Michigan director recalls moment he told Sherrone Moore he was fired… causing meltdown that led to arrest
By OLIVER SALT, US ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR
Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel says the decision to fire Sherrone Moore was an ‘easy’ one despite expressing sympathy over the turmoil in his personal life.
Married father-of-three Moore, 39, lost his job as head coach of the Michigan Wolverines due to an ‘inappropriate relationship’ with a staffer before being arrested over an alleged assault in the space of a dramatic few hours earlier this month.
The disgraced football coach was charged with breaking and entering, home invasion and stalking after entering a woman’s apartment, confronting her and threatening to kill himself, before spending two nights in jail.
He was eventually granted a $25,000 bond and released. If convicted on all counts, Moore, who has pleaded not guilty, could face up to six years behind bars.
Michigan has already moved on after firing him, with the Wolverines unveiling Kyle Whittingham as their new head coach at the weekend.
And after hiring Whittingham from Utah, Manuel has opened up on the moment he parted company with Moore – which preceded his shocking arrest later that day.

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Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel says the decision to fire Sherrone Moore was ‘easy’

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Moore was fired as Michigan football head coach and arrested over an alleged assault hours later earlier this month
Read More
Five women claim Sherrone Moore made unwanted advances amid Michigan affair scandal and arrest
‘Listen man, it’s hard,’ the Michigan director admitted, via Detroit Free Press. ‘It’s hard when you have a colleague that is going through something personally, professionally, in his family and [knowing the] people and impact that it has on so many staff, student-athletes and the Michigan community.
‘Personally, I’ve known him for seven or eight years, so it was difficult to see him, as a person, go through what he went through.
‘But professionally, it was an easy decision to make because of the expectations that we have for everyone on our side.’
After Moore’s firing and alleged assault, Michigan brought in an outside law firm to review both the situation involving their former football coach and the athletic department at large, which Manuel says was partly his idea.
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‘There’s not much I can say. There’s an investigation continuing into coach Moore, there’s a cultural evaluation around the department and so we will we obviously know some facts,’ he explained.
‘There’s some things that are out there that I can’t comment on, that are untrue, and there may be some things that they find, but that’s why we do an investigation, and I’m very open to that. Wanted the cultural analysis to be done to help us get better.
‘I asked the President to help with a cultural analysis and have somebody come in. So yes, I am very supportive of that, because as a leader, I face reality. There are things that happen. I don’t step away from it. Never have, never will. So we need to get better, and that’s part of is getting somebody to come in and to assess.’

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The 39-year-old has three kids with wife Kelli (left), who appears to be standing by him

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Manuel (pictured) did express sympathy over the current turmoil in Moore’s personal life
Police records show the alleged assault took place at the home of Moore’s executive assistant Paige Shiver, hours after Michigan had fired him over the ‘inappropriate relationship’ with a fellow member of staff – who is still yet to be officially named.
According to police dispatch audio obtained by Daily Mail, an unidentified 911 caller claimed he assaulted her on Wednesday, adding that he had a knife and had been stalking her ‘for months.’ A dispatcher was later heard saying that the suspect was described by his wife Kelli as ‘suicidal’ after losing his job earlier in the day.
Pittsfield, Michigan police and Washtenaw County prosecutors alleged the uninvited Moore was unarmed when he entered an unlocked door before allegedly grabbing two butter knives and a pair of scissors while threatening to harm himself.
‘I’m going to kill myself,’ he told the alleged victim, as quoted by assistant prosecutor Kati Rezmierski on Friday. ‘I’m going to make you watch. My blood is on your hands. You ruined my life.’
Rezmierski said Moore and the woman had been engaged in an ‘intimate relationship’ for a number of years. Magistrate Odetalla M. Odetalla forbid the court from identifying the alleged victim, but the 911 call that led to his arrest was made from an apartment belonging to Shiver.
I ‘stormed’ Area 51 and it was even weirder than I imagined
This article is more than 6 years old
No one had any idea what to expect of a plan for people to meet in Rachel, Nevada, to see for themselves if the government was hiding aliens
In the middle of the Nevadan desert, outside a secretive US military airstrip, I found the worldโs strangest social media convention.
Dozens of young, good-looking, often costumed people were running around filming each other with semi-professional video rigs. They were YouTube and Instagram stars โ or, more often, aspiring stars โ here to โstormโ Area 51 for the benefit of their followers and free the aliens held captive within. Or at least film themselves talking about it.
Joining them was a ragged army of hundreds of stoners, UFO buffs, punk bands, rubberneckers, European tourists, people with way too much time on their hands, and meme-lords in Pepe the Frog costumes โ all here because of the Internet, the ironic and the earnest alike, for a party at the end of the earth.
Three months earlier, on 20 June 2019, the podcaster Joe Rogan released an interview with Bob Lazar. Lazar is a cult figure in UFO circles; he claims to have studied flying saucers at Area 51, the classified air force base in Nevada where the US government is rumored โ by some โ to make secret contact with extraterrestrial beings.
Roganโs millions of listeners heard the interview.

One of those listeners was Matty Roberts, a college student, anime enthusiast and video gamer in Bakersfield, California. Inspired by the Rogan podcast, Roberts created a joke Facebook event: โStorm Area 51, They Canโt Stop All of Us.โ According to the plan, people would meet in Rachel, Nevada โ the closest town to Area 51 โ in the early morning of 20 September, then swarm the defenses and see for themselves if the government was hiding aliens.
Things snowballed. Within hours, the page had thousands of RSVPs. Within days it had more than a million. The air force warned that things would end badly for anyone attempting a raid. The FBI paid the hapless Matty Roberts a house call.
