Return of the Gypsy

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by Philippa Carr


  “I hope it was a good one.”

  “I have told Miss Dolly what I tell all… and there is no great skill in it. What comes to you is largely of your own making. The good life is there … if you have the wit to take it.”

  “It is a comfortable way of looking at life if you believe it,” I said.

  “And wouldn’t you believe it, my lady Jessica?”

  “I suppose you are right in a way, but so many things happen in life that one has no control over. Acts of God they call them.”

  Dolly said: “Earthquakes, floods, death …”

  “I wasn’t only thinking of them,” I said.

  “She is wise, our lady Jessica.”

  “Jake told me I had a good life ahead of me … if I took the right road to it,” said Dolly.

  “That applies to us all,” I retorted.

  “Ah,” said Romany Jake, “but we don’t all have the opportunity to take the golden road.”

  “If it is golden why should we turn away from it?”

  “Because it is not always seen for what it is at the start. You have to have the wisdom to see it and the courage to take it.”

  “Shall I?” asked Dolly.

  “It is for you to decide, Miss Dolly.”

  He held out his goblet and she went to him to refill it.

  There seemed to me then a sense of unreality in that kitchen. I wondered what my family would say if they could see me sitting at a table drinking wine with Dolly and Romany Jake. He seemed to guess what I was thinking and to be amused by it.

  He said: “Look at me now. Romany Jake, sitting at this table drinking wine with two ladies. Now if I were a man who turned away from his opportunities, I’d have touched my forelock and declared myself to be unworthy of the honour.”

  “I have a feeling that in your heart you think yourself worthy to sit down with the highest in the land,” I said.

  “And what would a lady like you know of a poor gypsy’s heart?”

  “I think Mr. Cadorson, that I know a little about you.”

  “Well, it is clever you are and I’ve never doubted that. You’ll have a great life because you’re bold and you are going to take what you want with both hands. It will be a lucky man who shares that life with you.”

  He looked at me very steadily when he said that. I felt myself flushing.

  “And what of me?” asked Dolly.

  “You are more timid than my lady Jessica. She has a fine opinion of herself, this one. She’s precious … and she knows it. And she will make sure others don’t forget it either.”

  “You are still talking about her” interrupted Dolly somewhat peevishly. “Why are you so interested in her?”

  “I am interested in the whole world—you, gentle Miss Dolly, and the not so gentle lady Jessica …”

  With that he set down his goblet and picked up the guitar. He strummed a few bars and began to sing a song about beautiful ladies. We sat there in silence watching and listening.

  Then he started to sing about a high-born lady who was discontented with her life until she met a gypsy in the woods. Then she left the luxury of her home and all that went with it to live a life of freedom under the moon and the stars and the sun … among the trees of the forest.

  His tenor voice vibrated with emotion; and all the time he was singing his eyes were on me and I was sure he was singing for me rather than for Dolly.

  I clapped my hands when he had finished but Dolly was silent.

  I said: “I daresay she didn’t find it so very wonderful. It is all very well to change a soft feather bed for the earth … but the earth can be very hard and uncomfortable with creeping crawling things in the summer and frost in winter. It is just a pleasant song.”

  “Oh, but my lady Jessica, there are great comforts in a gypsy’s life which I haven’t sung about.”

  “Well, I think she would soon have been regretting it.”

  “Not she. She learned more about love and life with her gypsy than she ever would with her high and mighty lord.”

  “Perhaps high and mighty lords would think differently.”

  “What an argumentative lady you are and how hard to convince. There is only one way of getting you to agree.”

  “And what is that?”

  He looked at me very boldly and I knew what he was going to say before he said it. He leaned closer to me and said quietly: “To show you.”

  “Have some more wine,” said Dolly, still peevish.

  She filled his goblet; he sipped it thoughtfully, looking at me with that amused smile; then he picked up his guitar and his deep rich voice echoed round the Grasslands kitchen. Some of the servants came down and stood at the door listening.

  When I saw them I remembered it was time I went home.

  I stood up hastily and said I must go. “I only came to bring the sloe gin.”

  He rose and bowed, giving me that disturbing enigmatical smile. I hurried out and as I walked away I heard the sound of the guitar.

  I felt very exhilarated by the encounter.

  When I arose that October morning there was no indication that this was going to be an important day not only for my family but for everyone in England. But with one glorious stroke our fears disappeared when the news of the victory at Trafalgar Bay was brought to us.

  Even my father was deeply moved. We were assembled at the table and the talk was all about what this would mean to us and our country. Lord Nelson had beaten the French at Trafalgar Bay. He had so crippled their fleet that there could no longer be a question of invasion. He had shown the world that Napoleon was not invincible.

  The saddest news was that, in giving England freedom from fear, our great admiral had lost his own life. Therefore our rejoicing was tempered with sorrow.

  But even that could not stem the jubilation. We had checked Napoleon. We alone, in threatened Europe, had shown the bombastic Emperor that we were the unconquerable.

  My father was eloquent. “Never, never in all its history has our country lain at the foot of a conqueror.”

