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+Project Gutenberg Etext Confessions of A Justified Sinner, by Hogg
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+The Private Memoirs and Confessions of A Justified Sinner
+By James Hogg
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+The Private Memoirs and Confessions of A Justified Sinner
+
+By James Hogg
+
+August, 2000 [Etext #2276]
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Robin Hood by J. Walker McSpadden
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+
+THE PRIVATE MEMOIRS
+AND CONFESSIONS
+OF A JUSTIFIED SINNER
+
+WRITTEN BY HIMSELF
+
+WITH A DETAIL OF CURIOUS TRADITIONARY FACTS, AND
+OTHER EVIDENCE, BY THE EDITOR
+
+By James Hogg
+
+
+
+
+THE EDITOR'S NARRATIVE
+
+
+It appears from tradition, as well as some parish registers still
+extant, that the lands of Dalcastle (or Dalchastel, as it is often
+spelled) were possessed by a family of the name of Colwan,
+about one hundred and fifty years ago, and for at least a century
+previous to that period. That family was supposed to have been a
+branch of the ancient family of Colquhoun, and it is certain that
+from it spring the Cowans that spread towards the Border. I find
+that, in the year 1687, George Colwan succeeded his uncle of the
+same name, in the lands of Dalchastel and Balgrennan; and, this
+being all I can gather of the family from history, to tradition I
+must appeal for the remainder of the motley adventures of that
+house. But, of the matter furnished by the latter of these powerful
+monitors, I have no reason to complain: It has been handed down
+to the world in unlimited abundance; and I am certain that, in
+recording the hideous events which follow, I am only relating to
+the greater part of the inhabitants of at least four counties of
+Scotland matters of which they were before perfectly well
+informed.
+
+This George was a rich man, or supposed to be so, and was
+married, when considerably advanced in life, to the sole heiress
+and reputed daughter of a Baillie Orde, of Glasgow. This proved
+a conjunction anything but agreeable to the parties contracting. It
+is well known that the Reformation principles had long before
+that time taken a powerful hold of the hearts and affections of the
+people of Scotland, although the feeling was by no means
+general, or in equal degrees; and it so happened that this married
+couple felt completely at variance on the subject. Granting it to
+have been so, one would have thought that the laird, owing to his
+retiring situation, would have been the one that inclined to the
+stern doctrines of the reformers; and that the young and gay dame
+from the city would have adhered to the free principles cherished
+by the court party, and indulged in rather to extremity, in
+opposition to their severe and carping contemporaries.
+
+The contrary, however, happened to be the case. The laird was
+what his country neighbours called "a droll, careless chap", with a
+very limited proportion of the fear of God in his heart, and very
+nearly as little of the fear of man. The laird had not intentionally
+wronged or offended either of the parties, and perceived not the
+necessity of deprecating their vengeance. He had hitherto
+believed that he was living in most cordial terms with the greater
+part of the inhabitants of the earth, and with the powers above in
+particular: but woe be unto him if he was not soon convinced of
+the fallacy of such damning security! for his lady was the most
+severe and gloomy of all bigots to the principles of the
+Reformation. Hers were not the tenets of the great reformers, but
+theirs mightily overstrained and deformed. Theirs was an unguent
+hard to be swallowed; but hers was that unguent embittered and
+overheated until nature could not longer bear it. She had imbibed
+her ideas from the doctrines of one flaming predestinarian divine
+alone; and these were so rigid that they became a stumbling block
+to many of his brethren, and a mighty handle for the enemies of
+his party to turn the machine of the state against them.
+
+The wedding festivities at Dalcastle partook of all the gaiety, not
+of that stern age, but of one previous to it. There was feasting,
+dancing, piping, and singing: the liquors were handed, around in
+great fulness, the ale in large wooden bickers, and the brandy in
+capacious horns of oxen. The laird gave full scope to his homely
+glee. He danced--he snapped his fingers to the music--clapped his
+hands and shouted at the turn of the tune. He saluted every girl in
+the hall whose appearance was anything tolerable, and requested
+of their sweethearts to take the same freedom with his bride, by
+way of retaliation. But there she sat at the head of the hall in still
+and blooming beauty, absolutely refusing to tread a single
+measure with any gentleman there. The only enjoyment in which
+she appeared to partake was in now and then stealing a word of
+sweet conversation with her favourite pastor about divine things;
+for he had accompanied her home after marrying her to her
+husband, to see her fairly settled in her new dwelling. He
+addressed her several times by her new name, Mrs. Colwan; but
+she turned away her head disgusted, and looked with pity and
+contempt towards the old inadvertent sinner, capering away in the
+height of his unregenerated mirth. The minister perceived the
+workings of her pious mind, and thenceforward addressed her by
+the courteous title of Lady Dalcastle, which sounded somewhat
+better, as not coupling her name with one of the wicked: and
+there is too great reason to believe that, for all the solemn vows
+she had come under, and these were of no ordinary binding,
+particularly on the laird's part, she at that time despised, if not
+abhorred him, in her heart.
+
+The good parson again blessed her, and went away. She took
+leave of him with tears in her eyes, entreating him often to visit
+her in that heathen land of the Amorite, the Hittite, and the
+Girgashite: to which he assented, on many solemn and qualifying
+conditions--and then the comely bride retired to her chamber to
+pray.
+
+It was customary, in those days, for the bride's-man and maiden,
+and a few select friends, to visit the new-married couple after
+they had retired to rest, and drink a cup to their healths, their
+happiness, and a numerous posterity. But the laird delighted not
+in this: he wished to have his jewel to himself; and, slipping away
+quietly from his jovial party, he retired to his chamber to his
+beloved, and bolted the door. He found her engaged with the
+writings of the Evangelists, and terribly demure. The laird went
+up to caress her; but she turned away her head, and spoke of the
+follies of aged men, and something of the broad way that leadeth
+to destruction. The laird did not thoroughly comprehend this
+allusion; but being considerably flustered by drinking, and
+disposed to take all in good part, he only remarked, as he took off
+his shoes and stockings, that, "whether the way was broad or
+narrow, it was time that they were in their bed."
+
+"Sure, Mr. Colwan, you won't go to bed to-night, at such an
+important period of your life, without first saying prayers for
+yourself and me."
+
+When she said this, the laird had his head down almost to the
+ground, loosing his shoe-buckle; but when he heard of prayers, on
+such a night, he raised his face suddenly up, which was all over
+as flushed and red as a rose, and answered:
+
+"Prayers, Mistress! Lord help your crazed head, is this a night for
+prayers?"
+
+He had better have held his peace. There was such a torrent of
+profound divinity poured out upon him that the laird became
+ashamed, both of himself and his new-made spouse, and wist not
+what to say: but the brandy helped him out.
+
+"It strikes me, my dear, that religious devotion would be
+somewhat out of place to-night," said he. "Allowing that it is ever
+so beautiful, and ever so beneficial, were we to ride on the
+rigging of it at all times, would we not be constantly making a
+farce of it: It would be like reading the Bible and the jestbook,
+verse about, and would render the life of man a medley of
+absurdity and confusion."
+
+But, against the cant of the bigot or the hypocrite, no reasoning
+can aught avail. If you would argue until the end of life, the
+infallible creature must alone be right. So it proved with the laird.
+One Scripture text followed another, not in the least connected,
+and one sentence of the profound Mr. Wringhim's sermons after
+another, proving the duty of family worship, till the laird lost
+patience, and tossing himself into bed, said carelessly that he
+would leave that duty upon her shoulders for one night.
+
+The meek mind of Lady Dalcastle was somewhat disarranged by
+this sudden evolution. She felt that she was left rather in an
+awkward situation. However, to show her unconscionable spouse
+that she was resolved to hold fast her integrity, she kneeled down
+and prayed in terms so potent that she deemed she was sure of
+making an impression on him. She did so; for in a short time the
+laird began to utter a response so fervent that she was utterly
+astounded, and fairly driven from the chain of her orisons. He
+began, in truth, to sound a nasal bugle of no ordinary calibre--the
+notes being little inferior to those of a military trumpet. The lady
+tried to proceed, but every returning note from the bed burst on
+her ear with a louder twang, and a longer peal, till the concord of
+sweet sounds became so truly pathetic that the meek spirit of the
+dame was quite overcome; and, after shedding a flood of tears,
+she arose from her knees, and retired to the chimney-corner with
+her Bible in her lap, there to spend the hours in holy meditation
+till such time as the inebriated trumpeter should awaken to a
+sense of propriety.
+
+The laird did not awake in any reasonable time; for, he being
+overcome with fatigue and wassail, his sleep became sounder,
+and his Morphean measures more intense. These varied a little in
+their structure; but the general run of the bars sounded something
+in this way: "Hic-hoc-wheew!" It was most profoundly ludicrous;
+and could not have missed exciting risibility in anyone save a
+pious, a disappointed, and humbled bride.
+
+The good dame wept bitterly. She could not for her life go and
+awaken the monster, and request him to make room for her: but
+she retired somewhere, for the laird, on awaking next morning,
+found that he was still lying alone. His sleep had been of the
+deepest and most genuine sort; and, all the time that it lasted, he
+had never once thought of either wives, children, or sweethearts,
+save in the way of dreaming about them; but, as his
+spirit began again by slow degrees to verge towards the
+boundaries of reason, it became lighter and more buoyant from
+the effects of deep repose, and his dreams partook of that
+buoyancy, yea, to a degree hardly expressible. He dreamed of the
+reel, the jig, the strathspey, and the corant; and the elasticity of
+his frame was such that he was bounding over the heads of
+maidens, and making his feet skimmer against the ceiling,
+enjoying, the while, the most ecstatic emotions. These grew too
+fervent for the shackles of the drowsy god to restrain. The nasal
+bugle ceased its prolonged sounds in one moment, and a sort of
+hectic laugh took its place. "Keep it going--play up, you devils!"
+cried the laird, without changing his position on the pillow. But
+this exertion to hold the fiddlers at their work fairly awakened the
+delighted dreamer, and, though he could not refrain from
+continuing, his laugh, beat length, by tracing out a regular chain
+of facts, came to be sensible of his real situation. "Rabina, where
+are you? What's become of you, my dear?" cried the laird. But
+there was no voice nor anyone that answered or regarded. He
+flung open the curtains, thinking to find her still on her knees, as
+he had seen her, but she was not there, either sleeping or waking.
+"Rabina! Mrs. Colwan!" shouted he, as loud as he could call, and
+then added in the same breath, "God save the king--I have lost my
+wife!"
+
+He sprung up and opened the casement: the day-light was
+beginning to streak the east, for it was spring, and the nights were
+short, and the mornings very long. The laird half dressed himself
+in an instant, and strode through every room in the house,
+opening the windows as he went, and scrutinizing every bed and
+every corner. He came into the hall where the wedding festival
+had been held; and as he opened the various windowboards,
+loving couples flew off like hares surprised too late in the
+morning among the early braird. "Hoo-boo! Fie, be frightened!"
+cried the laird. "Fie, rin like fools, as if ye were caught in an ill-
+turn!" His bride was not among them; so he was obliged to betake
+himself to further search. "She will be praying in some corner,
+poor woman," said he to himself. "It is an unlucky thing this
+praying. But, for my part, I fear I have behaved very ill; and I
+must endeavour to make amends."
+
+The laird continued his search, and at length found his beloved in
+the same bed with her Glasgow cousin who had acted as
+bridesmaid. "You sly and malevolent imp," said the laird; "you
+have played me such a trick when I was fast asleep! I have not
+known a frolic so clever, and, at the same time, so severe. Come
+along, you baggage you!"
+
+"Sir, I will let you know that I detest your principles and your
+person alike," said she. "It shall never be said, Sir, that my person
+was at the control of a heathenish man of Belial--a dangler among
+the daughters of women--a promiscuous dancer--and a player of
+unlawful games. Forgo your rudeness, Sir, I say, and depart away
+from my presence and that of my kinswoman.
+
+"Come along, I say, my charming Rab. If you were the pink of all
+puritans, and the saint of all saints, you are my wife, and must do
+as I command you."
+
+"Sir, I will sooner lay down my life than be subjected to your
+godless will; therefore I say, desist, and begone with you."
+
+But the laird regarded none of these testy sayings: he rolled her in
+a blanket, and bore her triumphantly away to his chamber, taking
+care to keep a fold or two of the blanket always rather near to her
+mouth, in case of any outrageous forthcoming of noise.
+
+The next day at breakfast the bride was long in making her
+appearance. Her maid asked to see her; but George did not choose
+that anybody should see her but himself. He paid her several
+visits, and always turned the key as he came out. At length
+breakfast was served; and during the time of refreshment the laird
+tried to break several jokes; but it was remarked that they wanted
+their accustomed brilliancy, and that his nose was particularly red
+at the top.
+
+Matters, without all doubt, had been very bad between the new-
+married couple; for in the course of the day the lady deserted her
+quarters, and returned to her father's house in Glasgow, after
+having been a night on the road; stage-coaches and steam-boats
+having then no existence in that quarter.
+
+Though Baillie Orde had acquiesced in his wife's asseveration
+regarding the likeness of their only daughter to her father, he
+never loved or admired her greatly; therefore this behaviour
+nothing astounded him. He questioned her strictly as to the
+grievous offence committed against her, and could discover
+nothing that warranted a procedure so fraught with disagreeable
+consequences. So, after mature deliberation, the baillie addressed
+her as follows:
+
+"Aye, aye, Raby! An' sae I find that Dalcastle has actually refused
+to say prayers with you when you ordered him; an' has guidit you
+in a rude indelicate manner, outstepping the respect due to my
+daughter--as my daughter. But, wi' regard to what is due to his
+own wife, of that he's a better judge nor me. However, since he
+has behaved in that manner to MY DAUGHTER, I shall be
+revenged on him for aince; for I shall return the obligation to ane
+nearer to him: that is, I shall take pennyworths of his wife--an' let
+him lick at that."
+
+"What do you mean, Sir?" said the astonished damsel.
+
+"I mean to be revenged on that villain Dalcastle," said he, "for
+what he has done to my daughter. Come hither, Mrs. Colwan, you
+shall pay for this."
+
+So saying, the baillie began to inflict corporal punishment on the
+runaway wife. His strokes were not indeed very deadly, but he
+made a mighty flourish in the infliction, pretending to be in a
+great rage only at the Laird of Dalcastle. "Villain that he is!"
+exclaimed he, 'I shall teach him to behave in such a manner to a
+child of mine, be she as she may; since I cannot get at himself, I
+shall lounder her that is nearest to him in life. Take you that, and
+that, Mrs. Colwan, for your husband's impertinence!"
+
+The poor afflicted woman wept and prayed, but the baillie would
+not abate aught of his severity. After fuming and beating her with
+many stripes, far drawn, and lightly laid down, he took her up. to
+her chamber, five stories high, locked her in, and there he fed her
+on bread and water, all to be revenged on the presumptuous Laird
+of Dalcastle; but ever and anon, as the baillie came down the stair
+from carrying his daughter's meal, he said to himself: "I shall
+make the sight of the laird the blithest she ever saw in her life."
+
+Lady Dalcastle got plenty of time to read, and pray, and meditate;
+but she was at a great loss for one to dispute with about religious
+tenets; for she found that, without this advantage, about which
+there was a perfect rage at that time, the reading and learning of
+Scripture texts, and sentences of intricate doctrine, availed her
+naught; so she was often driven to sit at her casement and look
+out for the approach of the heathenish Laird of Dalcastle.
+
+That hero, after a considerable lapse of time, at length made his
+appearance. Matters were not hard to adjust; for his lady found
+that there was no refuge for her in her father's house; and so, after
+some sighs and tears, she accompanied her husband home. For all
+that had passed, things went on no better. She WOULD convert
+the laird in spite of his teeth: the laird would not be converted.
+She WOULD have the laird to say family prayers, both morning
+and evening: the laird would neither pray morning nor evening.
+He would not even sing psalms, and kneel beside her while she
+performed the exercise; neither would he converse at all times,
+and in all places, about the sacred mysteries of religion, although
+his lady took occasion to contradict flatly every assertion that he
+made, in order that she might spiritualize him by drawing him
+into argument.
+
+The laird kept his temper a long while, but at length his patience
+wore out; he cut her short in all her futile attempts at
+spiritualization, and mocked at her wire-drawn degrees of faith,
+hope, and repentance. He also dared to doubt of the great
+standard doctrine of absolute predestination, which put the crown
+on the lady's Christian resentment. She declared her helpmate to
+be a limb of Antichrist, and one with whom no regenerated
+person could associate. She therefore bespoke a separate
+establishment, and, before the expiry of the first six months, the
+arrangements of the separation were amicably adjusted. The
+upper, or third, story of the old mansion-house was awarded to
+the lady for her residence. She had a separate door, a separate
+stair, a separate garden, and walks that in no instance intersected
+the laird's; so that one would have thought the separation
+complete. They had each their own parties, selected from their
+own sort of people; and, though the laird never once chafed
+himself about the lady's companies, it was not long before she
+began to intermeddle about some of his.
+
+"Who is that fat bouncing dame that visits the laird so often, and
+always by herself?" said she to her maid Martha one day.
+
+"Oh dear, mem, how can I ken? We're banished frae our
+acquaintances here, as weel as frae the sweet gospel ordinances."
+
+"Find me out who that jolly dame is, Martha. You, who hold
+communion with the household of this ungodly man, can be at no
+loss to attain this information. I observe that she always casts her
+eye up toward our windows, both in coming and going; and I
+suspect that she seldom departs from the house emptyhanded."
+
+That same evening Martha came with the information that this
+august visitor was a Miss Logan, an old an intimate acquaintance
+of the laird's, and a very worthy respectable lady, of good
+connections, whose parents had lost their patrimony in the civil
+wars.
+
+"Ha! very well!" said the lady; "very well, Martha! But,
+nevertheless, go thou and watch this respectable lady's motions
+and behaviour the next time she comes to visit the laird--and the
+next after that. You will not, I see, lack opportunities."
+
+Martha's information turned out of that nature that prayers were
+said in the uppermost story of Dalcastle house against the
+Canaanitish woman, every night and every morning; and great
+discontent prevailed there, even to anathemas and tears. Letter
+after letter was dispatched to Glasgow; and at length, to the lady's
+great consolation, the Rev. Mr. Wringhim arrived safely and
+devoutly in her elevated sanctuary. Marvellous was the
+conversation between these gifted people. Wringhim had held in
+his doctrines that there were eight different kinds of FAITH, all
+perfectly distinct in their operations and effects. But the lady, in
+her secluded state, had discovered another five, making twelve
+[sic] in all: the adjusting of the existence or fallacy of these five
+faiths served for a most enlightened discussion of nearly
+seventeen hours; in the course of which the two got warm in their
+arguments, always in proportion as they receded from nature,
+utility, and common sense. Wringhim at length got into unwonted
+fervour about some disputed point between one of these faiths
+and TRUST: when the lady, fearing that zeal was getting beyond
+its wonted barrier, broke in on his vehement asseverations with
+the following abrupt discomfiture: "But, Sir, as long as I
+remember, what is to be done with this case of open and avowed
+iniquity?"
+
+The minister was struck dumb. He leaned him back on his chair,
+stroked his beard, hemmed--considered, and hemmed again, and
+then said. in an altered and softened tone: "Why, that is a
+secondary consideration; you mean the case between your
+husband and Miss Logan?"
+
+"The same, Sir. I am scandalized at such intimacies going on
+under my nose. The sufferance of it is a great and crying evil."
+
+"Evil, madam, may be either operative, or passive. To them it is
+an evil, but to us none. We have no more to do with the sins of
+the wicked and unconverted here than with those of an infidel
+Turk; for all earthly bonds and fellowships are absorbed and
+swallowed up in the holy community of the Reformed Church.
+However, if it is your wish, I shall take him to task, and
+reprimand and humble him in such a manner that he shall be
+ashamed of his doings, and renounce such deeds for ever, out of
+mere self-respect, though all unsanctified the heart, as well as the
+deed, may be. To the wicked, all things are wicked; but to the
+just, all things are just and right."
+
+"Ah, that is a sweet and comfortable saying, Mr. Wringhim! How
+delightful to think that a justified person can do no wrong! Who
+would not envy the liberty wherewith we are made free? Go to
+my husband, that poor unfortunate, blindfolded person, and open
+his eyes to his degenerate and sinful state; for well are you fitted
+to the task."
+
+"Yea, I will go in unto him, and confound him. I will lay the
+strong holds of sin and Satan as flat before my face as the dung
+that is spread out to fatten the land."
+
+"Master, there's a gentleman at the fore-door wants a private.
+word o' ye."
+
+"Tell him I'm engaged: I can't see any gentleman to-night. But I
+shall attend on him to-morrow as soon as he pleases."
+
+"'He's coming straight in, Sir. Stop a wee bit, Sir, my master is
+engaged. He cannot see you at present, Sir."
+
+"Stand aside, thou Moabite! My mission admits of no delay. I
+come to save him from the jaws of destruction!"
+
+"An that be the case, Sir, it maks a wide difference; an', as the
+danger may threaten us a', I fancy I may as weel let ye gang by as
+fight wi' ye, sin' ye seem sae intent on 't.--The man says he's
+comin' to save ye, an' canna stop, Sir. Here he is."
+
+The laird was going to break out into a volley of wrath against
+Waters, his servant; but, before he got a word pronounced, the
+Rev. Mr. Wringhim had stepped inside the room, and Waters had
+retired, shutting the door behind him.
+
+No introduction could be more mal-a-propos: it was impossible;
+for at that very moment the laird and Arabella Logan were both
+sitting on one seat, and both looking on one book, when the door
+opened. "What is it, Sir?" said the laird fiercely.
+
+"A message of the greatest importance, Sir," said the divine,
+striding unceremoniously up to the chimney, turning his back to
+the fire, and his face to the culprits. "I think you should know me,
+Sir?" continued he, looking displeasedly at the laird, with his face
+half turned round.
+
+"I think I should," returned the laird. "You are a Mr. How's--tey--
+ca'--him, of Glasgow, who did me the worst turn ever I got done
+to me in my life. You gentry are always ready to do a man such a
+turn. Pray, Sir, did you ever do a good job for anyone to
+counterbalance that? For, if you have not, you ought to be--"
+
+"Hold, Sir, I say! None of your profanity before me. If I do evil to
+anyone on such occasions, it is because he will have it so;
+therefore, the evil is not of my doing. I ask you, Sir, before God
+and this witness, I ask you, have you kept solemnly and inviolate
+the vows which I laid upon you that day? Answer me!"
+
+"Has the partner whom you bound me to kept hers inviolate?
+Answer me that, Sir! None can better do so than you, Mr. How's--
+tey--ca'--you."
+
+"So, then, you confess your backslidings, and avow the
+profligacy of your life. And this person here is, I suppose, the
+partner of your iniquity--she whose beauty hath caused you to
+err! Stand up, both of you, till I rebuke you, and show you what
+you are in the eyes of God and man."
+
+"In the first place, stand you still there, till I tell you what you are
+in the eyes of God and man. You are, Sir, a presumptuous, self-
+conceited pedagogue, a stirrer up of strife and commotion in
+church, in state, in families, and communities. You are one, Sir,
+whose righteousness consists in splitting the doctrines of Calvin
+into thousands of undistinguishable films, and in setting up a
+system of justifying-grace against all breaches of all laws, moral
+or divine. In short, Sir, you are a mildew--a canker-worm
+in the bosom of the Reformed Church, generating a disease of
+which she will never be purged, but by the shedding of blood. Go
+thou in peace, and do these abominations no more; but humble
+thyself, lest a worse reproof come upon thee."
+
+Wringhim heard all this without flinching. He now and then
+twisted his mouth in disdain, treasuring up, meantime, his
+vengeance against the two aggressors; for he felt that he had them
+on the hip, and resolved to pour out his vengeance and
+indignation upon them. Sorry am I that the shackles of modern
+decorum restrain me from penning that famous rebuke; fragments
+of which have been attributed to every divine of old notoriety
+throughout Scotland. But 1 have it by heart; and a glorious morsel
+it is to put into the hands of certain incendiaries. The metaphors
+are so strong and so appalling that Miss Logan could only stand
+them a very short time; she was obliged to withdraw in confusion.
+The laird stood his ground with much ado, though his face was
+often crimsoned over with the hues of shame and anger. Several
+times he was on the point of turning the officious sycophant to
+the door; but good manners, and an inherent respect that lie
+entertained for the clergy, as the immediate servants of the
+Supreme Being, restrained him.
+
+Wringhim, perceiving these symptoms of resentment, took them
+for marks of shame and contrition, and pushed his reproaches
+farther than ever divine ventured to do in a similar case. When he
+had finished, to prevent further discussion, he walked slowly and
+majestically out of the apartment, making his robes to swing
+behind him in a most magisterial manner; he being, without
+doubt, elated with his high conquest. He went to the upper story,
+and related to his metaphysical associate his wonderful success;
+how he had driven the dame from the house in tears and deep
+confusion, and left the backsliding laird in such a quandary of
+shame and repentance that he could neither articulate a word nor
+lift up his countenance. The dame thanked him most cordially,
+lauding his friendly zeal and powerful eloquence; and then the
+two again set keenly to the splitting of hairs, and making
+distinctions in religion where none existed.
+
+They being both children of adoption, and secured from falling
+into snares, or anyway under the power of the wicked one, it was
+their custom, on each visit, to sit up a night in the same
+apartment, for the sake of sweet spiritual converse; but that time,
+in the course of the night, they differed so materially on a small
+point somewhere between justification and final election that the
+minister, in the heat of his zeal, sprung from his seat, paced the
+floor, and maintained his point with such ardour that Martha was
+alarmed, and, thinking they were going to fight, and that the
+minister would be a hard match for her mistress, she put on some
+clothes, and twice left her bed and stood listening at the back of
+the door, ready to burst in should need require it. Should anyone
+think this picture over-strained, I can assure him that it is taken
+from nature and from truth; but I will not likewise aver that the
+theologist was neither crazed nor inebriated. If the listener's
+words were to be relied on, there was no love, no accommodating
+principle manifested between the two, but a fiery burning zeal,
+relating to points of such minor importance that a true Christian
+would blush to hear them mentioned, and the infidel and profane
+make a handle of them to turn our religion to scorn.
+
+Great was the dame's exultation at the triumph of her beloved
+pastor over her sinful neighbours in the lower parts of the house;
+and she boasted of it to Martha in high-sounding terms. But it
+was of short duration; for, in five weeks after that, Arabella
+Logan came to reside with the laird as his housekeeper, sitting at
+his table and carrying the keys as mistress-substitute of the
+mansion. The lady's grief and indignation were now raised to a
+higher pitch than ever; and she set every agent to work, with
+whom she had any power, to effect a separation between these
+two suspected ones. Remonstrance was of no avail: George
+laughed at them who tried such a course, and retained his
+housekeeper, while the lady gave herself up to utter despair; for,
+though she would not consort with her husband herself, she could
+not endure that any other should do so.
+
+But, to countervail this grievous offence, our saintly and afflicted
+dame, in due time, was safely delivered of a fine boy whom the
+laird acknowledged as his son and heir, and had him christened
+by his own name, and nursed in his own premises. He gave the
+nurse permission to take the boy to his mother's presence if ever
+she should desire to see him; but, strange as it may appear, she
+never once desired to see him from the day that he was born. The
+boy grew up, and was a healthful and happy child; and, in the
+course of another year, the lady presented him with a brother. A
+brother he certainly was, in the eye of the law, and it is more than
+probable that he was his brother in reality. But the laird thought
+otherwise; and, though he knew and acknowledged that he was
+obliged to support and provide for him, he refused to
+acknowledge him in other respects. He neither would
+countenance the banquet nor take the baptismal vows on him in
+the child's name; of course, the poor boy had to live and remain
+an alien from the visible church for a year and a day; at which
+time, Mr. Wringhim out of pity and kindness, took the lady
+herself as sponsor for the boy, and baptized him by the name of
+Robert Wringhim--that being the noted divine's own name.
+
+George was brought up with his father, and educated partly at the
+parish school, and partly at home, by a tutor hired for the
+purpose. He was a generous and kind-hearted youth; always
+ready to oblige, and hardly ever dissatisfied with anybody. Robert
+was brought up with Mr. Wringhim, the laird paying a certain
+allowance for him yearly; and there the boy was early inured to
+all the sternness and severity of his pastor's arbitrary and
+unyielding creed. He was taught to pray twice every day, and
+seven times on Sabbath days; but he was only to pray for the
+elect, and, like Devil of old, doom all that were aliens from God
+to destruction. He had never, in that family into which he had
+been as it were adopted, heard aught but evil spoken of his
+reputed father and brother; consequently he held them in utter
+abhorrence, and prayed against them every day, often "that the
+old hoary sinner might be cut off in the full flush of his iniquity,
+and be carried quick into hell; and that the young stem of the
+corrupt trunk might also be taken from a world that he disgraced,
+but that his sins might be pardoned, because he knew no better."
+
+Such were the tenets in which it would appear young Robert was
+bred. He was an acute boy, an excellent learner, had ardent and
+ungovernable passions, and, withal, a sternness of demeanour
+from which other boys shrunk. He was the best grammarian, the
+best reader, writer, and accountant in the various classes that he
+attended, and was fond of writing essays on controverted points
+of theology, for which he got prizes, and great praise from his
+guardian and mother. George was much behind him in scholastic
+acquirements, but greatly his superior in personal prowess, form,
+feature, and all that constitutes gentility in the deportment and
+appearance. The laird had often manifested to Miss Logan an
+earnest wish that the two young men should never meet, or at all
+events that they should be as little conversant as possible; and
+Miss Logan, who was as much attached to George as if he had
+been her own son, took every precaution, while he was a boy, that
+he should never meet with his brother; but, as they advanced
+towards manhood, this became impracticable. The lady was
+removed from her apartments in her husband's house to Glasgow,
+to her great content; and all to prevent the young laird being
+tainted with the company of her and her second son; for the laird
+had felt the effects of the principles they professed, and dreaded
+them more than persecution, fire, and sword. During all the
+dreadful times that had overpast, though the laird had been a
+moderate man, he had still leaned to the side of kingly
+prerogative, and had escaped confiscation and fines, without ever
+taking any active hand in suppressing the Covenanters. But, after
+experiencing a specimen of their tenets and manner in his wife,
+from a secret favourer of them and their doctrines, he grew
+alarmed at the prevalence of such stern and factious principles,
+now that there was no check or restraint upon them; and from that
+time he began to set himself against them, joining with the
+Cavalier party of that day in all their proceedings.
+
+It so happened that, under the influence of the Earls of Seafield
+and Tullibardine, he was returned for a Member of Parliament in
+the famous session that sat at Edinburgh when the Duke of
+Queensberry was commissioner, and in which party spirit ran to
+such an extremity. The young laird went with his father to the
+court, and remained in town all the time that the session lasted;
+and, as all interested people of both factions flocked to the town
+at that period, so the important Mr. Wringhim was there among
+the rest, during the greater part of the time, blowing the coal of
+revolutionary principles with all his might, in every society to
+which he could obtain admission. He was a great favourite with
+some of the west country gentlemen of that faction, by reason of
+his unbending impudence. No opposition could for a moment
+cause him either to blush, or retract one item that he had
+advanced. Therefore the Duke of Argyle and his friends made
+such use of him as sportsmen often do of terriers, to start the
+game, and make a great yelping noise to let them know whither
+the chase is proceeding. They often did this out of sport, in order
+to tease their opponent; for of all pesterers that ever fastened on
+man he was the most insufferable: knowing that his coat
+protected him from manual chastisement, he spared no acrimony,
+and delighted in the chagrin and anger of those with whom he
+contended. But he was sometimes likewise of real use to the
+heads of the Presbyterian faction, and therefore was admitted to
+their tables, and of course conceived himself a very great man.
+
+His ward accompanied him; and, very shortly after their arrival in
+Edinburgh, Robert, for the first time, met with the young laird his
+brother, in a match at tennis. The prowess and agility of the
+young squire drew forth the loudest plaudits of approval from his
+associates, and his own exertion alone carried the game every
+time on the one side, and that so far as all I along to count three
+for their one. The hero's name soon ran round the circle, and
+when his brother Robert, who was an onlooker, learned who it
+was that was gaining so much applause, he came and stood close
+beside him all the time that the game lasted, always now and then
+putting in a cutting remark by way of mockery.
+
+George could not help perceiving him, not only on account of his
+impertinent remarks, but he, moreover, stood so near him that he
+several times impeded him in his rapid evolutions, and of course
+got himself shoved aside in no very ceremonious way. Instead of
+making him keep his distance, these rude shocks and pushes,
+accompanied sometimes with hasty curses, only made him cling
+the closer to this king of the game. He seemed determined to
+maintain his right to his place as an onlooker, as well as any of
+those engaged in the game, and, if they had tried him at an
+argument, he would have carried his point; or perhaps he wished
+to quarrel with this spark of his jealousy and aversion, and draw
+the attention of the gay crowd to himself by these means; for, like
+his guardian, he knew no other pleasure but what consisted in
+opposition. George took him for some impertinent student of
+divinity, rather set upon a joke than anything else. He perceived a
+lad with black clothes, and a methodistical face, whose
+countenance and eye he disliked exceedingly, several times in his
+way, and that was all the notice he took of him the first time they
+two met. But the next day, and every succeeding one, the same
+devilish-looking youth attended him as constantly as his shadow;
+was always in his way as with intention to impede him and ever
+and anon his deep and malignant eye met those of his elder
+brother with a glance so fierce that it sometimes startled him.
+
+The very next time that George was engaged at tennis, he had
+not struck the ball above twice till the same intrusive being was
+again in his way. The party played for considerable stakes that
+day, namely, a dinner and wine at the Black Bull tavern; and
+George, as the hero and head of his party, was much interested in
+its honour; consequently the sight of this moody and
+hellish-looking student affected him in no very pleasant manner.
+"Pray Sir, be so good as keep without the range of the ball", said
+he.
+
+"Is there any law or enactment that can compel me to do so?" said
+the other, biting his lip with scorn.
+
+"If there is not, they are here that shall compel you," returned
+George. "so, friend, I rede you to be on your guard."
+
+As he said this, a flush of anger glowed in his handsome face and
+flashed from his sparkling blue eye; but it was a stranger to both,
+and momently took its departure. The black-coated youth set up
+his cap before, brought his heavy brows over his deep dark eyes,
+put his hands in the pockets of his black plush breeches, and
+stepped a little farther into the semicircle, immediately on his
+brother's right hand, than he had ever ventured to do before.
+There he set himself firm on his legs, and, with a face as demure
+as death, seemed determined to keep his ground. He pretended to
+he following the ball with his eyes; but every moment they were
+glancing aside at George. One of the competitors chanced to say
+rashly, in the moment of exultation, "That's a d--d fine blow,
+George!" On which the intruder took up the word, as
+characteristic of the competitors, and repeated it every stroke that
+was given, making such a ludicrous use of it that several of the
+onlookers were compelled to laugh immoderately; but the players
+were terribly nettled at it, as he really contrived, by dint of sliding
+in some canonical terms, to render the competitors and their game
+ridiculous.