So he came up with a brilliant pivot: why not channel this momentum into a Burning Man-style music festival in the desert? He joined forces with Connie West, the operator of Rachelโs sole inn and restaurant, to plan what they called Alienstock.
Then came the first schism. Scornful of the internet interlopers, the Alien Research Center in nearby Hiko, Nevada, decided to host its own Area 51 event the same weekend โ for serious ufologists.
Roberts and West pressed on. But the town of Rachel (population: 54) lacked the infrastructure to handle thousands of conspiracy theorists and gawkers descending on rural Nevada. The local authorities feared potential calamity: people dying of dehydration in the desert, angry landowners, madmen with guns.
Things snowballed. Within hours, the page had thousands of RSVPs. Within days it had more than a million.
On 10 September, nine days before the event, Roberts backed out. He wanted no involvement in a โFyre Fest 2.0โ, he told the media. He accused West of being insufficiently prepared for the coming flood. Budweiser offered to sponsor a free, alternative Alienstock event in a โsafe, cleanโ venue in downtown Las Vegas. Roberts urged people to go there instead.
West refused to cancel the concert in the desert. Sheโd already sunk thousands of dollars of her own money into the event, she told reporters as she held back tears. Alienstock would happen, she said, whether anyone liked it or not.
Now there were three rival events all happening on the same weekend โ one in Las Vegas, another in Rachel and a third in Hiko. No one had any idea how many people were coming.
I came equipped with a duffel bag of Hawaiian shirts and a case of vape cartridges, which I hoped to use as currency in the event of civilizational collapse in the desert.
But the desert would wait. The โArea 51 Celebrationโ in downtown Las Vegas did not get off to a promising start. When I arrived, shortly after 7pm, the outdoor venue โ heavily bedecked with glowing neon alien signage โ was mostly empty except for cops and local newscasters. A DJ blasted dubstep to a bare dancefloor. The venue even had a swimming pool, bathed in green light and watched by a bored-looking lifeguard.

I feared it might be a long night. I ordered a whiskey-and-water; the bartender filled a plastic stadium cup to the brim.
Then people started trickling in. Everyone was wearing their best alien-themed rave attire: one woman wore a shiny, and discomfitingly rubbery, head-to-toe alien costume. Another had a Rick-and-Morty-patterned dress. Three men tore up the dancefloor in matching alien-motif onesies. Someone carried a sign that said GREEN LIVES MATTER.
I talked to two people whoโd driven six hours from Tucson, Arizona, on a whim to attend. One was wearing a Flat Earth Society T-shirt, though he said it was ironic.
I spied Matty Roberts in the center of a swirling mass of people, holding court. He was wearing a Slayer hat and black T-shirt; his long, dark hair flowed majestically down his back. He looked like a heavy metal-listening, Mountain Dew-drinking samurai lord, surrounded by courtiers and supplicants. I fought my way over.
He was in high spirits. โIโm absolutely amazed at how things turned out, and itโs incredible,โ he told me as he signed autographs. I opened my mouth to ask a follow-up question but he was swallowed up again by the crowd.
By around 9pm, there were a couple hundred people jerking spasmodically to dubstep.
A woman who introduced herself as Shereel (โC-H-E-R-Y-Lโ) said she was happy to be at the rave but disappointed she couldnโt make the event in the desert.
โThis is the first time since Roswell that people like us are all coming together,โ she said. โEven if nothing happens, we tried.โ
The DJ interrupted his set to thank Matty Roberts and give a โspecial shout-outโ to Bob Lazar. The crowd cheered.
A warm wind was whipping through the arena. As the wind buffeted us and the rave lights flickered overhead, you could almost believe a UFO really was about to descend.

The next morning I got in my rental car and headed north.
The outskirts of Las Vegas โ casinos, strip clubs, endless billboards for personal injury lawyers โ dropped away rapidly. Now there was just desert in every direction, stunning in its vastness and austere beauty. Mountains towered over the highway, surrounded by hilly plains of cacti and scrub.
Soon most human settlement was gone. There was nothing alongside the highway โ no strip malls, no fast food joints, and, I noticed, worryingly few gas stations. I had at least two hours of driving ahead, though I knew I was going in the right direction: every vehicle I saw was a police car, an RV or a news satellite van.
As I drove I listened to rightwing talk radio, then Top 40, then country, then a Bible discussion call-in show, then some Spanish-language stations, then static. A talk station interviewed the mother of a police officer killed by an undocumented immigrant. Sean Hannity made fun of the climate strike, and every talkshow discussed the New York Timesโ recent, partly retracted accusation against Brett Kavanaugh. It was, they pointed out, yet another sign of bias in the liberal media.
Soon most human settlement was gone. There wasnโt even anything alongside the highway.
The first gas station was bustling with people buying water and jerry cans of gas. In the parking lot there was a camper van marked โAREA 51 โ HERE WE COMEโ.
Finally, two hours north of Las Vegas, I saw the exit for State Route 375 โ also known, since its formal renaming in 1996, as Extraterrestrial Highway.
The US government owns thousands of square miles of land in northern Nevada. The area is big enough, and empty enough, to detonate a nuclear bomb โ which the government has, on hundreds of occasions.
The โGroom Lake airfieldโ โ Area 51 โ is part of a massive complex of military installations. Their activities are classified and the skies above are restricted air space. Little is known about what goes on there, though the air force tests experimental stealth aircraft, which may account for some UFO sightings.
Of course, military pilots are themselves known to report seeing what they refer to as โunexplained aerial phenomenaโ. (Even the New York Times has reported on it.)
In the 2000s, Congress established an โadvanced aviation threat identification programโ to study the problem. The program wasnโt classified, but it โoperated with the knowledge of an extremely limited number of officialsโ, according to Politico. The then Nevada senator Harry Reid helped secure the funding.