  David mentioned the Norman Conquest and was immediately rounded on by my father. “We English are the Normans. The Vikings … for mark you they were not French …” I smiled at him. My father had an unreasoning hatred of the French because my mother had married a Frenchman before she married him. I could well imagine him in a winged helmet, sailing to these shores in a long ship. He guessed my thoughts and grinned at me. “No,” he went on. “Not French. The Normans were Vikings who had been given Normandy by the King of the Franks to stop them invading the rest of France. The Vikings along with the Angles and the Jutes mingled their blood with the Saxons and created the Anglo Saxon race … us, my son. And we have never allowed a conqueror to set foot on this soil… and by God’s grace never shall. Napoleon! Napoleon would never have been allowed to come here. But this matter of Trafalgar Bay has saved us a lot of trouble.”

  Then we drank to the great hero, Lord Nelson, and to our own Jonathan who had died for his country. Claudine was overcome by emotion and I saw the glitter of tears in her eyes.

  “There will be bonfires all over the country tonight,” said my mother.

  “We must see them,” I cried.

  “Well,” went on my mother, “I suppose we could all go out. They won’t light them until after dark.”

  “I want to go out and see them, don’t you, Amaryllis?” I cried.

  “Oh yes,” she answered.

  Our parents exchanged glances and my father said: “We’ll take the carriage. It will be near the coast… right on the cliffs, so that any watchers from the other side of the water may be able to see them. Bonfires all along the coast telling the plaguey French what we think of their Napoleon. David, you can drive us. We’ll all go.”

  The elders looked relieved. I followed their thoughts. There would be revelry round the bonfires tonight and they did not want their daughters to be out of sight.

  At dusk we set out. The excitement was intense. People were mak
ing their way to that spot on the cliff top where the bonfire was to be lighted. Already there was a crowd assembled there. Driftwood and rubbish of all sorts had been piled up, and on the top of the heap was an effigy of Napoleon.

  The crowd made way for our carriage.

  “Down with the Boney Party!” shouted someone.

  There were cheers for our carriage. My father waved his hand and called a greeting to some of them. Nothing could please him more than this display of feeling against the French.

  Our carriage pulled up some yards from the bonfire.

  People were looking anxiously at the sky. It must not rain. It occurred to me that people who had such a short time before been worried because they feared an invasion, now seemed equally so about the weather.

  We were lucky. The rain held off. The great moment had come.

  Several men approached carrying flaming torches. They circled the heap and with a shout threw their torches into the mass of accumulated rubbish and paraffin-soaked wood. There was a burst of flame. The bonfire was alight.

  The air was filled with shrieks of delight; people joined hands and danced round the bonfire. Fascinated, I watched. They looked different in the firelight. One hardly recognized the sober people one had known. They were servants, most of them. I saw the little tweeny, wide-eyed and wondering. Her hand was seized by one of the stable boys and she was whirled off into the dance.

  “They are going to get wilder as the night progresses,” said David.

  “Yes,” replied my mother, “there will be some merrymaking tonight.”

  “I trust the after effects will not be more than some of them have bargained for,” added my father.

  “Crowds scare me a little,” said my mother.

  My father looked at her tenderly. “This is rejoicing, Lottie,” he murmured gently.

  “I know. But crowds … mobs …”

  “Would you like to go?” he asked.

  She looked at me and Amaryllis. “No,” she replied. “Let’s wait awhile.”

  I felt a great desire to mingle with the crowds, to dance round the bonfire. Two of the men had brought fiddles with them and they were playing songs we all knew—The Vicar of Bray and Barbara Allen and the one which set them all shouting with fervour as we all joined in:

  When Britain first, at Heaven’s command

  Arose from out the azure main,

  This was the charter of the land,

  And the guardian angels sang the strain:

  “Rule Brittania, rule the waves Britons never will be slaves.”

  The words rang out into the night air; below the waves washed against the white cliffs.

  “Never, never, never,” chanted the crowd, “Will be slaves.”

  All the pent-up emotions of the last months were let loose as the fear of the havoc an invading army could wreak evaporated from their minds. Not that any of them would admit that they thought it could really happen, but the relief was intense, and I could hear it in those words. “Never … never, never …” they went on singing.

  The music changed. Now the fiddlers were playing a merry tune:

  Come, lasses and lads, get leave of your dads

  And away to the maypole hie …

  It was not Maytime but the tune would do for a dance and the lasses and lads had joined hands and were dancing round the bonfire as though it were a maypole.

  I saw some of the gypsies mingling with the crowd and yes! there he was. He was hand in hand with a sloe-eyed gypsy girl. Creole earrings flapped in her ears; she wore a red skirt and had wild dark hair.

  He danced gracefully, leaping round the bonfire. He came close to our carriage and saw me. For a few seconds his eyes met mine. He released the hand of the girl with whom he was dancing and she went leaping on without him. He stood there just looking; and although he did not beckon I knew that he was telling me how much he wanted me to be down there dancing with him. His gaze implied that our acquaintance was a secret… a delightful secret—something daring and forbidden.

  My father said: “The gypsies are here.”