+
+But matters at length came to a crisis that put them beyond sport.
+George, in flying backward to gain the point at which the ball
+was going to light, came inadvertently so rudely in contact with
+this obstreperous interloper that lie not only overthrew him, but
+also got a grievous fall over his legs; and, as he arose, the other
+made a spurn at him with his foot, which, if it had hit to its aim,
+would undoubtedly have finished the course of the young laird of
+Dalcastle and Balgrennan. George, being irritated beyond
+measure, as may well be conceived, especially at the deadly
+stroke aimed at him, struck the assailant with his racket, rather
+slightly, but so that his mouth and nose gushed out blood; and, at
+the same time, he said, turning to his cronies: "Does any of you
+know who the infernal puppy is?"
+
+"Do you know, Sir?" said one of the onlookers, a stranger, "the
+gentleman is your own brother, Sir--Mr. Robert Wringhim
+Colwan!"
+
+"No, not Colwan, Sir," said Robert, putting his hands in his
+pockets, and setting himself still farther forward than before, "not
+a Colwan, Sir; henceforth I disclaim the name."
+
+"No, certainly not," repeated George. "My mother's son you may.
+be--but not a Colwan! There you are right." Then, turning around
+to his informer, he said: "Mercy be about us, Sir! Is this the crazy
+minister's son from Glasgow?"
+
+This question was put in the irritation of the moment, but it was
+too rude, and far too out of place, and no one deigned any answer
+to it. He felt the reproof, and felt it deeply; seeming anxious for
+some opportunity to make an acknowledgment, or some
+reparation.
+
+In the meantime, young Wringhim was an object to all of the
+uttermost disgust. The blood flowing from his mouth and nose
+he took no pains to stem, neither did he so much as wipe it away;
+so that it spread over all his cheeks, and breast, even off at his
+toes. In that state did he take up his station in the middle of the
+competitors; and he did not now keep his place, but ran about,
+impeding everyone who attempted to make at the ball. They
+loaded him with execrations, but it availed nothing; he seemed
+courting persecution and buffetings, keeping steadfastly to his
+old joke of damnation, and marring the game so completely
+that, in spite of every effort on the part of the players, he forced
+them to stop their game and give it up. He was such a
+rueful-looking object, covered with blood, that none of them had
+the heart to kick him, although it appeared the only thing he
+wanted; and, as for George, he said not another word to him,
+either in anger or reproof.
+
+When the game was fairly given up, and the party were washing
+their hands in the stone fount, some of them besought Robert
+Wringhim to wash himself; but he mocked at them, and said he
+was much better as he was. George, at length, came forward
+abashedly towards him, and said: "I have been greatly to blame,
+Robert, and am very sorry for what I have done. But, in the first
+instance, I erred through ignorance, not knowing you were my
+brother, which you certainly are; and, in the second, through a
+momentary irritation, for which I am ashamed. I pray you,
+therefore, to pardon me, and give me your hand."
+
+As he said this, he held out his hand towards his polluted brother;
+but the froward predestinarian took not his from his breeches
+pocket, but lifting his foot, he gave his brother's hand a kick. 'I'll
+give you what will suit such a hand better than mine" said he,
+with a sneer. And then, turning lightly about, he added: Are there
+to be no more of these d---d fine blows, gentlemen? For shame, to
+give up such a profitable and edifying game!"
+
+"This is too bad," said George. "But, since it is thus, I have the
+less to regret." And, having made this general remark, he took no
+more note of the uncouth aggressor. But the persecution of the
+latter terminated not on the play-ground: he ranked up among
+them, bloody and disgusting as he was, and, keeping close by his
+brother's side, he marched along with the party all the way to the
+Black Bull. Before they got there, a great number of boys and idle
+people had surrounded them, hooting and incommoding them
+exceedingly, so that they were glad to get into the inn; and the
+unaccountable monster actually tried to get in alongst with them,
+to make one of the party at dinner. But the innkeeper and his
+men, getting the hint, by force prevented him from entering,
+although he attempted it again and again, both by telling lies and
+offering a bribe. Finding he could not prevail, he set to exciting
+the mob at the door to acts of violence; in which he had like to
+have succeeded. The landlord had no other shift, at last, but to
+send privately for two officers, and have him carried to the guard-
+house; and the hilarity and joy of the party of young gentlemen,
+for the evening, was quite spoiled by the inauspicious termination
+of their game.
+
+The Rev. Robert Wringhim was now to send for, to release his
+beloved ward. The messenger found him at table, with a number
+of the leaders of the Whig faction, the Marquis of Annandale
+being in the chair; and, the prisoner's note being produced,
+Wringhim read it aloud, accompanying it with some explanatory
+remarks. The circumstances of the case being thus magnified and
+distorted, it excited the utmost abhorrence, both of the deed and
+the perpetrators, among the assembled faction. They declaimed
+against the act as an unnatural attempt on the character, and even
+the life, of an unfortunate brother, who had been expelled from
+his father's house. And, as party spirit was the order of the day, an
+attempt was made to lay the burden of it to that account. In short,
+the young culprit got some of the best blood of the land to enter
+as his securities, and was set at liberty. But, when Wringhim
+perceived the plight that he was in, he took him, as he was, and
+presented him to his honourable patrons. This raised the
+indignation against the young laird and his associates a thousand-
+fold, which actually roused the party to temporary madness. They
+were, perhaps, a little excited by the wine and spirits they had
+swallowed; else a casual quarrel between two young men, at
+tennis, could not have driven them to such extremes. But certain
+it is that, from one at first arising to address the party on the
+atrocity of the offence, both in a moral and political point of
+view, on a sudden there were six on their feet, at the same time,
+expatiating on it; and, in a very short time thereafter, everyone in
+the room was up talking with the utmost vociferation, all on the
+same subject, and all taking the same side in the debate.
+
+In the midst of this confusion, someone or other issued from the
+house, which was at the back of the Canongate, calling out: "A
+plot, a plot! Treason, treason! Down with the bloody incendiaries
+at the Black Bull!"
+
+The concourse of people that were assembled in Edinburgh at that
+time was prodigious; and, as they were all actuated by political
+motives, they wanted only a ready-blown coal to set the mountain
+on fire. The evening being fine, and the streets thronged, the cry
+ran from mouth to mouth through the whole city. More than that,
+the mob that had of late been gathered to the door of the Black
+Bull had, by degrees, dispersed; but, they being young men, and
+idle vagrants, they had only spread themselves over the rest of the
+street to lounge in search of further amusement: consequently, a
+word was sufficient to send them back to their late rendezvous,
+where they had previously witnessed something they did not
+much approve of.
+
+The master of the tavern was astonished at seeing the mob again
+assembling; and that with such hurry and noise. But, his inmates
+being all of the highest respectability, he judged himself sure of
+protection, or at least of indemnity. He had two large parties in
+his house at the time; the largest of which was of the
+Revolutionist faction. The other consisted of our young
+Tennis-players, and their associates, who were all of the Jacobite
+order; or, at all events, leaned to the Episcopal side. The largest
+party were in a front room; and the attack of the mob fell first on
+their windows, though rather with fear and caution. Jingle went
+one pane; then a loud hurrah; and that again was followed by a
+number of voices, endeavouring to restrain the indignation from
+venting itself in destroying the windows, and to turn it on the
+inmates. The Whigs, calling the landlord, inquired what the
+assault meant: he cunningly answered that he suspected it was
+some of the youths of the Cavalier, or High-Church party,
+exciting the mob against them. The party consisted mostly of
+young gentlemen, by that time in a key to engage in any row;
+and, at all events, to suffer nothing from the other party, against
+whom their passions were mightily inflamed.
+
+The landlord, therefore, had no sooner given them the spirit-
+rousing intelligence than everyone, as by instinct, swore his own
+natural oath, and grasped his own natural weapon. A few of those
+of the highest rank were armed with swords, which they boldly
+drew; those of the subordinate orders immediately flew to such
+weapons as the room, kitchen, and scullery afforded--such as
+tongs, pokers, spits, racks, and shovels; and breathing vengeance
+on the prelatic party, the children of Antichrist and the heirs of
+d-n-t-n! the barterers of the liberties of their country, and
+betrayers of the most sacred trust--thus elevated, and thus armed,
+in the cause of right, justice, and liberty, our heroes rushed to the
+street, and attacked the mob with such violence that they broke
+the mass in a moment, and dispersed their thousands like chaff
+before the wind. The other party of young Jacobites, who sat in
+a room farther from the front, and were those against whom the
+fury of the mob was meant to have been directed, knew nothing
+of this second uproar, till the noise of the sally made by the
+Whigs assailed their ears; being then informed that the mob had
+attacked the house on account of the treatment they themselves
+had given to a young gentleman of the adverse faction, and that
+another jovial party had issued from the house in their defence,
+and was now engaged in an unequal combat, the sparks likewise
+flew, to the field to back their defenders with all their prowess,
+without troubling their heads about who they were.
+
+A mob is like a spring tide in an eastern storm, that retires only to
+return with more overwhelming fury. The crowd was taken by
+surprise when such a strong and well-armed party issued from the
+house with so great fury, laying all prostrate that came in their
+way. Those who were next to the door, and were, of course,
+the first whom the imminent danger assailed, rushed backwards
+among the crowd with their whole force. The Black Bull standing
+in a small square half-way between the High Street and the
+Cowgate, and the entrance to it being by two closes, into these the
+pressure outwards was simultaneous, and thousands were moved
+to an involuntary flight, they knew not why.
+
+But the High Street of Edinburgh, which they soon reached, is a
+dangerous place in which to make an open attack upon a mob.
+And it appears that the entrances to the tavern had been
+somewhere near to the Cross, on the south side of the street; for
+the crowd fled with great expedition, both to the cast and west,
+and the conquerors, separating themselves as chance directed,
+pursued impetuously, wounding and maiming as they flew. But
+it so chanced that, before either of the wings had followed the
+flying squadrons of their enemies for the space of a hundred
+yards each way, the devil an enemy they had to pursue! the
+multitude had vanished like so many thousands of phantoms!
+What could our heroes do? Why, they faced about to return
+towards their citadel, the Black Bull. But that feat was not so
+easily, nor so readily accomplished as they divined. The
+unnumbered alleys on each side of the street had swallowed up
+the multitude in a few seconds; but from these they were busy
+reconnoitring; and perceiving the deficiency in the number of
+their assailants, the rush from both sides of the street was as
+rapid, and as wonderful, as the disappearance of the crowd had
+been a few minutes before. Each close vomited out its levies, and
+these better armed with missiles than when they sought it for a
+temporary retreat. Woe then to our two columns of victorious
+Whigs! The mob actually closed around them as they would have
+swallowed them up; and, in the meanwhile, shower after shower
+of the most abominable weapons of offence were rained in upon
+them. If the gentlemen were irritated before, this inflamed them
+still further; but their danger was now so apparent they could not
+shut their eyes on it; therefore, both parties, as if actuated by the
+same spirit, made a desperate effort to join, and the greater part
+effected it; but some were knocked down, and others were
+separated from their friends, and blithe to become silent members
+of the mob.
+
+The battle now raged immediately in front of the closes leading to
+the Black Bull; the small body of Whig gentlemen was hardly
+bested, and it is likely would have been overcome and trampled
+down every man, had they not been then and there joined by the
+young Cavaliers; who, fresh to arms, broke from the wynd,
+opened the head of the passage, laid about them manfully, and
+thus kept up the spirits of the exasperated Whigs, who were the
+men in fact that wrought the most deray among the populace.
+
+The town-guard was now on the alert; and two companies of the
+Cameronian Regiment, with the Hon. Captain Douglas, rushed
+down from the Castle to the scene of action; but, for all the noise
+and hubbub that these caused in the street, the combat had
+become so close and inveterate that numbers of both sides were
+taken prisoners fighting hand to hand, and could scarcely be
+separated when the guardsmen and soldiers had them by the
+necks.
+
+Great was the alarm and confusion that night in Edinburgh; for
+everyone concluded that it was a party scuffle, and, the two
+parties being so equal in power, the most serious consequences
+were anticipated. The agitation was so prevailing that every party
+in town, great and small, was broken up; and the lord-
+commissioner thought proper to go to the Council Chamber
+himself, even at that late hour, accompanied by the sheriffs of
+Edinburgh and Linlithgow, with sundry noblemen besides, in
+order to learn something of the origin of the affray.
+
+For a long time the court was completely puzzled. Every
+gentleman brought in exclaimed against the treatment he had
+received, in most bitter terms, blaming a mob set on him and his
+friends by the adverse party, and matters looked extremely ill
+until at length they began to perceive that they were examining
+gentlemen of both parties, and that they had been doing so from
+the beginning, almost alternately, so equally had the prisoners
+been taken from both parties. Finally, it turned out that a few
+gentlemen, two-thirds of whom were strenuous Whigs
+themselves, had joined in mauling the whole Whig population of
+Edinburgh. The investigation disclosed nothing the effect of
+which was not ludicrous; and the Duke of Queensberry, whose
+aim was at that time to conciliate the two factions, tried all that he
+could to turn the whole fracas into a joke--an unlucky frolic,
+where no ill was meant on either side, and which yet had been
+productive of a great deal.
+
+The greater part of the people went home satisfied; but not so
+the Rev. Robert Wringhim. He did all that he could to inflame
+both judges and populace against the young Cavaliers, especially
+against the young Laird of Dalcastle, whom he represented as an
+incendiary, set on by an unnatural parent to slander his mother,
+and make away with a hapless and only brother; and, in truth,
+that declaimer against all human merit had that sort of powerful,
+homely, and bitter eloquence which seldom missed affecting his
+hearers: the consequence at that time was that he made the
+unfortunate affair between the two brothers appear in extremely
+bad colours, and the populace retired to their homes impressed
+with no very favourable opinion of either the Laird of Dalcastle
+or his son George, neither of whom were there present to speak
+for themselves.
+
+As for Wringhim himself, he went home to his lodgings, filled
+with gall and with spite against the young laird, whom he was
+made to believe the aggressor, and that intentionally. But most of
+all he was filled with indignation against the father, whom he
+held in abhorrence at all times, and blamed solely for this
+unmannerly attack made on his favourite ward, namesake, and
+adopted son; and for the public imputation of a crime to his own
+reverence in calling the lad his son, and thus charging him with a
+sin against which he was well known to have levelled all the
+arrows of church censure with unsparing might.
+
+But, filled as his heart was with some portion of these bad
+feelings, to which all flesh is subject, he kept, nevertheless, the
+fear of the Lord always before his eyes so far as never to omit any
+of the external duties of religion, and farther than that man hath
+no power to pry. He lodged with the family of a Mr. Miller,
+whose lady was originally from Glasgow, and had been a hearer
+and, of course. a great admirer of Mr. Wringhim. In that family
+he made public worship every evening; and that night, in his
+petitions at a throne of grace, he prayed for so many vials of
+wrath to be poured on the head of some particular sinner that the
+hearers trembled, and stopped their ears. But that he might not
+proceed with so violent a measure, amounting to
+excommunication, without due scripture warrant, he began the
+exercise of the evening by singing the following verses, which it
+is a pity should ever have been admitted into a Christian
+psalmody, being so adverse to all its mild and benevolent
+principles:
+
+
+Set thou the wicked over him,
+And upon his right hand
+Give thou his greatest enemy,
+Even Satan, leave to stand.
+
+And, when by thee he shall be judged,
+Let him remembered be;
+And let his prayer be turned to sin
+When he shall call on thee.
+
+Few be his days; and in his room
+His charge another take;
+His children let be fatherless;
+His wife a widow make:
+
+Let God his father's wickedness
+Still to remembrance call;
+And never let his mother's sin
+Be blotted out at all.
+
+As he in cursing pleasure took
+So let it to him fall;
+As he delighted not to bless,
+So bless him not at all.
+
+As cursing he like clothes put on,
+Into his bowels so,
+Like water, and into his bones
+Like oil, down let it go.
+
+
+Young Wringhim only knew the full purport of this spiritual
+song; and went to his bed better satisfied than ever that his father
+and brother were castaways, reprobates, aliens from the Church
+and the true faith, and cursed in time and eternity.
+
+The next day George and his companions met as usual--all who
+were not seriously wounded of them. But, as they strolled about
+the city, the rancorous eye and the finger of scorn was pointed
+against them. None of them was at first aware of the reason; but it
+threw a damp over their spirits and enjoyments, which they could
+not master. They went to take a forenoon game at their old play
+of tennis, not on a match, but by way of improving themselves;
+but they had not well taken their places till young Wringhim
+appeared in his old station, at his brother's right hand, with looks
+more demure and determined than ever. His lips were primmed
+so close that his mouth was hardly discernible, and his dark deep
+eye flashed gleams of holy indignation on the godless set, but
+particularly on his brother. His presence acted as a mildew on all
+social intercourse or enjoyment; the game was marred, and ended
+ere ever it was well begun. There were whisperings apart--the
+party separated, and, in order to shake off the blighting influence
+of this dogged persecutor, they entered sundry houses of their
+acquaintances, with an understanding that they were to meet on
+the Links for a game at cricket.
+
+They did so; and, stripping off part of their clothes, they began
+that violent and spirited game. They had not played five minutes
+till Wringhim was stalking in the midst of them, and totally
+impeding the play. A cry arose from all corners of: "Oh, this will
+never do. Kick him out of the play-ground! Knock down the
+scoundrel; or bind him, and let him lie in peace."
+
+"By no means," cried George. "It is evident he wants nothing
+else. Pray do not humour him so much as to touch him with either
+foot or finger." Then, turning to a friend, he said in a whisper:
+"Speak to him, Gordon; he surely will not refuse to let us have
+the ground to ourselves, if you request it of him."
+
+Gordon went up to him, and requested of him, civilly, but
+ardently, "to retire to a certain distance, else none of them could
+or would be answerable, however sore he might be hurt."
+
+He turned disdainfully on his heel, uttered a kind of pulpit hem!
+and then added, "I will take my chance of that; hurt me, any of
+you, at your peril."
+
+The young gentlemen smiled, through spite and disdain of the
+dogged animal. Gordon followed him up, and tried to remonstrate
+with him; but he let him know that "it was his pleasure to be there
+at that time; and, unless he could demonstrate to him what
+superior right he and his party had to that ground, in preference to
+him, and to the exclusion of all others, he was determined to
+assert his right, and the rights of his fellow-citizens, by keeping
+possession of whatsoever part of that common field he chose."
+
+"You are no gentleman, Sir," said Gordon.
+
+"Are you one, Sir?" said the other.
+
+"Yes, Sir. I will let you know that I am, by G--!"
+
+"Then, thanks be to Him whose name you have profaned, I am
+none, If one of the party be a gentleman, I do hope in God am
+not!"
+
+It was now apparent to them all that he was courting obloquy and
+manual chastisement from their hands, if by any means he could
+provoke them to the deed; and, apprehensive that he had some
+sinister and deep-laid design in hunting after such a singular
+favour, they wisely restrained one another from inflicting the
+punishment that each of them yearned to bestow, personally, and
+which he so well deserved.
+
+But the unpopularity of the younger George Colwan could no
+longer be concealed from his associates. It was manifested
+wherever the populace were assembled; and his young and
+intimate friend, Adam Gordon, was obliged to warn him of the
+circumstance that he might not be surprised at the gentlemen of
+their acquaintance withdrawing themselves from his society, as
+they could not be seen with him without being insulted. George
+thanked him; and it was agreed between them that the former
+should keep himself retired during the daytime while he remained
+in Edinburgh, and that at night they should meet together, along
+with such of their companions as were disengaged.
+
+George found it every day more and more necessary to adhere to
+this system of seclusion; for it was not alone the hisses of the
+boys and populace that pursued him--a fiend of more malignant
+aspect was ever at his elbow, in the form of his brother. To
+whatever place of amusement he betook himself, and however
+well he concealed his intentions of going there from all flesh
+living, there was his brother Wringhim also, and always within a
+few yards of him, generally about the same distance, and ever and
+anon darting looks at him that chilled his very soul. They were
+looks that cannot be described; but they were felt piercing to the
+bosom's deepest core. They affected even the onlookers in a very
+particular manner, for all whose eyes caught a glimpse of these
+hideous glances followed them to the object towards which they
+were darted: the gentlemanly and mild demeanour of that object
+generally calmed their startled apprehensions; for no one ever yet
+noted the glances of the young man's eye, in the black coat, at the
+face of his brother, who did not at first manifest strong symptoms
+of alarm.
+
+George became utterly confounded; not only at the import of this
+persecution, but how in the world it came to pass that this
+unaccountable being knew all his motions, and every intention of
+his heart, as it were intuitively. On consulting his own previous
+feelings. and resolutions, he found that the circumstances of his
+going to such and such a place were often the most casual
+incidents in nature--the caprice of a moment had carried him there,
+and yet he had never sat or stood many minutes till there was the
+selfsame being, always in the same position with regard to
+himself, as regularly as the shadow is cast from the substance, or
+the ray of light from the opposing denser medium.
+
+For instance, he remembered one day of setting out with the
+intention of going to attend divine worship in the High Church,
+and when, within a short space of its door, he was overtaken by
+young Kilpatrick of Closeburn, who was bound to the Grey-Friars
+to see his sweetheart, as he said: "and if you will go with me,
+Colwan," said he, "I will let you see her too, and then you will be
+just as far forward as I am."
+
+George assented at once, and went; and, after taking his seat, he
+leaned his head forwards on the pew to repeat over to himself a
+short ejaculatory prayer, as had always been his custom on
+entering the house of God. When he had done, he lifted his eye
+naturally towards that point on his right hand where the fierce
+apparition of his brother had been wont to meet his view: there he
+was, in the same habit, form, demeanour, and precise point of
+distance, as usual! George again laid down his head, and his mind
+was so astounded that he had nearly fallen into a swoon. He tried
+shortly after to muster up courage to look at the speaker, at the
+congregation, and at Captain Kilpatrick's sweetheart in particular;
+but the fiendish glances of the young man in the black clothes
+were too appalling to be withstood--his eye caught them whether
+he was looking that way or not: at length his courage was fairly
+mastered, and he was obliged to look down during the remainder
+of the service.
+
+By night or by day it was the same. In the gallery of the
+Parliament House, in the boxes of the play-house, in the church,
+in the assembly, in the streets, suburbs, and the fields; and every
+day, and every hour, from the first rencounter of the two, the
+attendance became more and more constant, more inexplicable,
+and altogether more alarming and insufferable, until at last
+George was fairly driven from society, and forced to spend his
+days in his and his father's lodgings with closed doors. Even
+there, he was constantly harassed with the idea that, the next time
+he lifted his eyes, he would to a certainty see that face, the most
+repulsive to all his feelings of aught the earth contained. The
+attendance of that brother was now become like the attendance of
+a demon on some devoted being that had sold himself to
+destruction; his approaches as undiscerned, and his looks as
+fraught with hideous malignity. It was seldom that he saw him
+either following him in the streets, or entering any house or
+church after him; he only appeared in his place, George wist not
+how, or whence; and, having sped so ill in his first friendly
+approaches, he had never spoken to his equivocal attendant a
+second time.
+
+It came at length into George's head, as he was pondering, by
+himself, on the circumstances of this extraordinary attendance,
+that perhaps his brother had relented, and, though of so sullen and
+unaccommodating a temper that he would not acknowledge it, or
+beg a reconciliation, it might be for that very purpose that he
+followed his steps night and day in that extraordinary manner. "I
+cannot for my life see for what other purpose it can be," thought
+he. "He never offers to attempt my life; nor dares he, if he had the
+inclination; therefore, although his manner is peculiarly repulsive
+to me, I shall not have my mind burdened with the reflection that
+my own mother's son yearned for a reconciliation with me and
+was repulsed by my haughty and insolent behaviour. The next
+time he comes to my hand, I am resolved that I will accost him as
+one brother ought to address another, whatever it may cost me;
+and, if I am still flouted with disdain, then shall the blame rest
+with him."
+
+After this generous resolution, it was a good while before his
+gratuitous attendant appeared at his side again; and George began
+to think that his visits were discontinued. The hope was a relief
+that could not be calculated; but still George had a feeling that it
+was too supreme to last. His enemy had been too pertinacious to
+abandon his design, whatever it was. He, however, began to
+indulge in a little more liberty, and for several days he enjoyed it
+with impunity.
+
+George was, from infancy, of a stirring active disposition and
+could not endure confinement; and, having been of late much
+restrained in his youthful exercises by this singular persecutor, he
+grew uneasy under such restraint, and, one morning, chancing to
+awaken very early, he arose to make an excursion to the top of
+Arthur's Seat, to breathe the breeze of the dawning, and see the
+sun arise out of the eastern ocean. The morning was calm and
+serene; and as he walked down the south back of the Canongate,
+towards the Palace, the haze was so close around him that he
+could not see the houses on the opposite side of the way. As he
+passed the Lord-Commissioner's house, the guards were in
+attendance, who cautioned him not to go by the Palace, as all the
+gates would be shut and guarded for an hour to come, on which
+he went by the back of St. Anthony's gardens, and found his way
+into that little romantic glade adjoining to the saint's chapel and
+well. He was still involved in a blue haze, like a dense smoke,
+but yet in the midst of it the respiration was the most refreshing
+and delicious. The grass and the flowers were loaden with dew;
+and, on taking off his hat to wipe his forehead, he perceived that
+the black glossy fur of which his chaperon was wrought was all
+covered with a tissue of the most delicate silver--a fairy web,
+composed of little spheres, so minute that no eye could discern
+any of them; yet there they were shining in lovely millions.
+Afraid of defacing so beautiful and so delicate a garnish, he
+replaced his hat with the greatest caution, and went on his way
+light of heart.
+
+As he approached the swire at the head of the dell--that little
+delightful verge from which in one moment the eastern limits and
+shores of Lothian arise on the view--as he approached it, I say,
+and a little space from the height, he beheld, to his astonishment,
+a bright halo in the cloud of haze, that rose in a semicircle over
+his head like a pale rainbow. He was struck motionless at the
+view of the lovely vision; for it so chanced that he had never seen
+the same appearance before, though common at early morn. But
+he soon perceived the cause of the phenomenon, and that it
+proceeded from the rays of the sun from a pure unclouded
+morning sky striking upon this dense vapour which refracted
+them. But, the better all the works of nature are understood, the
+more they will be ever admired. That was a scene that would
+have entranced the man of science with delight, but which the
+uninitiated and sordid man would have regarded less than the
+mole rearing up his hill in silence and in darkness.
+
+George did admire this halo of glory, which still grew wider, and
+less defined, as he approached the surface, of the cloud. But, to
+his utter amazement and supreme delight, he found, on reaching
+the top of Arthur's Seat, that this sublunary rainbow, this
+terrestrial glory, was spread in its most vivid hues beneath his
+feet. Still he could not perceive the body of the sun, although the
+light behind him was dazzling; but the cloud of haze lying dense
+in that deep dell that separates the hill from the rocks of
+Salisbury, and the dull shadow of the hill mingling with that
+cloud made the dell a pit of darkness. On that shadowy cloud was
+the lovely rainbow formed, spreading itself on a horizontal plain,
+and having a slight and brilliant shade of all the colours of the
+heavenly bow, but all of them paler and less defined. But this
+terrestrial phenomenon of the early morn cannot be better
+delineated than by the name given of it by the shepherd boys,
+"The little wee ghost of the rainbow."
+
+Such was the description of the morning, and the wild shades of
+the hill, that George gave to his father and Mr. Adam Gordon that
+same day on which he had witnessed them; and it is necessary
+that the reader should comprehend something of their nature to
+understand what follows.
+
+He seated himself on the pinnacle of the rocky precipice, a little
+within the top of the hill to the westward, and, with a light and
+buoyant heart, viewed the beauties of the morning, and inhaled its
+salubrious breeze. "Here," thought he, "I can converse with nature
+without disturbance, and without being intruded on by any
+appalling or obnoxious visitor." The idea of his brother's dark and
+malevolent looks coming at that moment across his mind, he
+turned his eyes instinctively to the right, to the point where that
+unwelcome guest was wont to make his appearance. Gracious
+Heaven! What an apparition was there presented to his view! He
+saw, delineated in the cloud, the shoulders, arms, and features of
+a human being of the most dreadful aspect. The face was the face
+of his brother, but dilated to twenty times the natural size. Its dark
+eyes gleamed on him through the mist, while every furrow of its
+hideous brow frowned deep as the ravines on the brow of the hill.
+George started, and his hair stood up in bristles as he gazed on
+this horrible monster. He saw every feature and every line of the
+face distinctly as it gazed on him with an intensity that was hardly
+brookable. Its eyes were fixed on him, in the same manner as
+those of some carnivorous animal fixed on its prey; and yet there
+was fear and trembling in these unearthly features, as plainly
+depicted as murderous malice. The giant apparition seemed
+sometimes to be cowering down as in terror, so that nothing but
+his brow and eyes were seen; still these never turned one moment
+from their object--again it rose imperceptively up, and began to
+approach with great caution; and, as it neared, the dimensions of
+its form lessened, still continuing, however, far above the natural
+size.
+
+George conceived it to be a spirit. He could conceive it to be
+nothing else; and he took it for some horrid demon by which he
+was haunted, that had assumed the features of his brother in
+every lineament, but, in taking on itself the human form, had
+miscalculated dreadfully on the size, and presented itself thus to
+him in a blown-up, dilated frame of embodied air, exhaled from
+the caverns of death or the regions of devouring fire. He was
+further confirmed in the belief that it was a malignant spirit on
+perceiving that it approached him across the front of a precipice,
+where there was not footing for thing of mortal frame. still, what
+with terror and astonishment, he continued riveted to the spot, till
+it approached, as he deemed, to within two yards of him; and
+then, perceiving that it was setting itself to make a violent spring
+on him, he started to his feet and fled distractedly in the opposite
+direction, keeping his eye cast behind him lest he had been seized
+in that dangerous place. But the very first bolt that he made in his
+flight he came in contact with a real body of flesh and blood, and
+that with such violence that both went down among some
+scragged rocks, and George rolled over the other. The being
+called out "Murder"; and, rising, fled precipitately. George then
+perceived that it was his brother; and being confounded between
+the shadow and the substance, he knew not what he was doing or
+what he had done; and, there being only one natural way of
+retreat from the brink of the rock, he likewise arose and pursued
+the affrighted culprit with all his speed towards the top of the hill.
+Wringhim was braying out, "Murder! murder!" at which George,
+being disgusted, and his spirits all in a ferment from some hurried
+idea of intended harm, the moment he came up with the craven he
+seized him rudely by the shoulder, and clapped his hand on his
+mouth. "Murder, you beast!" said he; "what do you mean by
+roaring out murder in that way? Who the devil is murdering you,
+or offering to murder you?"
+
+Wringhim forced his mouth from under his brother's hand, and
+roared with redoubled energy: "Eh! Egh! Murder! murder!" etc.
+George had felt resolute to put down this shocking alarm, lest
+someone might hear it and fly to the spot, or draw inferences
+widely different from the truth; and, perceiving the terror of this
+elect youth to be so great that expostulation was vain, he seized
+him by the mouth and nose with his left hand so strenuously that
+he sank his fingers into his cheeks. But, the poltroon still
+attempting to bray out, George gave him such a stunning blow
+with his fist on the left temple that he crumbled, as it were, to the
+ground, but more from the effects of terror than those of the blow.
+His nose, however, again gushed out blood, a system of defence
+which seemed as natural to him as that resorted to by the race of
+stinkards. He then raised himself on his knees and hams, and
+raising up his ghastly face, while the blood streamed over both
+ears, he besought his life of his brother, in the most abject
+whining manner, gaping and blubbering most piteously.
+
+"Tell me then, Sir," said George, resolved to make the most of the
+wretch's terror--"tell me for what purpose it is that you
+haunt my steps? Tell me plainly, and instantly, else I will throw
+you from the verge of that precipice."
+
+"Oh, I will never do it again! I will never do it again! Spare my
+life, dear, good brother! Spare my life! Sure I never did you any
+hurt."
+
+"Swear to me, then, by the God that made you, that you will
+never henceforth follow after me to torment me with your hellish
+threatening looks; swear that you will never again come into my
+presence without being invited. Will you take an oath to this
+effect?"
+
+"Oh yes! I will, I will!"
+
+"But this is not all: you must tell me for what purpose you sought
+me out here this morning?"
+
+"Oh, brother! For nothing but your good. I had nothing at heart
+but your unspeakable profit, and great and endless good."
+
+"So, then, you indeed knew that I was here?"
+
+"I was told so by a friend, but I did not believe him; a--a--at least
+I did not know that it was true till I saw you."
+
+"Tell me this one thing, then, Robert, and all shall he forgotten
+and forgiven. Who was that friend?"
+
+"You do not know him."
+
+"How then does he know me?"
+
+"I cannot tell."
+
+"Was he here present with you to-day?"
+
+"Yes; he was not far distant. He came to this hill with me."
+
+"Where then is he now?"
+
+"I cannot tell."
+
+"Then, wretch, confess that the devil was that friend who told you
+I was here, and who came here with you. None else could
+possibly know of my being here."
+
+"Ah! how little you know of him! Would you argue that there is
+neither man nor spirit endowed with so much foresight as to
+deduce natural conclusions from previous actions and incidents
+but the devil? Alas, brother! But why should I wonder at such
+abandoned notions and principles? It was fore-ordained that you
+should cherish them, and that they should be the ruin of your soul
+and body, before the world was framed. Be assured of this,
+however, that I had no aim of seeking you but your good!"
+
+"Well, Robert, I will believe it. I am disposed to be hasty and
+passionate: it is a fault in my nature; but I never meant, or wished
+you evil; and God is my witness that I would as soon stretch out
+my hand to my own life, or my father's, as to yours." At these
+words, Wringhim uttered a hollow exulting laugh, put his hands
+in his pockets, and withdrew a space to his accustomed distance.
+George continued: "And now, once for all, I request that we may
+exchange forgiveness, and that we may part and remain friends."
+
+"Would such a thing be expedient, think you? Or consistent with
+the glory of God? I doubt it."
+
+"I can think of nothing that would be more so. Is it not consistent
+with every precept of the Gospel? Come, brother, say that our
+reconciliation is complete."
+
+"Oh yes, certainly!. I tell you, brother, according to the flesh: it is
+just as complete as the lark's is with the adder, no more so, nor
+ever can. Reconciled, forsooth! To what would I be reconciled?"
+
+As he said this, he strode indignantly away. From the moment
+that he heard his life was safe, he assumed his former insolence
+and revengeful looks--and never were they more dreadful than on
+parting with his brother that morning on the top of the hill. "Well,
+go thy way," said George; "some would despise, but I pity thee. If
+thou art not a limb of Satan, I never saw one."
