Lord Warwick in Lymington.
Hare's journals, Oct. 31,
Lady Waterford said, 'Now I must tell you the story. Somers
came to Highcliffe this year. I like having Somers for a cousin,
he is always so kind and pleasant, and tells me so many things
that are interesting. I felt it particularly this year, for he
was suffering so much from a piece of the railroad that had got
into his eye and he was in great pain, but he was just as
pleasant as ever. "Oh, love has sore eyes," he said,
but he would talk. The next day he insisted on going off to
Lymington to see Lord Warwick, who was there, and who had been
ill; and it was an immense drive, and when he came back, he did
not come down, and Pattinson said, "Lord Somers is come
back, but he is suffering so much pain from his eyes that he will
not be able to have any dinner." So I went up to sit with
him. He was suffering great pain, and I wanted him not to talk,
but he said, "Oh, no; I have got a story quite on my mind,
and I really must tell you." And he said that when he got to
Lymington, he found Lord Warwick ill in bed, and he said, "I
am so glad to see you, for I want to tell you such an odd thing
that has happened to me. Last night I was in bed and the room was
quite dark (this old-fashioned room of the inn at Lymington which
you now see). Suddenly at the foot of the bed there appeared a
great light, and in the midst of the light the figure of Death
just as it is seen in the Dance of Death and other old pictures -
a ghastly skeleton with a scythe and a dart: and Death balanced
the dart, and it flew past me, just above my shoulder, close to
my head, and it seemed to go into the wall; and then the light
went out and the figure vanished. I was as wide awake then as I
am now, for I pinched myself hard to see, and I lay awake for a
long time, but a last I fell asleep. When my servant came to call
me in the morning, he had a very scared expression of face, and
he said, 'A dreadful thing has happened in the night, and the
whole household of the inn is in the greatest confusion and
grief, for the landlady's daughter, who slept in the next room,
and the head of whose bed is against the wall against which your
head now rests, has been found dead in her bed.'