Chapter Forty.
God save the Queen!
“Come and sit a bit with me, Will. I scarce ever see you now.”
Will Johnson, a year older and bigger, scrambled up on the garden seat, and Cissy put her arm round him.
From having been very small of her age, Cissy was suddenly shooting up into a tall, slim, lily-like girl, nearly as white as a lily, and as delicate-looking. “How are you getting on with the ladies, Will?”
“Oh, middling.”
“You know you must learn as much as you can, Will, of aught they teach you that is good. We’re being better learned than Father could have learned us, in book-learning and such; and we must mind and pay heed, the rather because maybe we sha’n’t have it long.”
“I wish you wouldn’t talk so about—Father. You’re for ever talking about him,” said Will uneasily, trying to wriggle himself out of his sister’s clasp.
“Not talk about Father!” exclaimed Cissy indignantly. “Will, whatever do you mean? I couldn’t bear not to talk about Father! It would seem like as we’d forgotten him. And you must never forget him—never!”
“I don’t like talking about dead folks. And—well it’s no use biding it. Look here. Cissy—I’m going to give up.”
“Give up what?” Cissy’s voice was very low. There might be pain and disappointment in it, but there was no weakness.
“Oh, all this standing out against the nuns. You can go on, if you like being starved and beaten and made to kneel on the chapel floor, and so forth; but I’ve stood it as long as I can. And—wait a bit, Cis; let me have my say out—I can’t see what it signifies, not one bit. What can it matter whether I say my prayers looking at yon image or not? If I said them looking at the moon, or at you, you wouldn’t say I was praying to you or the moon. I’m not praying to it; only, if they think I am, I sha’n’t get thrashed and sent to bed hungred. Don’t you see? That can’t be idolatry.”
Cissy was silent till she had felt her way through the mist raised by Will’s subterfuge into the clear daylight of truth.
“Shall I tell you what it would be, Will?”
“Well? Some of your queer notions, I reckon.”
“Idolatry, with lying and cheating on the top of it. Do you think they make it better?”
“Cis, don’t say such ugly words!”
“Isn’t it best to call ugly things by their right names?”
“Well, any way, it won’t be my fault: it’ll be theirs who made me do it.”
“Theirs and yours too, Will, if you let them make you.”
“I tell you, Cissy, I can’t stand it!”
“Father stood more than that,” said Cissy in that low, firm voice.
“Oh, don’t be always talking about Father! He was a man and could bear things. I’ve had enough of it. God Almighty won’t be hard on me, if I do give in.”
“Hard, Will! Do you call it hard when people are grieved to the heart because you do something which they’d lay down their lives you shouldn’t do? The Lord did lay down His life for you: and yet you say that you can’t bear a little hunger and a few stripes for Him!”
“Cis, you don’t know what it is. You’re a maid, and I dare say they don’t lay on so hard on you. It’s more than a little, I can tell you.”
Cissy knew what it was far better than Will, for he was a strong boy, on whom hardships fell lightly, while she had to bear the blows and the hunger with a delicate and enfeebled frame. But she only said,—
“Will, don’t you care for me?”
“Of course I do, Cis.”
“I think the only thing in the world that could break my heart would be to see you or Nell ‘giving in’, as you call it. I couldn’t stand that, Will. I can stand anything else. I hoped you cared for God and Father: but if you won’t heed them, I must see if you will listen to me. It would kill me, Will.”
“Oh, come, Cis, don’t talk so.”
“Won’t you go on trying a bit longer, Will? Any day the tide may turn. I don’t know how, but God knows. He can bring us out of this prison all in a minute. You know He keeps count of the hairs on our heads. Now, Will, you know as well as I do what God said,—He did not say only, ‘Thou shalt not worship them,’ but ‘Thou shalt not bow down to them.’ Oh Will, Will! have you forgotten all the texts Father taught us?—are you forgetting Father himself?”
“Cis, I wish you wouldn’t!”
“I wish you wouldn’t, Will.”
“You don’t think Father can hear, do you?” asked Will uncomfortably glancing around.
“I hope he can’t, indeed, or he’ll be sore grieved, even in Heaven, to think what his little Will’s coming to.”
“Oh, well—come, I’ll try a bit longer, Cis, if you— But I say, I do hope it won’t be long, or I can’t stand it.”
That night, or rather in the early hours of the following morning, a horseman came spurring up to the Head Gate of Colchester. He alighted from his panting horse, and threw the reins on its neck.
“Gate, ho!”
Nothing but silence came in answer.
“Gate, ho!” cried the horseman in a louder voice.
“Somebody there?” asked the gatekeeper in a very sleepy voice. “Tarry a minute, will you? I’ll be with you anon.”
“Tarry!” repeated the horseman with a contemptuous laugh. “Thou’d not want me to tarry if thou knewest what news I bring.”
“Good tidings, eh? let’s have ’em!” said the gatekeeper in a brisker voice.
“Take them. ‘God save the Queen!’”
“Call that tidings? We’ve sung that this five year.”
“Nay you’ve never sung it yet—not as you will. How if it be ‘God save Queen Elizabeth’?”
The gate was dashed open in the unsleepiest way that ever gate was moved.
“You never mean—is the Queen departed?”
“Queen Mary is gone to her reward,” replied the horseman gravely. “God save Queen Elizabeth!”
“God be thanked, and praised!”
“Ay, England is free now. A man may speak his mind, and not die for it. No more burnings, friend! no more prison for reading of God’s Word! no more hiding of men’s heads in dens and caves of the earth! God save the Queen! long live the Queen! may the Queen live for ever!”
It is not often that the old British Lion is so moved by anything as to roar and dance in his inexpressible delight. But now and then he does it; and never did he dance and roar as he did on that eighteenth of November, 1558. All over England, men went wild with joy. The terrible weight of the chains in which she had been held, was never truly felt until they were thus suddenly knocked from the shackled limbs. Old, calm, sober-minded people—nay, grave and stern, precise and rigid—every manner of man and woman—all fairly lost their heads, and were like children in their frantic glee that day Men who were perfect strangers were seen in the streets shaking hands with each other as though they were the dearest friends. Women who ordinarily would not of thought of speaking to one another were kissing each other and calling on each other to rejoice. Nobody calmed down until he was so worn-out that wearied nature absolutely forced him to repose. It was seen that day that however she had been oppressed, compelled to silence, or tortured into apparent submission, England was Protestant. The prophets had prophesied falsely, and the priests borne rule, but the people had not loved to have it so, as they very plainly showed. Colchester had declared for Mary five years before, because she was the true heir who had the right to reign, and rebellion was not right because her religion was wrong: but now that God delivered them from her awful tyranny, Colchester was not behind the rest of England in giving thanks to Him.
We are worse off now. The prophets prophesy falsely, and the priests bear rule by their means. It has not reached to the point it did then; but how soon will it do so?—for, last and worst of all, the people love to have it so. May God awake the people of England! For His mercies’ sake, let us not have to say, England flung off the chains of bondage and the sin of idolatry under Queen Elizabeth; but she bound them tight again, of her own will, under Queen Victoria!