+
+The sun had now dispelled the vapours; and, the morning being
+lovely beyond description, George sat himself down on the top of
+the hill, and pondered deeply on the unaccountable incident that
+had befallen to him that morning. He could in no-wise
+comprehend it; but, taking it with other previous circumstances,
+he could not get quit of a conviction that he was haunted by some
+evil genius in the shape of his brother, as well as by that dark and
+mysterious wretch himself. In no other way could he account for
+the apparition he saw that morning on the face of the rock, nor for
+several sudden appearances of the same being, in places where
+there was no possibility of any foreknowledge that he himself
+was to be there, and as little that the same being, if he were flesh
+and blood like other men, could always start up in the same
+position with regard to him. He determined, therefore, on
+reaching home, to relate all that had happened, from beginning to
+end, to his father, asking his counsel and his assistance, although
+he knew full well that his father was not the fittest man in the
+world to solve such a problem. He was now involved in party
+politics, over head and ears; and, moreover, he could never hear
+the names of either of the Wringhims mentioned without getting
+into a quandary of disgust and anger; and all that he would deign
+to say of them was, to call them by all the opprobrious names he
+could invent.
+
+It turned out as the young man from the first suggested: old
+Dalcastle would listen to nothing concerning them with any
+patience. George complained that his brother harassed him with
+his presence at all times, and in all places. Old Dal asked why he
+did not kick the dog out of his presence whenever he felt him
+disagreeable? George said he seemed to have some demon for a
+familiar. Dal answered that he did not wonder a bit at that, for the
+young spark was the third in a direct line who had all been
+children of adultery; and it was well known that all such were
+born half-deils themselves, and nothing was more likely than that
+they should hold intercourse with their fellows. In the same style
+did he sympathize with all his son's late sufferings and
+perplexities.
+
+In Mr. Adam Gordon, however, George found a friend who
+entered into all his feelings, and had seen and known everything
+about the matter. He tried to convince him that at all events there
+could be nothing supernatural in the circumstances; and that the
+vision he had seen on the rock, among the thick mist, was the
+shadow of his brother approaching behind him. George could not
+swallow this, for he had seen his own shadow on the cloud, and,
+instead of approaching to aught like his own figure, he perceived
+nothing but a halo of glory round a point of the cloud that was
+whither and purer than the rest. Gordon said, if he would go with
+him to a mountain of his father's, which he named, in
+Aberdeenshire, he would show him a giant spirit of the same
+dimensions, any morning at the rising of the sun, provided he
+shone on that spot. This statement excited George's curiosity
+exceedingly; and, being disgusted with some things about
+Edinburgh, and glad to get out of the way, he consented to go
+with Gordon to the Highlands for a space. The day was
+accordingly set for their departure, the old laird's assent obtained,
+and the two young sparks parted in a state of great impatience for
+their excursion.
+
+One of them found out another engagement, however, the instant
+after this last was determined on. Young Wringhim went off the
+hill that morning, and home to his upright guardian again without
+washing the blood from his face and neck; and there he told a
+most woeful story indeed: how he had gone out to take a
+morning's walk on the hill, where he had encountered with his
+reprobate brother among the mist, who had knocked him down
+and very near murdered him; threatening dreadfully, and with
+horrid oaths, to throw him from the top of the cliff.
+
+The wrath of the great divine was kindled beyond measure. He
+cursed the aggressor in the name of the Most High; and bound
+himself, by an oath, to cause that wicked one's transgressions
+return upon his own head sevenfold. But, before he engaged
+further in the business of vengeance, he kneeled with his adopted
+son, and committed the whole cause unto the Lord, whom he
+addressed as one coming breathing burning coals of juniper, and
+casting his lightnings before him, to destroy and root out all who
+had moved hand or tongue against the children of the promise.
+Thus did he arise confirmed, and go forth to certain conquest.
+
+We cannot enter into the detail of the events that now occurred
+without forestalling a part of the narrative of one who knew all
+the circumstances--was deeply interested in them, and whose
+relation is of higher value than anything that can be retailed out of
+the stores of tradition and old registers; but, his narrative being
+different from these, it was judged expedient to give the account
+as thus publicly handed down to us. Suffice it that, before
+evening, George was apprehended, and lodged in jail, on a
+criminal charge of an assault and battery, to the shedding of
+blood, with the intent of committing fratricide. Then was the old
+laird in great consternation, and blamed himself for treating the
+thing so lightly, which seemed to have been gone about, from the
+beginning, so systematically, and with an intent which the villains
+were now going to realize, namely, to get the young laird
+disposed of; and then his brother, in spite of the old gentleman's
+teeth, would be laird himself.
+
+Old Dal now set his whole interest to work among the noblemen
+and lawyers of his party. His son's case looked exceedingly ill,
+owing to the former assault before witnesses. and the unbecoming
+expressions made use of by him on that occasion, as well as from
+the present assault, which George did not deny, and for which no
+moving cause or motive could be made to appear.
+
+On his first declaration before the sheriff, matters looked no
+better: but then the sheriff was a Whig. It is well known how
+differently the people of the present day, in Scotland, view the
+cases of their own party-men and those of opposite political
+principles. But this day is nothing to that in such matters,
+although, God knows, they are still sometimes barefaced enough.
+It appeared, from all the witnesses in the first case, that the
+complainant was the first aggressor--that he refused to stand out
+of the way, though apprised of his danger; and, when his brother
+came against him inadvertently, he had aimed a blow at him with
+his foot, which, if it had taken effect, would have killed him. But
+as to the story of the apparition in fair day-light--the flying from
+the face of it--the running foul of his brother pursuing him, and
+knocking him down, why the judge smiled at the relation, and
+saying: "It was a very extraordinary story," he remanded George
+to prison, leaving the matter to the High Court of Justiciary.
+
+When the case came before that court, matters took a different
+turn. The constant and sullen attendance of the one brother upon
+the other excited suspicions; and these were in some manner
+confirmed when the guards at Queensberry House deported that
+the prisoner went by them on his way to the hill that morning,
+about twenty minutes before the complainant, and, when the
+latter passed, he asked if such a young man had passed before
+him, describing the prisoner's appearance to them; and that, on
+being answered in the affirmative, he mended his pace and fell a-
+running.
+
+The Lord Justice, on hearing this, asked the prisoner if he had any
+suspicions that his brother had a design on his life.
+
+He answered that all along, from the time of their first
+unfortunate meeting, his brother had dogged his steps so
+constantly, and so unaccountably, that he was convinced it was
+with some intent out of the ordinary course of events; and that if,
+as his lordship supposed, it was indeed his shadow that he had
+seen approaching him through the mist, then, from the cowering
+and cautious manner that it advanced, there was no little doubt
+that his brother's design had been to push him headlong from the
+cliff that morning.
+
+A conversation then took place between the judge and the Lord
+Advocate; and, in the meantime, a bustle was seen in the hall; on
+which the doors were ordered to be guarded, and, behold, the
+precious Mr. R. Wringhim was taken into custody, trying to make
+his escape out of court. Finally it turned out that George was
+honourably acquitted, and young Wringhim bound over to keep
+the peace, with heavy penalties and securities.
+
+That was a day of high exultation to George and his youthful
+associates, all of whom abhorred Wringhim; and, the evening
+being spent in great glee, it was agreed between Mr. Adam
+Gordon and George that their visit to the Highlands, though thus
+long delayed, was not to be abandoned; and though they had,
+through the machinations of an incendiary, lost the season of
+delight, they would still find plenty of sport in deer-shooting.
+Accordingly, the day was set a second time for their departure;
+and, on the day preceding that, all the party were invited by
+George to dine with him once more at the sign of the Black Bull
+of Norway. Everyone promised to attend, anticipating nothing but
+festivity and joy. Alas, what short-sighted improvident creatures
+we are, all of us; and how often does the evening cup of joy lead
+to sorrow in the morning!
+
+The day arrived--the party of young noblemen and gentlemen
+met, and were as happy and jovial as men could be. George was
+never seen so brilliant, or so full of spirits; and exulting to see so
+many gallant young chiefs and gentlemen about him, who all
+gloried in the same principles of loyalty (perhaps this word
+should have been written disloyalty), he made speeches, gave
+toasts, and sung songs, all leaning slyly to the same side, until a
+very late hour. By that time he had pushed the bottle so long and
+so freely that its fumes had taken possession of every brain to
+such a degree that they held Dame Reason rather at the staff's
+end, overbearing all her counsels and expostulations; and it was
+imprudently proposed by a wild inebriated spark, and carried by a
+majority of voices, that the whole party should adjourn to a
+bagnio for the remainder of the night.
+
+They did so; and it appears from what follows that the house,
+to which they retired must have been somewhere on the opposite
+side of the street to the Black Bull Inn, a little farther to the
+eastward. They had not been an hour in that house till some
+altercation chanced to arise between George Colwan and a Mr.
+Drummond, the younger son of a nobleman of distinction. It
+was perfectly casual, and no one thenceforward, to this day,
+could ever tell what it was about, if it was not about the
+misunderstanding of some word or term that the one had uttered.
+However it was, some high words passed between them; these
+were followed by threats, and, in less than two minutes from the
+commencement of the quarrel, Drummond left the house in
+apparent displeasure, hinting to the other that they two should
+settle that in a more convenient place.
+
+The company looked at one another, for all was over before any
+of them knew such a thing was begun. "What the devil is the
+matter?" cried one. "What ails Drummond?" cried another. "Who
+has he quarrelled with?" asked a third.
+
+"Don't know."--"Can't tell, on my life."--"He has quarrelled with
+his wine, I suppose, and is going to send it a challenge."
+
+Such were the questions, and such the answers that passed in the
+jovial party, and the matter was no more thought of.
+
+But in the course of a very short space, about the length which the
+ideas of the company were the next day at great variance, a sharp
+rap came to the door. it was opened by a female; but, there being
+a chain inside, she only saw one side of the person at the door. He
+appeared to be a young gentleman, in appearance like him who
+had lately left the house, and asked, in a low whispering voice, "if
+young Dalcastle was still in the house?" The woman did not
+know. "If he is," added he, "pray tell him to speak with me for a
+few minutes." The woman delivered the message before all the
+party, among whom there were then sundry courteous ladies of
+notable distinction, and George, on receiving it, instantly rose
+from the side of one of them, and said, in the hearing of them all,
+'I will bet a hundred merks that is Drummond."--"Don't go to
+quarrel with him, George," said one.--"Bring him in with you,"
+said another. George stepped out; the door was again bolted, the
+chain drawn across, and the inadvertent party, left within, thought
+no more of the circumstance till the morning, that the report had
+spread over the city that a young gentleman had been slain, on a
+little washing-green at the side of the North Loch, and at the very
+bottom of the close where this thoughtless party had been
+assembled.
+
+Several of them, on first hearing the report, basted to the dead-
+room in the Guard-house, where the corpse had been deposited,
+and soon discovered the body to be that of their friend and late
+entertainer, George Colwan. Great were the consternation and
+grief of all concerned, and, in particular, of his old father and
+Miss Logan; for George had always been the sole hope and
+darling of both, and the news of the event paralysed them so as
+to render them incapable of all thought or exertion. The spirit
+of the old laird was broken by the blow, and he descended at
+once from a jolly, good-natured and active man to a mere
+driveller, weeping over the body of his son, kissing his wound,
+his lips, and his cold brow alternately; denouncing vengeance on
+his murderers, and lamenting that he himself had not met the
+cruel doom, so that the hope of his race might have been
+preserved. In short, finding that all further motive of action and
+object of concern or of love, here below, were for ever removed
+from him, he abandoned himself to despair, and threatened to go
+down to the grave with his son.
+
+But, although he made no attempt to discover the murderers, the
+arm of justice was not idle; and, it being evident to all that the
+crime must infallibly be brought home to young Drummond,
+some of his friends sought him out, and compelled him, sorely
+against his will, to retire into concealment till the issue of the
+proof that should be led was made known. At the same time, he
+denied all knowledge of the incident with a resolution that
+astonished his intimate friends and relations, who to a man
+suspected him guilty. His father was not in Scotland, for I think it
+was said to me that this young man was second son to a John,
+Duke of Melfort, who lived abroad with the royal family of the
+Stuarts; but this young gentleman lived with the relations of his
+mother, one of whom, an uncle, was a Lord of Session: these,
+having thoroughly effected his concealment, went away, and
+listened to the evidence; and the examination of every new
+witness convinced them that their noble young relative was the
+slayer of his friend.
+
+All the young gentlemen of the party were examined, save
+Drummond, who, when sent for, could not be found, which
+circumstance sorely confirmed the suspicions against him in the
+minds of judges and jurors, friends and enemies; and there is little
+doubt that the care of his relations in concealing him injured his
+character and his cause. The young gentlemen of whom the party
+was composed varied considerably with respect to the quarrel
+between him and the deceased. Some of them had neither heard
+nor noted it; others had, but not one of them could tell how it
+began. Some of them had heard the threat uttered by Drummond
+on leaving the house, and one only had noted him lay his hand on
+his sword. Not one of them could swear that it was Drummond
+who came to the door and desired to speak with the deceased, but
+the general impression on the minds of them all was to that effect;
+and one of the women swore that she heard the voice distinctly at
+the door, and every word that voice pronounced, and at the same
+time heard the deceased say that it was Drummond's.
+
+On the other hand, there were some evidences on Drummond's
+part, which Lord Craigie, his uncle, had taken care to collect. He
+produced the sword which his nephew had worn that night, on
+which there was neither blood nor blemish; and, above all, he
+insisted on the evidence of a number of surgeons, who declared
+that both the wounds which the deceased had received had been
+given behind. One of these was below the left arm, and a slight
+one; the other was quite through the body, and both evidently
+inflicted with the same weapon, a two-edged sword, of the same
+dimensions as that worn by Drummond.
+
+Upon the whole, there was a division in the court, but a
+majority decided it. Drummond was pronounced guilty of the
+murder; outlawed for not appearing, and a high reward offered
+for his apprehension. It was with the greatest difficulty that he
+escaped on board of a small trading vessel, which landed him in
+Holland, and from thence, flying into Germany, he entered into
+the service of the Emperor Charles VI. Many regretted that he
+was not taken, and made to suffer the penalty due for such a
+crime, and the melancholy incident became a pulpit theme over
+a great part of Scotland, being held up as a proper warning to
+youth to beware of such haunts of vice and depravity, the nurses
+of all that is precipitate, immoral, and base, among mankind.
+
+After the funeral of this promising and excellent young man, his
+father never more held up his head. Miss Logan, with all her art,
+could not get him to attend to any worldly thing, or to make any
+settlement whatsoever of his affairs, save making her over a
+present of what disposable funds he had about him. As to his
+estates, when they were mentioned to him, he wished them all in
+the bottom of the sea, and himself along with them. But,
+whenever she mentioned the circumstance of Thomas Drummond
+having been the murderer of his son, he shook his head, and once
+made the remark that "It was all a mistake, a gross and fatal error;
+but that God, who had permitted such a flagrant deed, would
+bring it to light in his own time and way." In a few weeks he
+followed his son to the grave, and the notorious Robert Wringhim
+took possession of his estates as the lawful son of the late laird,
+born in wedlock, and under his father's roof. The investiture was
+celebrated by prayer, singing of psalms, and religious disputation.
+The late guardian and adopted father, and the mother of the new
+laird, presided on the grand occasion, making a conspicuous
+figure in all the work of the day; and, though the youth himself
+indulged rather more freely in the bottle than he had ever been
+seen to do before, it was agreed by all present that there had never
+been a festivity so sanctified within the great hall of Dalcastle.
+Then, after due thanks returned, they parted rejoicing in spirit;
+which thanks, by the by, consisted wholly in telling the Almighty
+what he was; and informing, with very particular precision, what
+they were who addressed him; for Wringhim's whole system of
+popular declamation consisted, it seems, in this--to denounce all
+men and women to destruction, and then hold out hopes to his
+adherents that they were the chosen few, included in the
+promises, and who could never fall away. It would appear that
+this pharisaical doctrine is a very delicious one, and the most
+grateful of all others to the worst characters.
+
+But the ways of heaven are altogether inscrutable, and soar as far
+above and beyond the works and the comprehensions of man as
+the sun, flaming in majesty, is above the tiny boy's evening
+rocket. It is the controller of Nature alone that can bring light out
+of darkness, and order out of confusion. Who is he that causeth
+the mole, from his secret path of darkness, to throw up the gem,
+the gold, and the precious ore? The same that from the mouths of
+babes and sucklings can extract the perfection of praise, and who
+can make the most abject of his creatures instrumental in bringing
+the most hidden truths to light.
+
+Miss Logan had never lost the thought of her late master's
+prediction that Heaven would bring to light the truth concerning
+the untimely death of his son. She perceived that some strange
+conviction, too horrible for expression, preyed on his mind from
+the moment that the fatal news reached him to the last of his
+existence; and, in his last ravings, he uttered some incoherent
+words about justification by faith alone and absolute and eternal
+predestination having been the ruin of his house. These, to be
+sure, were the words of superannuation, and of the last and
+severest kind of it; but, for all that, they sunk deep into Miss
+Logan's soul, and at last she began to think with herself: "Is it
+possible the Wringhims, and the sophisticating wretch who is in
+conjunction with them, the mother of my late beautiful and
+amiable young master, can have effected his destruction? If so, I
+will spend my days, and my little patrimony, in endeavours to
+rake up and expose the unnatural deed."
+
+In all her outgoings and incomings Mrs. Logan (as she was now
+styled) never lost sight of this one object. Every new
+disappointment only whetted her desire to fish up some
+particulars, concerning it; for she thought so long and so ardently
+upon it that by degrees it became settled in her mind as a sealed
+truth. And, as woman is always most jealous of her own sex in
+such matters, her suspicions were fixed on her greatest enemy,
+Mrs. Colwan, now the Lady Dowager of Dalcastle. All was wrapt
+in a chaos of confusion and darkness; but at last, by dint of a
+thousand sly and secret inquiries, Mrs. Logan found out where
+Lady Dalcastle had been on the night that the murder happened,
+and likewise what company she had kept, as well as some of the
+comers and goers; and she had hopes of having discovered a clue,
+which, if she could keep hold of the thread, would lead her
+through darkness to the light of truth.
+
+Returning very late one evening from a convocation of family
+servants, which she had drawn together in order to fish something
+out of them, her maid having been in attendance on her all the
+evening, they found, on going home, that the house had been
+broken and a number of valuable articles stolen therefrom. Mrs.
+Logan had grown quite heartless before this stroke, having been
+altogether unsuccessful in her inquiries, and now she began to
+entertain some resolutions of giving up the fruitless search.
+
+In a few days thereafter, she received intelligence that her clothes
+and plate were mostly recovered, and that she for one was bound
+over to prosecute the depredator, provided the articles turned out
+to be hers, as libelled in the indictment, and as a king's evidence
+had given out. She was likewise summoned, or requested, I know
+not which, being ignorant of these matters, to go as far as the
+town of Peebles in Tweedside, in order to survey these articles on
+such a day, and make affidavit to their identity before the Sheriff
+She went accordingly; but, on entering the town by the North
+Gate, she was accosted by a poor girl in tattered apparel, who
+with great earnestness inquired if her name was not Mrs. Logan?
+On being answered in the affirmative, she said that the
+unfortunate prisoner in the Tolbooth requested her, as she valued
+all that was dear to her in life, to go and see her before she
+appeared in court at the hour of cause, as she (the prisoner) had
+something of the greatest moment to impart to her. Mrs. Logan's
+curiosity was excited, and she followed the girl straight to the
+Tolbooth, who by the way said to her that she would find in the
+prisoner a woman of superior mind, who had gone through all the
+vicissitudes of life. "She has been very unfortunate, and I fear
+very wicked," added the poor thing, "but she is my mother, and
+God knows, with all her faults and failings, she has never been
+unkind to me. You, madam, have it in your power to save her; but
+she has wronged you, and therefore, if you will not do it for her
+sake, do it for mine, and the God of the fatherless will reward
+you."
+
+Mrs. Logan answered her with a cast of the head, and a hem! and
+only remarked, that "the guilty must not always be suffered to
+escape, or what a world must we be doomed to live in!"
+
+She was admitted to the prison, and found a tall emaciated figure,
+who appeared to have once possessed a sort of masculine beauty
+in no ordinary degree, but was now considerably advanced in
+years. She viewed Mrs. Logan with a stem, steady gaze, as if
+reading her features as a margin to her intellect; and when she
+addressed her it was not with that humility, and agonized fervour,
+which are natural for one in such circumstances to address to
+another who has the power of her life and death in her hands.
+
+"I am deeply indebted to you for this timely visit, Mrs. Logan,"
+said she. "It is not that I value life, or because I fear death, that I
+have sent for you so expressly. But the manner of the death that
+awaits me has something peculiarly revolting in it to a female
+mind. Good God! when I think of being hung up, a spectacle to a
+gazing, gaping multitude, with numbers of which I have had
+intimacies and connections, that would render the moment of
+parting so hideous, that, believe me, it rends to flinders a soul
+born for another sphere than that in which it has moved, had not
+the vile selfishness of a lordly fiend ruined all my prospects and
+all my hopes. Hear me then; for I do not ask your pity: I only ask
+of you to look to yourself, and behave with womanly prudence, if
+you deny this day that these goods are yours, there is no other
+evidence whatever against my life, and it is safe for the present.
+For, as for the word of the wretch who has betrayed me, it is of
+no avail; he has prevaricated so notoriously to save himself. If
+you deny them, you shall have them all again to the value of a
+mite, and more to the bargain. If you swear to the identity of
+them, the process will, one way and another, cost you the half of
+what they are worth."
+
+"And what security have I for that?" said Mrs. Logan.
+
+"You have none but my word," said the other proudly, "and that
+never yet was violated. If you cannot take that, 1 know the worst
+you can do. But I had forgot--I have a poor helpless child
+without, waiting and starving about the prison door. Surely it was
+of her that I wished to speak. This shameful death of mine will
+leave her in a deplorable state."
+
+"The girl seems to have candour and strong affections," said Mrs.
+Logan. "I grievously mistake if such a child would not be a
+thousand times better without such a guardian and director."
+
+"Then will you be so kind as to come to the Grass Market and see
+me put down?" said the prisoner. "I thought a woman would
+estimate a woman's and a mother's feelings, when such a dreadful
+throw was at stake, at least in part. But you are callous, and have
+never known any feelings but those of subordination to your old
+unnatural master. Alas, I have no cause of offence! I have
+wronged you; and justice must take its course. Will you forgive
+me before we part?"
+
+Mrs. Logan hesitated, for her mind ran on something else. On
+which the other subjoined: "No, you will not forgive me, I see.
+But you will pray to God to forgive me? I know you will do that."
+
+Mrs. Logan heard not this jeer, but, looking at the prisoner with
+an absent and stupid stare, she said: "Did you know my late
+master?"
+
+"Ay, that I did, and never for any good," said she. "I knew the
+old and the young spark both, and was by when the latter was
+slain."
+
+This careless sentence affected Mrs. Logan in a most peculiar
+manner. A shower of tears burst from her eyes ere it was done,
+and, when it was, she appeared like one bereaved of her mind.
+She first turned one way and then another, as if looking for
+something she had dropped. She seemed to think she had lost her
+eyes, instead of her tears, and at length, as by instinct, she tottered
+close up to the prisoner's face, and, looking wistfully and joyfully
+in it, said, with breathless earnestness: "Pray, mistress, what is
+your name?"
+
+ "My name is Arabella Calvert," said the other. "Miss, mistress,
+or widow, as you choose, for I have been all the three, and that
+not once nor twice only. Ay, and something beyond all these.
+But, as for you, you have never been anything!"
+
+"Ay, ay! and so you are Bell Calvert? Well, I thought so--I
+thought so," said Mrs. Logan; and, helping herself to a seat, she
+came and sat down dose by the prisoner's knee. "So you are
+indeed Bell Calvert, so called once. Well, of all the world you are
+the woman whom I have longed and travailed the most to see.
+But you were invisible; a being to be heard of, not seen."
+
+"There have been days, madam," returned she, "when I was to be
+seen, and when there were few to be seen like me. But since that
+time there have indeed been days on which I was not to be seen.
+My crimes have been great, but my sufferings have been greater.
+So great that neither you nor the world can ever either know or
+conceive them. I hope they will be taken into account by the Most
+High. Mine have been crimes of utter desperation. But whom am
+I speaking to? You had better leave me to myself, mistress."
+
+"Leave you to yourself? That I will be loth to do till you tell me
+where you were that night my young master was murdered."
+
+"Where the devil would, I was! Will that suffice you? Ah, it was
+a vile action! A night to be remembered that was! Won't you be
+going? I want to trust my daughter with a commission."
+
+"No, Mrs. Calvert, you and I part not till you have divulged that
+mystery to me."
+
+"You must accompany me to the other world, then, for you shall
+not have it in this."
+
+"If you refuse to answer me, I can have you before a tribunal,
+where you shall be sifted to the soul."
+
+"Such miserable inanity! What care I for your threatenings of a
+tribunal? I who must soon stand before my last earthly one? What
+could the word of such a culprit avail? Or, if it could, where is the
+judge that could enforce it?"
+
+"Did you not say that there was some mode of accommodating
+matters on that score?"
+
+"Yes, I prayed you to grant me my life, which is in your power.
+The saving of it would not have cost you a plack, yet you refused
+to do it. The taking of it will cost you a great deal, and yet to that
+purpose you adhere. I can have no parley with such a spirit. I
+would not have my life in a present from its motions, nor would I
+exchange courtesies with its possessor."
+
+"Indeed, Mrs. Calvert, since ever we met, I have been so busy
+thinking about who you might be that I know not what you have
+been proposing. I believe I meant to do what I could to save you
+But, once for all, tell me everything that you know concerning
+that amiable young gentleman's death, and here is my band there
+shall be nothing wanting that I can effect for you."
+
+"No I despise all barter with such mean and selfish curiosity; and,
+as I believe that passion is stronger with you, than fear with me,
+we part on equal terms. Do your worst; and my secret shall go to
+the gallows and the grave with me."
+
+Mrs. Logan was now greatly confounded, and after proffering in
+vain to concede everything she could ask in exchange, for the
+particulars relating to the murder, she became the suppliant in her
+turn. But the unaccountable culprit, exulting in her advantage.
+laughed her to scorn; and finally, in a paroxysm of pride and
+impatience, called in the jailor and had her expelled, ordering him
+in her hearing not to grant her admittance a second time, on any
+pretence.
+
+Mrs. Logan was now hard put to it, and again driven almost to
+despair. She might have succeeded in the attainment of that she
+thirsted for most in life so easily had she known the character
+with which she had to deal. Had she known to have soothed her
+high and afflicted spirit: but that opportunity was past, and the
+hour of examination at hand. She once thought of going and
+claiming her articles, as she at first intended; but then, when she
+thought again of the Wringhims swaying it at Dalcastle, where
+she had been wont to hear them held in such contempt, if not
+abhorrence, and perhaps of holding it by the most diabolical
+means, she was withheld from marring the only chance that
+remained of having a glimpse into that mysterious affair.
+
+Finally, she resolved not to answer to her name in the court,
+rather than to appear and assert a falsehood, which she might be
+called on to certify by oath. She did so; and heard the Sheriff give
+orders to the officers to make inquiry for Miss Logan from
+Edinburgh, at the various places of entertainment in town, and to
+expedite her arrival in court, as things of great value were in
+dependence. She also heard the man who had turned king's
+evidence against the prisoner examined for the second time, and
+sifted most cunningly. His answers gave anything but satisfaction
+to the Sheriff, though Mrs. Logan believed them to be mainly
+truth. But there were a few questions and answers that struck her
+above all others.
+
+"How long is it since Mrs. Calvert and you became acquainted?"
+
+"About a year and a half."
+
+"State the precise time, if you please; the day, or night, according
+to your remembrance."
+
+"It was on the morning of the 28th of February, 1705."
+
+"What time of the morning?"
+
+"Perhaps about one."
+
+"So early as that? At what place did you meet then?"
+
+"It was at the foot of one of the north wynds of Edinburgh." "Was
+it by appointment that you met?"
+
+"No, it was not."
+
+"For what purpose was it then?"
+
+"For no purpose."
+
+"How is it that you chance to remember the day and hour so
+minutely, if you met that woman, whom you have accused,
+merely by chance, and for no manner of purpose, as you must
+have met others that night, perhaps to the amount of hundreds, in
+the same way?"
+
+"I have good cause to remember it, my lord."
+
+"What was that cause?--No answer?--You don't choose to say
+what that cause was?"
+
+"I am not at liberty to tell."
+
+The Sheriff then descended to other particulars, all of which
+tended to prove that the fellow was an accomplished villain, and
+that the principal share of the atrocities had been committed by
+him. Indeed the Sheriff hinted that he suspected the only share
+Mrs. Calvert had in them was in being too much in his company,
+and too true to him. The case was remitted to the Court of
+Justiciary; but Mrs. Logan had heard enough to convince her that
+the culprits first met at the very spot, and the very hour, on which
+George Colwan was slain; and she had no doubt that they were
+incendiaries set on by his mother, to forward her own and her
+darling son's way to opulence. Mrs. Logan was wrong, as will
+appear in the sequel; but her antipathy to Mrs. Colwan made her
+watch the event with all care. She never quitted Peebles as long
+as Bell Calvert remained there, and, when she was removed to
+Edinburgh, the other followed. When the trial came on, Mrs.
+Logan and her maid were again summoned as witnesses before
+the jury, and compelled by the prosecutor for the Crown to
+appear.
+
+The maid was first called; and, when she came into the witness
+box, the anxious and hopeless looks of the prisoner were manifest
+to all. But the girl, whose name, she said, was Bessy Gillies,
+answered in so flippant and fearless a way that the auditors were
+much amused. After a number of routine questions, the depute-
+advocate asked her if she was at home on the morning of the fifth
+of September last, when her mistress's house was robbed.
+
+"Was I at hame, say ye? Na, faith-ye, lad! An' I had been at hame,
+there had been mair to dee. I wad hae raised sic a yelloch!"
+
+"Where were you that morning?"
+
+"Where was I, say you? I was in the house where my mistress
+was, sitting dozing an' half sleeping in the kitchen. I thought aye
+she would be setting out every minute, for twa hours."
+
+"And, when you went home, what did you find?"
+
+"What found we? Be my sooth, we found a broken lock, an' toom
+kists."
+
+"Relate some of the particulars, if you please."
+
+"Sir, the thieves didna stand upon particulars: they were halesale
+dealers in a' our best wares."
+
+"I mean, what passed between your mistress and you on the
+occasion?"
+
+"What passed, say ye? O, there wasna muckle: I was in a great
+passion, but she was dung doitrified a wee. When she gaed to put
+the key i' the door, up it flew to the fer wa'. 'Bless ye, jaud, what's
+the meaning o' this?' quo she. 'Ye hae left the door open, ye
+tawpie!' quo she. 'The ne'er o' that I did,' quo I, 'or may my shakel
+bane never turn another key.' When we got the candle lightit, a'
+the house was in a hoad-road. 'Bessy, my woman,' quo she, 'we
+are baith ruined and undone creatures.' 'The deil a bit,' quo I; 'that
+I deny positively. H'mh! to speak o' a lass o' my age being ruined
+and undone! I never had muckle except what was within a good
+jerkin, an' let the thief ruin me there wha can.
+
+"Do you remember aught else that your mistress said on the
+occasion? Did you hear her blame any person?"
+
+"O, she made a gread deal o' grumphing an' groaning about the
+misfortune, as she ca'd it, an' I think she said it was a part o' the
+ruin, wrought by the Ringans, or some sic name. 'They'll hae't a'!
+They'll hae't a'!' cried she, wringing her hands; 'a'! they'll hae' a',
+an' hell wi't, an' they'll get them baith.' 'Aweel, that's aye some
+satisfaction,' quo I."
+
+"Whom did she mean by the Ringans, do you know?"
+
+"I fancy they are some creatures that she has dreamed about,
+for I think there canna be as ill folks living as she ca's them."
+
+"Did you never hear say that the prisoner at the bar there, Mrs.
+Calvert, or Bell Calvert, was the robber of her house; or that she
+was one of the Ringans?"
+
+"Never. Somebody tauld her lately that ane Bell Calvert robbed
+her house, but she disna believe it. Neither do I."
+
+"What reasons have you for doubting it?"
+
+"Because it was nae woman's fingers that broke up the bolts an'
+the locks that were torn open that night."
+
+"Very pertinent, Bessy. Come then within the bar, and look, at
+these articles on the table. Did you ever see these silver spoons
+before?"
+
+"I hae seen some very like them, and whaever has seen siller
+spoons has done the same."
+
+"Can you swear you never saw them before?"
+
+"Na, na, I wadna swear to ony siller spoons that ever war made,
+unless I had put a private mark on them wi' my ain hand, an' that's
+what I never did to ane."
+
+"See, they are all marked with a C."
+
+"Sae are a' the spoons in Argyle, an' the half o' them in Edinburgh
+I think. A C is a very common letter, an' so are a' the names that
+begin wi't. Lay them by, lay them by, an' gie the poor woman her
+spoons again. They are marked wi' her ain name, an' I hae little
+doubt they are hers, an' that she has seen better days."
+
+"Ah, God bless her heart!" sighed the prisoner; and that blessing
+was echoed in the breathings of many a feeling breast.
+
+"Did you ever see this gown before, think you?"
+
+"I hae seen ane very like it."
+
+"Could you not swear that gown was your mistress's once?"
+
+"No, unless I saw her hae't on, an' kend that she had paid for't. I
+am very scrupulous about an oath. Like is an ill mark. Sae ill
+indeed that I wad hardly swear to anything."
+
+"But you say that gown is very like one your mistress used to
+wear."
+
+"I never said sic a thing. It is like one I hae seen her hae out airing
+on the hay raip i' the back green. It is very like ane I hae seen
+Mrs. Butler in the Grass Market wearing too: I rather think it is
+the same. Bless you, sir, I wadna swear to my ain forefinger, if it
+had been as lang out o' my sight an', brought in an' laid on that
+table."
+
+"Perhaps you are not aware, girl, that this scrupulousness of yours
+is likely to thwart the purposes of justice, and bereave your
+mistress of property to the amount of a thousand merks." (From
+the Judge.)
+
+"I canna help that, my lord: that's her look-out. For my part, I am
+resolved to keep a clear conscience, till I be married, at any rate."
+
+"Look over these things and see if there is any one article among
+them which you can fix on as the property of your mistress."
+
+"No ane o' them. sir, no ane o' them. An oath is an awfu' thing,
+especially when it is for life or death. Gie the poor woman her
+things again, an' let my mistress pick up the next she finds: that's
+my advice."
+
+When Mrs. Logan came into the box, the prisoner groaned and
+laid down her head. But how she was astonished when she heard
+her deliver herself something to the following purport--That,
+whatever penalties she was doomed to abide, she was determined
+she would not bear witness against a woman's life, from a certain
+conviction that it could not be a woman who broke her house. "I
+have no doubt that I may find some of my own things there,"
+added she, "but, if they were found in her possession, she has
+been made a tool, or the dupe, of an infernal set, who shall be
+nameless here. I believe she did not rob me, and for that reason I
+will have no hand in her condemnation."
+
+The judge: "This is the most singular perversion I have ever
+witnessed. Mrs. Logan, I entertain strong suspicions that the
+prisoner, or her agents, have made some agreement with you on
+this matter to prevent the course of justice."
