Mr. Fortescue: An Andean Romance
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Mr. Fortescue, by William Westall
A quaint old Essex village of single-storied cottages, some ivy mantled, with dormer windows, thatched roofs, and miniature gardens, strewed with picturesque irregularity round as fine a green as you will find in the county. Its normal condition is rustic peace and sleepy beatitude; and it pursues the even tenor of its way undisturbed by anything more exciting than a meeting of the vestry, the parish dinner, the advent of a new curate, or the exit of one of the fathers of the hamlet.
But this morning the place is all agog, and so transformed that it hardly knows itself. The entire population, from the oldest gaffer to the last-born baby, is out-of-doors; the two inns are thronged with guests, and the road is lined with all sorts and conditions of carriages, from the four-in-hand of the wealthy swell to the donkey-cart of the local coster-monger. From every point of the compass are trooping horsemen, some resplendent in scarlet coats, their nether limbs clothed in immaculate white breeches and shining top-boots, others in pan hats and brown leggings; and all in high spirits and eager for the fray; for to-day, according to old custom, the Essex Hunt hold the first regular meet of the season on Matching’s matchless Green.
The master is already to the fore, and now comes Tom Cuffe, the huntsman, followed by his hounds, whose sleek skins and bright coats show that they are “fit to go,” and whose eager looks bode ill to the long-tailed denizens of copse and covert.
It still wants a few minutes to eleven, and the interval is occupied in the interchange of greetings between old companions of the chase, in desultory talk about horses and hounds; and while some of the older votaries of Diana fight their battles o’er again, and describe thrice-told historic runs, which grow longer with every repetition, others discuss the prospects of the coming season, and indulge in hopes of which, let us hope, neither Jack Frost, bad scent, nor accident by flood or field will mar the fruition.
William Westall
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Mr. Fortescue
William Westall
Matching Green.
Tickle-Me-Quick.
Mr. Fortescue’s Proposal.
A Rescue.
Thereby Hangs a Tale.
The Tale Begins.
In Quest of Fortune.
In the King’s Name.
Doomed to Die.
Salvador.
Out of the Lion’s Mouth.
Between Two Fires.
On the Llanos.
Caught.
An Old Enemy.
The Azuferales.
A Timely Warning.
A New Departure.
Don Esteban’s Daughter.
The Happy Valley.
A Fight for Life.
The Cacique’s Scheme.
You are the Man.
In the Toils.
The Man-Killer.
Angela.
Abbé Balthazar.
I Bid You Stay.
The Abbé’s Legacy.
The Quenching of Quipai.
North by West.
Found Out.
Grief and Pain.
Old Friends and a New Foe.
A Novel Wager.
Epilogue.