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قراءة كتاب Captain Ravenshaw Or The Maid of Cheapside. A Romance of Elizabethan London
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Captain Ravenshaw Or The Maid of Cheapside. A Romance of Elizabethan London
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LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
| PAGE | ||
| "There was exchange of thrust and parry" | ||
| (see page 333) | Frontispiece | |
| "'She led me but a short chase'" | 60 | |
| "'Sir, I thank you for what you did that | ||
| night'" | 128 | |
| "Bade his visitor be seated upon a stone bench, | ||
| and faced her sullenly" | 153 | |
| "One hand gesticulating, while the other | ||
| held his new-written manuscript" | 203 | |
| "Suddenly the narrow way before him became | ||
| blocked with human creatures" | 251 | |
| "There ... was the maid of Cheapside, pale | ||
| and bewildered" | 303 |
CAPTAIN RAVENSHAW.
CHAPTER I.
"Though my hard fate has thrust me out to servitude,
I tumbled into th' world a gentleman."—The Changeling.
It was long past curfew, yet Captain Ravenshaw still tarried in the front room of the Windmill tavern, in the Old Jewry. With him were some young gentlemen, at whose cost he had been drinking throughout the afternoon. For their bounty, he had paid with the satirical conversation for which he was famed, as well as with richly embellished anecdotes of his campaigns. Late in the evening, the company had been joined by a young gallant who had previously sent them, from another chamber, a quantity of Rhenish wine. This newcomer now ordered supper for the party, a proceeding at which the captain dissembled his long-deferred pleasure—for he had not eaten since the day before. Moreover, besides the prospect of supper, there was this to hold him at the tavern: he knew not where he should look for a bed, or shelter, upon leaving it. The uncertainty was a grave consideration upon so black and windy a night.
Master Vallance, the gentleman who had ordered supper, had listened to the last of Ravenshaw's brag with a rather scornful silence. But the other young men had been appreciative; it was their pose, or affectation, to be as wicked as any man might; hence they looked up to this celebrated bully as to a person from whom there was much to be learned, and in whom there was much to be imitated.
The group had been sitting before the wide fireplace. But as soon as the roast fowls were brought in, there was a movement to the long table in the middle of the room. The captain was gifted with active, striding legs and long, slashing arms. So he was first to be seated, and, as he leaned forward upon his elbows, he seemed to cover more than his share of the table. He had a broad, solid forehead, an assertive nose, a narrow but forward chin, gray eyes accustomed to flash with a devil-may-care defiance, a firm mouth inured to a curve of sardonic derision. His rebellious hair, down-turning moustaches, and pointed beard were of a dark brown hue. He was a man of good height; below the sword-belt, he was lank to the ground; above, he broadened out well for chest and shoulders. His voice was quick, vigorous, and not unpleasantly metallic. He was under thirty, but rough experience had hardened his visage to an older look. His jerkin, shirt, hose, shoes, and ruff also betokened much and severe usage.
Master Vallance, in spotless velvet doublet and breeches, and perfectly clean silk stockings, looked at him with contemptuous dislike.
"Take heed you scorch not the capon with your nose, roaring Ravenshaw," said the youth, quietly.
It was not Ravenshaw's habit to resent allusions to his character as a "roaring boy;" indeed he encouraged the popular idea which saddled him with that title, at that time applied to bullies of the taverns. But some circumstance of the moment,

