a miracle; their bed an interposition of Providence. If you and I, my dear sir, want a shilling tomorrow, who will give it us?

Will OUR butchers give us mutton-chops? will OUR laundresses clothe us in clean linen?--not a bone or a rag. Standing as we do (may it be ever so) somewhat removed from want, is there one of us who does not shudder at the thought of descending into the lists to combat with it, and expect anything but to be utterly crushed in the encounter?

The author, it must be remembered, has his lodgings and food provided for him by the government of his country.

Not a bit of it, my dear sir. It takes much more than you think for to starve a man. Starvation is very little when you are used to it.

Some people I know even, who live on it quite comfortably, and make their daily bread by it. It had been our friend Macshane's sole profession for many years; and he did not fail to draw from it such a livelihood as was sufficient, and perhaps too good, for him. He managed to dine upon it a certain or rather uncertain number of days in the week, to sleep somewhere, and to get drunk at least three hundred times a year. He was known to one or two noblemen who occasionally helped him with a few pieces, and whom he helped in turn--never mind how. He had other acquaintances whom he pestered undauntedly; and from whom he occasionally extracted a dinner, or a crown, or mayhap, by mistake, a goldheaded cane, which found its way to the pawnbroker's. When flush of cash, he would appear at the coffee-house; when low in funds, the deuce knows into what mystic caves and dens he slunk for food and lodging. He was perfectly ready with his sword, and when sober, or better still, a very little tipsy, was a complete master of it; in the art of boasting and lying he had hardly any equals; in shoes he stood six feet five inches;and here is his complete signalement. It was a fact that he had been in Spain as a volunteer, where he had shown some gallantry, had had a brain-fever, and was sent home to starve as before.

Mr. Macshane had, however, like Mr. Conrad, the Corsair, one virtue in the midst of a thousand crimes,--he was faithful to his employer for the time being: and a story is told of him, which may or may not be to his credit, viz. that being hired on one occasion by a certain lord to inflict a punishment upon a roturier who had crossed his lordship in his amours, he, Macshane, did actually refuse from the person to be belaboured, and who entreated his forbearance, a larger sum of money than the nobleman gave him for the beating;which he performed punctually, as bound in honour and friendship.

This tale would the Ensign himself relate, with much self-satisfaction; and when, after the sudden flight from London, he and Brock took to their roving occupation, he cheerfully submitted to the latter as his commanding officer, called him always Major, and, bating blunders and drunkenness, was perfectly true to his leader. He had a notion--and, indeed, I don't know that it was a wrong one--that his profession was now, as before, strictly military, and according to the rules of honour. Robbing he called plundering the enemy; and hanging was, in his idea, a dastardly and cruel advantage that the latter took, and that called for the sternest reprisals.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 别惹我:王妃很调皮

    别惹我:王妃很调皮

    一不小心,他遇上了她,从此一颗冰封的心在开始慢慢的融化。从来不近女色的他既然一点点的为了她而改变。而她本应该过着无忧无虑的生活,却不曾想自己睡一觉既然睡到了古代。替原主完成未完成的使命。
  • 穿越:抗战风云

    穿越:抗战风云

    我是美国黑水公司王牌雇佣兵,代号白狼。机缘巧合之下我穿越到了抗战年代,以身为中国人为骄傲的我,决定为祖国做点什么!炸机场、夺军火、搞暗杀、杀汉奸,尽在书中!【热血抗战,壮我中华族魂】【剧情需要文中部分描述不实】【本文纯属虚构,如有雷同不胜荣幸】
  • 感悟人生全集

    感悟人生全集

    《感悟人生全集》收录了许多经典的哲理故事。这些广为流传的小故事,影响和改变了无数人的观念,洗涤和陶冶了无数人的心灵。故事后的人生感悟更是点睛之笔,它们或睿智凝练,让心灵为之震撼;或灵气十足,恍如一丝清泉渗入心田,让人在紧张繁忙之余可以关爱自己。通过阅读本书,你将从中获得无与伦比的情感体验,收获受益终生的人生感悟。
  • 莫不是他

    莫不是他

    快看,莫十一在和一只狗掐架唉,果然被男人甩了脑子都出问题了。天啊,她这么大岁数还辞职,哪个公司要她啊?什么,去相亲还看不上对方,也不想想自己都三十好几了。各种质疑之声不绝于耳。。。莫十一表示她也很无奈,给各位看官造成这么多困扰,原非她本意,还请诸位见谅。
  • 狐妃萌萌哒:魔王殿下宠上瘾

    狐妃萌萌哒:魔王殿下宠上瘾

    都说,九尾妖狐一族是最滥情的种族。然,她却此生最爱他一人。都说,她是天生的王者。然,她却为了他而放弃一切,甚至被打回原形,元神俱灭。再次强势回归,看着曾经一个个欺她辱她的人,冰冷回击,毫不留情。她终于成为了合格的王,却始终失去了他……只是,紧紧跟在她后面的那是什么鬼!“小狐狸,我错了,原谅我好不好?”“小狐狸,回来好吗?”“小狐狸……”
  • 冷酷总裁的温柔妻

    冷酷总裁的温柔妻

    韩轩霸道,冷酷,绝情,只要是他抛弃过的女人没有一个是过的好的,夏氏集团面临着破产的危险,夏泽风利用自己的男女儿商业联婚,他能到达自己的目的么?“不,我不要嫁,”“我告诉你,你不嫁也得嫁,我这不是在争取你的同意,我只是把这件事告诉你而已,你乖乖的等着做你的新娘吧!”当善良的夏恩雪遇上冷酷总裁会发生什么事呢?
  • 情网

    情网

    新婚第二天,老公通过视频直播给了我一个巨大的惊喜;我才知道,原来我爱了七年的男人竟然更喜欢被男人抱--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 复仇时遇见的爱情

    复仇时遇见的爱情

    三个女孩因为复仇走上了白黑道,并成为世尊,在复仇的过程中,她们遇到了爱情,杀手是不能拥有爱情,她们会怎么做呢?圣灵是三大王子会选择放弃她们吗?
  • 本宫来了,皇上请小心!

    本宫来了,皇上请小心!

    意外穿越,逃亡之中,她被当成卞府五小姐,纳入大名鼎鼎的侯爷府中,成为侯爷的第108个妾。新婚之夜,侯爷抬着一张傲慢自大的脸,第一句话:“脱!”第二句话:“躺下!”第三句话:“验货!”于是,她诱他喝下毒酒,立竿见影,洞房花烛化为泡影。此后,她两面三刀,步步使坏,千方百计让他当不成男人。他知道她的计划后气疯了,恨不得将她千刀万剐,却又迷上她的特立独行。可她是单身主义者,拒绝属于任何男人!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 星际狂野

    星际狂野

    一个因为人类内斗,而漂泊异星的小孩儿,将来如何扭转人类的命运?东西方文化差异,会导致怎样的未来格局?人类与新生物种,会爆发怎样的星际冲突?天堂里有没有车来车往?人性善恶如何影响故事的结局?梦想与现实拧巴在一起,会演奏出怎样的狂想曲?