+
+"So far from that, my lord, I went into the jail at Peebles to this
+woman, whom I had never seen before, and proffered to
+withdraw my part in the prosecution, as well as my evidence,
+provided she would tell me a few simple facts; but she spurned at
+my offer, and had me turned insolently out of the prison, with
+orders to the jailor never to admit me again on any pretence."
+
+The prisoner's counsel, taking hold of this evidence, addressed
+the jury with great fluency; and, finally, the prosecution was
+withdrawn, and the prisoner dismissed from the bar, with a severe
+reprimand for her past conduct, and an exhortation to keep better
+company.
+
+It was not many days till a caddy came with a large parcel to Mrs.
+Logan's house, which parcel he delivered into her hands,
+accompanied with a sealed note, containing an inventory of the
+articles, and a request to know if the unfortunate Arabella Calvert
+would be admitted to converse with Mrs. Logan.
+
+Never was there a woman so much overjoyed as Mrs. Logan was
+at this message. She returned compliments. Would be most happy
+to see her; and no article of the parcel should be looked at, or
+touched, till her arrival. It was not long till she made her
+appearance, dressed in somewhat better style than she had yet
+seen her; delivered her over the greater part of the stolen
+property, besides many things that either never had belonged to
+Mrs. Logan or that she thought proper to deny in order that the
+other might retain them.
+
+The tale that she told of her misfortunes was of the most
+distressing nature, and was enough to stir up all the tender, as
+well as abhorrent feelings in the bosom of humanity. She had
+suffered every deprivation in fame, fortune, and person. She had
+been imprisoned; she had been scourged, and branded as an
+impostor; and all on account of her resolute and unmoving
+fidelity and truth to several of the very worst of men, every one of
+whom had abandoned her to utter destitution and shame. But this
+story we cannot enter on at present, as it would perhaps mar the
+thread of our story, as much as it did the anxious anticipations of
+Mrs. Logan, who sat pining and longing for the relation that
+follows.
+
+"Now I know, Mrs. Logan, that you are expecting a detail of the
+circumstances relating to the death of Mr. George Colwan; and,
+in gratitude for your unbounded generosity and disinterestedness,
+I will tell you all that I know, although, for causes that will
+appear obvious to you, I had determined never in life to divulge
+one circumstance of it. I can tell you, however, that you will be
+disappointed, for it was not the gentleman who was accused,
+found guilty, and would have suffered the utmost penalty of the
+law had he not made his escape. It was not he, I say, who slew
+your young master, nor had he any hand in it."
+
+"I never thought he had. But, pray, how do you come to know
+this?"
+
+"You shall hear. I had been abandoned in York by an artful and
+consummate fiend; and found guilty of being art and part
+concerned in the most heinous atrocities, and, in his place,
+suffered what I yet shudder to think of I was banished the county,
+begged my way with my poor outcast child up to Edinburgh, and
+was there obliged, for the second time in my life, to betake
+myself to the most degrading of all means to support two
+wretched lives. I hired a dress, and betook me, shivering, to the
+High Street, too well aware that my form and appearance would
+soon draw me suitors enow at that throng and intemperate time of
+the Parliament. On my very first stepping out to the street, a party
+of young gentlemen was passing. I heard by the noise they made,
+and the tenor of their speech, that they were more then mellow,
+and so I resolved to keep near them, in order, if possible, to make
+some of them my prey. But, just as one of them began to eye me,
+I was rudely thrust into a narrow close by one of the guardsmen. I
+had heard to what house the party was bound, for the men were
+talking exceedingly loud, and making no secret of it: so I hasted
+down the close, and round below to the one where their
+rendezvous was to be; but I was too late, they were all housed and
+the door bolted. I resolved to wait, thinking they could not all stay
+long; but I was perishing with famine, and was like to fall down.
+The moon shone as bright as day, and I perceived, by a sign at the
+bottom of the close, that there was a small tavern of a certain
+description up two stairs there. I went up and called, telling the
+mistress of the house my plan. She approved of it mainly, and
+offered me her best apartment, provided I could get one of these
+noble mates to accompany me. She abused Lucky Sudds, as she
+called her, at the inn where the party was, envying her huge
+profits, no doubt, and giving me afterwards something to drink
+for which I really felt exceedingly grateful in my need. I stepped
+downstairs in order to be on the alert. The moment that I reached
+the ground, the door of Lucky Sudds' house opened and shut, and
+down came the Honourable Thomas Drummond, with hasty and
+impassioned strides, his sword rattling at his heel. I accosted him
+in a soft and soothing tone. He was taken with my address; for he
+instantly stood still and gazed intently at me, then at the place,
+and then at me again. I beckoned him to follow me, which he did
+without further ceremony, and we soon found ourselves together
+in the best room of a house where everything was wretched. He
+still looked about him, and at me; but all this while he had never
+spoken a word. At length, I asked if he would take any
+refreshment? 'If you please,' said he. I asked what he would have,
+but he only answered, 'Whatever you choose, madam.' If he was
+taken with my address, I was much more taken with his; for he
+was a complete gentleman, and a gentleman will ever act as one.
+At length, he began as follows:
+
+"'I am utterly at a loss to account for this adventure, madam. It
+seems to me like enchantment, and I can hardly believe my
+senses. An English lady, I judge, and one, who from her manner
+and address should belong to the first class of society, in such a
+place as this, is indeed matter of wonder to me. At the foot of a
+close in Edinburgh! and at this time of the night! Surely it must
+have been no common reverse of fortune that reduced you to
+this?' I wept, or pretended to do so; on which he added, 'Pray,
+madam, take heart. Tell me what has befallen you; and if I can do
+anything for you, in restoring you to your country or your friends,
+you shall command my interest.'
+
+"I had great need of a friend then, and I thought now was the time
+to secure one. So I began and told him the moving tale I have told
+you. But I soon perceived that I had kept by the naked truth too
+unvarnishedly, and thereby quite overshot my mark. When he
+learned that he was sitting in a wretched corner of an irregular
+house, with a felon, who had so lately been scourged and
+banished as a swindler and impostor, his modest nature took the
+alarm, and he was shocked, instead of being moved with pity. His
+eye fixed on some of the casual stripes on my arm, and from that
+moment he became restless and impatient to be gone. I tried some
+gentle arts to retain him, but in vain; so, after paying both the
+landlady and me for pleasures he had neither tasted nor asked, he
+took his leave.
+
+"I showed him downstairs; and, just as be turned the corner of the
+next land, a man came rushing violently by him; exchanged looks
+with him, and came running up to me. He appeared in great
+agitation, and was quite out of breath; and, taking my hand in his,
+we ran upstairs together without speaking, and were instantly in
+the apartment I had left, where a stoup of wine still stood
+untasted. 'Ah, this is fortunate!' said my new spark, and helped
+himself. In the meanwhile, as our apartment was a corner one,
+and looked both east and north, I ran to the eastern casement to
+look after Drummond. Now, note me well: I saw him going
+eastward in his tartans and bonnet, and the gilded hilt of his
+claymore glittering in the moon; and, at the very same time, I saw
+two men, the one in black, and the other likewise in tartans,
+coming towards the steps from the opposite bank, by the foot of
+the loch; and I saw Drummond and they eyeing each other as they
+passed. I kept view of him till he vanished towards Leith Wynd,
+and by that time the two strangers had come close up under our
+window. This is what I wish you to pay particular attention to. I
+had only lost sight of Drummond (who had given me his name
+and address) for the short space of time that we took in running
+up one pair of short stairs; and during that space he had halted a
+moment, for, when I got my eye on him again, he had not crossed
+the mouth of the next entry, nor proceeded above ten or twelve
+paces, and, at the same time, I saw the two men coming down the
+bank on the opposite side of the loch, at about three hundred
+paces' distance. Both he and they were distinctly in my view, and
+never within speech of each other, until he vanished into one of
+the wynds leading towards the bottom of the High Street, at
+which precise time the two strangers came below my window; so
+that it was quite dear he neither could be one of them nor have
+any communication with them.
+
+"Yet, mark me again; for, of all things I have ever seen, this was
+the most singular. When I looked down at the two strangers, one
+of them was extremely like Drummond. So like was he that there
+was not one item in dress, form, feature, nor voice, by which I
+could distinguish the one from the other. I was certain it was not
+he, because I had seen the one going and the other approaching at
+the same time, and my impression at the moment was that I
+looked upon some spirit, or demon, in his likeness. I felt a
+chillness creep all round my heart, my knees tottered, and,
+withdrawing my head from the open casement that lay in the dark
+shade, I said to the man who was with me, 'Good God, what is
+this?'
+
+"'What is it, my dear?' said he, as much alarmed as I was.
+
+"'As I live, there stands an apparition!' said I.
+
+"He was not so much afraid when he heard me say so, and,
+peeping cautiously out, he looked and listened awhile, and then,
+drawing back, he said in a whisper, 'They are both living men,
+and one of them is he I passed at the corner.'
+
+"'That he is not,' said I, emphatically. 'To that I will make oath.'
+
+"He smiled and shook his head, and then added, 'I never then saw
+a man before, whom I could not know again, particularly if he
+was the very last I had seen. But what matters it whether it be or
+not? As it is no concern of ours, let us sit down and enjoy
+ourselves.'
+
+'But it does matter a very great deal with me, sir,' said I.
+'Bless me, my head is giddy--my breath quite gone, and I feel as if
+I were surrounded with fiends. Who are you, sir?'
+
+'You shall know that ere we two part, my love,' said he. 'I cannot
+conceive why the return of this young gentleman to the spot he so
+lately left should discompose you. I suppose he got a glance of
+you as he passed, and has returned to look after you, and that is
+the whole secret of the matter.'
+
+"'If you will be so civil as to walk out and join him then, it will
+oblige me hugely,' said I, 'for I never in my life experienced such
+boding apprehensions of evil company. I cannot conceive how
+you should come up here without asking my permission. Will it
+please you to be gone, sir?' I was within an ace of prevailing. He
+took out his purse--I need not say more--I was bribed to let him
+remain. Ah, had I kept my frail resolution of dismissing him at
+that moment, what a world of shame and misery had been evited!
+But that, though uppermost still in my mind, has nothing ado
+here.
+
+"When I peeped over again, the two men were disputing in a
+whisper, the one of them in violent agitation and terror, and the
+other upbraiding him, and urging him on to some desperate act.
+At length I heard the young man in the Highland garb say
+indignantly, 'Hush, recreant! It is God's work which you are
+commissioned to execute, and it must be done. But, if you
+positively decline it, I will do it myself, and do you beware of the
+consequences.'
+
+"'Oh, I will, I will!' cried the other in black clothes, in a wretched
+beseeching tone. 'You shall instruct me in this, as in all things
+else.'
+
+"I thought all this while I was closely concealed from them, and
+wondered not a little when be in tartans gave me a sly nod, as
+much as to say, 'What do you think of this?' or, 'Take note of
+what you see,' or something to that effect; from which I perceived
+that, whatever he was about, he did not wish it to be kept a secret.
+For all that, I was impressed with a terror and anxiety that I could
+not overcome, but it only made me mark every event with the
+more intense curiosity. The Highlander, whom I still could not
+help regarding as the evil genius of Thomas Drummond,
+performed every action as with the quickness of thought. He
+concealed the youth in black in a narrow entry, a little to the
+westward of my windows, and, as he was leading him across the
+moonlight green by the shoulder, I perceived, for the first time,
+that both of them were armed with rapiers. He pushed him
+without resistance into the dark shaded close, made another signal
+to me, and hasted up the close to Lucky Sudds' door. The city and
+the morning were so still that I heard every word that was uttered,
+on putting my head out a little. He knocked at the door sharply,
+and, after waiting a considerable space, the bolt was drawn, and
+the door, as I conceived, edged up as far as the massy chain
+would let it. 'Is young Dalcastle still in the house?' said he
+sharply.
+
+"I did not hear the answer, but I heard him say, shortly after, 'If
+he is, pray tell him to speak with me for a few minutes.' He then
+withdrew from the door, and came slowly down the close, in a
+lingering manner, looking oft behind him. Dalcastle came out;
+advanced a few steps after him, and then stood still, as if
+hesitating whether or not he should call out a friend to
+accompany him; and that instant the door behind him was closed,
+chained, and the iron bolt drawn; on hearing of which, he
+followed his adversary without further hesitation. As he passed
+below my window, I heard him say, 'I beseech you, Tom, let us
+do nothing in this matter rashly'; but I could not hear the answer
+of the other, who had turned the corner.
+
+"I roused up my drowsy companion, who was leaning on the bed,
+and we both looked together from the north window. We were in
+the shade, but the moon shone full on the two young gentlemen.
+Young Dalcastle was visibly the worse of liquor, and, his back
+being turned towards us, he said something to the other which I
+could not make out, although he spoke a considerable time, and,
+from his tones and gestures, appeared to be reasoning.
+
+"When he had done, the tall young man in the tartans drew his
+sword, and, his face being straight to us, we heard him say
+distinctly, 'No more words about it, George, if you please; but if
+you be a man, as I take you to be, draw your sword, and let us
+settle it here.'
+
+"Dalcastle drew his sword, without changing his attitude; but
+he spoke with more warmth, for we heard his words, 'Think you
+that I fear you, Tom? Be assured, Sir, I would not fear ten of the
+best of your name, at each other's backs: all that I want is to have
+friends with us to see fair play, for, if you close with me, you are
+a dead man.'
+
+"The other stormed at these words. 'You are a braggart, Sir,'
+cried he, 'a wretch--a blot on the cheek of nature--a blight on
+the Christian world--a reprobate--I'll have your soul, Sir. You
+must play at tennis, and put down elect brethren in another world
+to-morrow.' As he said this, he brandished his rapier, exciting
+Dalcastle to offence. He gained his point. The latter, who had
+previously drawn, advanced upon his vapouring and licentious
+antagonist, and a fierce combat ensued. My companion was
+delighted beyond measure, and I could not keep him from
+exclaiming, loud enough to have been heard, 'That's grand! That's
+excellent!' For me, my heart quaked like an aspen. Young
+Dalcastle either had a decided advantage over his adversary, or
+else the other thought proper to let him have it; for he shifted, and
+swore, and flitted from Dalcastle's thrusts like a shadow, uttering
+ofttimes a sarcastic laugh, that seemed to provoke the other
+beyond all bearing. At one time, he would spring away to a great
+distance, then advance again on young Dalcastle with the
+swiftness of lightning. But that young hero always stood his
+ground, and repelled the attack: he never gave way, although they
+fought nearly twice round the bleaching green, which you know
+is not a very small one. At length they fought close up to the
+mouth of the dark entry, where the fellow in black stood all this
+while concealed, and then the combatant in tartans closed with
+his antagonist, or pretended to do so; but, the moment they began
+to grapple, he wheeled about, turning Colwan's back towards the
+entry, and then cried out, 'Ah, hell has it! My friend, my friend!'
+
+"That moment the fellow in black rushed from his cover with his
+drawn rapier, and gave the brave young Dalcastle two deadly
+wounds in the back, as quick as arm could thrust, both of which I
+thought pierced through his body. He fell, and, rolling himself on
+his back, he perceived who it was that had slain him thus foully,
+and said, with a dying emphasis, which I never heard equalled,
+'oh, dog of hell, it is you who has done this!'
+
+"He articulated some more, which I could not hear for other
+sounds; for, the moment that the man in black inflicted the deadly
+wound, my companion called out, 'That's unfair, you rip! That's
+damnable! to strike a brave fellow behind! One at a time, you
+cowards!' etc., to all which the unnatural fiend in the tartans
+answered with a loud exulting laugh; and then, taking the poor
+paralysed murderer by the bow of the arm, be hurried him in the
+dark entry once more, where I lost sight of them for ever."
+
+Before this time Mrs. Logan had risen up; and, when the narrator
+had finished, she was standing with her arms stretched upwards at
+their full length, and her visage turned down, on which were
+portrayed the lines of the most absolute horror. "The dark
+suspicions of my late benefactor have been just, and his last
+prediction is fulfilled," cried she. "The murderer of the
+accomplished George Colwan has been his own brother, set on,
+there is little doubt, by her who bare them both, and her directing
+angel, the self-justified bigot. Aye, and yonder they sit, enjoying
+the luxuries so dearly purchased, with perfect impunity! If the
+Almighty do not hurl them down, blasted with shame and
+confusion, there is no hope of retribution in this life. And, by His
+might, I will be the agent to accomplish it! Why did the man not
+pursue the foul murderers? Why did he not raise the alarm, and
+call the watch?"
+
+"He? The wretch! He durst not move from the shelter he had
+obtained. No, not for the soul of him. He was pursued for his life,
+at the moment when he first flew into my arms. But I did not
+know it; no, I did not then know him. May the curse of heaven,
+and the blight of hell, settle on the detestable wretch! He pursue
+for the sake of justice! No; his efforts have all been for evil, but
+never for good. But I raised the alarm; miserable and degraded as
+I was, I pursued and raised the watch myself Have you not heard
+the name of Bell Calvert coupled with that hideous and
+mysterious affair?"
+
+"Yes, I have. In secret often I have heard it. But how came it that
+you could never be found? How came it that you never appeared
+in defence of the Honourable Thomas Drummond; you, the only
+person who could have justified him?"
+
+"I could not, for I then fell under the power and guidance of a
+wretch who durst not for the soul of him be brought forward in
+the affair. And, what was worse, his evidence would have
+overborne mine, for he would have sworn that the man who
+called out and fought Colwan was the same he met leaving my
+apartment, and there was an end of it. And, moreover, it is well
+known that this same man--this wretch of whom I speak, never
+mistook one man for another in his life, which makes the mystery
+of the likeness between this incendiary and Drummond the more
+extraordinary."
+
+"If it was Drummond, after all that you have asserted, then are
+my surmises still wrong."
+
+"There is nothing of which I can be more certain than that it was
+not Drummond. We have nothing on earth but our senses to
+depend upon. if these deceive us, what are we to do? I own I
+cannot account for it; nor ever shall be able to account for it as
+long as I live."
+
+"Could you know the man in black, if you saw him again?"
+
+"I think I could, if I saw him walk or run: his gait was very
+particular. He walked as if he had been flat-soled, and his legs
+made of steel, without any joints in his feet or ankles."
+
+"The very same! The very same! The very same! Pray will you
+take a few days' journey into the country with me, to look at such
+a man?"
+
+"You have preserved my life, and for you I will do anything. I
+will accompany you with pleasure: and I think I can say that I
+will know him, for his form left an impression on my heart not
+soon to be effaced. But of this I am sure that my unworthy
+companion will recognize him, and that he will be able to swear
+to his identity every day as long as he lives."
+
+"Where is he? Where is he? Oh! Mrs. Calvert, where is he?"
+
+"Where is he? He is the wretch whom you heard giving me up to
+the death; who, after experiencing every mark of affection that a
+poor ruined being could confer, and after committing a thousand
+atrocities of which she was ignorant, became an informer to save
+his diabolical life, and attempted to offer up mine as a sacrifice
+for all. We will go by ourselves first, and I will tell you if it
+is necessary to send any farther."
+
+The two dames, the very next morning, dressed themselves like
+country goodwives, and, hiring two stout ponies furnished with
+pillions, they took their journey westward, and the second
+evening after leaving Edinburgh they arrived at the village about
+two miles below Dalcastle, where they alighted. But Mrs. Logan,
+being anxious to have Mrs. Calvert's judgment, without either
+hint or preparation, took care not to mention that they were so
+near to the end of their journey. In conformity with this plan, she
+said, after they had sat a while: "Heigh-ho, but I am weary! What,
+suppose we should rest a day here before we proceed farther on
+our journey?"
+
+Mrs. Calvert was leaning on the casement and looking out when
+her companion addressed these words to her, and by far too much
+engaged to return any answer, for her eyes were riveted on two
+young men who approached from the farther end of the village;
+and at length, turning round her head, she said, with the most
+intense interest, "Proceed farther on our journey, did you say?
+That we need not do; for, as I live, here comes the very man!"
+
+Mrs. Logan ran to the window, and, behold, there was indeed
+Robert Wringhim Colwan (now the Laird of Dalcastle) coming
+forward almost below their window, walking arm in arm with
+another young man; and, as the two passed, the latter looked up
+and made a sly signal to the two dames, biting his lip, winking
+with his left eye, and nodding his head. Mrs. Calvert was
+astonished at this recognizance, the young man's former
+companion having made exactly such another signal on the night
+of the duel, by the light of the moon; and it struck her, moreover,
+that she had somewhere seen this young man's face before. She
+looked after him, and he winked over his shoulder to her; but she
+was prevented from returning his salute by her companion, who
+uttered a loud cry, between a groan and shriek, and fell down on
+the floor with a rumble like a wall that had suddenly been
+undermined. She had fainted quite away, and required all her
+companion's attention during the remainder of the evening, for
+she had scarcely ever well recovered out of one fit before she fell
+into another, and in the short intervals she raved like one
+distracted or in a dream. After falling into a sound sleep by night.
+she recovered her equanimity, and the two began to converse
+seriously on what they had seen. Mrs. Calvert averred that the
+young man who passed next to the window was the very man
+who stabbed George Colwan in the back, and she said she was
+willing to take her oath on it at any time when required, and was
+certain, if the wretch Ridsley saw him, that he would make oath
+to the same purport, for that his walk was so peculiar no one of
+common discernment could mistake it.
+
+Mrs. Logan was in great agitation, and said: "It is what I have
+suspected all along, and what I am sure my late master and
+benefactor was persuaded of, and the horror of such an idea cut
+short his days. That wretch, Mrs. Calvert, is the born brother of
+him he murdered, sons of the same mother they were, whether or
+not of the same father, the Lord only knows. But, Oh, Mrs.
+Calvert, that is not the main thing that has discomposed me, and
+shaken my nerves to pieces at this time. Who do you think the
+young man was who walked in his company to-night?"
+
+"I cannot for my life recollect, but am convinced I have seen the
+same fine form and face before."
+
+"And did not he seem to know us, Mrs. Calvert? You who are
+able to recollect things as they happened, did he not seem to
+recollect us, and make signs to that effect?"
+
+"He did, indeed, and apparently with great good humour."
+
+"Oh, Mrs Calvert, hold me, else I shall fall into hysterics again!
+Who is he? Who is he? Tell me who you suppose he is, for I
+cannot say my own thought."
+
+"On my life, I cannot remember."
+
+"Did you note the appearance of the young gentleman you saw
+slain that night? Do you recollect aught of the appearance of my
+young master, George Colwan?"
+
+Mrs. Calvert sat silent, and stared the other mildly in the face.
+Their looks encountered, and there was an unearthly amazement
+that gleamed from each, which, meeting together, caught real fire,
+and returned the flame to their heated imaginations, till the two
+associates became like two statues, with their hands spread, their
+eyes fixed, and their chops fallen down upon their bosoms. An
+old woman who kept the lodging-house, having been called in
+before when Mrs. Logan was faintish, chanced to enter at this
+crisis with some cordial; and, seeing the state of her lodgers, she
+caught the infection, and fell into the same rigid and statue-like
+appearance. No scene more striking was ever exhibited; and if
+Mrs. Calvert had not resumed strength of mind to speak, and
+break the spell, it is impossible to say how long it might have
+continued. "It is he, I believe," said she, uttering the words as it
+were inwardly. "It can be none other but he. But, no, it is
+impossible! I saw him stabbed through and through the heart; I
+saw him roll backward on the green in his own blood, utter his
+last words, and groan away his soul. Yet, if it is not he, who can it
+be?"
+
+"It is he!" cried Mrs. Logan, hysterically.
+
+"Yes, yes, it is he!" cried the landlady, in unison.
+
+"It is who?" said Mrs. Calvert. "Whom do you mean, mistress?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know! I don't know! I was affrighted."
+
+"Hold your peace then till you recover your senses, and tell me, if
+you can, who that young gentleman is who keeps company with
+the new Laird of Dalcastle?"
+
+"Oh, it is he! It is he!" screamed Mrs. Logan, wringing her hands.
+
+"Oh, it is he! It is he!" cried the landlady, wringing hers.
+
+Mrs. Calvert turned the latter gently and civilly out of the
+apartment, observing that there seemed to be some infection in
+the air of the room, and she would be wise for herself to keep out
+of it.
+
+The two dames had a restless and hideous night. Sleep came not
+to their relief, for their conversation was wholly about the dead,
+who seemed to be alive, and their minds were wandering and
+groping in a chaos of mystery. "Did you attend to his corpse, and
+know that he positively died and was buried?" said Mrs. Calvert.
+
+"Oh, yes, from the moment that his fair but mangled corpse was
+brought home, I attended it till that when it was screwed in the
+coffin. I washed the long stripes of blood from his lifeless form,
+on both sides of the body. I bathed the livid wound that passed
+through his generous and gentle heart. There was one through the
+flesh of his left side too, which had bled most outwardly of them
+all. I bathed them, and bandaged them up with wax and perfumed
+ointment, but still the blood oozed through all, so that when he
+was laid in the coffin he was like one newly murdered. My brave,
+my generous young master. He was always as a son to me, and no
+son was ever more kind or more respectful to a mother. But he
+was butchered--he was cut off from the earth ere he had well
+reached to manhood--most barbarously and unfairly slain. And
+how is it, how can it be, that we again see him here, walking arm
+in arm with his murderer?"
+
+"The thing cannot be, Mrs. Logan. It is a phantasy of our
+disturbed imaginations, therefore let us compose ourselves till we
+investigate this matter farther."
+
+"It cannot be in nature, that is quite clear," said Mrs. Logan. "Yet
+how it should be that I should think so--I who knew and nursed
+him from his infancy--there lies the paradox. As you said once
+before, we have nothing but our senses to depend on, and, if you
+and I believe that we see a person, why, we do see him. Whose
+word, or whose reasoning can convince us against our own
+senses? We will disguise ourselves as poor women selling a few
+country wares, and we will go up to the Hall, and see what is to
+see, and hear what we can hear, for this is a weighty business in
+which we are engaged, namely, to turn the vengeance of the law
+upon an unnatural monster; and we will further learn, if we can,
+who this is that accompanies him."
+
+Mrs. Calvert acquiesced, and the two dames took their way to
+Dalcastle, with baskets well furnished with trifles. They did not
+take the common path from the village, but went about, and
+approached the mansion by a different way. But it seemed as if
+some overruling power ordered it that they should miss no chance
+of attaining the information they wanted. For ere ever they came
+within half a mile of Dalcastle they perceived the two youths
+coming as to meet them, on the same path. The road leading
+from Dalcastle towards the north-east, as all the country knows,
+goes along a dark bank of brush-wood called the Bogle-heuch. It
+was by this track that the two women were going, and, when they
+perceived the two gentlemen meeting them, they turned back,
+and, the moment they were out of their sight, they concealed
+themselves in a thicket close by the road. They did this because
+Mrs. Logan was terrified for being discovered, and because they
+wished to reconnoitre without being seen. Mrs. Calvert now
+charged her, whatever she saw, or whatever she heard, to put on a
+resolution, and support it, for if she fainted there and was
+discovered, what was to become of her!
+
+The two young men came on, in earnest and vehement
+conversation; but the subject they were on was a terrible one, and
+hardly fit to be repeated in the face of a Christian community.
+Wringhim was disputing the boundlessness of the true Christian's
+freedom, and expressing doubts that, chosen as he knew he was
+from all eternity, still it might be possible for him to commit acts
+that would exclude him from the limits of the covenant. The other
+argued, with mighty fluency, that the thing was utterly
+impossible, and altogether inconsistent with eternal
+predestination. The arguments of the latter prevailed, and the
+laird was driven to sullen silence. But, to the women's utter
+surprise, as the conquering disputant passed, he made a signal of
+recognizance through the brambles to them, as formerly, and, that
+he might expose his associate fully, and in his true colours, he led
+him back, wards and forwards by the women more than twenty
+times, making him to confess both the crimes that he had done
+and those he had in contemplation. At length he said to him:
+"Assuredly I saw some strolling vagrant women on this walk, my
+dear friend: I wish we could find them, for there is little doubt
+that they are concealed here in your woods."
+
+"I wish we could find them," answered Wringhim. "We would
+have fine sport maltreating and abusing them."
+
+"That we should, that we should! Now tell me, Robert, if you
+found a malevolent woman, the latent enemy of your prosperity,
+lurking in these woods to betray you, what would you inflict on
+her?"
+
+"I would tear her to pieces with my dogs, and feed them with her
+flesh. Oh, my dear friend, there is an old strumpet who lived with
+my unnatural father, whom I hold in such utter detestation that I
+stand constantly in dread of her, and would sacrifice the half of
+my estate to shed her blood!"
+
+"What will you give me if I will put her in your power, and give
+you a fair and genuine excuse for making away with her; one for
+which you shall answer at the bar, here or hereafter?"
+
+"I should like to see the vile hag put down. She is in possession of
+the family plate, that is mine by right, as well as a thousand
+valuable relics, and great riches besides, all of which the old
+profligate gifted shamefully away. And it is said, besides all
+these, that she has sworn my destruction."
+
+"She has, she has. But I see not how she can accomplish that,
+seeing the deed was done so suddenly, and in the silence of the
+night."
+
+"It was said there were some onlookers. But where shall we find
+that disgraceful Miss Logan?"
+
+"I will show you her by and by. But will you then consent to the
+other meritorious deed? Come, be a man, and throw away
+scruples."
+
+"If you can convince me that the promise is binding I will."
+
+"Then step this way, till I give you a piece of information."
+
+They walked a little way out of hearing, but went not out of sight;
+therefore, though the women were in a terrible quandary, they
+durst not stir, for they had some hopes that this extraordinary
+person was on a mission of the same sort with themselves, knew
+of them, and was going to make use of their testimony. Mrs.
+Logan was several times on the point of falling into a swoon, so
+much did the appearance of the young man impress her, until her
+associate covered her face that she might listen without
+embarrassment. But this latter dialogue roused different feelings
+within them; namely, those arising from imminent personal
+danger. They saw his waggish associate point out the place of
+their concealment to Wringhim, who came towards them, out of
+curiosity to see what his friend meant by what he believed to be a
+joke, manifestly without crediting it in the least degree. When he
+came running away, the other called after him: "If she is too hard
+for you, call to me." As he said this, he hasted out of sight, in the
+contrary direction, apparently much delighted with the joke.
+
+Wringhim came rushing through the thicket impetuously, to the
+very spot where Mrs. Logan lay squatted. She held the wrapping
+close about her head, but he tore it off and discovered her. "The
+curse of God be on thee!" said he. "What fiend has brought thee
+here, and for what purpose art thou come? But, whatever has
+brought thee, I have thee!" and with that he seized her by the
+throat. The two women, when they heard what jeopardy they
+were in from such a wretch, had squatted among the underwood
+at a small distance from each other, so that he had never observed
+Mrs. Calvert; but, no sooner had he seized her benefactor, than,
+like a wild cat, she sprung out of the thicket, and had both hands
+fixed at his throat, one of them twisted in his stock, in a
+twinkling. She brought him back-over among the brushwood, and
+the two, fixing on him like two harpies, mastered him with case.
+Then indeed was he woefully beset. He deemed for a while that
+his friend was at his back, and, turning his bloodshot eyes
+towards the path, he attempted to call; but there was no friend
+there, and the women cut short his cries by another twist of his
+stock. "Now, gallant and rightful Laird of Dalcastle," said Mrs.
+Logan, "what hast thou to say for thyself? Lay thy account to dree
+the weird thou hast so well earned. Now shalt thou suffer due
+penance for murdering thy brave and only brother."
+
+"Thou liest, thou hag of the pit! I touched not my brother's life."
+
+"I saw thee do it with these eyes that now look thee in the face;
+ay, when his back was to thee, too, and while he was hotly
+engaged with thy friend," said Mrs. Calvert.
+
+"I heard thee confess it again and again this same hour," said Mrs.
+Logan.
+
+"Ay, and so did I," said her companion. "Murder will out, though
+the Almighty should lend hearing to the ears of the willow, and
+speech to the seven tongues of the woodriff."
+
+"You are liars and witches!" said he, foaming with rage, "and
+creatures fitted from the beginning for eternal destruction. I'll
+have your bones and your blood sacrificed on your cursed altars!
+O Gil-Martin! Gil-Martin! Where art thou now? Here, here is the
+proper food for blessed vengeance! Hilloa!"
+
+There was no friend, no Gil-Martin there to hear or assist him: he
+was in the two women's mercy, but they used it with moderation.
+They mocked, they tormented, and they threatened him; but,
+finally, after putting him in great terror, they bound his hands
+behind his back, and his feet fast with long straps of garters
+which they chanced to have in their baskets, to prevent him from
+pursuing them till they were out of his reach. As they left him,
+which they did in the middle of the path, Mrs. Calvert said: "We
+could easily put an end to thy sinful life, but our hands shall be
+free of thy blood. Nevertheless thou art still in our power, and the
+vengeance of thy country shall overtake thee, thou mean and
+cowardly murderer, ay, and that more suddenly than thou art
+aware!"
+
+The women posted to Edinburgh; and as they put themselves
+under the protection of an English merchant, who was journeying
+thither with twenty horses laden, and armed servants, so they had
+scarcely any conversation on the road. When they arrived at Mrs.
+Logan's house, then they spoke of what they had seen and heard,
+and agreed that they had sufficient proof to condemn young
+Wringhim, who they thought richly deserved the severest doom
+of the law.
+
+"I never in my life saw any human being," said Mrs. Calvert,
+whom I thought so like a fiend. If a demon could inherit flesh and
+blood, that youth is precisely such a being as I could conceive
+that demon to be. The depth and the malignity of his eye is
+hideous. His breath is like the airs from a charnel house, and his
+flesh seems fading from his bones, as if the worm that never dies
+were gnawing it away already."
+
+"He was always repulsive, and every way repulsive," said the
+other, "but be is now indeed altered greatly to the worse. While
+we were hand-fasting him, I felt his body to be feeble and
+emaciated; but yet I know him to be so puffed up with spiritual
+pride that I believe he weens every one of his actions justified
+before God, and, instead of having stings of conscience for these,
+he takes great merit to himself in having effected them. Still my
+thoughts are less about him than the extraordinary being who
+accompanies him. He does everything with so much ease and
+indifference, so much velocity and effect, that all bespeak him an
+adept in wickedness. The likeness to my late hapless young
+master is so striking that I can hardly believe it to be a chance
+model; and I think he imitates him in everything, for some
+purpose or some effect on his sinful associate. Do you know that
+he is so like in every lineament, look, and gesture, that, against
+the, clearest light of reason, I cannot in my mind separate the one
+from the other, and have a certain indefinable expression on my
+mind that they are one and the same being, or that the one was a
+prototype of the other."
+
+"If there is an earthly crime," said Mrs. Calvert, "for the due
+punishment of which the Almighty may be supposed to subvert
+the order of nature, it is fratricide. But tell me, dear friend, did
+you remark to what the subtile and hellish villain was
+endeavouring to prompt the assassin?"
+
+"No, I could not comprehend it. My senses were altogether so
+bewildered that I thought they had combined to deceive me, and I
+gave them no credit."