Thatโs the end of the history lesson. The reader is free to investigate further and come to their own conclusions.
On the way to Rachel, I stopped at the rival festival at the Alien Research Center in Hiko. It was heavy on souvenir sellers, though there were some hardcore ufologists. A group called the Mutual UFO Network (Mufon) gave me a pamphlet offering certification to be a โfield investigatorโ.

If anything, the ufologists were more the exception than the rule. I had expected most Area 51 Stormers to be conspiracy theorists, 4chan types, or people on the fringe political spectrum, but a lot โ probably most โ were normies on a lark, or foreigners in search of peak Americana.
Two young men โ one Swiss German, the other Japanese โ told me they were friends whoโd met at an English as a second language program in New York. A group of Britons told me theyโd been taking a road trip up the west coast, heard about the Area 51 business, and decided to take a detour.
This was a common theme: โWell, Iโd been thinking about taking a road trip anyway, soooโฆโ
When my car turned the last switchback into the valley toward Area 51, the car radio, theretofore static, suddenly started blasting Smetanaโs Mรก Vlast in eerie, crystal-perfect sound. The aliens, it seemed, were classical music buffs.
Rachel came into view โ a tiny, one-horse town besieged by cars and tents and camper vans. Including the cops, EMTs, festival organizers, and so on, there looked to be a couple thousand people โ not the two million who had RSVPโd to the Facebook event, nor the 30,000 the sheriff feared, but more than I thought would follow through.
Contrary to the wild warnings about a Fyre festival 2.0, things appeared mostly under control. Festival marshals waved me along to an assigned lot.
My neighbors at the parking lot-slash-campsite were a punk band called Foreign Life Form. They werenโt part of the planned music lineup, one Life Form explained as he ate Chef Boyardee room-temperature from a can, but when they heard about Alienstock, it seemed like fate. They were trying to find the concert organizer to get added to the billing. To help seal the deal theyโd painted their faces and arms green.

My other neighbor, an erudite, joint-smoking history podcaster from Oregon, wore a T-shirt that said โTake me to your dealerโ. He and his son had had the shirts custom-made; the Life Forms were disappointed they couldnโt buy some.
Getting to the actual entrance to Area 51 took another 20 minutes of driving on an unmarked, unpaved road. Clouds of chalk billowed behind the cars coming and going.
At the end of the road was a drab military checkpoint flanked by concertina wire and threatening signs. The sign prohibiting photography was clearly a dead letter.
Rotating shifts of law enforcement officers of every variety โ sheriffโs deputies, state troopers, game wardens, park rangers โ kept a watchful eye on everything. They seemed relaxed, though, and looked like they were having as good a time as the ostensible Stormers. After all, this was an excuse for them to hang out at Area 51, too.
(To my knowledge, no one actually raided Area 51, besides the two Dutch YouTubers who had tried to sneak through the perimeter two weeks earlier and ended up in jail instead.)
In addition to YouTube vloggers and Instagram influencers, there were more than a few actual journalists. Watching them scurry around diligently with tape recorders reminded me that I needed to find a Quirky Character who could give On-Scene Color. A talkative UFO buff would be ideal but the other journalists had already claimed most of the good ones.
I couldnโt avoid noticing a pair of men in huge, papier-mache Pepe the Frog heads. The vloggers loved them, and the Pepes enjoyed mugging for the cameras. โMy God,โ a girl said, โtheyโre adorable.โ
Under their frog heads, the Pepes were two young Latino guys from California. When I asked them what they thought of the frogโs association with the alt-right, one seemed confused. The other nodded in recognition but claimed he just thought the symbol was fun.
He said, โItโs all about the โโ
โMemes,โ finished the other. They both laughed.

I asked if it wasnโt weird for them, as Latinos, to embrace a symbol affiliated with white nationalists.
โYeah, I mean, theyโre a little, like, extreme for me sometimes,โ one said. โBut sometimes you feel like theyโre right about some stuff.โ
I said, โLike what?โ
โLike clown world.โ
โWhat?โ
โClown world.โ
โWhat?โ
โLike the idea that weโre all living in a world of clowns,โ he clarified.
Tendrils of fog hung over Alienstock. The temperature was dropping fast and the sun was low and pink in the sky. The sunset was sublime but I had a long drive to my motel ahead and a sick feeling that I should have left half an hour ago.
I bade farewell to the history podcaster. He reminded me that the area was open grazing land. โWatch out for the steer,โ he said. โThey go right out into the road.โ
The next morning I debated whether to squeeze in another trip out to Alienstock and couldnโt quite find the willpower. It was time to get back to civilization, I decided. Or at least Las Vegas.
I stopped at the gas station in Alamo, near Rachel. The town felt hungover, and it still had a day to go. Most of the locals seemed unsure quite how to feel about the whole thing. It was a boon to the local economy, yes, but also a financial disaster for the county government. There were rumors that the district attorney was planning to sue Connie West, or Matty Roberts, or even Facebook.
Most, though, just seemed excited at the idea that their corner of the world might become something bigger than a gas stop on the way elsewhere.
Everyone vowed that next year, theyโd be ready.
An incredible self-own
In 1936, John Scott, son of the late Guardian owner and legendary editor CP Scott, did something unheard of for a media heir: he gave up his stake for the greater good.
After inheriting the newspaper, Scott renounced all financial benefit โ bar his salary โ in the Guardian (worth ยฃ1m at the time and around ยฃ62m today) and passed ownership over to the newly formed Scott Trust. The Trust would evolve to have one key mission: to secure the financial and editorial independence of the Guardian in perpetuity.
