Desperate Remedies eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 532 pages of information about Desperate Remedies.

Desperate Remedies eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 532 pages of information about Desperate Remedies.

’’Tis a feeling that will come.  But ’twont bear looking into.  There’s a back’ard current in the world, and we must do our utmost to advance in order just to bide where we be.  But, Baker, they are turning in here with the coffin, look.’

The two carpenters had borne their load into a narrow way close at hand.  The farmers, in common with others, turned and watched them along the way.

‘’Tis a man’s coffin, and a tall man’s, too,’ continued Farmer Springrove.  ‘His was a fine frame, whoever he was.’

‘A very plain box for the poor soul—­just the rough elm, you see.’  The corner of the cloth had blown aside.

’Yes, for a very poor man.  Well, death’s all the less insult to him.  I have often thought how much smaller the richer class are made to look than the poor at last pinches like this.  Perhaps the greatest of all the reconcilers of a thoughtful man to poverty—­and I speak from experience—­is the grand quiet it fills him with when the uncertainty of his life shows itself more than usual.’

As Springrove finished speaking, the bearers of the coffin went across a gravelled square facing the two men and approached a grim and heavy archway.  They paused beneath it, rang a bell, and waited.

Over the archway was written in Egyptian capitals,

‘COUNTY GAOL.’

The small rectangular wicket, which was constructed in one of the two iron-studded doors, was opened from the inside.  The men severally stepped over the threshold, the coffin dragged its melancholy length through the aperture, and both entered the court, and were covered from sight.

‘Somebody in the gaol, then?’

‘Yes, one of the prisoners,’ said a boy, scudding by at the moment, who passed on whistling.

‘Do you know the name of the man who is dead?’ inquired Baker of a third bystander.

’Yes, ’tis all over town—­surely you know, Mr. Springrove?  Why, Manston, Miss Aldclyffe’s steward.  He was found dead the first thing this morning.  He had hung himself behind the door of his cell, in some way, by a handkerchief and some strips of his clothes.  The turnkey says his features were scarcely changed, as he looked at ’em with the early sun a-shining in at the grating upon him.  He has left a full account of the murder, and all that led to it.  So there’s an end of him.’

It was perfectly true:  Manston was dead.

The previous day he had been allowed the use of writing-materials, and had occupied himself for nearly seven hours in preparing the following confession:—­

’LAST WORDS.

’Having found man’s life to be a wretchedly conceived scheme, I renounce it, and, to cause no further trouble, I write down the facts connected with my past proceedings.

’After thanking God, on first entering my house, on the night of the fire at Carriford, for my release from bondage to a woman I detested, I went, a second time, to the scene of the disaster, and, finding that nothing could be done by remaining there, shortly afterwards I returned home again in the company of Mr. Raunham.

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Desperate Remedies from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.