+
+"Then bear me: I am almost certain he was using every
+persuasion to induce him to make away with his mother; and I
+likewise conceive that I heard the incendiary give his consent!"
+
+"This is dreadful. Let us speak and think no more about it, till we
+see the issue. In the meantime, let us do that which is our
+bounden duty--go and divulge all that we know relating to this
+foul murder."
+
+Accordingly the two women went to Sir Thomas Wallace of
+Craigie, the Lord justice Clerk (who was, I think, either uncle or
+grandfather to young Drummond, who was outlawed and obliged
+to fly his country on account of Colwan's death), and to that
+gentleman they related every circumstance of what they had seen
+and heard. He examined Calvert very minutely, and seemed
+deeply interested in her evidence--said he knew she was relating
+the truth, and, in testimony of it, brought a letter of young
+Drummond's from his desk, wherein that young gentleman, after
+protesting his innocence in the most forcible terms, confessed
+having been with such a woman in such a house, after leaving the
+company of his friends; and that, on going home, Sir Thomas's
+servant had let him in, in the dark, and from these circumstances
+he found it impossible to prove an alibi. He begged of his
+relative, if ever an opportunity offered, to do his endeavour to
+clear up that mystery, and remove the horrid stigma from his
+name in his country, and among his kin, of having stabbed a
+friend behind his back.
+
+Lord Craigie, therefore, directed the two women to the proper
+authorities, and, after hearing their evidence there, it was judged
+proper to apprehend the present Laird of Dalcastle, and bring him
+to his trial. But, before that, they sent the prisoner in the
+Tolbooth, he who had seen the whole transaction along with Mrs.
+Calvert, to take a view of Wringhim privately; and, his
+discrimination being so well known as to be proverbial all over
+the land, they determined secretly to be ruled by his report. They
+accordingly sent him on a pretended mission of legality to
+Dalcastle, with orders to see and speak with the proprietor,
+without giving him a hint what was wanted. On his return, they
+examined him, and he told them that he found all things at the
+place in utter confusion and dismay; that the lady of the place was
+missing, and could not be found, dead or alive. On being asked if
+he had ever seen the proprietor before, he looked astounded and
+unwilling to answer. But it came out that he had; and that he had
+once seen him kill a man on such a spot at such an hour.
+
+Officers were then dispatched, without delay, to apprehend the
+monster, and bring him to justice. On these going to the mansion,
+and inquiring for him, they were told he was at home; on which
+they stationed guards, and searched all the premises, but he was
+not to be found. It was in vain that they overturned beds, raised
+floors, and broke open closets: Robert Wringhim Colwan was lost
+once and for ever. His mother also was lost; and strong suspicions
+attached to some of the farmers and house servants to whom she
+was obnoxious, relating to her disappearance.
+
+The Honourable Thomas Drummond became a distinguished
+officer in the Austrian service, and died in the memorable year
+for Scotland, 1715; and this is all with which history, justiciary
+records, and tradition, furnish me relating to these matters.
+
+I have now the pleasure of presenting my readers with an original
+document of a most singular nature, and preserved for their
+perusal in a still more singular manner. I offer no remarks on it,
+and make as few additions to it, leaving everyone to judge for
+himself. We have heard much of the rage of fanaticism in former
+days, but nothing to this.
+
+
+
+
+The Private Memoirs and
+Confessions of a Sinner
+WRITTEN BY HIMSELF
+
+
+
+PRIVATE MEMOIRS AND CONFESSIONS OF A SINNER
+
+
+My life has been a life of trouble and turmoil of change and
+vicissitude; of anger and exultation; of sorrow and of vengeance.
+My sorrows have all been for a slighted gospel, and my
+vengeance has been wreaked on its adversaries. Therefore, in the
+might of Heaven, I will sit down and write: I will let the wicked
+of this world know what I have done in the faith of the promises,
+and justification by grace, that they may read and tremble, and
+bless their gods of silver and gold that the minister of Heaven was
+removed from their sphere before their blood was mingled with
+their sacrifices.
+
+I was born an outcast in the world, in which I was destined to act
+so conspicuous a part. My mother was a burning and a shining
+light, in the community of Scottish worthies, and in the days of
+her virginity had suffered much in the persecution of the saints.
+But it so pleased Heaven that, as a trial of her faith, she was
+married to one of the wicked; a man all over spotted with the
+leprosy of sin. As well might they have conjoined fire and water
+together, in hopes that they would consort and amalgamate, as
+purity and corruption: She fled from his embraces the first night
+after their marriage, and from that time forth his iniquities so
+galled her upright heart that she quitted his society altogether,
+keeping her own apartments in the same house with him.
+
+I was the second son of this unhappy marriage, and, ere ever I
+was born, my father according to the flesh disclaimed all relation
+or connection with me, and all interest in me, save what the law
+compelled him to take, which was to grant me a scanty
+maintenance; and had it not been for a faithful minister of the
+gospel, my mother's early instructor, I should have remained an
+outcast from the church visible. He took pity on me, admitting me
+not only into that, but into the bosom of his own household and
+ministry also, and to him am I indebted, under Heaven, for the
+high conceptions and glorious discernment between good and
+evil, right and wrong, which I attained even at an early age. It was
+he who directed my studies aright, both in the learning of the
+ancient fathers and the doctrines of the reformed church, and
+designed me for his assistant and successor in the holy office. I
+missed no opportunity of perfecting myself particularly in all the
+minute points of theology in which my reverend father and
+mother took great delight; but at length I acquired so much skill
+that I astonished my teachers, and made them gaze at one
+another. I remember that it was the custom, in my patron's house,
+to ask questions of the Single Catechism round every Sabbath
+night. He asked the first, my mother the second, and so on,
+everyone saying the question asked and then asking the next. It
+fell to my mother to ask Effectual Calling at me. I said the answer
+with propriety and emphasis. "Now, madam," added I, my
+question to you is: What is Ineffectual Calling?"
+
+"Ineffectual Calling? There is no such thing, Robert," said she.
+
+"But there is, madam," said I, and that answer proves how much
+you say these fundamental precepts by rote, and without any
+consideration. Ineffectual Calling is the outward call of the gospel
+without any effect on the hearts of unregenerated and impenitent
+sinners. Have not all these the same calls, warnings, doctrines,
+and reproofs, that we have? And is not this ineffectual Calling?
+Has not Ardinferry the same? Has not Patrick M'Lure the same?
+Has not the Laird of Dalcastle and his reprobate heir the same?
+And will any tell me that this is not Ineffectual Calling?"
+
+"What a wonderful boy he is!" said my mother.
+
+"I'm feared he turn out to be a conceited gowk," said old Barnet,
+the minister's man.
+
+"No," said my pastor, and father (as I shall henceforth
+denominate him). "No, Barnet, he is a wonderful boy; and no
+marvel, for I have prayed for these talents to be bestowed on him
+from his infancy: and do you think that Heaven would refuse a
+prayer so disinterested? No, it is impossible. But my dread is,
+madam," continued he, turning to my mother, "that he is yet in
+the bond of iniquity."
+
+"God forbid!" said my mother.
+
+"I have struggled with the Almighty long and hard," continued
+he; "but have as yet no certain token of acceptance in his behalf, I
+have indeed fought a hard fight, but have been repulsed by him
+who hath seldom refused my request; although I cited his own
+words against him, and endeavoured to hold him at his promise,
+he hath so many turnings in the supremacy of his power, that I
+have been rejected. How dreadful is it to think of our darling
+being still without the pale of the covenant! But I have vowed a
+vow, and in that there is hope."
+
+My heart quaked with terror when I thought of being still living
+in a state of reprobation, subjected to the awful issues of death,
+judgment, and eternal misery, by the slightest accident or
+casualty; and I set about the duty of prayer myself with the
+utmost earnestness. I prayed three times every day, and seven
+times on the Sabbath; but, the more frequently and fervently that I
+prayed, I sinned still the more. About this time, and for a long
+period afterwards, amounting to several years, I lived in a
+hopeless and deplorable state of mind; for I said to myself, "If my
+name is not written in the book of life from all eternity, it is in
+vain for me to presume that either vows or prayers of mine, or
+those of all mankind combined, can ever procure its insertion
+now." I had come under many vows, most solemnly taken, every
+one of which I had broken; and I saw with the intensity of
+juvenile grief that there was no hope for me. I went on sinning
+every hour, and all the while most strenuously warring against
+sin, and repenting of every one transgression as soon after the
+commission of it as I got leisure to think. But, oh, what a
+wretched state this unregenerated state is, in which every effort
+after righteousness only aggravates our offences! I found it vanity
+to contend; for, after communing with my heart, the conclusion
+was as follows: "If I could repent me of all my sins, and shed
+tears of blood for them, still have I not a load of original
+transgression pressing on me that is enough to crush me to the
+lowest hell. I may be angry with my first parents for having
+sinned, but how I shall repent me of their sin is beyond what I am
+able to comprehend."
+
+Still, in those days of depravity and corruption, I had some of
+those principles implanted in my mind which were afterwards to
+spring up with such amazing fertility among the heroes of the
+faith and the promises. In particular, I felt great indignation
+against all the wicked of this world, and often wished for the
+means of ridding it of such a noxious burden. I liked John Barnet,
+my reverend father's serving-man, extremely ill; but, from a
+supposition that he might be one of the justified, I refrained from
+doing him any injury. He gave always his word against me, and
+when we were by ourselves, in the barn or the fields, he rated me
+with such severity for my faults that my heart could brook it no
+longer. He discovered some notorious lies that I had framed, and
+taxed me with them in such a manner that I could in no wise get
+off. My cheek burnt, with offence, rather than shame; and he,
+thinking he had got the mastery of me, exulted over me most
+unmercifully, telling me I was a selfish and conceited blackguard,
+who made great pretences towards religious devotion to cloak a
+disposition tainted with deceit, and that it would not much
+astonish him if I brought myself to the gallows.
+
+I gathered some courage from his over-severity, and answered
+him as follows: "Who made thee a judge of the actions or
+dispositions of the Almighty's creatures--thou who art a worm
+and no man in his sight? How it befits thee to deal out judgments and
+anathemas! Hath he not made one vessel to honour, and another
+to dishonour, as in the case with myself and thee? Hath he not
+builded his stories in the heavens, and laid the foundations
+thereof in the earth, and how can a being like thee judge between
+good and evil, that are both subjected to the workings of his hand;
+or of the opposing principles in the soul of man, correcting,
+modifying, and refining one another?"
+
+I said this with that strong display of fervour for which I was
+remarkable at my years, and expected old Barnet to be utterly
+confounded; but he only shook his head, and, with the most
+provoking grin, said: "There he goes! Sickan sublime and
+ridiculous sophistry I never heard come out of another mouth but
+ane. There needs nae aiths to be sworn afore the session wha is
+your father, young goodman. I ne'er, for my part, saw a son sac
+like a dad, sin' my een first opened." With that he went away,
+saying with an ill-natured wince: "You made to honour and me to
+dishonour! Dirty bow-kail thing that thou be'st!"
+
+"I will have the old rascal on the hip for this, if I live," thought I.
+So I went and asked my mother if John was a righteous man. She
+could not tell, but supposed he was, and therefore I got no
+encouragement from her. I went next to my reverend father, and
+inquired his opinion, expecting as little from that quarter. He
+knew the elect as it were by instinct, and could have told you of
+all those in his own, and some neighbouring parishes, who were
+born within the boundaries of the covenant of promise, and who
+were not.
+
+"I keep a good deal in company with your servant, old Barnet,
+father," said I.
+
+"You do, boy, you do, I see," said he.
+
+"I wish I may not keep too much in his company," said I, "not
+knowing what kind of society I am in. Is John a good man,
+father?"
+
+"Why, boy, he is but so so. A morally good man John is, but very
+little of the leaven of true righteousness, which is faith, within. I
+am afraid old Barnet, with all his stock of morality, will be a
+castaway."
+
+My heart was greatly cheered by this remark; and I sighed very
+deeply, and hung my head to one side. The worthy father
+observed me, and inquired the cause, when I answered as follows:
+"How dreadful the thought, that I have been going daily in
+company and fellowship with one whose name is written on the
+red-letter side of the book of life; whose body and soul have
+been, from all eternity, consigned over to everlasting destruction,
+and to whom the blood of the atonement can never, never reach!
+Father, this is an awful thing, and beyond my comprehension."
+
+"While we are in the world, we must mix with the inhabitants
+thereof," said he; "and the stains which adhere to us by reason of
+this mixture, which is unavoidable, shall all be washed away. It is
+our duty, however, to shun the society of wicked men as much as
+possible, lest we partake of their sins, and become sharers with
+them in punishment. John, however, is morally a good man, and
+may yet get a cast of grace."
+
+"I always thought him a good man till to-day," said I, "when he
+threw out some reflections on your character, so horrible that I
+quake to think of the wickedness and malevolence of his heart.
+He was rating me very impertinently for some supposed fault,
+which had no being save in his own jealous brain, when I
+attempted to reason him out of his belief in the spirit of calm
+Christian argument. But how do you think he answered me? He
+did so, sir, by twisting his mouth at me, and remarking that such
+sublime and ridiculous sophistry never came out of another
+mouth but one (meaning yours) and that no oath before a kirk
+session was necessary to prove who was my dad, for that he had
+never seen a son so like a father as I was like mine."
+
+"He durst not for his soul's salvation, and for his daily bread,
+which he values much more, say such a word, boy; therefore, take
+care what you assert," said my reverend father.
+
+"He said these very words, and will not deny them, sir," said I.
+
+My reverend father turned about in great wrath and indignation,
+and went away in search of John, but I kept out of the way, and
+listened at a back window; for John was dressing the plot of
+ground behind the house; and I hope it was no sin in me that I did
+rejoice in the dialogue which took place, it being the victory of
+righteousness over error.
+
+"Well, John, this is a fine day for your delving work."
+
+"Ay, it's a tolerable day, sir."
+
+"Are you thankful in heart, John, for such temporal mercies as
+these?"
+
+"Aw doubt we're a' ower little thankfu', sir, baith for temporal an'
+speeritual mercies; but it isna aye the maist thankfu' heart that
+maks the greatest fraze wi' the tongue."
+
+"I hope there is nothing personal under that remark, John?"
+
+"Gin the bannet fits ony body's head, they're unco welcome to it,
+sir, for me."
+
+"John, I do not approve of these innuendoes. You have an arch
+malicious manner. of vending your aphorisms, which the men of
+the world are too apt to read the wrong way, for your dark hints
+are sure to have one very bad meaning."
+
+"Hout na, sir, it's only bad folks that think sac. They find ma bits
+o' gibes come hame to their hearts wi' a kind o' yerk, an' that gars
+them wince."
+
+"That saying is ten times worse than the other, John; it is a
+manifest insult: it is just telling me to my face that you think me a
+bad man."
+
+"A body canna help his thoughts, sir."
+
+"No, but a man's thoughts are generally formed from observation.
+Now I should like to know, even from the mouth of a
+misbeliever, what part of my conduct warrants such a
+conclusion."
+
+"Nae particular pairt, sir; I draw a' my conclusions frae the haill o'
+a man's character, an' I'm no that aften far wrong."
+
+"Well, John, and what sort of general character do you suppose
+mine to be?"
+
+"Yours is a Scripture character, sir, an' I'll prove it."
+
+"I hope so, John. Well, which of the Scripture characters do you
+think approximates nearest to my own?"
+
+"Guess, sir, guess; I wish to lead a proof."
+
+"Why, if it be an Old Testament character, I hope it is
+Melchizedek, for at all events you cannot deny there is one point
+of resemblance: I, like him, am a preacher of righteousness. If it
+be a New Testament character, I suppose you mean the Apostle
+of the Gentiles, of whom I am an unworthy representative."
+
+"Na, na, sir, better nor that still, an' fer closer is the resemblance.
+When ye bring me to the point, I maun speak. Ye are the just
+Pharisee, sir, that gaed up wi' the poor publican to pray in the
+Temple; an' ye're acting the very same pairt at this time, an'
+saying i' your heart, 'God, I thank thee that I am not as other men
+are, an' in nae way like this poor misbelieving unregenerate
+sinner, John Barnet.'"
+
+"I hope I may say so indeed."
+
+"There now! I tauld you how it was! But, d'ye hear, maister. Here
+stands the poor sinner, John Barnet, your beadle an' servantman,
+wha wadna change chances wi' you in the neist world, nor
+consciences in this, for ten times a' that you possess--your
+justification by faith an' awthegither."
+
+"You are extremely audacious and impertinent, John; but the
+language of reprobation cannot affect me: I came only to ask you
+one question, which I desire you to answer candidly. Did you
+ever say to anyone that I was the boy Robert's natural father?"
+
+"Hout na, sir! Ha-ha-ha! Aih, fie, na, sir! I durst-na say that for
+my life. I doubt the black stool, an' the sack gown, or maybe the
+juggs wad hae been my portion had I said sic a thing as that.
+Hout, hout! Fie, fie! Unco-like doings thae for a Melchizedek or a
+Saint Paul!"
+
+"John, you are a profane old man, and I desire that you will not
+presume to break your jests on me. Tell me, dare you say, or dare
+you think, that I am the natural father of that boy?"
+
+"Ye canna hinder me to think whatever I like, sir, nor can I hinder
+mysel."
+
+"But did you ever say to anyone that he resembled me, and
+fathered himself well enough?"
+
+"I hae said mony a time that he resembled you, sir. Naebody can
+mistake that."
+
+"But, John, there are many natural reasons for such likenesses,
+besides that of consanguinity. They depend much on the thoughts
+and affections of the mother; and it is probable that the mother of
+this boy, being deserted by her worthless husband, having turned
+her thoughts on me, as likely to be her protector, may have
+caused this striking resemblance."
+
+"Ay, it may be, sir. I coudna say."
+
+"I have known a lady, John, who was delivered of a blackamoor
+child, merely from the circumstance of having got a start by the
+sudden entrance of her negro servant, and not being able to forget
+him for several hours."
+
+"It may be, sir; but I ken this--an' I had been the laird, I wadna
+hae ta'en that story in."
+
+"So, then, John, you positively think, from a casual likeness, that
+this boy is my son?"
+
+"Man's thoughts are vanity, sir; they come unasked, an' gang
+away without a dismissal, an' he canna' help them. I'm neither
+gaun to say that I think he's your son, nor that I think he's no your
+son: sae ye needna pose me nae mair about it."
+
+"Hear then my determination, John. If you do not promise to me,
+in faith and honour, that you never will say, or insinuate such a
+thing again in your life, as that that boy is my natural son, I will
+take the keys of the church from you, and dismiss you from my
+service."
+
+John pulled out the keys, and dashed them on the gravel at the
+reverend minister's feet. "There are the keys o' your kirk, sir! I
+hae never had muckle mense o' them sin' ye entered the door o't. I
+hae carried them this three and thretty year, but they hae aye been
+like to burn a hole i' my pouch sin' ever they were turned for your
+admittance. Tak them again, an' gie them to wha you will, and
+muckle gude may he get o' them. Auld John may dee a beggar in
+a hay barn, or at the back of a dike, but he sall aye be master o'
+his ain thoughts an' gie them vent or no, as he likes."
+
+He left the manse that day, and I rejoiced in the riddance; for I
+disdained to be kept so much under by one who was in bond of
+iniquity, and of whom there seemed no hope, as he rejoiced in his
+frowardness, and refused to submit to that faithful teacher, his
+master.
+
+It was about this time that my reverend father preached a sermon,
+one sentence of which affected me most disagreeably. It was to
+the purport that every unrepented sin was productive of a new sin
+with each breath that a man drew; and every one of these new
+sins added to the catalogue in the same manner. I was utterly
+confounded at the multitude of my transgressions; for I was
+sensible that there were great numbers of sins of which I had
+never been able thoroughly to repent, and these momentary ones,
+by moderate calculation, had, I saw. long ago, amounted to a
+hundred and fifty thousand in the minute, and I saw no end to the
+series of repentances to which I had subjected myself. A life-time
+was nothing to enable me to accomplish the sum, and then being,
+for anything I was certain of, in my state of nature, and the grace
+of repentance withheld from me--what was I to do, or what was
+to become of me? In the meantime, I went on sinning without
+measure; but I was still more troubled about the multitude than
+the magnitude of my transgressions, and the small minute ones
+puzzled me more than those that were more heinous, as the latter
+had generally some good effects in the way of punishing wicked
+men, froward boys, and deceitful women; and I rejoiced, even
+then in my early youth, at being used as a scourge in the hand of
+the Lord; another Jehu, a Cyrus, or a Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+On the whole, I remember that I got into great confusion relating
+to my sins and repentances, and knew neither where to begin nor
+how to proceed, and often had great fears that I was wholly
+without Christ, and that I would find God a consuming fire to me.
+I could not help running into new sins continually; but then I was
+mercifully dealt with, for I was often made to repent of them
+most heartily, by reason of bodily chastisements received on
+these delinquencies being discovered. I was particularly prone to
+lying, and I cannot but admire the mercy that has freely forgiven
+me all these juvenile sins. Now that I know them all to be blotted
+out, and that I am an accepted person, I may the more freely
+confess them: the truth is, that one lie always paved the way for
+another, from hour to hour, from day to day, and from year to
+year; so that I found myself constantly involved in a labyrinth of
+deceit, from which it was impossible to extricate myself. If I
+knew a person to be a godly one, I could almost have kissed his
+feet; but, against the carnal portion of mankind, I set my face
+continually. I esteemed the true ministers of the gospel; but the
+prelatic party, and the preachers up of good works I abhorred, and
+to this hour I account them the worst and most heinous of all
+transgressors.
+
+There was only one boy at Mr. Witch's class who kept always the
+upper hand of me in every part of education. I strove against him
+from year to year, but it was all in vain; for he was a very wicked
+boy, and I was convinced he had dealings with the Devil. Indeed,
+it was believed all over the country that his mother was a witch;
+and I was at length convinced, that it was no human ingenuity
+that beat me with so much ease in the Latin, after I had often sat
+up a whole night with my reverend father, studying my lesson in
+all its bearings. I often read as well and sometimes better than he;
+but, the moment Mr. Wilson began to examine us, my opponent
+popped up above me. I determined (as I knew him for a wicked
+person, and one of the Devil's handfasted children) to be
+revenged on him, and to humble him by some means or other.
+Accordingly I lost no opportunity of setting the master against
+him, and succeeded several times in getting him severely beaten
+for faults of which he was innocent. I can hardly describe the joy
+that it gave to my heart to see a wicked creature suffering, for,
+though he deserved it not for one thing, he richly deserved it for
+others. This may be by some people accounted a great sin in me;
+but I deny it, for I did it as a duty, and what a man or boy does for
+the right will never be put into the sum of his transgressions.
+
+This boy, whose name was M'Gill, was, at all his leisure hours,
+engaged in drawing profane pictures of beasts, men, women,
+houses, and trees, and, in short, of all things that his eye
+encountered. These profane things the master often smiled at, and
+admired; therefore I began privately to try my hand likewise. I
+had scarcely tried above once to draw the figure of a man, ere I
+conceived that I had hit the very features of Mr. Wilson. They
+were so particular that they could not be easily mistaken, and I
+was so tickled and pleased with the droll likeness that I had
+drawn that I laughed immoderately at it. I tried no other figure
+but this; and I tried it in every situation in which a man and a
+schoolmaster could be placed. I often wrought for hours together
+at this likeness, nor was it long before I made myself so much
+master of the outline that I could have drawn it in any situation
+whatever, almost off hand. I then took M'Gill's account book of
+algebra home with me, and at my leisure put down a number
+of gross caricatures of Mr. Wilson here and there, several of them
+in situations notoriously ludicrous. I waited the discovery of this
+treasure with great impatience; but the book, chancing to be one
+that M'Gill was not using, I saw it might be long enough before
+I enjoyed the consummation of my grand scheme: therefore,
+with all the ingenuity I was master of, I brought it before our
+dominie's eye. But never shall I forget the rage that gleamed
+in the tyrant's phiz! I was actually terrified to look at him, and
+trembled at his voice. M'Gill was called upon, and examined
+relating to the obnoxious figures. He denied flatly that any of
+them were of his doing. But the master inquiring at him whose
+they were, he could not tell, but affirmed it to be some trick. Mr.
+Wilson at one time began, as I thought, to hesitate; but the
+evidence was so strong against M'Gill that at length his solemn
+asseverations of innocence only proved an aggravation of his
+crime. There was not one in the school who had ever been known
+to draw a figure but himself, and on him fell the whole weight of
+the tyrant's vengeance. It was dreadful; and I was once in hopes
+that he would not leave life in the culprit. He, however, left the
+school for several months, refusing to return to be subjected to
+punishment for the faults of others, and I stood king of the class.
+
+Matters, were at last made up between M'Gill's parents and the
+schoolmaster, but by that time I had got the start of him, and
+never in my life did I exert myself so much as to keep the
+mastery. It was in vain; the powers of enchantment prevailed, and
+I was again turned down with the tear in my eye. I could think of
+no amends but one, and, being driven to desperation, I put it in
+practice. I told a lie of him. I came boldly up to the master, and
+told him that M'Gill had in my hearing cursed him in a most
+shocking manner, and called him vile names. He called M'Gill,
+and charged him with the crime, and the proud young coxcomb
+was so stunned at the atrocity of the charge that his face grew as
+red as crimson, and the words stuck in his throat as he feebly
+denied it. His guilt was manifest, and he was again flogged most
+nobly and dismissed the school for ever in disgrace, as a most
+incorrigible vagabond.
+
+This was a great victory gained, and I rejoiced and exulted
+exceedingly in it. It had, however, very nigh cost me my life; for
+I not long thereafter I encountered M'Gill in the fields, on which
+he came up and challenged me for a liar, daring me to fight him. I
+refused, and said that I looked on him as quite below my notice;
+but he would not quit me, and finally told me that he should
+either lick me, or I should lick him, as he had no other means of
+being revenged on such a scoundrel. I tried to intimidate him, but
+it would not do; and I believe I would have given all that I had in
+the world to be quit of him. He at length went so far as first to
+kick me, and then strike me on the face; and, being both older and
+stronger than he, I thought it scarcely became me to take such
+insults patiently. I was, nevertheless, well aware that the devilish
+powers of his mother would finally prevail; and either the dread
+of this, or the inward consciousness of having wronged him,
+certainly unnerved my arm, for I fought wretchedly, and was
+soon wholly overcome. I was so sore defeated that I kneeled and
+was going to beg his pardon; but another thought struck me
+momentarily, and I threw myself on my face, and inwardly
+begged aid from heaven; at the same time I felt as if assured that
+my prayer was heard, and would be answered. While I was in this
+humble attitude, the villain kicked me with his foot and cursed
+me; and I, being newly encouraged, arose and encountered him
+once more. We had not fought long at this second turn before I
+saw a man hastening towards us; on which I uttered a shout of
+joy, and laid on valiantly; but my very next look assured me that
+the man was old John Barnet, whom I had likewise wronged all
+that was in my power, and between these two wicked persons I
+expected anything but justice. My arm was again enfeebled, and
+that of my adversary prevailed. I was knocked down and mauled
+most grievously, and, while the ruffian was kicking and cuffing
+me at his will and pleasure, up came old John Barnet, breathless
+with running, and, at one blow with his open hand, levelled my
+opponent with the earth. "Tak ye that, maister!" said John, "to
+learn ye better breeding. Hout awa, man! An ye will fight, fight
+fair. Gude sauf us, ir ye a gentleman's brood, that ye will kick an'
+cuff a lad when he's down?"
+
+When I heard this kind and unexpected interference, I began once
+more to value myself on my courage, and, springing up, I made at
+my adversary; but John, without saying a word, bit his lip, and
+seizing me by the neck threw me down. M'Gill begged of him to
+stand and see fair play, and suffer us to finish the battle; for,
+added he. "he is a liar, and a scoundrel, and deserves ten times
+more than I can give him."
+
+"I ken he's a' that ye say, an' mair, my man," quoth John. "But am
+I sure that ye're no as bad, an' waur? It says nae muckle for ony o'
+ye to be tearing like tikes at one anither here."
+
+John cocked his cudgel and stood between us, threatening to
+knock the one dead who first offered to lift his hand against the
+other; but, perceiving no disposition in any of us to separate, he
+drove me home before him like a bullock, and keeping close
+guard behind me, lest M'Gill had followed. I felt greatly indebted
+to John, yet I complained of his interference to my mother, and
+the old officious sinner got no thanks for his pains.
+
+As I am writing only from recollection, so I remember of nothing
+farther in these early days, in the least worthy of being recorded.
+That I was a great, a transcendent sinner, I confess. But still I had
+hopes of forgiveness, because I never sinned from principle, but
+accident; and then I always tried to repent of these sins by the
+slump, for individually it was impossible; and, though not always
+successful in my endeavours, I could not help that, the grace of
+repentance being withheld from me, I regarded myself as in no
+degree accountable for the failure. Moreover, there were many of
+the most deadly sins into which I never fell, for I dreaded those
+mentioned in the Revelations as excluding sins, so that I guarded
+against them continually. In particular, I brought myself to
+despise, if not to abhor, the beauty of women, looking on it as the
+greatest snare to which mankind was subjected, and though
+young men and maidens, and even old women (my mother
+among the rest), taxed me with being an unnatural wretch, I
+gloried in my acquisition; and, to this day, am thankful for having
+escaped the most dangerous of all snares.
+
+I kept myself also free of the sins of idolatry and misbelief, both
+of a deadly nature; and, upon the whole, I think I had not then
+broken, that is, absolutely broken, above four out of the ten
+commandments; but, for all that, I had more sense than to regard
+either my good works, or my evil deeds, as in the smallest degree
+influencing the eternal decrees of God concerning me, either with
+regard to my acceptance or reprobation. I depended entirely on
+the bounty of free grace, holding all the righteousness of man as
+filthy rags, and believing in the momentous and magnificent truth
+that, the more heavily loaden with transgressions, the more
+welcome was the believer at the throne of grace. And I have
+reason to believe that it was this dependence and this belief that at
+last ensured my acceptance there.
+
+I come now to the most important period of my existence--the
+period that has modelled my character, and influenced every
+action of my life--without which, this detail of my actions would
+have been as a tale that hath been told--a monotonous farrago--an
+uninteresting harangue--in short, a thing of nothing. Whereas, lo!
+it must now be a relation of great and terrible actions, done in the
+might, and by the commission of heaven. Amen.
+
+Like the sinful king of Israel, I had been walking softly before the
+Lord for a season. I had been humbled for my transgressions, and,
+as far as I recollect, sorry on account of their numbers and
+heinousness. My reverend father had been, moreover, examining
+me every day regarding the state of my soul, and my answers
+sometimes appeared to give him satisfaction, and sometimes not.
+As for my mother, she would harp on the subject of my faith for
+ever; yet, though I knew her to be a Christian, I confess that I
+always despised her motley instructions, nor had I any great
+regard for her person. If this was a crime in me, I never could
+help it. I confess it freely, and believe it was a judgment from
+heaven inflicted on her for some sin of former days, and that I
+had no power to have acted otherwise towards her than I did.
+
+In this frame of mind was I when my reverend father one
+morning arose from his seat, and, meeting me as I entered the
+room, he embraced me, and welcomed me into the community of
+the just upon earth. I was struck speechless, and could make no
+answer save by looks of surprise. My mother also came to me,
+kissed, and wept over me; and, after showering unnumbered
+blessings on my head, she also welcomed me into the society of
+the just made perfect. Then each of them took me by a hand, and
+my reverend father explained to me how he had wrestled with
+God, as the patriarch of old had done, not for a night, but for days
+and years, and that in bitterness and anguish of spirit, on my
+account; but, that he had at last prevailed, and had now gained the
+long and earnestly desired assurance of my acceptance with the
+Almighty, in and through the merits and sufferings of his Son.
+That I was now a justified person, adopted among the number of
+God's children--my name written in the Lamb's book of life, and
+that no by-past transgression, nor any future act of my own, or of
+other men, could be instrumental in altering the decree. "All the
+powers of darkness," added he, "shall never be able to pluck you
+again out of your Redeemer's hand. And now, my son, be strong
+and steadfast in the truth. Set your face against sin, and sinful
+men, and resist even to blood, as many of the faithful of this land
+have done, and your reward shall be double. I am assured of your
+acceptance by the word and spirit of Him who cannot err, and
+your sanctification and repentance unto life will follow in due
+course. Rejoice and be thankful, for you are plucked as a brand
+out of the burning, and now your redemption is sealed and sure."
+
+I wept for joy to be thus assured of my freedom from all sin, and
+of the impossibility of my ever again falling away from my new
+state. I bounded away into the fields and the woods, to pour out
+my spirit in prayer before the Almighty for his kindness to me:
+my whole frame seemed to be renewed; every nerve was buoyant
+with new life; I felt as if I could have flown in the air, or leaped
+over the tops of the trees. An exaltation of spirit lifted me, as it
+were, far above the earth and the sinful creatures crawling on its
+surface; and I deemed myself as an eagle among the children of
+men, soaring on high, and looking down with pity and contempt
+on the grovelling creatures below.
+
+As I thus wended my way, I beheld a young man of a mysterious
+appearance coming towards me. I tried to shun him, being bent
+on my own contemplations; but he cast himself in my way, so
+that I could not well avoid him; and, more than that, I felt a sort
+of invisible power that drew me towards him, something like the
+force of enchantment, which I could not resist. As we approached
+each other, our eyes met and I can never describe the strange
+sensations that thrilled through my whole frame at that
+impressive moment; a moment to me fraught with the most
+tremendous consequences; the beginning of a series of adventures
+which has puzzled myself, and will puzzle the world when I am
+no more in it. That time will now soon arrive, sooner than anyone
+can devise who knows not the tumult of my thoughts and the
+labour of my spirit; and when it hath come and passed over, when
+my flesh and my bones are decayed, and my soul has passed to its
+everlasting home, then shall the sons of men ponder on the events
+of my life; wonder and tremble, and tremble and wonder how
+such things should be.
+
+That strange youth and I approached each other in silence, and
+slowly, with our eyes fixed on each other's eyes. We approached
+till not more than a yard intervened between us, and then stood
+still and gazed, measuring each other from head to foot. What
+was my astonishment on perceiving that he was the same being as
+myself! The clothes were the same to the smallest item. The form
+was the same; the apparent age; the colour of the hair; the eyes;
+and, as far as recollection could serve me from viewing my own
+features in a glass, the features too were the very same. I
+conceived at first that I saw a vision, and that my guardian angel
+had appeared to me at this important era of my life; but this
+singular being read my thoughts in my looks, anticipating the
+very words that I was going to utter.
+
+"You think I am your brother," said he; or that I am your second
+self. I am indeed your brother, not according to the flesh, but in
+my belief of the same truths, and my assurance in the same mode
+of redemption, than which I hold nothing so great or so glorious
+on earth."
+
+"Then you are an associate well adapted to my present state," said
+I. "For this time is a time of great rejoicing in spirit to me. I am
+on my way to return thanks to the Most High for my redemption
+from the bonds of sin and misery. If you will join with me heart
+and hand in youthful thanksgiving, then shall we two go and
+worship together; but, if not, go your way, and I shall go mine."