That means the Guardian canโt be bought. Not by private equity, not by a conglomerate, and definitely not by a billionaire looking for a political mouthpiece.
Our independence means we can say what we want, report on who we want, challenge who we want, and stand up at a time when others are sitting down.
But this unique model also means we depend on readers like you from Vietnam to help fund our work. If you would rather the news you read was the result of decisions made by journalists and editors, not shareholders or ultra-wealthy tech bros, then, well, you know what to do:
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Book 5 Chapter 10
Mowbray was in a state of great excitement. It was Saturday evening: the mills were closed; the news had arrived of the arrest of the Delegate.
โHereโs a go!โ said Dandy Mick to Devilsdust. โWhat do you think of this?โ
โItโs the beginning of the end,โ said Devilsdust.
โThe deuce!โ said the Dandy, who did not clearly comprehend the bent of the observation of his much pondering and philosophic friend, but was touched by its oracular terseness.
โWe must see Warner.โ said Devilsdust, โand call a meeting of the people on the Moor for to-morrow evening. I will draw up some resolutions. We must speak out; we must terrify the Capitalists.โ
โI am all for a strike,โ said Mick.
โโTisnโt ripe,โ said Devilsdust.
โBut thatโs what you always say, Dusty,โ said Mick.
โI watch events,โ said Devilsdust. โIf you want to be a leader of the people you must learn to watch events.โ
โBut what do you mean by watching events?โ
โDo you see Mother Careyโs stall?โ said Dusty, pointing in the direction of the counter of the good-natured widow.
โI should think I did; and whatโs more, Julia owes her a tick for herrings.โ
โRight,โ said Devilsdust: โand nothing but herrings are to be seen on her board. Two years ago it was meat.โ
โI twig,โ said Mick.
โWait till itโs wegetables; when the people canโt buy even fish. Then we will talk about strikes. Thatโs what I call watching events.โ
Julia, Caroline, and Harriet came up to them.
โMick,โ said Julia, โwe want to go to the Temple.โ
โI wish you may get it,โ said Mick shaking his head. โWhen you have learnt to watch events, Julia, you will understand that under present circumstances the Temple is no go.โ
โAnd why so, Dandy?โ said Julia.
โDo you see Mother Careyโs stall?โ said Mick, pointing in that direction. โWhen thereโs a tick at Madam Careyโs there is no tin for Chaffing Jack. Thatโs what I call watching events.โ
โOh! as for the tin,โ said Caroline, โin these half-time days thatโs quite out of fashion. But they do say itโs the last night at the Temple, for Chaffing Jack means to shut up, it does not pay any longer; and we want a lark. Iโll stand treat; Iโll put my earrings up the spoutโthey must go at last, and I would sooner at any time go to my uncleโs for frolic than woe.โ
โI am sure I should like very much to go to the Temple if any one would pay for me,โ said Harriet, โbut I wonโt pawn nothing.โ
โIf we only pay and hear them sing,โ said Julia in a coaxing tone.
โVery like,โ said Mick; โthereโs nothing that makes one so thirsty as listening to a song, particularly if it touches the feelings. Donโt you remember, Dusty, when we used to encore that German fellow in โScots wha ha.โ We always had it five times. Hang me if I wasnโt blind drunk at the end of it.โ
โI tell you what, young ladies,โ said Devilsdust, looking very solemn, โyouโre dancing on a volcano.โ
โOh! my,โ said Caroline. โI am sure I wish we were; though what you mean exactly I donโt quite know.โ
โI mean that we shall all soon be slaves,โ said Devilsdust.
โNot if we get the Ten-Hour Bill,โ said Harriet.
โAnd no cleaning of machinery in meal time,โ said Julia; โthat is a shame.โ
โYou donโt know what you are talking about,โ said Devilsdust. โI tell you, if the Capitalists put down Gerard weโre done for another ten years, and by that time we shall be all used up.โ
โLor! Dusty, you quite terrify one,โ said Caroline.
โItโs a true bill though. Instead of going to the Temple we must meet on the Moor, and in as great numbers as possible. Go you and get all your sweethearts. I must see your father, Harriet; he must preside. We will have the hymn of Labour sung by a hundred thousand voices in chorus. It will strike terror into the hearts of the Capitalists. This is what we must all be thinking of if we wish Labour to have a chance, not of going to Chaffing Jackโs and listening to silly songs. Dโye understand?โ
โDonโt we!โ said Caroline; โand for my part for a summer eve I prefer Mowbray Moor to all the Temples in the world, particularly if itโs a sociable party and we have some good singing.โ
This evening it was settled among the principal champions of the cause of Labour, among whom Devilsdust was now included, that on the morrow there should be a monster meeting on the Moor to take into consideration the arrest of the delegate of Mowbray. Such was the complete organisation of this district that by communicating with the various lodges of the Trades Unions fifty thousand persons, or even double that number, could within four-and-twenty hours on a great occasion and on a favourable day be brought into the field. The morrow being a day of rest was favourable, and the seizure of their cherished delegate was a stimulating cause. The excitement was great, the enthusiasm earnest and deep. There was enough distress to make people discontented without depressing them. And Devilsdust after attending a council of the Union, retired to rest and dreamed of strong speeches and spicy resolutions, bands and banners, the cheers of assembled thousands, and the eventual triumph of the sacred rights.
The post of the next morning brought great and stirring news to Mowbray. Gerard had undergone his examination at Bow Street. It was a long and laborious one; he was committed for trial for a seditious conspiracy, but he was held to bail. The bail demanded was heavy; but it was prepared and instantly proffered. His sureties were Morley and a Mr Hatton. By this post Morley wrote to his friends, apprising them that both Gerard and himself intended to leave London instantly, and that they might be expected to arrive at Mowbray by the evening train.
