Roger Willoughby 
A Story of the Times of Benbow 
by W.H.G. Kingston 
CHAPTER ONE. 
"Hillo, Roger! glad to find you at last. I have been hunting up and down 
along the cliffs for the last hour or more, till I began to fear that you 
must have been carried off by a Barbary corsair, or spirited away on the 
end of Mother Shipton's broomstick." 
The speaker was a fine-looking lad of sixteen, dressed in the costume 
worn by Puritans in the time of the second Charles--a long cloth coat of 
unobtrusive hue, knee-breeches, high-heeled shoes with large buckles, 
a thick neckcloth tied in a bow, and a high-crowned, broad-brimmed 
hat; but the brim of the lad's hat was looped up on one side by a rosette 
of silver lace, his shoe-buckles were of massive silver, his neckcloth 
was of silk, and his coat of fine cloth, betokening that he was of the 
rank of a gentleman, and that, if a Puritan, he had taken no small pains 
to set his person off to the best advantage. 
"Faith! I had no idea that I had been so long hidden away in my cosy 
nook, and if you had not ferreted me out, Stephen, I should likely 
enough have lain perdu for another hour or more," answered Roger, a 
sturdy blue-eyed boy, apparently a year or two younger than Stephen 
Battiscombe, and of the same station in life; but his dress, though of 
gayer colours and less precise cut than that of his friend, was somewhat 
threadbare, and put on as if he had not troubled himself much about the 
matter. "See, I have been studying the art of navigation, and begin to 
hope that I shall be able to sail a ship through distant seas as well as 
Drake or Cavendish, or Sir Martin Frobisher, or Sir Richard Grenville, 
or the great Christopher Columbus himself,--ay, and maybe to imitate 
their gallant deeds," he continued, holding up a small well-thumbed
volume. "I have not made as much progress this morning as I expected 
to do, for I have ever and anon been watching yonder fine ship, which 
has long been in sight, striving to beat down Channel against this light 
westerly breeze, but for some time past she has made no progress, or 
rather has been drifting back to the eastward." 
"It seems to me that she is standing in this way," observed Stephen, 
shading his eyes with his hand from the noonday sun. "Certes, she is a 
goodly craft, and light as is the wind slips swiftly through the water." 
"Would that I were on board of her!" exclaimed Roger. "She is 
doubtless bound out to some of those strange lands of which I have 
read in Master Purchas Pilgrims, and many another book of voyages. 
How I long to visit those regions, and to behold with mine own eyes 
the wonderful sights they present!" 
"Many, you should understand, are mere travellers' tales--lying fables-- 
such as Sir John de Mandeville would make us believe about monsters, 
half man and half beast, and people walking about with their heads 
under their arms, and cities of marble, the windows of precious stones, 
and the streets paved with gold, and such like extravagances," observed 
Stephen. "I much doubt also whether your father will readily accede to 
your wishes. Think how he would grieve should any of the many 
mishaps befall you which so often overtake those who voyage on the 
treacherous ocean." 
"My father knows that I must seek my fortune in some calling or other, 
and he would be well pleased were I to come back with a goodly store 
of the gold of Golconda to restore the impoverished fortunes of our 
house," answered Roger, still looking eagerly towards the approaching 
ship. 
"Day-dreams, my friend, day-dreams,--natural enough, but very 
unlikely to come true," said Stephen in a somewhat sententious tone, 
such as he considered became one of his mature years. If the truth were 
to have been known, however, Master Stephen Battiscombe was apt to 
indulge in day-dreams himself, though of a different character--a 
judge's wig and robes, or even a seat on the Woolsack, were not beyond
his aspirations. He now added, "But we must stop talking here longer. 
See, the sun is already at his height in the heavens; an we delay the 
Colonel and Madam Pauline will be justly chiding us for being late to 
dinner." 
"I am ready," answered Roger, still, however, lingering and watching 
the ship in the offing. "But tell me, what cause brought you to Eversden 
this morning?" 
"I came over to ask you to return with me to Langton, that you might 
join us in making war on the young rooks, which have increased too 
greatly in our woods of late. Not finding you, I would fain,    
    
		
	
	
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