+
+"Ah, you little know with how much pleasure I will accompany
+you, and join with you in your elevated devotions," said he
+fervently. "Your state is a state to be envied indeed; but I have
+been advised of it, and am come to be a humble disciple of yours;
+to be initiated into the true way of salvation by conversing with
+you, and perhaps of being assisted by your prayers."
+
+My spiritual pride being greatly elevated by this address, I began
+to assume the preceptor, and questioned this extraordinary youth
+with regard to his religious principles, telling him plainly, if he
+was one who expected acceptance with God at all, on account of
+good works, that I would hold no communion with him. He
+renounced these at once, with the greatest vehemence, and
+declared his acquiescence in my faith. I asked if he believed in
+the eternal and irrevocable decrees of God, regarding the
+salvation and condemnation of all mankind? He answered that he
+did so: aye, what would signify all things else that he believed, if
+he did not believe in that? We then went on to commune about all
+our points of belief; and in everything that I suggested he
+acquiesced, and, as I thought that day, often carried them to
+extremes, so that I had a secret dread he was advancing
+blasphemies. He had such a way with him, and paid such a
+deference to all my opinions, that I was quite captivated, and, at
+the same time, I stood in a sort of awe of him, which I could not
+account for, and several times was seized with an involuntary
+inclination to escape from his presence by making a sudden
+retreat. But he seemed constantly to anticipate my thoughts, and
+was sure to divert my purpose by some turn in the conversation
+that particularly interested me. He took care to dwell much on the
+theme of the impossibility of those ever falling away who were
+once accepted and received into covenant with God, for he
+seemed to know that in that confidence, and that trust, my whole
+hopes were centred.
+
+We moved about from one place to another, until the day was
+wholly spent. My mind had all the while been kept in a state of
+agitation resembling the motion of a whirlpool, and, when we
+came to separate, I then discovered that the purpose for which I
+had sought the fields had been neglected, and that I had been
+diverted from the worship of God by attending to the quibbles
+and dogmas of this singular and unaccountable being, who
+seemed to have more knowledge and information than all the
+persons I had ever known put together.
+
+We parted with expressions of mutual regret, and when I left him
+I felt a deliverance, but at the same time a certain consciousness
+that I was not thus to get free of him, but that he was like to be an
+acquaintance that was to stick to me for good or for evil. I was
+astonished at his acuteness and knowledge about everything; but,
+as for his likeness to me, that was quite unaccountable. He was
+the same person in every respect, but yet he was not always so;
+for I observed several times, when we were speaking of certain
+divines and their tenets, that his face assumed something of the
+appearance of theirs; and it struck me that, by setting his features
+to the mould of other people's, he entered at once into their
+conceptions and feelings. I had been greatly flattered, and greatly
+interested by his conversation; whether I had been the better for it
+or the worse, I could not tell. I had been diverted from returning
+thanks to my gracious Maker for his great kindness to me, and came
+home as I went away, but not with the same buoyancy and lightness of
+heart. Well may I remember the day in which I was first received into
+the number, and made an heir to all the privileges of the children
+of God, and on which I first met this mysterious associate, who
+from that day forth contrived to wind himself into all my affairs,
+both spiritual and temporal, to this day on which I am writing the
+account of it. It was on the 25th day of March, 1704, when I had
+just entered the eighteenth year of my age. Whether it behoves
+me to bless God for the events of that day, or to deplore them, has
+been hid from my discernment, though I have inquired into it
+with fear and trembling; and I have now lost all hopes of ever
+discovering the true import of these events until that day when
+my accounts are to make up and reckon for in another world.
+
+When I came home, I went straight into the parlour, where my
+mother was sitting by herself. She started to her feet, and uttered
+a smothered scream. "What ails you, Robert?" cried she. "My
+dear son, what is the matter with you?"
+
+"Do you see anything the matter with me?" said I. "It appears that
+the ailment is with yourself and either in your crazed head or your
+dim eyes, for there is nothing the matter with me."
+
+"Ah, Robert, you are ill!" cried she. "You are very ill, my dear
+boy; you are quite changed; your very voice and manner are
+changed. Ah, Jane, haste you up to the study, and tell Mr.
+Wringhim to come here on the instant and speak to Robert."
+
+"I beseech you, woman, to restrain yourself," said I. "If you suffer
+your frenzy to run away with your judgment in this manner, I will
+leave the house. What do you mean? I tell you, there is nothing
+ails me: I never was better."
+
+She screamed, and ran between me and the door, to bar my
+retreat: in the meantime my reverend father entered, and I have
+not forgot how he gazed, through his glasses, first at my mother,
+and then at me. I imagined that his eyes burnt like candles, and
+was afraid of him, which I suppose made my looks more unstable
+than they would otherwise have been.
+
+"What is all this for?" said he. "Mistress! Robert! What is the
+matter here?"
+
+"Oh, sir, our boy!" cried my mother; "our dear boy, Mr.
+Wringhim! Look at him, and speak to him: he is either dying or
+translated, sir!"
+
+He looked at me with a countenance of great alarm; mumbling
+some sentences to himself, and then taking me by the arm, as if to
+feel my pulse, he said, with a faltering voice: "Something has
+indeed befallen you, either in body or mind, boy, for you are
+transformed, since the morning, that I could not have known you
+for the same person. Have you met with any accident?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Have you seen anything out of the ordinary course of nature?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then, Satan, I fear, has been busy with you, tempting you in no
+ordinary degree at this momentous crisis of your life?"
+
+My mind turned on my associate for the day, and the idea that he
+might be an agent of the Devil had such an effect on me that I
+could make no answer.
+
+"I see how it is," said he; "you are troubled in spirit, and I have no
+doubt that the enemy of our salvation has been busy with you.
+Tell me this, has he overcome you, or has he not?"
+
+"He has not, my dear father," said I. "in the strength of the Lord, I
+hope I have withstood him. But indeed, if he has been busy with
+me, I knew it not. I have been conversant this day with one
+stranger only, whom I took rather for an angel of light."
+
+"It is one of the Devil's most profound wiles to appear like one,"
+said my mother.
+
+"Woman, hold thy peace!" said my reverend father. "Thou
+pretendest to teach what thou knowest not. Tell me this, boy: did
+this stranger, with whom you met, adhere to the religious
+principles in which I have educated you?"
+
+"Yes, to every one of them in their fullest latitude," said I.
+
+"Then he was no agent of the Wicked One with whom you held
+converse," said he: "for that is the doctrine that was made to
+overturn the principalities and powers, the might and dominion of
+the kingdom of darkness. Let us pray."
+
+After spending about a quarter of an hour in solemn and sublime
+thanksgiving, this saintly man and minister of Christ Jesus, gave
+out that the day following should be kept by the family as a day
+of solemn thanksgiving, and spent in prayer and praise, on
+account of the calling and election of one of its members; or
+rather for the election of that individual being revealed on earth,
+as well as confirmed in Heaven.
+
+The next day was with me a day of holy exultation. It was begun
+by my reverend father laying his hands upon my head and
+blessing me, and then dedicating me to the Lord in the most
+awful and impressive manner. It was in no common way that he
+exercised this profound rite, for it was done with all the zeal and
+enthusiasm of a devotee to the true cause, and a champion on the
+side he had espoused. He used these remarkable words, which I
+have still treasured up in my heart: "I give him unto Thee only, to
+Thee wholly, and to Thee for ever. I dedicate him unto Thee,
+soul, body, and spirit. Not as the wicked of this world, or the
+hirelings of a Church profanely called by Thy name, do I dedicate
+this Thy servant to Thee: Not in words and form, learned by rote,
+and dictated by the limbs of Antichrist, but, Lord, I give him into
+Thy hand, as a captain putteth a sword into the hand of his
+sovereign, wherewith to lay waste his enemies. May he be a two-
+edged weapon in Thy hand and a spear coming out of Thy mouth,
+to destroy, and overcome, and pass over; and may the enemies of
+Thy Church fall down before him, and be as dung to fat the
+land!"
+
+From the moment, I conceived it decreed, not that I should be a
+minister of the gospel, but a champion of it, to cut off the enemies
+of the Lord from the face of the earth; and I rejoiced in the
+commission, finding it more congenial to my nature to be cutting
+sinners off with the sword than to be haranguing them from the
+pulpit, striving to produce an effect which God, by his act of
+absolute predestination, had for ever rendered impracticable. The
+more I pondered on these things the more I saw of the folly and
+inconsistency of ministers in spending their lives striving and
+remonstrating with sinners in order to induce them to do that
+which they had it not in their power to do. Seeing that God had
+from all eternity decided the fate of every individual that was to
+be born of woman, how vain was it in man to endeavour to save
+those whom their Maker had, by an unchangeable decree,
+doomed to destruction. I could not disbelieve the doctrine which
+the best of men had taught me, and towards which he made the
+whole of the Scriptures to bear, and yet it made the economy of
+the Christian world appear to me as an absolute contradiction.
+How much more wise would it be, thought I, to begin and cut
+sinners off with the sword! For till that is effected, the saints can
+never inherit the earth in peace. Should I be honoured as an
+instrument to begin this great work of purification, I should
+rejoice in it. But, then, where had I the means, or under what
+direction was I to begin? There was one thing clear, I was now
+the Lord's and it behoved me to bestir myself in His service. Oh
+that I had an host at my command, then would I be as a devouring
+fire among the workers of iniquity!
+
+Full of these great ideas, I hurried through the city, and sought
+again the private path through the field and wood of Finnieston,
+in which my reverend preceptor had the privilege of walking for
+study, and to which he had a key that was always at my
+command. Near one of the stiles, I perceived a young man sitting
+in a devout posture, reading a Bible. He rose, lifted his hat, and
+made an obeisance to me, which I returned and walked on. I had
+not well crossed the stile till it struck me I knew the face of the
+youth and that he was some intimate acquaintance, to whom I
+ought to have spoken. I walked on, and returned, and walked on
+again, trying to recollect who he was; but for my life I could not.
+There was, however, a fascination in his look and manner that
+drew me back towards him in spite of myself, and I resolved to
+go to him, if it were merely to speak and see who he was.
+
+I came up to him and addressed him, but he was so intent on his
+book that, though I spoke, he lifted not his eyes. I looked on the
+book also, and still it seemed a Bible, having columns, chapters,
+and verses; but it was in a language of which I was wholly
+ignorant, and all intersected with red lines and verses. A sensation
+resembling a stroke of electricity came over me, on first casting
+my eyes on that mysterious book, and I stood motionless. He
+looked up, smiled, closed his book, and put it in his bosom. "You
+seem strangely affected, dear sir, by looking at my book," said he
+mildly.
+
+"In the name of God, what book is that?" said I. "Is it a Bible?"
+
+"It is my Bible, sir," said he, "but I will cease reading it, for I am
+glad to see you. Pray, is not this a day for holy festivity with
+you?"
+
+I stared in his face, but made no answer, for my senses were
+bewildered.
+
+"Do you not know me?" said he. "You appear to be somehow at a
+loss. Had not you and I some sweet communion and fellowship
+yesterday?"
+
+"I beg your pardon, sir," said I. "But, surely, if you are the young
+gentleman with whom I spent the hours yesterday, you have the
+chameleon art of changing your appearance; I never could have
+recognized you."
+
+"My countenance changes with my studies and sensations," said
+he. It is a natural peculiarity in me, over which I have not full
+control. If I contemplate a man's features seriously, mine own
+gradually assume the very same appearance and character. And
+what is more, by contemplating a face minutely, I not only attain
+the same likeness but, with the likeness, I attain the very same
+ideas as well as the same mode of arranging them, so that, you
+see, by looking at a person attentively, I by degrees assume his
+likeness, and by assuming his likeness I attain to the possession
+of his most secret thoughts. This, I say, is a peculiarity in my
+nature, a gift of the God that made me; but, whether or not given
+me for a blessing, He knows Himself, and so do I. At all events, I
+have this privilege, I can never be mistaken of a character in
+whom I am interested."
+
+"It is a rare qualification," replied I, "and I would give worlds to
+possess it. Then, it appears that it is needless to dissemble with
+you, since you can at any time extract our most secret thoughts
+from our bosoms. You already know my natural character?"
+
+"Yes," said he, "and it is that which attaches me to you. By
+assuming your likeness yesterday, I became acquainted with your
+character, and was no less astonished at the profundity and range
+of your thoughts than at the heroic magnanimity with which these
+were combined. And now, in addition to these, you are dedicated
+to the great work of the Lord; for which reasons I have resolved
+to attach myself as closely to you as possible, and to render you
+all the service of which my poor abilities are capable."
+
+I confess that I was greatly flattered by these compliments paid to
+my abilities by a youth of such superior qualifications; by one
+who, with a modesty and affability rare at his age, combined a
+height of genius and knowledge almost above human
+comprehension. Nevertheless, I began to assume a certain
+superiority of demeanour towards him, as judging it incumbent
+on me to do so, in order to keep up his idea of my exalted
+character. We conversed again till the day was near a close; and
+the things that he strove most to inculcate on my mind were the
+infallibility of the elect, and the preordination of all things that
+come to pass. I pretended to controvert the first of these, for the
+purpose of showing him the extent of my argumentative powers,
+and said that "indubitably there were degrees of sinning which
+would induce the Almighty to throw off the very elect." But
+behold my hitherto humble and modest companion took up the
+argument with such warmth that he put me not only to silence but
+to absolute shame.
+
+"Why, sir," said he, "by vending such an insinuation, you put
+discredit on the great atonement, in which you trust. Is there not
+enough of merit in the blood of Jesus to save thousands of
+worlds, if it was for these worlds that he died? Now, when you
+know, as you do (and as every one of the elect may know of
+himself) that this Saviour died for you, namely and particularly,
+dare you say that there is not enough of merit in His great
+atonement to annihilate all your sins, let them be as heinous and
+atrocious as they may? And, moreover, do you not acknowledge
+that God hath pre-ordained and decreed whatsoever comes to
+pass? Then, how is it that you should deem it in your power to
+eschew one action of your life, whether good or evil? Depend on
+it, the advice of the great preacher is genuine: 'What thine hand
+findeth to do, do it with all thy might, for none of us knows what
+a day may bring forth.' That is, none of us knows what is pre-
+ordained, but whatever it is pre-ordained we must do, and none of
+these things will be laid to our charge."
+
+I could hardly believe that these sayings were genuine or
+orthodox; but I soon felt that, instead of being a humble disciple
+of mine, this new acquaintance was to be my guide and director,
+and all under the humble guise of one stooping at my feet to learn
+the right. He said that he saw I was ordained to perform some
+great action for the cause of Jesus and His Church, and he
+earnestly coveted being a partaker with me; but he besought of
+me never to think it possible for me to fall from the truth, or the
+favour of Him who had chosen me, else that misbelief would
+baulk every good work to which I set my face.
+
+There was something so flattering in all this that I could not resist
+it. Still, when he took leave of me, I felt it as a great relief; and
+yet, before the morrow, I wearied and was impatient to see him
+again. We carried on our fellowship from day to day, and all the
+while I knew not who he was, and still my mother and reverend
+father kept insisting that I was an altered youth, changed in my
+appearance, my manners, and my whole conduct; yet something
+always prevented me from telling them more about my new
+acquaintance than I had done on the first day we met. I rejoiced in
+him, was proud of him, and soon could not live without him; yet,
+though resolved every day to disclose the whole story of my
+connection with him, I had it not in my power. Something always
+prevented me, till at length I thought no more of it, but resolved
+to enjoy his fascinating company in private, and by all means to
+keep my own with him. The resolution was vain: I set a bold face
+to it, but my powers were inadequate to the task; my adherent,
+with all the suavity imaginable, was sure to carry his point. I
+sometimes fumed, and sometimes shed tears at being obliged to
+yield to proposals against which I had at first felt every reasoning
+power of my soul rise in opposition; but for all that he never
+faded in carrying conviction along with him in effect, for he
+either forced me to acquiesce in his measures, and assent to the
+truth of his positions, or he put me so completely down that I had
+not a word left to advance against them.
+
+After weeks, and I may say months of intimacy, I observed,
+somewhat to my amazement, that we had never once prayed
+together; and, more than that, that he had constantly led my
+attentions away from that duty, causing me to neglect it wholly. I
+thought this a bad mark of a man seemingly so much set on
+inculcating certain important points of religion, and resolved next
+day to put him to the test, and request him to perform that sacred
+duty in name of us both. He objected boldly; saying there were
+very few people indeed with whom he could join in prayer, and
+he made a point of never doing it, as he was sure they were to ask
+many things of which he disapproved, and that, if he were to
+officiate himself, he was as certain to allude to many things that
+came not within the range of their faith. He disapproved of prayer
+altogether in the manner it was generally gone about, he said.
+Man made it merely a selfish concern, and was constantly
+employed asking, asking, for everything. Whereas it became all
+God's creatures to be content with their lot, and only to kneel
+before him in order to thank him for such benefits as he saw meet
+to bestow. In short, he argued with such energy that before we
+parted I acquiesced, as usual, in his position, and never
+mentioned prayer to him any more.
+
+Having been so frequently seen in his company, several people
+happened to mention the circumstance to my mother and
+reverend father; but at the same time had all described him
+differently. At length, they began to examine me with respect to
+the company I kept, as I absented myself from home day after
+day. I told them I kept company only with one young gentleman,
+whose whole manner of thinking on religious subjects I found so
+congenial with my own that I could not live out of his society.
+My mother began to lay down some of her old hackneyed rules of
+faith, but I turned from hearing her with disgust; for, after the
+energy of my new friend's reasoning, hers appeared so tame I
+could not endure it. And I confess with shame that my reverend
+preceptor's religious dissertations began, about this time, to lose
+their relish very much, and by degrees became exceedingly
+tiresome to my ear. They were so inferior, in strength and
+sublimity, to the most common observations of my young friend
+that in drawing a comparison the former appeared as nothing. He,
+however, examined me about many things relating to my
+companion, in all of which I satisfied him, save in one: I could
+neither tell him who my friend was, what was his name, nor of
+whom he was descended; and I wondered at myself how I had
+never once adverted to such a thing for all the time we had been
+intimate.
+
+I inquired the next day what his name was; as I said I was often at
+a loss for it, when talking with him. He replied that there was no
+occasion for any one friend ever naming another, when their
+society was held in private, as ours was; for his part he had never
+once named me since we first met, and never intended to do so,
+unless by my own request. "But if you cannot converse without
+naming me, you may call me Gil for the present," added he, "and
+if I think proper to take another name at any future period, it shall
+be with your approbation."
+
+"Gil!" said I. "Have you no name but Gil? Or which of your
+names is it? Your Christian or surname?"
+
+"Oh, you must have a surname too, must you!" replied he. "Very
+well, you may call me Gil-Martin. It is not my Christian name;
+but it is a name which may serve your turn."
+
+"This is very strange!" said I. "Are you ashamed of your parents
+that you refuse to give your real name?"
+
+"I have no parents save one, whom I do not acknowledge," said
+he proudly. "Therefore, pray drop that subject, for it is a
+disagreeable one. I am a being of a very peculiar temper, for,
+though I have servants and subjects more than I can number, yet,
+to gratify a certain whim, I have left them, and retired to this city,
+and, for all the society it contains, you see I have attached myself
+only to you. This is a secret, and I tell you only in friendship,
+therefore pray let it remain one, and say not another word about
+the matter."
+
+I assented, and said no more concerning it; for it instantly struck
+me that this was no other than the Czar Peter of Russia, having
+heard that he had been travelling through Europe in disguise, and
+I cannot say that I had not thenceforward great and mighty hopes
+of high preferment, as a defender and avenger of the oppressed
+Christian Church, under the influence of this great potentate. He
+had hinted as much already, as that it was more honourable, and
+of more avail to put down the wicked with the sword than try to
+reform them, and I thought myself quite justified in supposing
+that he intended me for some great employment, that he had thus
+selected me for his companion out of all the rest in Scotland, and
+even pretended to learn the great truths of religion from my
+mouth. From that time I felt disposed to yield to such a great
+prince's suggestions without hesitation.
+
+Nothing ever astonished me so much as the uncommon powers
+with which he seemed invested. In our walk one day, we met with
+a Mr. Blanchard, who was reckoned a worthy, pious divine, but
+quite of the moral cast, who joined us; and we three walked on,
+and rested together in the fields. My companion did not seem to
+like him, but, nevertheless, regarded him frequently with deep
+attention, and there were several times, while he seemed
+contemplating him, and trying to find out his thoughts, that his
+face became so like Mr. Blanchard's that it was impossible to
+have distinguished the one from the other. The antipathy between
+the two was mutual, and discovered itself quite palpably in a
+short time. When my companion the prince was gone, Mr.
+Blanchard asked me anent him, and I told him that he was a
+stranger in the city, but a very uncommon and great personage.
+Mr. Blanchard's answer to me was as follows: "I never saw
+anybody I disliked so much in my life, Mr. Robert; and if it be
+true that he is a stranger here, which I doubt, believe me he is
+come for no good."
+
+"Do you not perceive what mighty powers of mind he is
+possessed of?" said I, "and also how clear and unhesitating he is
+on some of the most interesting points of divinity?"
+
+"It is for his great mental faculties that I dread him," said he. "It is
+incalculable what evil such a person as he may do, if so disposed.
+There is a sublimity in his ideas, with which there is to me a
+mixture of terror; and, when he talks of religion, he does it as one
+that rather dreads its truths than reverences them. He, indeed,
+pretends great strictness of orthodoxy regarding some of the
+points of doctrine embraced by the reformed church; but you do
+not seem to perceive that both you and he are carrying these
+points to a dangerous extremity. Religion is a sublime and
+glorious thing, the bonds of society on earth, and the connector of
+humanity with the Divine nature; but there is nothing so
+dangerous to man as the wresting of any of its principles, or
+forcing them beyond their due bounds: this is of all others the
+readiest way to destruction. Neither is there anything so easily
+done. There is not an error into which a man can fall which he
+may not press Scripture into his service as proof of the probity of,
+and though your boasted theologian shunned the full discussion
+of the subject before me, while you pressed it, I can easily see
+that both you and he are carrying your ideas of absolute
+predestination, and its concomitant appendages, to an extent that
+overthrows all religion and revelation together; or, at least,
+jumbles them into a chaos, out of which human capacity can
+never select what is good. Believe me, Mr. Robert, the less you
+associate with that illustrious stranger the better, for it appears to
+me that your creed and his carries damnation on the very front of
+it."
+
+I was rather stunned at this; but pretended to smile with disdain,
+and said it did not become youth to control age; and, as I knew
+our principles differed fundamentally, it behoved us to drop the
+subject. He, however, would not drop it, but took both my
+principles and me fearfully to task, for Blanchard was an eloquent
+and powerful-minded old man; and, before we parted, I believe I
+promised to drop my new acquaintance, and was all but resolved
+to do it.
+
+As well might I have laid my account with shunning the light of
+day. He was constant to me as my shadow, and by degrees he
+acquired such an ascendency over me that I never was happy out
+of his company, nor greatly so in it. When I repeated to him all
+that Mr. Blanchard had said, his countenance kindled with
+indignation and rage; and then by degrees his eyes sunk inward,
+his brow lowered, so that I was awed, and withdrew my eyes
+from looking at him. A while afterwards as I was addressing him,
+I chanced to look him again in the face, and the sight of him
+made me start violently. He had made himself so like Mr.
+Blanchard that I actually believed I had been addressing that
+gentleman, and that I had done so in some absence of mind that I
+could not account for. Instead of being amused at the quandary I
+was in, he seemed offended: indeed, he never was truly amused
+with anything. And he then asked me sullenly, if I conceived such
+personages as he to have no other endowments than common
+mortals?
+
+I said I never conceived that princes or potentates had any greater
+share of endowments than other men, and frequently not so much.
+He shook his head, and bade me think over the subject again; and
+there was an end of it. I certainly felt every day the more disposed
+to acknowledge such a superiority in him; and, from all that I
+could gather, I had now no doubt that he was Peter of Russia.
+Everything combined to warrant the supposition, and, of course, I
+resolved to act in conformity with the discovery I had made.
+
+For several days the subject of Mr. Blanchard's doubts and
+doctrines formed the theme of our discourse. My friend
+deprecated them most devoutly; and then again he would deplore
+them, and lament the great evil that such a man might do among
+the human race. I joined with him in allowing the evil in its
+fullest latitude; and, at length, after he thought he had fully
+prepared my nature for such a trial of its powers and abilities, he
+proposed calmly that we two should make away with Mr.
+Blanchard. I was so shocked that my bosom became as it were a
+void, and the beatings of my heart sounded loud and hollow in it;
+my breath cut, and my tongue and palate became dry and
+speechless. He mocked at my cowardice, and began a-reasoning
+on the matter with such powerful eloquence that, before we
+parted, I felt fully convinced that it was my bounden duty to slay
+Mr. Blanchard; but my will was far, very far from consenting to
+the deed.
+
+I spent the following night without sleep, or nearly so; and the
+next morning, by the time the sun arose, I was again abroad, and
+in the company of my illustrious friend. The same subject was
+resumed, and again he reasoned to the following purport: That
+supposing me placed at the head of any army of Christian
+soldiers, all bent on putting down the enemies of the Church,
+would I have any hesitation in destroying and rooting out these
+enemies? None, surely. Well then, when I saw and was convinced
+that here was an individual who was doing more detriment to the
+Church of Christ on earth than tens of thousands of such warriors
+were capable of doing, was it not my duty to cut him off, and
+save the elect? "He who would be a champion in the cause of
+Christ and His Church, my brave young friend," added he, "must
+begin early, and no man can calculate to what an illustrious
+eminence small beginnings may lead. If the man Blanchard is
+worthy, he is only changing his situation for a better one; and, if
+unworthy, it is better that one fall than that a thousand souls
+perish. Let us be up and doing in our vocations. For me, my
+resolution is taken; I have but one great aim in this world, and I
+never for a moment lose sight of it."
+
+I was obliged to admit the force of his reasoning; for, though I
+cannot from memory repeat his words, his eloquence was of that
+overpowering nature that the subtilty of other men sunk before it;
+and there is also little doubt that the assurance I had that these
+words were spoken by a great potentate who could raise me to the
+highest eminence (provided that I entered into his extensive and
+decisive measures) assisted mightily in dispelling my youthful
+scruples and qualms of conscience; and I thought moreover that,
+having such a powerful back friend to support me, I hardly
+needed to be afraid of the consequences. I consented! But begged
+a little time to think of it. He said the less one thought of a duty
+the better; and we parted.
+
+But the most singular instance of this wonderful man's power
+over my mind was that he had as complete influence over me by
+night as by day. All my dreams corresponded exactly with his
+suggestions; and, when he was absent from me, still his
+arguments sunk deeper in my heart than even when he was
+present. I dreamed that night of a great triumph obtained, and,
+though the whole scene was but dimly and confusedly defined in
+my vision, yet the overthrow and death of Mr. Blanchard was the
+first step by which I attained the eminent station I occupied.
+Thus, by dreaming of the event by night, and discoursing of it by
+day, it soon became so familiar to my mind that I almost
+conceived it as done. It was resolved on: which was the first and
+greatest victory gained; for there was no difficulty in finding
+opportunities enow of cutting off a man who, every good day,
+was to be found walking by himself in private grounds. I went
+and heard him preach for two days, and in fact I held his tenets
+scarcely short of blasphemy; they were such as I had never heard
+before, and his congregation, which was numerous, were turning
+up their ears and drinking in his doctrines with the utmost delight;
+for Oh they suited their carnal natures and self-sufficiency to a
+hair! He was actually holding it forth, as a fact, that "it was every
+man's own blame if he was not saved!" What horrible
+misconstruction! And then be was alleging, and trying to prove
+from nature and reason, that no man ever was guilty of a sinful
+action who might not have declined it had he so chosen!
+"Wretched controvertist!" thought I to myself an hundred times,
+"shall not the sword of the Lord be moved from its place of peace
+for such presumptuous, absurd testimonies as these!"
+
+When I began to tell the prince about these false doctrines, to my
+astonishment I found that he had been in the church himself, and
+had every argument that the old divine had used verbatim; and he
+remarked on them with great concern that these were not the
+tenets that corresponded with his views in society, and that he had
+agents in every city, and every land, exerting their powers to put
+them down. I asked, with great simplicity: "Are all your subjects
+Christians, prince?"
+
+"All my European subjects are, or deem themselves so," returned
+he; "and they are the most faithful and true subjects I have."
+
+Who could doubt, after this, that he was the Czar of Russia? I
+have nevertheless had reasons to doubt of his identity since that
+period, and which of my conjectures is right I believe the God of
+Heaven only knows, for I do not. I shall go on to write such
+things as I remember, and, if anyone shall ever take the trouble to
+read over these confessions, such a one will judge for himself. It
+will be observed that, since ever I fell in with this extraordinary
+person, I have written about him only, and I must continue to do
+so to the end of this memoir, as I have performed no great or
+interesting action in which he had not a principal share.
+
+He came to me one day and said: "We must not linger thus in
+executing what we have resolved on. We have much before our
+hands to perform for the benefit of mankind, both civil as well as
+religious. Let us do what we have to do here, and then we must
+wend our way to other cities, and perhaps to other countries. Mr.
+Blanchard is to hold forth in the high church of Paisley on
+Sunday next, on some particularly great occasion: this must be
+defeated; he must not go there. As he will be busy arranging his
+discourses, we may expect him to be walking by himself in
+Finnieston Dell the greater part of Friday and Saturday. Let us go
+and cut him off. What is the life of a man more than the life of a
+lamb, or any guiltless animal? It is not half so much, especially
+when we consider the immensity of the mischief this old fellow is
+working among our fellow-creatures. Can there be any doubt that
+it is the duty of one consecrated to God to cut off such a
+mildew?"
+
+"I fear me, great sovereign," said I, "that your ideas of retribution
+are too sanguine, and too arbitrary for the laws of this country. I
+dispute not that your motives are great and high; but have you
+debated the consequences, and settled the result?"
+
+"I have," returned be, "and hold myself amenable for the action to
+the laws of God and of equity; as to the enactments of men, I
+despise them. Fain would I see the weapon of the Lord of Hosts
+begin the work of vengeance that awaits it to do!"
+
+I could not help thinking that I perceived a little derision of
+countenance on his face as he said this, nevertheless I sunk dumb
+before such a man, aroused myself to the task, seeing he would
+not have it deferred. I approved of it in theory, but my spirit stood
+aloof from the practice. I saw and was convinced that the elect of
+God would be happier, and purer, were the wicked and
+unbelievers all cut off from troubling and misleading them, but if
+it had not been the instigations of this illustrious stranger, I
+should never have presumed to begin so great a work myself.
+Yet, though he often aroused my zeal to the highest pitch, still my
+heart at times shrunk from the shedding of life-blood, and it was
+only at the earnest and unceasing instigations of my enlightened
+and voluntary patron that I at length put my hand to the
+conclusive work. After I said all that I could say, and all had been
+overborne (I remember my actions and words as well as it had
+been yesterday), I turned round hesitatingly, and looked up to
+Heaven for direction; but there was a dimness come over my eyes
+that I could not see. The appearance was as if there had been a
+veil drawn over me, so nigh that I put up my hand to feel it; and
+then Gil-Martin (as this great sovereign was pleased to have
+himself called) frowned, and asked me what I was grasping at. I
+knew not what to say, but answered, with fear and shame: "I have
+no weapons, not one; nor know I where any are to be found."
+
+"The God whom thou servest will provide these," said he, "if thou
+provest worthy of the trust committed to thee."
+
+I looked again up into the cloudy veil that covered us and thought
+I beheld golden weapons of every description let down in it, but
+all with their points towards me. I kneeled, And was going to
+stretch out my hand to take one, when my patron seized me, as I
+thought, by the clothes, and dragged me away with as much ease
+as I had been a lamb, saying, with a joyful and elevated voice:
+"Come, my friend, let us depart: thou art dreaming--thou art
+dreaming. Rouse up all the energies of thy exalted mind, for thou
+art an highly favoured one; and doubt thou not that He whom
+thou servest, will be ever at thy right and left hand, to direct and
+assist thee."
+
+These words, but particularly the vision I had seen, of the golden
+weapons descending out of Heaven, inflamed my zeal to that
+height that I was as one beside himself; which my parents
+perceived that night, and made some motions towards confining
+me to my room. I joined in the family prayers, and then I
+afterwards sung a psalm and prayed by myself; and I had good
+reasons for believing that that small oblation of praise and prayer
+was not turned to sin. But there are strange things, and
+unaccountable agencies in nature: He only who dwells between
+the Cherubim can unriddle them, and to Him the honour must
+redound for ever. Amen.
+
+I felt greatly strengthened and encouraged that night, and the next
+morning I ran to meet my companion, out of whose eye I had
+now no life. He rejoiced at seeing me so forward in the great
+work of reformation by blood, and said many things to raise my
+hopes of future fame and glory; and then producing two pistols of
+pure beaten gold, he held them out and proffered me the choice of
+one, saying: "See what thy master hath provided thee!" I took one
+of them eagerly, for I perceived at once that they were two of the
+very weapons that were let down from Heaven in the cloudy veil,
+the dim tapestry of the firmament; and I said to myself. "Surely
+this is the will of the Lord."
+
+The little splendid and enchanting piece was so perfect, so
+complete, and so ready for executing the will of the donor, that I
+now longed to use it in his service. I loaded it with my own hand,
+as Gil-Martin did the other, and we took our stations behind a
+bush of hawthorn and bramble on the verge of the wood, and
+almost close to the walk. My patron was so acute in all his
+calculations that he never mistook an event. We had not taken our
+stand above a minute and a half till old Mr. Blanchard appeared,
+coming slowly on the path. When we saw this, we cowered down.
+and leaned each of us a knee upon the ground, pointing the pistols
+through the bush, with an aim so steady that it was impossible to
+miss our victim.
+
+He came deliberately on, pausing at times so long that we
+dreaded he was going to turn. Gil-Martin dreaded it, and I said I
+did, but wished in my heart that he might. He, however, came
+onward, and I will never forget the manner in which he came!
+No, I don't believe I ever can forget it, either in the narrow
+bounds of time or the ages of eternity! He was a broadly,
+ill-shaped man, of a rude exterior, and a little bent with age; his
+hands were clasped behind his back and below his coat, and he
+walked with a slow swinging air that was very peculiar. When he
+paused and looked abroad on nature, the act was highly
+impressive: he seemed conscious of being all alone, and
+conversant only with God and the elements of his creation. Never
+was there such a picture of human inadvertency! a man
+approaching step by step to the one that was to hurl him out of
+one existence into another with as much ease and indifference as
+the ox goeth to the stall. Hideous vision, wilt thou not be gone
+from my mental sight! if not, let me bear with thee as I can!
+
+When he came straight opposite to the muzzles of our pieces, Gil-
+Martin called out "Eh!" with a short quick sound. The old man,
+without starting, turned his face and breast towards us, and
+looked into the wood, but looked over our heads.
+
+"Now!" whispered my companion, and fired. But my hand
+refused the office, for I was not at that moment sure about
+becoming an assassin in the cause of Christ and His Church. I
+thought I heard a sweet voice behind me, whispering to me to
+beware, and I was going to look round, when my companion
+exclaimed: "Coward, we are ruined!"