The monster meeting of the Moor it was instantly resolved should be converted into a triumphant procession, or rather be preceded by one. Messengers on horseback were sent to all the neighbouring towns to announce the great event. Every artisan felt as a Moslemin summoned by the sacred standard. All went forth with their wives and their children to hail the return of the patriot and the martyr. The Trades of Mowbray mustered early in the morning, and in various processions took possession of all the churches. Their great pride was entirely to fill the church of Mr St Lys, who not daunted by their demonstration, and seizing the offered opportunity, suppressed the sermon with which he had supplied himself and preached to them an extemporary discourse on โFear God and honour the King.โ In the dissenting chapels thanksgivings were publicly offered that bail had been accepted for Walter Gerard. After the evening service, which the Unions again attended, they formed in the High Street and lined it with their ranks and banners. Every half hour a procession arrived from some neighbouring town with its music and streaming flags. Each was received by Warner or some other member of the managing committee, who assigned to them their appointed position, which they took up without confusion, nor was the general order for a moment disturbed. Sometimes a large party arrived without music or banners, but singing psalms and headed by their minister; sometimes the children walked together, the women following, then the men each with a ribbon of the same colour in his hat: all hurried, yet spontaneous and certain, indications how mankind under the influence of high and earnest feelings recur instantly to ceremony and form; how when the imagination is excited it appeals to the imagination, and requires for its expression something beyond the routine of daily life.
It was arranged that the moment the train arrived and the presence of Gerard was ascertained, the Trade in position nearest to the station should commence the hymn of Labour, which was instantly to be taken up by its neighbour, and so on in succession, so that by an almost electrical agency the whole population should almost simultaneously be assured of his arrival.
At half past six oโclock the bell announced that the train was in sight; a few minutes afterwards Dandy Mick hurried up to the leader of the nearest Trade, spoke a few words, and instantly the signal was given and the hymn commenced. It was taken up as the steeples of a great city in the silence of the night take up the new hour that has just arrived; one by one the mighty voices rose till they all blended in one vast waving sea of sound. Warner and some others welcomed Gerard and Morley, and ushered them, totally unprepared for such a reception, to an open carriage drawn by four white horses that was awaiting them. Orders were given that there was to be no cheering or any irregular clamour. Alone was heard the hymn. As the carriage passed each Trade, they followed and formed in procession behind it; thus all had the opportunity of beholding their chosen chief, and he the proud consolation of looking on the multitude who thus enthusiastically recognised the sovereignty of his services.
The interminable population, the mighty melody, the incredible order, the simple yet awful solemnity, this representation of the great cause to which she was devoted under an aspect that at once satisfied the reason, captivated the imagination, and elevated the heartโher admiration of her father, thus ratified as it were by the sympathy of a nationโadded to all the recent passages of her life teeming with such strange and trying interest, overcame Sybil. The tears fell down her cheek as the carriage bore away her father, while she remained under the care of one unknown to the people of Mowbray, but who had accompanied her from London,โthis was Hatton.
The last light of the sun was shed over the Moor when Gerard reached it, and the Druidsโ altar and its surrounding crags were burnished with its beam.
Book 5 Chapter 11
It was the night following the day after the return of Gerard to Mowbray. Morley, who had lent to him and Sybil his cottage in the dale, was at the office of his newspaper, the Mowbray Phalanx, where he now resided. He was alone in his room writing, occasionally rising from his seat and pacing the chamber, when some one knocked at his door. Receiving a permission to come in, there entered Hatton.
โI fear I am disturbing an article,โ said the guest.
โBy no means: the day of labour is not at hand. I am very pleased to see you.โ
โMy quarters are not very inviting,โ continued Hatton. โIt is remarkable what bad accommodation you find in these great trading towns. I should have thought that the mercantile traveller had been a comfortable animalโnot to say a luxurious; but I find everything mean and third-rate. The wine execrable. So I thought I would come and bestow my tediousness on you. โTis hardly fair.โ
โYou could not have pleased me better. I was, rather from distraction than from exigency, throwing some thoughts on paper. But the voice of yesterday still lingers in my ear.โ
โWhat a spectacle!โ
โYes; you see what a multitude presents who have recognised the predominance of Moral Power,โ said Morley. โThe spectacle was august; but the results to which such a public mind must lead are sublime.โ
โIt must have been deeply gratifying to our friend,โ said Hatton.
โIt will support him in his career,โ said Morley.
โAnd console him in his prison,โ added Hatton.
โYou think that it will come to that?โ said Morley inquiringly.
โIt has that aspect; but appearances change.โ
โWhat should change them?โ
โTime and accident, which change everything.โ
โTime will bring the York Assizes,โ said Morley musingly; โand as for accident I confess the future seems to me dreary. What can happen for Gerard?โ
โHe might win his writ of right,โ said Hatton demurely, stretching out his legs and leaning back in his chair. โThat also may be tried at the York Assizes.โ
โHis writ of right! I thought that was a feintโa mere affair of tactics to keep the chance of the field.โ
โI believe the field may be won,โ said Hatton very composedly.
โWon!โ
โAy! the castle and manor of Mowbray and half the lordships round, to say nothing of this good town. The people are prepared to be his subjects; he must give up equality and be content with being a popular sovereign.โ
โYou jest my friend.โ
โThen I speak truth in jest; sometimes, you know, the case.โ
โWhat mean you?โ said Morley rising and approaching Hatton; โfor though I have often observed you like a biting phrase, you never speak idly. Tell me what you mean.โ
โI mean,โ said Hatton, looking Morley earnestly in the face and speaking with great gravity, โthat the documents are in existence which prove the title of Walter Gerard to the proprietorship of this great district; that I know where the documents are to be found; and that it requires nothing but a resolution equal to the occasion to secure them.โ
โShould that be wanting?โ said Morley.
