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- 1302
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- 2026-01-30T20:48:05.590Z
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- structure-extraction-lambda
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- 1206
- text
- CHAPTER V.
ISRAEL IN THE LION’S DEN.
Harassed day and night, hunted from food and sleep, driven from hole to
hole like a fox in the woods, with no chance to earn an hour’s wages,
he was at last advised by one whose sincerity he could not doubt, to
apply, on the good word of Sir John Millet, for a berth as laborer in
the King’s Gardens at Kew. There, it was said, he would be entirely
safe, as no soldier durst approach those premises to molest any soul
therein employed. It struck the poor exile as curious, that the very
den of the British lion, the private grounds of the British King,
should be commended to a refugee as his securest asylum.
His nativity carefully concealed, and being personally introduced to
the chief gardener by one who well knew him; armed, too, with a line
from Sir John, and recommended by his introducer as uncommonly expert
at horticulture; Israel was soon installed as keeper of certain less
private plants and walks of the park.
It was here, to one of his near country retreats, that, coming from
perplexities of state—leaving far behind him the dingy old bricks of
St. James—George the Third was wont to walk up and down beneath the
long arbors formed by the interlockings of lofty trees.
More than once, raking the gravel, Israel through intervening foliage
would catch peeps in some private but parallel walk, of that lonely
figure, not more shadowy with overhanging leaves than with the shade of
royal meditations.
Unauthorized and abhorrent thoughts will sometimes invade the best
human heart. Seeing the monarch unguarded before him; remembering that
the war was imputed more to the self-will of the King than to the
willingness of parliament or the nation; and calling to mind all his
own sufferings growing out of that war, with all the calamities of his
country; dim impulses, such as those to which the regicide Ravaillae
yielded, would shoot balefully across the soul of the exile. But
thrusting Satan behind him, Israel vanquished all such temptations. Nor
did these ever more disturb him, after his one chance conversation with
the monarch.
As he was one day gravelling a little by-walk, wrapped in thought, the
King turning a clump of bushes, suddenly brushed Israel’s person.
Immediately Israel touched his hat—but did not remove it—bowed, and was
retiring; when something in his air arrested the King’s attention.
“You ain’t an Englishman,—no Englishman—no, no.”
Pale as death, Israel tried to answer something; but knowing not what
to say, stood frozen to the ground.
“You are a Yankee—a Yankee,” said the King again in his rapid and
half-stammering way.
Again Israel assayed to reply, but could not. What could he say? Could
he lie to a King?
“Yes, yes,—you are one of that stubborn race,—that very stubborn race.
What brought you here?”
“The fate of war, sir.”
“May it please your Majesty,” said a low cringing voice, approaching,
“this man is in the walk against orders. There is some mistake, may it
please your Majesty. Quit the walk, blockhead,” he hissed at Israel.
It was one of the junior gardeners who thus spoke. It seems that Israel
had mistaken his directions that morning.
“Slink, you dog,” hissed the gardener again to Israel; then aloud to
the King, “A mistake of the man, I assure your Majesty.”
“Go you away—away with ye, and leave him with me,” said the king.
Waiting a moment, till the man was out of hearing, the king again
turned upon Israel.
“Were you at Bunker Hill?—that bloody Bunker Hill—eh, eh?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Fought like a devil—like a very devil, I suppose?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Helped flog—helped flog my soldiers?”
“Yes, sir; but very sorry to do it.”
“Eh?—eh?—how’s that?”
“I took it to be my sad duty, sir.”
“Very much mistaken—very much mistaken, indeed. Why do ye sir me?—eh?
I’m your king—your king.”
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