+
+I had no time for an alternative: Gil-Martin's ball had not taken
+effect, which was altogether wonderful, as the old man's breast
+was within a few yards of him. "Hilloa!" cried Blanchard, "what
+is that for, you dog!" and with that he came forward to look over
+the bush. I hesitated, as I said, and attempted to look behind me;
+but there was no time: the next step discovered two assassins
+lying in covert, waiting for blood. "Coward, we are ruined!" cried
+my indignant friend; and that moment my piece was discharged.
+The effect was as might have been expected: the old man first
+stumbled to one side, and then fell on his back. We kept our
+places, and I perceived my companion's eyes gleaming with an
+unnatural joy. The wounded man raised himself from the bank to
+a sitting posture, and I beheld his eyes swimming; he however
+appeared sensible, for we heard him saying in a low and rattling
+voice: "Alas, alas! whom have I offended, that they should have
+been driven to an act like this! Come forth and shew yourselves,
+that I may either forgive you before I die, or curse you in the
+name of the Lord." He then fell a-groping with both hands on the
+ground, as if feeling for something he had lost manifestly in the
+agonies of death; and, with a solemn and interrupted prayer for
+forgiveness, he breathed his last.
+
+I had become rigid as a statue, whereas my associate appeared to
+be elevated above measure. "Arise, thou faint-hearted one, and let
+us be going," said he. "Thou hast done well for once; but
+wherefore hesitate in such a cause? This is but a small beginning
+of so great a work as that of purging the Christian world. But the
+first victim is a worthy one, and more of such lights must be
+extinguished immediately."
+
+We touched not our victim, nor anything pertaining to him, for
+fear of staining our hands with his blood; and the firing having
+brought three men within view, who were hasting towards the
+spot, my undaunted companion took both the pistols, and went
+forward as with intent to meet them, bidding me shift for myself.
+I ran off in a contrary direction, till I came to the foot of the
+Pearman Sike, and then, running up the hollow of that, I appeared
+on the top of the bank as if I had been another man brought in
+view by hearing the shots in such a place. I had a full view of a
+part of what passed, though not of all. I saw my companion going
+straight to meet the men, apparently with a pistol in every hand,
+waving in a careless manner. They seemed not quite clear of
+meeting with him, and so he went straight on, and passed
+between them. They looked after him, and came onwards; but,
+when they came to the old man lying stretched in his blood, then
+they turned and pursued my companion, though not so quickly as
+they might have done; and I understand that from the first they
+saw no more of him.
+
+Great was the confusion that day in Glasgow. The most popular
+of all their preachers of morality was (what they called) murdered
+in cold blood, and a strict and extensive search was made for the
+assassin. Neither of the accomplices was found, however, that is
+certain, nor was either of them so much as suspected; but another
+man was apprehended under circumstances that warranted
+suspicion. This was one of the things that I witnessed in my life,
+which I never understood, and it surely was one of my patron's
+most dexterous tricks, for I must still say, what I have thought
+from the beginning, that like him there never was a man created.
+The young man who was taken up was a preacher; and it was
+proved that he had purchased fire-arms in town, and gone out
+with them that morning. But the far greatest mystery of the whole
+was that two of the men, out of the three who met my companion,
+swore that that unfortunate preacher was the man whom they met
+with a pistol in each hand, fresh from the death of the old divine.
+The poor fellow made a confused speech himself, which there is
+not the least doubt was quite true; but it was laughed to scorn, and
+an expression of horror ran through both the hearers and jury. I
+heard the whole trial, and so did Gil-Martin; but we left the
+journeyman preacher to his fate, and from that time forth I have
+had no faith in the justice of criminal trials. If once a man is
+prejudiced on one side, he will swear anything in support of such
+prejudice. I tried to expostulate with my mysterious friend on the
+horrid injustice of suffering this young man to die for our act, but
+the prince exulted in it more than the other, and said the latter was
+the most dangerous man of the two.
+
+The alarm in and about Glasgow was prodigious. The country
+being divided into two political parties, the court and the country
+party, the former held meetings, issued proclamations, and
+offered rewards, ascribing all to the violence of party spirit, and
+deprecating the infernal measures of their opponents. I did not
+understand their political differences; but it was easy to see that
+the true Gospel preachers joined all on one side, and the
+upholders of pure morality and a blameless life on the other, so
+that this division proved a test to us, and it was forthwith resolved
+that we two should pick out some of the leading men of this
+unsaintly and heterodox cabal, and cut them off one by one, as
+occasion should suit.
+
+Now, the ice being broke, I felt considerable zeal in our great
+work, but pretended much more; and we might soon have
+kidnapped them all through the ingenuity of my patron, had not
+our next attempt miscarried, by some awkwardness or mistake of
+mine. The consequence was that he was discovered fairly, and
+very nigh seized. I also was seen, and suspected so far that my
+reverend father, my mother, and myself were examined privately.
+I denied all knowledge of the matter; and they held it in such a
+ridiculous light, and their conviction of the complete
+groundlessness of the suspicion was so perfect, that their
+testimony prevailed, and the affair was hushed. I was obliged,
+however, to walk circumspectly, and saw my companion the
+prince very seldom, who was prowling about every day, quite
+unconcerned about his safety. He was every day a new man,
+however, and needed not to be alarmed at any danger; for such a
+facility had he in disguising himself that, if it had not been for a
+password which we had between us, for the purposes of
+recognition, I never could have known him myself.
+
+It so happened that my reverend father was called to Edinburgh
+about this time, to assist with his counsel in settling the national
+affairs. At my earnest request I was permitted to accompany him,
+at which both my associate and I rejoiced, as we were now about
+to move in a new and extensive field. All this time I never knew
+where my illustrious friend resided. He never once invited me to
+call on him at his lodgings, nor did he ever come to our house,
+which made me sometimes to suspect that, if any of our great
+efforts in the cause of true religion were discovered, he intended
+leaving me in the lurch. Consequently, when we met in
+Edinburgh (for we travelled not in company), I proposed to go
+with him to look for lodgings, telling him at the same time what a
+blessed religious family my reverend instructor and I were settled
+in. He said he rejoiced at it, but he made a rule of never lodging
+in any particular house, but took these daily, or hourly, as he
+found it convenient, and that be never was at a loss in any
+circumstance.
+
+"What a mighty trouble you put yourself to, great sovereign!"
+said I, "and all, it would appear, for the purpose of seeing and
+knowing more and more of the human race."
+
+"I never go but where I have some great purpose to serve,"
+returned he, "either in the advancement of my own power and
+dominion or in thwarting my enemies."
+
+"With all due deference to your great comprehension, my
+illustrious friend," said I, "it strikes me that you can accomplish
+very little either the one way or the other here, in the humble and
+private capacity you are pleased to occupy."
+
+"It is your own innate modesty that prompts such a remark," said
+he. "Do you think the gaining of you to my service is not an
+attainment worthy of being envied by the greatest potentate in
+Christendom? Before I had missed such a prize as the attainment
+of your services, I would have travelled over one half of the
+habitable globe."--I bowed with great humility, but at the same
+time how could I but feel proud and highly flattered? He
+continued: "Believe me, my dear friend, for such a prize I account
+no effort too high. For a man who is not only dedicated to the
+King of Heaven in the most solemn manner, soul, body, and
+spirit, but also chosen of him from the beginning, justified,
+sanctified, and received into a communion that never shall be
+broken, and from which no act of his shall ever remove him--the
+possession of such a man, I tell you, is worth kingdoms; because,
+every deed that he performs, he does it with perfect safety to
+himself and honour to me."--I bowed again, lifting my hat, and he
+went on.-- "I am now going to put his courage in the cause he has
+espoused to a severe test--to a trial at which common nature
+would revolt, but he who is dedicated to be the sword of the Lord
+must raise himself above common humanity. You have a father
+and a brother according to the flesh: what do you know of them?"
+
+"I am sorry to say I know nothing good," said I. "They are
+reprobates, castaways, beings devoted to the Wicked One, and,
+like him, workers of every species of iniquity with greediness."
+
+"They must both fall!" said he, with a sigh and melancholy look.
+"It is decreed in the councils above that they must both fall by
+your hand."
+
+"The God of Heaven forbid it!" said I. "They are enemies to
+Christ and His Church, that I know and believe; but they shall
+live and die in their iniquity for me, and reap their guerdon when
+their time cometh. There my hand shall not strike."
+
+"The feeling is natural, and amiable," said he. "But you must
+think again. Whether are the bonds of carnal nature or the bonds
+and vows of the Lord strongest?"
+
+"I will not reason with you on this head, mighty potentate," said I,
+"for whenever I do so it is but to be put down. I shall only,
+express my determination not to take vengeance out of the Lord's
+hand in this instance. It availeth not. These are men that have the
+mark of the beast in their foreheads and right hands; they are lost
+beings themselves, but have no influence over others. Let them
+perish in their sins; for they shall not be meddled with by me."
+
+"How preposterously you talk, my dear friend!" said he. "These
+people are your greatest enemies; they would rejoice to see you
+annihilated. And, now that you have taken up the Lord's cause of
+being avenged on His enemies, wherefore spare those that are
+your own as well as His? Besides, you ought to consider what
+great advantages would be derived to the cause of righteousness
+and truth were the estate and riches of that opulent house in your
+possession, rather than in that of such as oppose the truth and all
+manner of holiness."
+
+This was a portion of the consequence of following my illustrious
+adviser's summary mode of procedure that had never entered into
+my calculation. I disclaimed all idea of being influenced by it;
+however, I cannot but say that the desire of being enabled to do
+so much good, by the possession of these bad men's riches, made
+some impression on my heart, and I said I would consider of the
+matter. I did consider it, and that right seriously as well as
+frequently; and there was scarcely an hour in the day on which
+my resolves were not animated by my great friend, till at length I
+began to have a longing desire to kill my brother, in particular.
+Should any man ever read this scroll, he will wonder at this
+confession, and deem it savage and unnatural. So it appeared to
+me at first, but a constant thinking of an event changes every one
+of its features. I have done all for the best, and as I was prompted,
+by one who knew right and wrong much better than I did. I had a
+desire to slay him, it is true, and such a desire too as a thirsty man
+has to drink; but, at the same time, this longing desire was
+mingled with a certain terror, as if I had dreaded that the drink for
+which I longed was mixed with deadly poison. My mind was so
+much weakened, or rather softened about this time, that my faith
+began a little to give way, and I doubted most presumptuously of
+the least tangible of all Christian tenets, namely, of the
+infallibility of the elect. I hardly comprehended the great work I
+had begun, and doubted of my own infallibility, or that of any
+created being. But I was brought over again by the unwearied
+diligence of my friend to repent of my backsliding, and view once
+more the superiority of the Almighty's counsels in its fullest
+latitude. Amen.
+
+I prayed very much in secret about this time, and that with great
+fervour of spirit, as well as humility; and my satisfaction at
+finding all my requests granted is not to be expressed.
+
+My illustrious friend still continuing to sound in my ears the
+imperious duty to which I was called, of making away with my
+sinful relations, and quoting many parallel actions out of the
+Scriptures, and the writings of the holy fathers, of the pleasure the
+Lord took in such as executed his vengeance on the wicked, I was
+obliged to acquiesce in his measures, though with certain
+limitations. It was not easy to answer his arguments, and yet I
+was afraid that he soon perceived a leaning to his will on my part.
+"If the acts of Jehu, in rooting out the whole house of his master,
+were ordered and approved-of by the Lord," said he, "would it
+not have been more praiseworthy if one of Ahab's own sons had
+stood up for the cause of the God of Israel, and rooted out the
+sinners and their idols out of the land?"
+
+"It would certainly," said I. "To our duty to God all other duties
+must yield."
+
+"Go thou then and do likewise," said he. "Thou are called to a
+high vocation; to cleanse the sanctuary of thy God in this thy
+native land by the shedding of blood; go thou then like a ruling
+energy, a master spirit of desolation in the dwellings of the
+wicked, and high shall be your reward both here and hereafter."
+
+My heart now panted with eagerness to look my brother in the
+face. On which my companion, who was never out of the way,
+conducted me to a small square in the suburbs of the city, where
+there were a number of young noblemen and gentlemen playing
+at a vain, idle, and sinful game, at which there was much of the
+language of the accursed going on; and among these blasphemers
+he instantly pointed out my brother to me. I was fired with
+indignation at seeing him in such company, and so employed; and
+I placed myself close beside him to watch all his motions, listen
+to his words, and draw inferences from what I saw and heard. In
+what a sink of sin was he wallowing! I resolved to take him to
+task, and, if he refused to be admonished, to inflict on him some
+condign punishment; and, knowing that my illustrious friend and
+director was looking on, I resolved to show some spirit.
+Accordingly, I waited until I heard him profane his Maker's name
+three times, and then, my spiritual indignation being roused
+above all restraint, I went up and kicked him. Yes, I went boldly
+up and struck him with my foot, and meant to have given him a
+more severe blow than it was my fortune to inflict. It had,
+however, the effect of rousing up his corrupt nature to quarrelling
+and strife, instead of taking the chastisement of the Lord in
+humility and meekness. He ran furiously against me in the choler
+that is always inspired by the wicked one; but I overthrew him,
+by reason of impeding the natural and rapid progress of his
+unholy feet running to destruction. I also fell slightly; but his fall
+proved a severe one, he arose in wrath, and struck me with the
+mall which he held in his hand, until my blood flowed copiously;
+and from that moment I vowed his destruction in my heart. But I
+chanced to have no weapon at that time, nor any means of
+inflicting due punishment on the caitiff, which would not have
+been returned double on my head by him and his graceless
+associates. I mixed among them at the suggestion of my friend,
+and, following them to their den of voluptuousness and sin, I
+strove to be admitted among them, in hopes of finding some
+means of accomplishing my great purpose, while I found myself
+moved by the spirit within me so to do. But I was not only
+debarred, but, by the machinations of my wicked brother and his
+associates, cast into prison.
+
+I was not sorry at being thus honoured to suffer in the cause of
+righteousness, and at the hands of sinful men; and, as soon as I
+was alone, I betook myself to prayer, deprecating the long-
+suffering of God towards such horrid sinners. My jailer came to
+me, and insulted me. He was a rude unprincipled fellow,
+partaking of the loose and carnal manners of the age; but I
+remembered of having read, in the Cloud of Witnesses, of such
+men formerly having been converted by the imprisoned saints; so
+I set myself, with all my heart, to bring about this man's
+repentance and reformation.
+
+"Fat the deil are ye yoolling an' praying that gate for, man?" said
+he, coming angrily in. "I thought the days o' praying prisoners
+had been a' ower. We hath rowth o' them aince; an' they were the
+poorest an' the blackest bargains that ever poor jailers saw. Gie
+up your crooning, or I'll pit you to an in-by place, where ye sall
+get plenty o't."
+
+"Friend," said I, "I am making my appeal at the bar where all
+human actions are seen and judged, and where you shall not be
+forgot, sinful as you are. Go in peace, and let me be."
+
+"Hae ye naebody nearer-hand hame to mak your appeal to, man?"
+said he. "Because an ye hae-na, I dread you an' me may be unco
+weel acquaintit by an' by."
+
+I then opened up the mysteries of religion to him in a clear and
+perspicuous manner, but particularly the great doctrine of the
+election of grace; and then I added: "Now, friend, you must tell
+me if you pertain to this chosen number. It is in every man's
+power to ascertain this, and it is every man's duty to do it."
+
+"An' fat the better wad you be for the kenning o' this, man?" said
+he.
+
+"Because, if you are one of my brethren, I will take you into
+sweet communion and fellowship," returned I. "But, if you
+belong to the unregenerate, I have a commission to slay you."
+
+"The deil you hae, callant!" said he, gaping and laughing. "An',
+pray now, fa was it, that gae you siccan a braw commission?"
+
+"My commission is sealed by the signet above", said I, "and that I
+will let you and all sinners know. I am dedicated to it by the most
+solemn vows and engagements. I am the sword of the Lord, and
+Famine and Pestilence are my sisters. Woe then to the wicked of
+this land, for they must fall down dead together, that the Church
+may be purified!"
+
+"Oo, foo, foo! I see how it is," said he. "Yours is a very braw
+commission, but you will have the small opportunity of carrying
+it through here. Take my advising, and write a bit of a letter to
+your friends, and I will send it, for this is no place for such a great
+man. If you cannot steady your hand to write, as I see you have
+been at your great work, a word of a mouth may do; for I do
+assure you this is not the place at all, of any in the world, for your
+operations."
+
+The man apparently thought I was deranged in my intellect. He
+could not swallow such great truths at the first morsel. So I took
+his advice, and sent a line to my reverend father, who was not
+long in coming, and great was the jailer's wonderment when he
+saw all the great Christian noblemen of the land sign my bond of
+freedom.
+
+My reverend father took this matter greatly to heart, and bestirred
+himself in the good cause till the transgressors were ashamed to
+shew their faces. My illustrious companion was not idle: I
+wondered that he came not to me in prison, nor at my release; but
+he was better employed, in stirring up the just to the execution of
+God's decrees; and he succeeded so well that my brother and all
+his associates had nearly fallen victims to their wrath. But many
+were wounded, bruised, and imprisoned, and much commotion
+prevailed in the city. For my part, I was greatly strengthened in
+my resolution by the anathemas of my reverend father, who,
+privately (that is in a family capacity) in his prayers, gave up my
+father and brother, according to the flesh, to Satan, making it
+plain to all my senses of perception that they were being given up
+of God, to be devoured by fiends of men, at their will and
+pleasure, and that whosoever should slay them would do God
+good service.
+
+The next morning my illustrious friend met me at an early hour,
+and he was greatly overjoyed at hearing my sentiments now
+chime so much in unison with his own. I said: "I longed for the
+day and the hour that I might look my brother in the face at
+Gilgal, and visit on him the iniquity of his father and himself, for
+that I was now strengthened and prepared for the deed."
+
+"I have been watching the steps and movements of the profligate
+one," said he, "and, lo, I will take you straight to his presence. Let
+your heart be as the heart of the lion, and your arms strong as the
+shekels of brass, and swift to avenge as the bolt that descendeth
+from heaven, for the blood of the just and the good hath long
+flowed in Scotland. But already is the day of their avengement
+begun; the hero is at length arisen who shall send all such as bear
+enmity to the true Church, or trust in works of their own, to
+Tophet!"
+
+Thus encouraged, I followed my friend, who led me directly to
+the same court in which I had chastised the miscreant on the
+foregoing day; and, behold, there was the same group again
+assembled. They eyed me with terror in their looks, as I walked
+among them and eyed them with looks of disapprobation and
+rebuke; and I saw that the very eye of a chosen one lifted on these
+children of Belial was sufficient to dismay and put them to flight.
+I walked aside to my friend, who stood at a distance looking on,
+and he said to me: "What thinkest thou now?" and I answered in
+the words of the venal prophet, "Lo, now, if I had a sword into
+mine hand I would even kill him."
+
+"Wherefore lackest thou it?" said he. "Dost thou not see that they
+tremble at thy presence, knowing that the avenger of blood is
+among them."
+
+My heart was lifted up on hearing this, and again I strode into the
+midst of them, and, eyeing them with threatening looks, they
+were so much confounded that they abandoned their sinful
+pastime, and fled everyone to his house!
+
+This was a palpable victory gained over the wicked, and I thereby
+knew that the hand of the Lord was with me. My companion also
+exulted, and said: "Did not I tell thee? Behold thou dost not know
+one half of thy might, or of the great things thou art destined to
+do. Come with me and I will show thee more than this, for these
+young men cannot subsist without the exercises of sin. I listened
+to their councils, and I know where they will meet again."
+
+Accordingly he led me a little farther to the south, and we walked
+aside till by degrees we saw some people begin to assemble; and
+in a short time we perceived the same group stripping off their
+clothes to make them more expert in the practice of madness and
+folly. Their game was begun before we approached, and so also
+were the oaths and cursing. I put my hands in my pockets, and
+walked with dignity and energy into the midst of them. It was
+enough. Terror and astonishment seized them. A few of them
+cried out against me, but their voices were soon hushed amid the
+murmurs of fear. One of them, in the name of the rest, then came
+and besought of me to grant them liberty to amuse themselves;
+but I refused peremptorily, dared the whole multitude so much as
+to touch me with one of their fingers, and dismissed them in the
+name of the Lord.
+
+Again they all fled and dispersed at my eye, and I went home in
+triumph, escorted by my friend, and some well-meaning young
+Christians, who, however, had not learned to deport themselves
+with soberness and humility. But my ascendancy over my
+enemies was great indeed; for wherever I appeared I was hailed
+with approbation, and, wherever my guilty brother made his
+appearance, he was hooted and held in derision, till he was forced
+to hide his disgraceful head, and appear no more in public.
+
+Immediately after this I was seized with a strange distemper,
+which neither my friends nor physicians could comprehend, and
+it confined me to my chamber for many days; but I knew, myself,
+that I was bewitched, and suspected my father's reputed
+concubine of the deed. I told my fears to my reverend protector,
+who hesitated concerning them, but I knew by his words and
+looks that he was conscious I was right. I generally conceived
+myself to be two people. When I lay in bed, I deemed there were
+two of us in it; when I sat up I always beheld another person, and
+always in the same position from the place where I sat or stood,
+which was about three paces off me towards my left side. It
+mattered not how many or how few were present: this my second
+self was sure to be present in his place, and this occasioned a
+confusion in all my words and ideas that utterly astounded my
+friends, who all declared that, instead of being deranged in my
+intellect, they had never heard my conversation manifest so much
+energy or sublimity of conception; but, for all that, over the
+singular delusion that I was two persons my reasoning faculties
+had no power. The most perverse part of it was that I rarely
+conceived myself to be any of the two persons. I thought for the
+most part that my companion was one of them, and my brother
+the other; and I found that, to be obliged to speak and answer in
+the character of another man, was a most awkward business at the
+long run.
+
+Who can doubt, from this statement, that I was bewitched, and
+that my relatives were at the ground of it? The constant and
+unnatural persuasion that I was my brother proved it to my own
+satisfaction, and must, I think, do so to every unprejudiced
+person. This victory of the Wicked One over me kept me
+confined in my chamber at Mr. Millar's house for nearly a month,
+until the prayers of the faithful prevailed, and I was restored. I
+knew it was a chastisement for my pride, because my heart was
+lifted up at my superiority over the enemies of the Church;
+nevertheless I determined to make short work with the aggressor,
+that the righteous might not be subjected to the effect of his
+diabolical arts again.
+
+I say I was confined a month. I beg he that readeth to take note of
+this, that he may estimate how much the word, or even the oath,
+of a wicked man is to depend on. For a month I saw no one but
+such as came into my room, and, for all that, it will be seen that
+there were plenty of the same set to attest upon oath that I saw my
+brother every day during this period; that I persecuted him, with
+my presence day and night, while all the time I never saw his
+face save in a delusive dream. I cannot comprehend what
+manoeuvres my illustrious friend was playing off with them
+about this time; for he, having the art of personating whom he
+chose, had peradventure deceived them, else many of them had
+never all attested the same thing. I never saw any man so steady
+in his friendships and attentions as he; but as he made a rule of
+never calling at private houses, for fear of some discovery being
+made of his person, so I never saw him while my malady lasted;
+but, as soon as I grew better, I knew I had nothing ado but to
+attend at some of our places of meeting to see him again. He was
+punctual, as usual, and I had not to wait.
+
+My reception was precisely as I apprehended. There was no
+flaring, no flummery, nor bombastical pretensions, but a dignified
+return to my obeisance, and an immediate recurrence, in
+converse, to the important duties incumbent on us, in our stations,
+as reformers and purifiers of the Church.
+
+"I have marked out a number of most dangerous characters in this
+city," said he, "all of whom must be cut off from cumbering the
+true vineyard before we leave this land. And, if you bestir not
+yourself in the work to which you are called, I must raise up
+others who shall have the honour of it!"
+
+"I am, most illustrious prince, wholly at your service," said I.
+"Show but what ought to be done, and here is the heart to dare and
+the hand to execute. You pointed out my relations, according to
+the flesh, as brands fitted to be thrown into the burning. I approve
+peremptorily of the award; nay, I thirst to accomplish it; for I
+myself have suffered severely from their diabolical arts. When
+once that trial of my devotion to the faith is accomplished, then
+he your future operations disclosed."
+
+"You are free of your words and promises," said he.
+
+"So will I be of my deeds in the service of my master, and that
+shalt thou see," said I. "I lack not the spirit, nor the will, but I lack
+experience woefully; and, because of that shortcoming, must bow
+to your suggestions!"
+
+"Meet me here to-morrow betimes," said he, "and perhaps you
+may hear of some opportunity of displaying your zeal in the
+cause of righteousness."
+
+I met him as he desired me; and he addressed me with a hurried
+and joyful expression, telling me that my brother was astir, and
+that a few minutes ago he had seen him pass on his way to the
+mountain. "The hill is wrapped in a cloud," added he, and never
+was there such an opportunity of executing divine justice on a
+guilty sinner. You may trace him in the dew, and shall infallibly
+find him on the top of some precipice; for it is only in secret that
+he dares show his debased head to the sun."
+
+"I have no arms, else assuredly I would pursue him and discomfit
+him," said I.
+
+"Here is a small dagger," said he; "I have nothing of weaponkind
+about me save that, but it is a potent one; and, should you require
+it, there is nothing more ready or sure."
+
+"Will not you accompany me?" said I. "Sure you will?"
+
+"I will be with you, or near you," said he. "Go you on before."
+
+I hurried away as he directed me, and imprudently asked some of
+Queensberry's guards if such and such a young man passed by
+them going out from the city. I was answered in the affirmative,
+and till then had doubted of my friend's intelligence, it was so
+inconsistent with a profligate's life to be so early astir. When I got
+the certain intelligence that my brother was before me, I fell a-
+running, scarcely knowing what I did; and, looking several times
+behind me, I perceived nothing of my zealous and arbitrary
+friend. The consequence of this was that, by the time I reached St.
+Anthony's well, my resolution began to give way. It was not my
+courage, for, now that I had once shed blood in the cause of the
+true faith, I was exceedingly bold and ardent, but, whenever I was
+left to myself, I was subject to sinful doubtings. These always
+hankered on one point. I doubted if the elect were infallible, and
+if the Scripture promises to them were binding in all situations
+and relations. I confess this, and that it was a sinful and shameful
+weakness in me, but my nature was subject to it, and I could not
+eschew it. I never doubted that I was one of the elect myself; for,
+besides the strong inward and spiritual conviction that I
+possessed, I had my kind father's assurance; and these had been
+revealed to him in that way and measure that they could not be
+doubted.
+
+In this desponding state, I sat myself down on a stone, and
+bethought me of the rashness of my undertaking. I tried to
+ascertain, to my own satisfaction, whether or not I really had been
+commissioned of God to perpetrate these crimes in His behalf,
+for, in the eyes and by the laws of men, they were great and
+crying transgressions. While I sat pondering on these things, I
+was involved in a veil of white misty vapour, and, looking up to
+heaven, I was just about to ask direction from above, when I
+heard as it were a still small voice close by me, which uttered
+some words of derision and chiding. I looked intensely in the
+direction whence it seemed to come, and perceived a lady robed
+in white, who hastened towards me. She regarded me with a
+severity of look and gesture that appalled me so much I could not
+address her; but she waited not for that, but coming close to my
+side said, without stopping: "Preposterous wretch! How dare you
+lift your eyes to Heaven with such purposes in your heart? Escape
+homewards, and save your Soul, or farewell for ever!"
+
+These were all the words that she uttered, as far as I could ever
+recollect, but my spirits were kept in such a tumult that morning
+that something might have escaped me. I followed her eagerly
+with my eyes, but in a moment she glided over the rocks above
+the holy well, and vanished. I persuaded myself that I had seen a
+vision, and that the radiant being that had addressed me was one
+of the good angels, or guardian spirits, commissioned by the
+Almighty to watch over the steps of the just. My first impulse
+was to follow her advice, and make my escape home; for I
+thought to myself. "How is this interested and mysterious
+foreigner a proper judge of the actions of a free Christian?"
+
+The thought was hardly framed, nor had I moved in a retrograde
+direction six steps, when I saw my illustrious friend and great
+adviser descending the ridge towards me with hasty and
+impassioned strides. My heart fainted within me; and, when he
+came up and addressed me, I looked as one caught in a trespass.
+"What hath detained thee, thou desponding trifler?" said he.
+"Verily now shall the golden opportunity be lost which may
+never be recalled. I have traced the reprobate to his sanctuary in
+the cloud, and lo he is perched on the pinnacle of a precipice an
+hundred fathoms high. One ketch with thy foot, or toss with thy
+finger, shall throw him from thy sight into the foldings of the
+cloud, and he shall be no more seen till found at the bottom of the
+cliff dashed to pieces. Make haste, therefore, thou loiterer, if thou
+wouldst ever prosper and rise to eminence in the work of thy
+Lord and Master."
+
+"I go no farther in this work, said I, "for I have seen a vision that
+has reprimanded the deed!'
+
+"A vision?" said he. "Was it that wench who descended from the
+hill?"
+
+"The being that spake to me, and warned me of my danger, was
+indeed in the form of a lady," said I.
+
+"She also approached me and said a few words," returned he,
+"and I thought there was something mysterious in her manner.
+Pray, what did she say? for the words of such a singular message,
+and from such a messenger, ought to be attended to. If I
+understood her aright, she was chiding us for our misbelief and
+preposterous delay."
+
+I recited her words, but he answered that I had been in a state of
+sinful doubting at the time, and it was to these doubtings she had
+adverted. In short, this wonderful and clear-sighted stranger soon
+banished all my doubts and despondency, making me utterly
+ashamed of them, and again I set out with him in the pursuit of
+my brother. He showed me the traces of his footsteps in the dew,
+and pointed out the spot where I should find him. "You have
+nothing more to do than go softly down behind him," said he,
+"which you can do to within an ell of him, without being seen;
+then rush upon him, and throw him from his seat, where there is
+neither footing nor hold. I will go, meanwhile, and amuse his
+sight by some exhibition in the contrary direction, and he shall
+neither know nor perceive who had done him this kind office: for,
+exclusive of more weighty concerns, be assured of this that, the
+sooner he falls, the fewer crimes will he have to answer for, and
+his estate in the other world will be proportionally more tolerable
+than if he spent a long unregenerate life steeped in iniquity to the
+loathing of the soul."
+
+"Nothing can be more plain or more pertinent," said I.
+"Therefore, I fly to perform that which is both a duty towards
+God and towards man!"
+
+"You shall yet rise to great honour and preferment," said he.
+
+"I value it not, provided I do honour and justice to the cause of
+my master here," said I.
+
+"You shall be lord of your father's riches and demesnes," added
+he.
+
+"I disclaim and deride every selfish motive thereto relating," said
+I, "further than as it enables me to do good."
+
+"Aye, but that is a great and a heavenly consideration, that
+longing for ability to do good," said he--and, as he said so, I
+could not help remarking a certain derisive exultation of
+expression which I could not comprehend; and indeed I have
+noted this very often in my illustrious friend, and sometimes
+mentioned it civilly to him, but he has never failed to disclaim it.
+On this occasion I said nothing, but, concealing his poniard in my
+clothes, I hasted up the mountain, determined to execute my
+purpose before any misgivings should again visit me; and I never
+had more ado than in keeping firm my resolution. I could not help
+my thoughts, and there are certain trains and classes of thoughts
+that have great power in enervating the mind. I thought of the
+awful thing of plunging a fellow creature from the top of a cliff
+into the dark and misty void below--of his being dashed to pieces
+on the protruding rocks, and of hearing his shrieks as he
+descended the cloud, and beheld the shagged points on which he
+was to alight. Then I thought of plunging a soul so abruptly into
+Hell, or, at the best, sending it to hover on the confines of that
+burning abyss--of its appearance at the bar of the Almighty to
+receive its sentence. And then I thought: "Will there not be a
+sentence pronounced against me there, by a jury of the just made
+perfect, and written down in the registers of Heaven?"
+
+These thoughts, I say, came upon me unasked, and, instead of
+being able to dispel them, they mustered upon the summit of my
+imagination in thicker and stronger array: and there was another
+that impressed me in a very particular manner, though I have
+reason to believe not so strongly as those above written. It was
+this: "What if I should fail in my first effort? Will the
+consequence not be that I am tumbled from the top of the rock
+myself?" and then all the feelings anticipated, with regard to both
+body and soul, must happen to me! This was a spinebreaking
+reflection; and yet, though the probability was rather on that side,
+my zeal in the cause of godliness was such that it carried me on,
+maugre all danger and dismay.
+
+I soon came close upon my brother, sitting on the dizzy pinnacle.
+with his eyes fixed steadfastly in the direction opposite to me. I
+descended the little green ravine behind him with my feet
+foremost, and every now and then raised my head, and watched
+his motions. His posture continued the same, until at last I came
+so near him I could have heard him breathe if his face had been
+towards me. I laid my cap aside, and made me ready to spring
+upon him and push him over. I could not for my life accomplish
+it! I do not think it was that I durst not, I have always felt my
+courage equal to anything in a good cause. But I had not the
+heart, or something that I ought to have had. In short, it was not
+done in time, as it easily might have been. These THOUGHTS
+are hard enemies wherewith to combat! And I was so grieved that
+I could not effect my righteous purpose that I laid me down on
+my face and shed tears. Then, again, I thought of what my great
+enlightened friend and patron would say to me, and again my
+resolution rose indignant and indissoluble save by blood. I arose
+on my right knee and left foot, and had just begun to advance the
+latter forward: the next step my great purpose had been
+accomplished, and the culprit had suffered the punishment due to
+his crimes. But what moved him I knew not: in the critical
+moment he sprung to his feet, and, dashing himself furiously
+against me, he overthrew me, at the imminent peril of my life. I
+disencumbered myself by main force and fled, but he overhied
+me, knocked me down, and threatened, with dreadful oaths, to
+throw me from the cliff. After I was a little recovered from the
+stunning blow, I aroused myself to the combat; and, though I do
+not recollect the circumstances of that deadly scuffle very
+minutely, I know that I vanquished him so far as to force him to
+ask my pardon, and crave a reconciliation. I spurned at both and
+left him to the chastisements of his own wicked and corrupt heart.
+
+My friend met me again on the hill and derided me in a haughty
+and stern manner for my imbecility and want of decision. I told
+him how nearly I had effected my purpose, and excused myself as
+well as I was able. On this, seeing me bleeding, he advised me to
+swear the peace against my brother, and have him punished in the
+meantime, he being the first aggressor. I promised compliance
+and we parted, for I was somewhat ashamed of my failure, and
+was glad to be quit for the present of one of whom I stood so
+much in awe.