โI should think not,โ said Hatton. โIt would belie our nature to believe so.โ
โAnd where are these documents?โ
โIn the muniment room of Mowbray castle.โ
โHah!โ exclaimed Morley in a prolonged tone.
โKept closely by one who knows their value, for they are the title deeds not of his right but of his confusion.โ
โAnd how can we obtain them?โ
โBy means more honest than those they were acquired by.โ
โThey are not obvious.โ
โTwo hundred thousand human beings yesterday acknowledged the supremacy of Gerard,โ said Hatton. โSuppose they had known that within the walls of Mowbray Castle were contained the proofs that Walter Gerard was the lawful possessor of the lands on which they live; I say suppose that had been the case. Do you think they would have contented themselves with singing psalms? What would have become of moral power then? They would have taken Mowbray Castle by storm; they would have sacked and gutted it; they would have appointed a chosen band to rifle the round tower; they would have taken care that every document in it, especially an iron chest painted blue and blazoned with the shield of Valence, should have been delivered to you, to me, to any one that Gerard appointed for the office. And what could be the remedy of the Earl de Mowbray? He could scarcely bring an action against the hundred for the destruction of the castle, which we would prove was not his own. And the most he could do would be to transport some poor wretches who had got drunk in his plundered cellars and then set fire to his golden saloons.โ
โYou amaze me,โ said Morley, looking with an astonished expression on the person who had just delivered himself of these suggestive details with the same coolness and arid accuracy that he would have entered into the details of a pedigree.
โโTis a practical view of the case,โ remarked Mr Hatton.
Morley paced the chamber disturbed; Hatton remained silent and watched him with a scrutinizing eye.
โAre you certain of your facts?โ at length said Morley abruptly stopping.
โQuite so; Lord de Mowbray informed me of the circumstances himself before I left London, and I came down here in consequence.โ
โYou know him?โ
โNo one better.โ
โAnd these documentsโsome of them I suppose,โ said Morley with a cynical look, โwere once in your own possession then?โ
โPossibly. Would they were now! But it is a great thing to know where they may be found.โ
โThen they once were the property of Gerard?โ
โHardly that. They were gained by my own pains, and often paid for with my own purse. Claimed by no one, I parted with them to a person to whom they were valuable. It is not merely to serve Gerard that I want them now, though I would willingly serve him. I have need of some of these papers with respect to an ancient title, a claim to which by a person in whom I am interested they would substantiate. Now listen, good friend Morley; moral force is a fine thing especially in speculation, and so is a community of goods especially when a man has no property, but when you have lived as long as I have and have tasted of the worldโs delight, youโll comprehend the rapture of acquisition, and learn that it is generally secured by very coarse means. Come, I have a mind that you should prosper. The public spirit is inflamed here; you are a leader of the people. Let us have another meeting on the Moor, a preconcerted outbreak; you can put your fingers in a trice on the men who will do our work. Mowbray Castle is in their possession; we secure our object. You shall have ten thousand pounds on the nail, and I will take you back to London with me besides and teach you what is fortune.โ
โI understand you,โ said Morley. โYou have a clear brain and a bold spirit; you have no scruples, which indeed are generally the creatures of perplexity rather than of principle. You ought to succeed.โ
โWe ought to succeed you mean,โ said Hatton, โfor I have long perceived that you only wanted opportunity to mount.โ
โYesterday was a great burst of feeling occasioned by a very peculiar cause,โ said Morley musingly; โbut it must not mislead us. The discontent here is not deep. The people are still employed, though not fully. Wages have fallen, but they must drop more. THE PEOPLE are not ripe for the movement you intimate. There are thousands who would rush to the rescue of the castle. Besides there is a priest here, one St Lys, who exercises a most pernicious influence over the people. It will require immense efforts and great distress to root him out. No; it would fail.โ
โThen we must wait awhile,โ said Hatton, โor devise some other means.โ
โโTis a very impracticable case,โ said Morley.
โThere is a combination for every case,โ said Hatton. โPonder and it comes. This seemed simple; but you think, you really think it would not answer?โ
โAt this moment, not; that is my conviction.โ
โWell suppose instead of an insurrection we have a burglary. Can you assist me to the right hands here?โ
โNot I indeed!โ
โWhat is the use then of this influence over the people of which you and Gerard are always talking? After yesterday I thought here you could do anything.โ
โWe have not hitherto had the advantage of your worldly knowledge; in future we shall be wiser.โ
โWell then,โ said Hatton, โwe must now think of Gerardโs defence. He shall have the best counsel. I shall retain Kelly specially. I shall return to town to-morrow morning. You will keep me alive to the state of feeling here, and if things get more mature drop me a line and I will come down.โ
โThis conversation had better not be mentioned to Gerard.โ
โThat is obvious; it would only disturb him. I did not preface it by a stipulation of confidence because that is idle. Of course you will keep the secret; it is your interest; it is a great possession. I know very well you will be most jealous of sharing it. I know it is as safe with you as with myself.โ
And with these words Hatton wished him a hearty farewell and withdrew.
โHe is right,โ thought Morley; โhe knows human nature well. The secret is safe. I will not breathe it to Gerard. I will treasure it up. It is knowledge; it is power: great knowledge, great power. And what shall I do with it? Time will teach me.โ
BOOK VI
Book 6 Chapter 1
โAnother week,โ exclaimed a gentleman in Downing Street on the 5th of August, 1842, โand we shall be prorogued. You can surely keep the country quiet for another week.โ
โI cannot answer for the public peace for another four-and-twenty hours,โ replied his companion.
