Tales and Novels, vol 2 | Page 5

Maria Edgeworth
do, because I was lame and weak, and not able to do
much.--'Let him have the care of my horses in the stable,' said my
master: 'he can do something. I don't want to make money of poor
Lame Jervas. So, as long as he is willing to work, he shall not be turned
out to starve.'--These were his very words; and when I heard them I
said in my heart, 'God bless him!' And, from that time forth, I could, as
I thought, have fought with the stoutest man in the mine that said a
word to his disparagement.
"Perhaps my feeling of attachment to him was the stronger, because he
was, I may say, the first person then in the world who had ever shown

me any tenderness, and the only one from whom I felt sure of meeting
with justice.
"About this time, as I was busied in the stable, unperceived by them, I
saw through a window a party of the miners, amongst whom were
several of my old associates, at work opposite to me. Suddenly, one of
them gave a shout--then all was hushed--they threw down their tools,
huddled together, and I judged by the keenness of their looks that they
knew they had made some valuable discovery. I further observed, that,
instead of beginning to work the vein, they covered it up immediately
with rubbish, and defaced the country with their pick-axes; so that, to
look at, no one could have suspected there was any load to be found
near. I also saw them secrete a lump of spar, in which they had reason
to guess there were Cornish diamonds, as they call them, and they
carefully hid the bits of _kellus_[Footnote: 2 Kellus is the miner's name
for a substance like a white soft stone, which lies above the floor or
spar, near to a vein.], which they had picked out, lest the viewer should
notice them and suspect the truth.
"From all this, the whispering that went on, and the pains they took to
chase or entice the overseer away from this spot, I conjectured they
meant to keep their discovery a secret, that they might turn it to their
own advantage.
"There was a passage out of the mine, known only to themselves, as
they thought, through which they intended to convey all the
newly-found ore. This passage, I should observe, led through an old
gallery in the mine, along the side of the mountain, immediately up to
the surface of the earth; so that you could by this way come in and out
of the mine without the assistance of the gin, by which people and ore
are usually let down or drawn up.
"I made myself sure of my facts by searching this passage, in which I
found plenty of their purloined treasure. I then went up to one of the
party, whose name was Clarke, and, drawing him aside, ventured to
expostulate with him. Clarke cursed me for a spy, and then knocked me
down, and returned to tell his associates what I had been saying, and
how he had served me. They one and all swore that they would be

revenged upon me, if I gave the least hint of what I had seen to our
master.
"From this time they watched me, whenever he came down amongst us,
lest I should have an opportunity of speaking to him; and they never, on
any account, would suffer me to go out of the mine. Under pretence
that the horses must be looked after, and that no one tended them so
well as I did, they contrived to keep me prisoner night and day; hinting
to me pretty plainly, that if I ever again complained of being thus shut
up, I should not long be buried alive.
"Whether they would have gone the lengths they threatened I know not:
perhaps they threw out these hints only with a design to intimidate me,
and so to preserve their secret. I confess I was alarmed; but there was
something in the thought of showing my good master how much I was
attached to his interests, that continually prevailed over my fears; and
my spirits rose with the reflection that I, a poor insignificant lad; I, that
was often the scoff and laughing-stock of the miners; I, that went by the
name of _Lame Jervas_; I, who they thought could be bullied to any
thing by their threats, might do a nobler action than any man amongst
them would have the courage to do in my place. Then the kindness of
my master, and the words he said about me to the viewer, came into my
memory; and I was so worked up, that I resolved, let the consequence
be what it might,
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