  “Well, I suppose there is no reason why they shouldn’t be,” replied my mother.

  “They seem to be enjoying the occasion,” added David.

  I was amazed to see Dolly in the crowd. I would not have expected her to venture out on such a night, and certainly not to come to the bonfire. She was standing on the edge of the crowd, looking frail and pretty because her deformity was not discernible. She looked like a young girl though she must be past her mid twenties.

  I whispered to Amaryllis: “Look, there’s Dolly.”

  And at that moment Romany Jake was beside her. He seized her hand and, drawing her along with him, began to dance.

  “Dolly … dancing,” said Amaryllis. “How very strange.”

  I followed them with my eyes for as long as I could. Once or twice as they came round the bonfire they were quite close to the carriage. Dolly looked ecstatic. He glanced my way. There was something I did not understand in his expression but I knew he was telling me how much he wanted me to be dancing with him round the bonfire.

  I waited for them to come round again, but they did not. I continued to look for them but I did not see them again.

  “This will go on through the night,” my mother said.

  “Yes.” My father yawned. “David, take us home now. I think we have had enough. This sort of thing becomes monotonous.”

  “It is a good thing that they all realize what dangers we have come through,” commented David. “There can’t be a man or woman in England tonight who is not proud to be English.”

  “For tonight, yes,” said my mother. “Tomorrow may be another matter.”

  “Lottie, my dear,” said my father, “you have become a cynic.”

  “Crowds make me feel so,” she replied.

  “Come along, David,” commanded my father, and David turned the horses.

  So we rode the short distance back to the house through the lanes which were illuminated by the light from the bonfire. We could see other bonfires spread along the coast like jewels in a necklace.

  “A night to remember,” said David.

  What I would remember most was the sight of Romany

  Jake standing there almost willing me to leave the carriage and go to him; and then hand in hand with Dolly he had disappeared.

  A few days later there was trouble.

  One of the gamekeepers came to see my father. He had caught two gypsies stealing pheasants in the wood. There was a definite boundary between those woods in which the gypsies were allowed to camp and those in which the pheasants were kept. There were notices in every conceivable spot warning that those who trespassed in the private woods would be prosecuted.

  These two men had been seen by the gamekeeper with pheasants in their hands. He had given chase and although he had failed to catch them he had traced them back to the gypsy encampment.

  As a result my father rode out there and warned the gypsies that if any more attempts were made to encroach on the land which was forbidden to them and if those stealing his pheasants were caught, they would be handed over to the law and suffer the consequences; and the gypsies would be moved on and never allowed to camp on his ground again.

  He talked of them over dinner that evening.

  “They are a proud race,” he said. “It’s a pity they don’t settle down and stop wandering over the face of the earth.”

  “I think they like the life under the sun, moon and stars,” I said.

  “Poetic, but uncomfortable,” said Claudine.

  “I suppose,” added David, who always brought a philosophical turn to the conversation, “that if they did not prefer it they would not continue with it.”

  “They’re lazy,” declared Dickon.

  “I am not sure,” contradicted my mother. “They have been doing it for generations. It’s a way of life.”

  “Begging … scrounging … making use of other people’s property!”


  “I believe,” I put in, “that they have an idea that everything on earth is for the use of everybody in it.”

  “A misguided philosophy,” said my father, “and only adhered to by those who want what others have got. Once they have it, they would endeavour to keep it to themselves with more vigour than any. That is nature and no philosophy on earth is going to change it. As for the gypsies, if they are caught in any more mischief, they’ll be out. They’re an insolent lot. There was one fellow… He was very different from the rest. He was sitting on the steps of one of the caravans playing a guitar of all things. I thought he might have got up and done a bit of work.”

  “That would be Romany Jake,” I said.

  “Who?” cried my father.

  “He’s one of them. I’ve seen him about. In the kitchen they talk about him a great deal.”

  “Colourful character,” said my father. “He was a sort of spokesman for them. He’s certainly not at a loss for words.”

  “I saw him at the bonfire,” I added. “He was dancing.”

  “He’d be good at that, I daresay. It would only be work he was shy of. I shall be glad when they’ve moved on. Thieves, vagabonds, most of them.”

  Then he started to talk about what might happen on the Continent. Napoleon would be anxious for success in Europe. He had to restore the people’s faith in the invincible Emperor whose fleet had been crippled beyond redemption at Trafalgar.

  It was a week or so after the bonfire. We were all at dinner when one of the servants came rushing in crying that the woods were on fire.

  We left the table and as we came out into the open air we were aware of the smoke and the acrid smell of burning. My father soon had the servants rushing out with water. I went to the stables and mounting my horse galloped in the direction of the fire. I knew that it was in those woods where the gypsies had their encampment.

  A scene of wild disorder met my eyes. The grass was on fire and the flames were running across it towards the trees, licking at their barks while I watched in horror.

  My father was in the midst of the melee shouting orders; cottagers who lived nearby were running out with buckets of water.

  “We have to stop it reaching the thicket,” cried my father.

  “Thank God there’s hardly any wind,” said David.

 

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