โThis business at Manchester must be stopped at once; you have a good force there?โ
โManchester is nothing; these are movements merely to distract. The serious work is not now to be apprehended in the cotton towns. The state of Staffordshire and Warwickshire is infinitely more menacing. Cheshire and Yorkshire alarm me. The accounts from Scotland are as bad as can be. And though I think the sufferings of โ39 will keep Birmingham and the Welch collieries in check, we cannot venture to move any of our force from those districts.โ
โYou must summon a council for four oโclock. I have some deputations to receive which I will throw over; but to Windsor I must go. Nothing has yet occurred to render any notice of the state of the country necessary in the speech from the Throne.โ
โNot yet,โ said his companion; โbut what will to-morrow bring forth?โ
โAfter all it is only a turn-out. I cannot recast her Majestyโs speech and bring in rebellion and closed mills, instead of loyalty and a good harvest.โ
โIt would be a bore. Well, we will see to-morrow;โ and the colleague left the room.
โAnd now for these deputations,โ said the gentleman in Downing Street, โof all things in the world I dislike a deputation. I do not care how much I labour in the Closet or the house; thatโs real work; the machine is advanced. But receiving a deputation is like sham marching: an immense dust and no progress. To listen to their views! As if I did not know what their views were before they stated them! And to put on a countenance of respectful candour while they are developing their exploded or their impracticable systems. Were it not that at a practised crisis, I permit them to see conviction slowly stealing over my conscience, I believe the fellows would never stop. I cannot really receive these deputations. I must leave them to Hoaxem,โ and the gentleman in Downing Street rang his bell.
โWell, Mr Hoaxem,โ resumed the gentleman in Downing Street as that faithful functionary entered, โthere are some deputations I understand, to-day. You must receive them, as I am going to Windsor. What are they?โ
โThere are only two, sir, of moment. The rest I could easily manage.โ
โAnd these two?โ
โIn the first place, there is our friend Colonel Bosky, the members for the county of Calfshire, and a deputation of tenant farmers.โ
โPah!โ
โThese must be attended to. The members have made a strong representation to me that they really cannot any longer vote with government unless the Treasury assists them in satisfying their constituents.โ
โAnd what do they want?โ
โStatement of grievances; high taxes and low prices; mild expostulations and gentle hints that they have been thrown over by their friends; Polish corn, Holstein cattle, and British income tax.โ
โWell you know what to say,โ said the gentleman in Downing Street. โTell them generally that they are quite mistaken; prove to them particularly that my only object has been to render protection more protective, by making it practical and divesting it of the surplusage of odium; that no foreign corn can come in at fifty-five shillings; that there are not enough cattle in all Holstein to supply the parish of Pancras daily with beef-steaks; and that as for the income tax, they will be amply compensated for it by their diminished cost of living through the agency of that very tariff of which they are so superficially complaining.โ
โTheir diminished cost of living!โ said Mr Hoaxem a little confused. โWould not that assurance, I humbly suggest, clash a little with my previous demonstration that we had arranged that no reduction of prices should take place?โ
โNot at all; your previous demonstration is of course true, but at the same time you must impress upon them the necessity of general views to form an opinion of particular instances. As for example a gentleman of five thousand pounds per annum pays to the income tax, which by the bye always call property tax, one hundred and fifty pounds a year. Well, I have materially reduced the duties on eight hundred articles. The consumption of each of those articles by an establishment of five thousand pounds per annum cannot be less than one pound per article. The reduction of price cannot be less than a moiety; therefore a saving of four hundred per annum; which placed against the deduction of the property tax leaves a clear increase of income of two hundred and fifty pounds per annum; by which you see that a property tax in fact increases income.โ
โI see,โ said Mr Hoaxem with an admiring glance. โAnd what am I to say to the deputation of the manufacturers of Mowbray complaining of the great depression of trade, and the total want of remunerating profits?โ
โYou must say exactly the reverse,โ said the gentleman in Downing Street. โShow them how much I have done to promote the revival of trade. First of all in making provisions cheaper; cutting off at one blow half the protection on corn, as for example at this moment under the old law the duty on foreign wheat would have been twenty-seven shillings a quarter; under the new law it is thirteen. To be sure no wheat could come in at either price, but that does not alter the principle. Then as to live cattle, show how I have entirely opened the trade with the continent in live cattle. Enlarge upon this, the subject is speculative and admits of expensive estimates. If there be any dissenters on the deputation who having freed the negroes have no subject left for their foreign sympathies, hint at the tortures of the bullfight and the immense consideration to humanity that instead of being speared at Seville, the Andalusian Toro will probably in future be cut up at Smithfield. This cheapness of provisions will permit them to compete with the foreigner in all neutral markets, in time beat them in their own. It is a complete compensation too for the property tax, which impress upon them is a great experiment and entirely for their interests. Ring the changes on great measures and great experiments till it is time to go down and make a house. Your official duties of course must not be interfered with. They will take the hint. I have no doubt you will get through the business very well, Mr Hoaxem, particularly if you be โfrank and explicit;โ that is the right line to take when you wish to conceal your own mind and to confuse the minds of others. Good morning!โ
Book 6 Chapter 2
Two days after this conversation in Downing Street, a special messenger arrived at Marney Abbey from the Lord Lieutenant of the county, the Duke of Fitz-Aquitaine. Immediately after reading the despatch of which he was the bearer, there was a great bustle in the house; Lady Marney was sent for to her husbandโs library and there enjoined immediately to write various letters which were to prevent certain expected visitors from arriving; Captain Grouse was in and out the same library every five minutes, receiving orders and counter orders, and finally mounting his horse was flying about the neighbourhood with messages and commands. All this stir signified that the Marney regiment of Yeomanry were to be called out directly.
Lord Marney who had succeeded in obtaining a place in the Household and was consequently devoted to the institutions of the country, was full of determination to uphold them; but at the same time with characteristic prudence was equally resolved that the property principally protected should be his own, and that the order of his own district should chiefly engage his solicitude.
โI do not know what the Duke means by marching into the disturbed districts,โ said Lord Marney to Captain Grouse. โThese are disturbed districts. There have been three fires in one week, and I want to know what disturbance can be worse than that? In my opinion this is a mere anti-corn-law riot to frighten the government; and suppose they do stop the millsโwhat then? I wish they were all stopped, and then one might live like a gentleman again?โ
Egremont, between whom and his brother a sort of bad-tempered good understanding had of late years to a certain degree flourished, in spite of Lord Marney remaining childless, which made him hate Egremont with double distilled virulence, and chiefly by the affectionate manoeuvres of their mother, but whose annual visits to Marney had generally been limited to the yeomanry week, arrived from London the same day as the letter of the Lord Lieutenant, as he had learnt that his brotherโs regiment, in which he commanded a troop, as well as the other yeomanry corps in the North of England, must immediately take the field.
Five years had elapsed since the commencement of our history, and they had brought apparently much change to the character of the brother of Lord Marney. He had become, especially during the last two or three years, silent and reserved; he rarely entered society; even the company of those who were once his intimates had ceased to attract him; he was really a melancholy man. The change in his demeanour was observed by all; his mother and his sister-in-law were the only persons who endeavoured to penetrate its cause, and sighed over the failure of their sagacity. Quit the world and the world forgets you; and Egremont would have soon been a name no longer mentioned in those brilliant saloons which he once adorned, had not occasionally a sensation, produced by an effective speech in the House of Commons, recalled his name to his old associates, who then remembered the pleasant hours passed in his society and wondered why he never went anywhere now.
โI suppose he finds society a bore,โ said Lord Eugene de Vere; โI am sure I do; but then what is a fellow to do? I am not in Parliament like Egremont. I believe, after all, thatโs the thing; for I have tried everything else and everything else is a bore.โ
โI think one should marry like Alfred Mountchesney,โ said Lord Milford.
โBut what is the use of marrying if you do not marry a rich womanโand the heiresses of the present age will not marry. What can be more unnatural! It alone ought to produce a revolution. Why, Alfred is the only fellow who has made a coup; and then he has not got it down.โ
โShe behaved in a most unprincipled manner to meโthat Fitz-Warene,โ said Lord Milford, โalways took my bouquets and once made me write some verses.โ
โBy Jove!โ said Lord Eugene, โI should like to see them. What a bore it must have been to write verses.โ
โI only copied them out of Mina Blakeโs album: but I sent them in my own handwriting.โ
Baffled sympathy was the cause of Egremontโs gloom. It is the secret spring of most melancholy. He loved and loved in vain. The conviction that his passion, though hopeless, was not looked upon with disfavour, only made him the more wretched, for the disappointment is more acute in proportion as the chance is better. He had never seen Sybil since the morning he quitted her in Smithโs Square, immediately before her departure for the North. The trial of Gerard had taken place at the assizes of that year: he had been found guilty and sentenced to eighteen months imprisonment in York Castle; the interference of Egremont both in the House of Commons and with the government saved him from the felon confinement with which he was at first threatened, and from which assuredly state prisoners should be exempt. During this effort some correspondence had taken place between Egremont and Sybil, which he would willingly have encouraged and maintained; but it ceased nevertheless with its subject. Sybil, through the influential interference of Ursula Trafford, lived at the convent at York during the imprisonment of her father, and visited him daily.
The anxiety to take the veil which had once characterised Sybil had certainly waned. Perhaps her experience of life had impressed her with the importance of fulfilling vital duties. Her father, though he had never opposed her wish, had never encouraged it; and he had now increased and interesting claims on her devotion. He had endured great trials, and had fallen on adverse fortunes. Sybil would look at him, and though his noble frame was still erect and his countenance still displayed that mixture of frankness and decision which had distinguished it of yore, she could not conceal from herself that there were ravages which time could not have produced. A year and a half of imprisonment had shaken to its centre a frame born for action, and shrinking at all times from the resources of sedentary life. The disappointment of high hopes had jarred and tangled even the sweetness of his noble disposition. He needed solicitude and solace: and Sybil resolved that if vigilance and sympathy could soothe an existence that would otherwise be embittered, these guardian angels should at least hover over the life of her father.
When the term of his imprisonment had ceased, Gerard had returned with his daughter to Mowbray. Had he deigned to accept the offers of his friends, he need not have been anxious as to his future. A public subscription for his service had been collected: Morley, who was well to do in the world, for the circulation of the Mowbray Phalanx daily increased with the increasing sufferings of the people, offered his friend to share his house and purse: Hatton was munificent; there was no limit either to his offers or his proffered services. But all were declined; Gerard would live by labour. The post he had occupied at Mr Traffordโs was not vacant even if that gentleman had thought fit again to receive him; but his reputation as a first-rate artizan soon obtained him good employment, though on this occasion in the town of Mowbray, which for the sake of his daughter he regretted. He had no pleasant home now for Sybil, but he had the prospect of one, and until he obtained possession of it, Sybil sought a refuge, which had been offered to her from the first, with her kindest and dearest friend; so that at this period of our history, she was again an inmate of the convent at Mowbray, whither her father and Morley had attended her the eve of the day she had first visited the ruins of Marney Abbey.