+
+When my reverend father beheld me bleeding a second time by
+the hand of a brother, he was moved to the highest point of
+displeasure; and, relying on his high interest and the justice of his
+cause, he brought the matter at once before the courts. My brother
+and I were first examined face to face. His declaration was a mere
+romance: mine was not the truth; but as it was by the advice of
+my reverend father, and that of my illustrious friend, both of
+whom I knew to be sincere Christians and true believers, that I
+gave it, I conceived myself completely justified on that score. I
+said I had gone up into the mountain early on the morning to
+pray, and had withdrawn myself, for entire privacy, into a little
+sequestered dell--had laid aside my cap, and was in the act of
+kneeling when I was rudely attacked by my brother, knocked
+over, and nearly slain. They asked my brother if this was true. He
+acknowledged that it was; that I was bare-headed and in the act of
+kneeling when he ran foul of me without any intent of doing so.
+But the judge took him to task on the improbability of this, and
+put the profligate sore out of countenance. The rest of his tale told
+still worse, insomuch that he was laughed at by all present, for the
+judge remarked to him that, granting it was true that he had at
+first run against me on an open mountain and overthrown me by
+accident, how was it that, after I had extricated myself and fled,
+that he had pursued, overtaken, and knocked me down a second
+time? Would he pretend that all that was likewise by chance? The
+culprit had nothing to say for himself on this head, and I shall not
+forget my exultation and that of my reverend father when the
+sentence of the judge was delivered. It was that my wicked
+brother should be thrown into prison and tried on a criminal
+charge of assault and battery, with the intent of committing
+murder. This was a just and righteous judge, and saw things in
+their proper bearings, that is, he could discern between a
+righteous and a wicked man, and then there could be no doubt as
+to which of the two were acting right and which wrong.
+
+Had I not been sensible that a justified person could do nothing
+wrong, I should not have been at my ease concerning the
+statement I had been induced to give on this occasion. I could
+easily perceive that, by rooting out the weeds from the garden of
+the Church, I heightened the growth of righteousness; but, as to
+the tardy way of giving false evidence on matters of such
+doubtful issue, I confess I saw no great propriety in it from the
+beginning. But I now only moved by the will and mandate of my
+illustrious friend. I had no peace or comfort when out of his
+Sight, nor have I ever been able to boast of much in his presence;
+so true is it that a Christian's life is one of suffering.
+
+My time was now much occupied, along with my reverend
+preceptor, in making ready for the approaching trial, as the
+prosecutors. Our counsel assured us of a complete victory, and
+that banishment would be the mildest award of the law on the
+offender. Mark how different was the result! From the shifts and
+ambiguities of a wicked Bench, who had a fellow-feeling of
+iniquity with the defenders, my suit was lost, the graceless
+libertine was absolved, and I was incarcerated, and bound over to
+keep the peace, with heavy penalties, before I was set at liberty.
+
+I was exceedingly disgusted at this issue, and blamed the counsel
+of my friend to his face. He expressed great grief, and expatiated
+on the wickedness of our judicatories, adding: "I see I cannot
+depend on you for quick and summary measures, but for your
+sake I shall be revenged on that wicked judge, and that you shall
+see in a few days." The Lord Justice Clerk died that same week!
+But he died in his own house and his own bed, and by what
+means my friend effected it I do not know. He would not tell me
+a single word of the matter, but the judge's sudden death made a
+great noise, and I made so many curious inquiries regarding the
+particulars of it that some suspicions were like to attach to our
+family of some unfair means used. For my part I know nothing,
+and rather think he died by the visitation of Heaven, and that my
+friend had foreseen it, by symptoms, and soothed me by promises
+of complete revenge.
+
+It was some days before he mentioned my brother's meditated
+death to me again, and certainly he then found me exasperated
+against him personally to the highest degree. But I told him that I
+could not now think any more of it owing to the late judgment of
+the court, by which, if my brother were missing or found dead, I
+would not only forfeit my life but my friends would be ruined by
+the penalties.
+
+"I suppose you know and believe in the perfect safety of your
+soul," said he, "and that that is a matter settled from the beginning
+of time, and now sealed and ratified both in Heaven and earth?"
+
+"I believe in it thoroughly and perfectly," said I; "and, whenever I
+entertain doubts of it, I am sensible of sin and weakness."
+
+"Very well, so then am I," said he. "I think I can now divine, with
+all manner of certainty, what will be the high and merited
+guerdon of your immortal part. Hear me then further: I give you
+my solemn assurance, and bond of blood, that no human hand
+shall ever henceforth be able to injure your life, or shed one drop
+of your precious blood; but it is on the condition that you walk
+always by my directions."
+
+"I will do so with cheerfulness," said I, "for, without your
+enlightened counsel, I feel that I can do nothing. But, as to your
+power of protecting my life, you must excuse me for doubting of
+it. Nay, were we in your proper dominions, you could not ensure
+that."
+
+"In whatever dominion or land I am, my power accompanies me,"
+said he, "and it is only against human might and human weapon
+that I ensure your life; on that will I keep an eye, and on that you
+may depend. I have never broken word or promise with you. Do
+you credit me?"
+
+"Yes, I do," said I, "for I see you are in earnest. I believe, though
+I do not comprehend you."
+
+"Then why do you not at once challenge your brother to the field
+of honour? Seeing you now act without danger, cannot you also
+act without fear?"
+
+"It is not fear," returned I, "believe me. I hardly know what fear
+is. It is a doubt that, on all these emergencies, constantly haunts
+my mind that, in performing such and such actions, I may fall
+from my upright state. This makes fratricide a fearful task!'
+
+"This is imbecility itself," said he. "We have settled and agreed
+on that point an hundred times. I would therefore advise that you
+challenge your brother to single combat. I shall ensure your
+safety, and he cannot refuse giving you satisfaction."
+
+"But then the penalties?" said I.
+
+"We will try to evade these," said he, "and, supposing you should
+be caught, if once you are Laird of Dalcastle and Balgrennan,
+what are the penalties to you?"
+
+"Might we not rather pop him off in private and quietness, as we
+did the deistical divine?" said I.
+
+"The deed would be alike meritorious, either way," said he. "But
+may we not wait for years before we find an opportunity? My
+advice is to challenge him, as privately as you will, and there cut
+him off."
+
+"So be it then," said I. "When the moon is at the full, I will send
+for him forth to speak with one, and there will I smite him and
+slay him, and he shall trouble the righteous no more."
+
+"Then this is the very night," said he, "The moon is nigh to the
+full, and this night your brother and his sinful mates hold
+carousal; for there is an intended journey to-morrow. The
+exulting profligate leaves town, where we must remain till the
+time of my departure hence; and then is he safe, and must live to
+dishonour God, and not only destroy his own soul but those of
+many others. Alack, and woe is me! The sins that he and his
+friends will commit this very night will cry to Heaven against us
+for our shameful delay! When shall our great work of cleansing
+the sanctuary be finished, if we proceed at this puny rate?"
+
+"I see the deed must be done, then," said I, "and, since it is so, it
+shall be done. I will arm myself forthwith, and from the midst of
+his wine and debauchery you shall call him forth to me, and there
+will I smite him with the edge of the sword, that our great work
+be not retarded."
+
+"If thy execution were equal to thy intent, how great a man you
+soon might be!" said he. "We shall make the attempt once more;
+and, if it fail again, why, I must use other means to bring about
+my high purposes relating to mankind. Home and make ready. I
+will go and procure what information I can regarding their
+motions, and will meet you in disguise twenty minutes hence, at
+the first turn of Hewie's Lane beyond the loch."
+
+"I have nothing to make ready," said I, "for I do not choose to go
+home. Bring me a sword, and we may consecrate it with prayer
+and vows, and, if I use it not to the bringing down of the wicked
+and profane, then may the Lord do so to me, and more also!"
+
+We parted, and there was I left again to the multiplicity of my
+own thoughts for the space of twenty minutes, a thing my friend
+never failed in subjecting me to, and these were worse to contend
+with than hosts of sinful men. I prayed inwardly that these deeds
+of mine might never be brought to the knowledge of men who
+were incapable of appreciating the high motives that led to them;
+and then I sung part of the 10th Psalm, likewise in spirit; but, for
+all these efforts, my sinful doubts returned, so that when my
+illustrious friend joined me, and proffered me the choice of two
+gilded rapiers, I declined accepting any of them, and began, in a
+very bold and energetic manner, to express my doubts regarding
+the justification of all the deeds of perfect men. He chided me
+severely and branded me with cowardice, a thing that my nature
+never was subject to; and then he branded me with falsehood and
+breach of the most solemn engagements both to God and man.
+
+I was compelled to take the rapier, much against my inclination;
+but, for all the arguments, threats, and promises that he could use,
+I would not consent to send a challenge to my brother by his
+mouth. There was one argument only that he made use of which
+had some weight with me, but yet it would not preponderate. He
+told me my brother was gone to a notorious and scandalous
+habitation of women, and that, if I left him to himself for ever so
+short a space longer, it might embitter his state through ages to
+come. This was a trying concern to me; but I resisted it, and
+reverted to my doubts. On this he said that he had meant to do me
+honour, but, since I put it out of his power, he would do the deed,
+and take the responsibility on himself. "I have with sore travail
+procured a guardship of your life," added he. "For my own, I
+have not; but, be that as it will, I shall not be baffled in my
+attempts to benefit my friends without a trial. You will at all
+events accompany me, and see that I get justice?"
+
+"Certes, I will do thus much," said I, "and woe be to him if his
+arm prevail against my friend and patron!"
+
+His lip curled with a smile of contempt, which I could hardly
+brook; and I began to be afraid that the eminence to which I had
+been destined by him was already fading from my view. And I
+thought what I should then do to ingratiate myself again with
+him, for without his countenance I had no life. "I will be a man in
+act," thought I, "but in sentiment I will not yield, and for this he
+must surely admire me the more."
+
+As we emerged from the shadowy lane into the fair moonshine, I
+started so that my whole frame underwent the most chilling
+vibrations of surprise. I again thought I had been taken at
+unawares and was conversing with another person. My friend was
+equipped in the Highland garb, and so completely translated into
+another being that, save by his speech, all the senses of mankind
+could not have recognized him. I blessed myself, and asked
+whom it was his pleasure to personify to-night? He answered me
+carelessly that it was a spark whom he meant should bear the
+blame of whatever might fall out to-night; and that was all that
+passed on the subject.
+
+We proceeded by some stone steps at the foot of the North Loch,
+in hot argument all the way. I was afraid that our conversation
+might be overheard, for the night was calm and almost as light as
+day, and we saw sundry people crossing us as we advanced. But
+the zeal of my friend was so high that he disregarded all danger,
+and continued to argue fiercely and loudly on my delinquency, as
+he was pleased to call it. I stood on one argument
+alone, which was that "I did not think the Scripture promises to
+the elect, taken in their utmost latitude, warranted the assurance
+that they could do no wrong; and that, therefore, it behoved
+every man to look well to his steps."
+
+There was no religious scruple that irritated my enlightened
+friend and master so much as this. He could not endure it. And,
+the sentiments of our great covenanted reformers being on his
+side, there is not a doubt that I was wrong. He lost all patience on
+hearing what I advanced on this matter, and, taking hold of me,
+he led me into a darksome booth in a confined entry; and, after a
+friendly but cutting reproach, he bade me remain there in secret
+and watch the event. "And, if I fall," said he, "you will not fail to
+avenge my death?"
+
+I was so entirely overcome with vexation that I could make no
+answer, on which he left me abruptly, a prey to despair; and I saw
+or heard no more till he came down to the moonlight green
+followed by my brother. They had quarrelled before they came
+within my hearing, for the first words I heard were those of my
+brother, who was in a state of intoxication, and he was urging a
+reconciliation, as was his wont on such occasions. My friend
+spurned at the suggestion, and dared him to the combat; and after
+a good deal of boastful altercation, which the turmoil of my
+spirits prevented me from remembering, my brother was
+compelled to draw his sword and stand on the defensive. It was a
+desperate and terrible engagement. I at first thought that the
+royal stranger and great champion of the faith would overcome
+his opponent with ease, for I considered Heaven as on his side,
+and nothing but the arm of sinful flesh against him. But I was
+deceived. The sinner stood firm as a rock, while the assailant
+flitted about like a shadow, or rather like a spirit. I smiled
+inwardly, conceiving that these lightsome manoeuvres were all a
+sham to show off his art and mastership in the exercise, and that,
+whenever they came to close fairly, that instant my brother would
+be overcome. Still I was deceived. My brother's arm seemed
+invincible, so that the closer they fought the more palpably did it
+prevail. They fought round the green to the very edge of the
+water, and so round till they came close up to the covert where I
+stood. There being no more room to shift ground, my brother then
+forced him to come to close quarters, on which, the former still
+having the decided advantage, my friend quitted his sword and
+called out. I could resist no longer; so, springing from my
+concealment, I rushed between them with my sword drawn, and
+parted them as if they had been two schoolboys: then, turning to
+my brother, I addressed him as follows: "Wretch! miscreant!
+knowest thou what thou art attempting? Wouldest thou lay thine
+hand on the Lord's anointed, or shed his precious blood? Turn
+thee to me, that I may chastise thee for all thy wickedness, and
+not for the many injuries thou hast done to me!" To it we went,
+with full thirst of vengeance on every side. The duel was fierce;
+but the might of Heaven prevailed, and not my might. The
+ungodly and reprobate young man fell covered with wounds, and
+with curses and blasphemy in his mouth, while I escaped
+uninjured. Thereto his power extended not.
+
+I will not deny that my own immediate impressions of this affair
+in some degree differed from this statement. But this is precisely
+as my illustrious friend described it to be afterwards, and I can
+rely implicitly on his information, as he was at that time a looker-
+on, and my senses all in a state of agitation, and he could have no
+motive for saying what was not the positive truth.
+
+Never till my brother was down did we perceive that there had
+been witnesses to the whole business. Our ears were then
+astounded by rude challenges of unfair play, which were quite
+appalling to me; but my friend laughed at them and conducted me
+off in perfect safety. As to the unfairness of the transaction, I can
+say thus much, that my royal friend's sword was down ere ever
+mine was presented. But if it still be accounted unfair to take up a
+conqueror, and punish him in his own way, I answer: That if a
+man is sent on a positive mission by his master, and hath laid
+himself under vows to do his work, he ought not to be too nice in
+the means of accomplishing it; and, further, I appeal to holy writ,
+wherein many instances are recorded of the pleasure the Lord
+takes in the final extinction of the wicked and profane; and this
+position I take to be unanswerable.
+
+I was greatly disturbed in my mind for many days, knowing that
+the transaction had been witnessed, and sensible also of the
+perilous situation I occupied, owing to the late judgment of the
+court against me. But on the contrary, I never saw my enlightened
+friend in such high spirits. He assured me there was no danger;
+and again repeated that he warranted my life against the power of
+man. I thought proper, however, to remain in hiding for a week;
+but, as he said, to my utter amazement, the blame fell on another,
+who was not only accused but pronounced guilty by the general
+voice, and outlawed for non-appearance! How could I doubt,
+after this, that the hand of Heaven was aiding and abetting me?
+The matter was beyond my comprehension; and, as for my friend,
+he never explained anything that was past, but his activity and art
+were without a parallel.
+
+He enjoyed our success mightily; and for his sake I enjoyed it
+somewhat, but it was on account of his comfort only, for I could
+not for my life perceive in what degree the Church was better or
+purer than before these deeds were done. He continued to flatter
+me with great things, as to honours, fame and emolument; and,
+above all, with the blessing and protection of Him to whom my
+body and soul were dedicated. But, after these high promises, I
+got no longer peace; for he began to urge the death of my father
+with such an unremitting earnestness that I found I had nothing
+for it but to comply. I did so; and cannot express his enthusiasm
+of approbation. So much did he hurry and press me in this that I
+was forced to devise some of the most openly violent measures,
+having no alternative. Heaven spared me the deed, taking, in that
+instance, the vengeance in its own hand; for, before my arm could
+effect the sanguine but meritorious act, the old man followed his
+son to the grave. My illustrious and zealous friend seemed to
+regret this somewhat, but he comforted himself with the
+reflection, that still I had the merit of it, having not only
+consented to it, but in fact effected it, for by doing the one action
+I had brought about both.
+
+No sooner were the obsequies of the funeral over than my friend
+and I went to Dalcastle, and took undisputed possession of the
+houses, lands and effects that had been my father's; but his plate,
+and vast treasures of ready money, he had bestowed on a
+voluptuous and unworthy creature, who had lived long with him
+as a mistress. Fain would I have sent her after her lover, and gave
+my friend some hints on the occasion; but he only shook his head,
+and said that we must lay all selfish and interested motives out of
+the question.
+
+For a long time, when I awaked in the morning, I could not
+believe my senses, that I was indeed the undisputed and sole
+proprietor of so much wealth and grandeur; and I felt so much
+gratified that I immediately set about doing all the good I was
+able, hoping to meet with all approbation and encouragement
+from my friend. I was mistaken. He checked the very first
+impulses towards such a procedure, questioned my motives, and
+uniformly made them out to be wrong. There was one morning
+that a servant said to me there was a lady in the back chamber
+who wanted to speak with me, but he could not tell me who it
+was, for all the old servants had left the mansion, every one on
+hearing of the death of the late laird, and those who had come
+knew none of the people in the neighbourhood. From several
+circumstances, I had suspicions of private confabulations with
+women, and refused to go to her, but bid the servant inquire what
+she wanted. She would not tell, she could only state the
+circumstances to me; so I, being sensible that a little dignity of
+manner became me in my elevated situation, returned for answer
+that, if it was business that could not be transacted by my
+steward, it must remain untransacted. The answer which the
+servant brought back was of a threatening nature. She stated she
+must see me, and, if I refused her satisfaction there, she would
+compel it where I should not evite her.
+
+My friend and director appeared pleased with my dilemma, and
+rather advised that I should hear what the woman had to say; on
+which I consented, provided she would deliver her mission in his
+presence. She came with manifest signs of anger and indignation,
+and began with a bold and direct charge against me of a shameful
+assault on one of her daughters; of having used the basest of
+means in order to lead her aside from the paths of rectitude; and,
+on the failure of these, of having resorted to the most unqualified
+measures.
+
+I denied the charge in all its bearings, assuring the dame that I
+had never so much as seen either of her daughters to my
+knowledge, far less wronged them; on which she got into great
+wrath, and abused me to my face as an accomplished vagabond,
+hypocrite, and sensualist; and she went so far as to tell me
+roundly that if I did not marry her daughter, she would bring me
+to the gallows and that in a very short time.
+
+"Marry your daughter, honest woman!" said I, "on the faith of a
+Christian, I never saw your daughter; and you may rest assured in
+this, that I will neither marry you nor her. Do you consider how
+short a time I have been in this place? How much that time has
+been occupied? And how there was even a possibility that I could
+have accomplished such villainies?"
+
+"And how long does your Christian reverence suppose you have
+remained in this place since the late laird's death?" said she.
+
+"That is too well known to need recapitulation," said I. "Only a
+very few days, though I cannot at present specify the exact
+number; perhaps from thirty to forty, or so. But in all that time,
+certes, I have never seen either you or any of your two daughters
+that you talk of. You must be quite sensible of that."
+
+My friend shook his head three times during this short sentence,
+while the woman held up her hands in amazement and disgust,
+exclaiming: "There goes the self-righteous one! There goes the
+consecrated youth, who cannot err! You, sir, know, and the world
+shall know, of the faith that is in this most just, devout, and
+religious miscreant! Can you deny that you have already been in
+this place four months and seven days? Or that in that time you
+have been forbid my house twenty times? Or that you have
+persevered in your endeavours to effect the basest and most
+ungenerous of purposes? Or that you have attained them?
+Hypocrite and deceiver as you are! Yes, sir; I say, dare you deny
+that you have attained your vile, selfish, and degrading purposes
+towards a young, innocent, and unsuspecting creature, and
+thereby ruined a poor widow's only hope in this world? No, you
+cannot look in my face, and deny aught of this."
+
+"The woman is raving mad!" said I. "You, illustrious sir, know
+that, in the first instance, I have not yet been in this place one
+month." My friend shook his head again, and answered me: "You
+are wrong, my dear friend; you are wrong. It is indeed the space
+of time that the lady hath stated, to a day, since you came here,
+and I came with you; and I am sorry that I know for certain that
+you have been frequently haunting her house, and have often had
+private correspondence with one of the young ladies, too. Of the
+nature of it I presume not to know."
+
+"You are mocking me," said I. "But as well may you try to reason
+me out of my existence as to convince me that I have been here
+even one month, or that any of those things you allege against me
+has the shadow of truth or evidence to support it. I will swear to
+you, by the great God that made me; and by--"
+
+"Hold, thou most abandoned profligate!" cried she violently, "and
+do not add perjury to your other detestable crimes. Do not, for
+mercy's sake, any more profane that name whose attributes you
+have wrested and disgraced. But tell me what reparation you
+propose offering to my injured child."
+
+"I again declare, before Heaven, woman, that, to the best of my
+knowledge and recollection, I never saw your daughter. I now
+think I have some faint recollection of having seen your face, but
+where, or in what place, puzzles me quite."
+
+"And, why?" said she. "Because for months and days you have
+been, in such a state of extreme inebriety, that your time has
+gone over like a dream that has been forgotten. I believe that,
+from the day you came first to my house, you have been in a state
+of utter delirium, and that principally from the fumes of wine and
+ardent spirits."
+
+"It is a manifest falsehood!" said I. "I have never, since I entered
+on the possession of Dalcastle, tasted wine or spirits, saving once
+a few evenings ago; and, I confess to my shame, that I was led
+too far; but I have craved forgiveness and obtained it. I take my
+noble and distinguished friend there for a witness to the truth of
+what I assert; a man who has done more, and sacrificed more for
+the sake of genuine Christianity than any this world contains.
+Him you will believe."
+
+"I hope you have attained forgiveness," said he, seriously.
+"Indeed it would be next to blasphemy to doubt it. But, of late,
+you have been very much addicted to intemperance. I doubt if,
+from the first night you tasted the delights of drunkenness, that
+you have ever again been in your right mind until Monday last.
+Doubtless you have been for a good while most diligent in your
+addresses to this lady's daughter."
+
+"This is unaccountable," said I. "It is impossible that I can have
+been doing a thing and not doing it at the same time. But indeed,
+honest woman, there have several incidents occurred to me in the
+course of my life which persuade me I have a second self; or that
+there is some other being who appears in my likeness."
+
+Here my friend interrupted me with a sneer, and a hint that I was
+talking insanely; and then he added, turning to the lady: "I know
+my friend Mr. Colwan will do what is just and, right. Go and
+bring the young lady to him, that he may see her, and he will then
+recollect all his former amours with her!'
+
+"I humbly beg your pardon, sir," said I. "But the mention of such
+a thing as amours with any woman existing, to me, is really so
+absurd, so far from my principles, so from the purity of nature
+and frame to which I was born and consecrated, that I hold it as
+an insult, and regard it with contempt."
+
+I would have said more in reprobation of such an idea, had not
+my servant entered, and said that a gentleman wanted to see me
+on business. Being glad of an opportunity of getting quit of my
+lady visitor, I ordered the servant to show him in; and forthwith a
+little lean gentleman, with a long aquiline nose, and a bald head,
+daubed all over with powder and pomatum, entered. I thought 1
+recollected having seen him too, but could not remember his
+name, though he spoke to me with the greatest familiarity; at
+least, that sort of familiarity that an official person generally
+assumes. He bustled about and about, speaking to everyone, but
+declined listening for a single moment to any. The lady offered to
+withdraw, but he stopped her.
+
+"No, no, Mrs. Keeler, you need not go; you need not go; you
+must not go, madam. The business I came about concerns you--
+yes, that it does. Bad business yon of Walker's? Eh? Could not
+help it--did all I could, Mr. Wringhim. Done your business. Have
+it all cut and dry here, sir. No, this is not it--Have it among them,
+though.--I'm at a little loss for your name, sir (addressing my
+friend)--seen you very often, though--exceedingly often--quite
+well acquainted with you."
+
+"No, sir, you are not," said my friend, sternly. The intruder never
+regarded him; never so much as lifted his eyes from his bundle of
+law papers, among which he was bustling with great hurry and
+importance, but went on:
+
+"Impossible! Have seen a face very like it, then--what did you say
+your name was, sir?--very like it indeed. Is it not the young laird
+who was murdered whom you resemble so much?"
+
+Here Mrs. Keeler uttered a scream, which so much startled me.
+that it seems I grew pale, and, on looking at my friend's face,
+there was something struck me so forcibly in the likeness
+between him and my late brother that I had very nearly fainted.
+The woman exclaimed that it was my brother's spirit that stood
+beside me.
+
+"Impossible!" exclaimed the attorney. "At least, I hope not, else
+his signature is not worth a pin. There is some balance due on yon
+business, madam. Do you wish your account? because I have it
+here, ready discharged, and it does not suit letting such things lie
+over. This business of Mr. Colwan's will be a severe one on you,
+madam--rather a severe one."
+
+"What business of mine, if it be your will, sir," said I. "For my
+part I never engaged you in business of any sort less or more." He
+never regarded me, but went on: "You may appeal, though. Yes,
+yes, there are such things as appeals for the refractory. Here it is,
+gentlemen. Here they are all together. Here is, in the first place,
+sir, your power of attorney, regularly warranted, sealed, and
+signed with your own hand."
+
+"I declare solemnly that I never signed that document," said I.
+
+"Aye, aye, the system of denial is not a bad one in general," said
+my attorney. "But at present there is no occasion for it. You do
+not deny your own hand?"
+
+"I deny everything connected with the business," cried I. "I
+disclaim it in toto, and declare that I know no more about it than
+the child unborn."
+
+"That is exceedingly good!" exclaimed he. "I like your pertinacity
+vastly! I have three of your letters, and three of your signatures;
+that part is all settled, and I hope so is the whole affair; for here is
+the original grant to your father, which he has never thought
+proper to put in requisition. Simple gentleman! But here have I,
+Lawyer Linkum, in one hundredth part of the time that any other
+notary, writer, attorney, or writer of the signet in Britain would
+have done it, procured the signature of His Majesty's
+commissioner, and thereby confirmed the charter to you and your
+house, sir, for ever and ever--Begging your pardon, madam." The
+lady, as well as myself, tried several times to interrupt the
+loquacity of Linkum, but in vain: he only raised his hand with a
+quick flourish, and went on:
+
+"Here it is:
+
+JAMES, by the grace of God, King of Great Britain, France, and
+Ireland , to his right trusty cousin, sendeth greeting: And whereas
+his right leal and trust-worthy cousin, George Colwan, of
+Dalcastle and Balgrennan, hath suffered great losses, and
+undergone much hardship, on behalf of his Majesty's rights and
+titles; he therefore, for himself, and as prince and steward of
+Scotland, and by the consent of his right trusty cousins and
+councillors hereby grants to the said George Colwan, his heirs
+and assignees whatsomever, heritably and irrevocably, all and
+haill the lands and others underwritten: To wit, All and haill, the
+five merk land of Kipplerig; the five pound land of Easter
+Knockward, with all the towers, fortalices, manor-places, houses,
+biggings, yards, orchards, tofts, crofts, mills, woods, fishings,
+mosses, muirs, meadows, commonties, pasturages, coals, coal-
+heughs, tennants, tenantries, services of free tenants, annexes,
+connexes, dependencies, parts, pendicles, and pertinents of the
+same whatsomever; to be peaceably brooked, joysed, set, used,
+and disposed of by him and his aboves, as specified, heritably and
+irrevocably, in all time coming: And, in testimony thereof, his
+Majesty, for himself, and as prince steward of Scotland, with the
+advice and consent of his foresaids, knowledge, proper motive,
+and kingly power, makes, erects, creates, unites, annexes, and
+incorporates, the whole lands above mentioned in a haill and free
+barony, by all the rights, miethes, and marches thereof, old and
+divided, as the same lies, in length and breadth, in houses,
+biggings, mills, multures, hawking, bunting, fishing; with court,
+plaint, herezeld, fock, fork, sack, sock, thole, thame, vert, wraik,
+waith, wair, venison, outfang thief, infang thief, pit and gallows,
+and all and sundry other commodities. Given at our Court of
+Whitehall, &c., &c. God save the King.
+
+Compositio 5 lib. 13.8.
+
+Registrate 26th September 1687.
+
+"See, madam, here are ten signatures of privy councillors of that
+year, and here are other ten of the present year, with His Grace
+the Duke of Queensberry at the head. All right. See here it is, sir--
+all right--done your work. So you see, madam, this gentleman is
+the true and sole heritor of all the land that your father possesses,
+with all the rents thereof for the last twenty years, and upwards.
+Fine job for my employers! Sorry on your account, madam--can't
+help it."
+
+I was again going to disclaim all interest or connection in the
+matter but my friend stopped me; and the plaints and
+lamentations of the dame became so overpowering that they put
+an end to all further colloquy; but Lawyer Linkum followed me,
+and stated his great outlay, and the important services he had
+rendered me, until I was obliged to subscribe an order to him for
+L100 on my banker.
+
+I was now glad to retire with my friend, and ask seriously for
+some explanation of all this. It was in the highest degree
+unsatisfactory. He confirmed all that had been stated to me;
+assuring me that I had not only been assiduous in my endeavours
+to seduce a young lady of great beauty, which it seemed I had
+effected, but that I had taken counsel, and got this supposed, old,
+false, and forged grant raked up and now signed, to ruin the
+young lady's family quite, so as to throw her entirely on myself
+for protection, and be wholly at my will.
+
+This was to me wholly incomprehensible. I could have freely
+made oath to the contrary of every particular. Yet the evidences
+were against me, and of a nature not to be denied. Here I must
+confess that, highly as I disapproved of the love of women, and
+all intimacies and connections with the sex, I felt a sort of
+indefinite pleasure, an ungracious delight in having a beautiful
+woman solely at my disposal. But I thought of her spiritual good
+in the meantime. My friend spoke of my backslidings with
+concern; requesting me to make sure of my forgiveness, and to
+forsake them; and then he added some words of sweet comfort.
+But from this time forth I began to be sick at times of my
+existence. I had heart-burnings, longings, and, yearnings that
+would not be satisfied; and I seemed hardly to be an accountable
+creature; being thus in the habit of executing transactions of the
+utmost moment without being sensible that I did them. I was a
+being incomprehensible to myself. Either I had a second self, who
+transacted business in my likeness, or else my body was at times
+possessed by a spirit over which it had no control, and of whose
+actions my own soul was wholly unconscious. This was an
+anomaly not to be accounted for by any philosophy of mine, and I
+was many times, in contemplating it, excited to terrors and mental
+torments hardly describable. To be in a state of consciousness and
+unconsciousness, at the same time, in the same body and same
+spirit, was impossible. I was under the greatest anxiety, dreading
+some change would take place momently in my nature; for of
+dates I could make nothing: one-half, or two-thirds of my time,
+seemed to me totally lost. I often, about this time, prayed with
+great fervour, and lamented my hopeless condition, especially in
+being liable to the commission of crimes which I was not sensible
+of and could not eschew. And I confess, notwithstanding the
+promises on which I had been taught to rely, I began to have
+secret terrors that the great enemy of man's salvation was
+exercising powers over me that might eventually lead to my ruin.
+These were but temporary and sinful fears, but they added greatly
+to my unhappiness.
+
+The worst thing of all was what hitherto I had never felt, and, as
+yet, durst not confess to myself, that the presence of my
+illustrious and devoted friend was becoming irksome to me.
+When I was by myself, I breathed freer, and my step was lighter;
+but, when he approached, a pang went to my heart, and, in his
+company, I moved and acted as if under a load that I could hardly
+endure. What a state to be in! And yet to shake him off was
+impossible--we were incorporated together--identified with one
+another, as it were, and the power was not in me to separate
+myself from him. I still knew nothing who he was, further than
+that he was a potentate of some foreign land, bent on establishing
+some pure and genuine doctrines of Christianity, hitherto only
+half understood, and less than half exercised. Of this I could have
+no doubts after all that he had said, done and suffered in the
+cause. But, alongst with this, I was also certain that he was
+possessed of some supernatural power, of the source of which I
+was wholly ignorant. That a man could be a Christian and at the
+same time a powerful necromancer, appeared inconsistent, and
+adverse to every principle taught in our Church and from this I
+was led to believe that he inherited his powers from on high, for I
+could not doubt either of the soundness of his principles or that he
+accomplished things impossible to account for. Thus was I
+sojourning in the midst of a chaos of confusion. I looked back on
+my by-past life with pain, as one looks back on a perilous
+journey, in which he has attained his end, without gaining any
+advantage either to himself or others; and I looked forward, as on
+a darksome waste, full of repulsive and terrific shapes, pitfalls,
+and precipices, to which there was no definite bourn, and from
+which I turned with disgust. With my riches, my unhappiness was
+increased tenfold; and here, with another great acquisition of
+property, for which I had pleaed, and which I had gained in a
+dream, my miseries and difficulties were increasing. My principal
+feeling, about this time, was an insatiable longing for something
+that I cannot describe or denominate properly, unless I say it was
+for utter oblivion that I longed. I desired to sleep; but it was for a
+deeper and longer sleep than that in which the senses were
+nightly steeped. I longed to be at rest and quiet, and close my
+eyes on the past and the future alike, as far as this frail life was
+concerned. But what had been formerly and finally settled in the
+councils above, I presumed not to call in question.
+
+In this state of irritation and misery was I dragging on an
+existence, disgusted with all around me, and in particular with my
+mother, who, with all her love and anxiety, had such an
+insufferable mode of manifesting them that she had by this time
+rendered herself exceedingly obnoxious to me. The very sound of
+her voice at a distance went to my heart like an arrow, and made
+all my nerves to shrink; and, as for the beautiful young lady for
+whom they told me I had been so much enamoured, I shunned all
+intercourse with her or hers, as I would have done with the Devil.
+I read some of their letters and burnt them, but refused to see
+either the young lady or her mother on any account.
+
+About this time it was that my worthy and reverend parent
+came with one of his elders to see my mother and myself. His
+presence always brought joy with it into our family, for my
+mother was uplifted, and I had so few who cared for me, or for
+whom I cared, that I felt rather gratified at seeing him. My
+illustrious friend was also much more attached to him than any
+other person (except myself) for their religious principles tallied
+in every point, and their conversation was interesting, serious,
+and sublime. Being anxious to entertain well and highly the
+man to whom I had been so much indebted, and knowing that,
+with all his integrity and righteousness, he disdained not the good
+things of this life, I brought from the late laird's well-stored
+cellars various fragrant and salubrious wines, and we drank, and
+became merry, and I found that my miseries and overpowering
+calamities passed away over my head like a shower that is driven
+by the wind. I became elevated and happy, and welcomed my
+guests an hundred times; and then I joined them in religious
+conversation, with a zeal and enthusiasm which I had not often
+experienced, and which made all their hearts rejoice, so that I said
+to myself. "Surely every gift of God is a blessing, and ought to be
+used with liberality and thankfulness."
+
+The next day I waked from a profound and feverish sleep, and
+called for something to drink. There was a servant answered
+whom I had never seen before, and he was clad in my servant's
+clothes and livery. I asked for Andrew Handyside, the servant
+who had waited at table the night before; but the man answered
+with a stare and a smile:
+
+"What do you mean, sirrah," said I. "Pray what do you here? Or
+what are you pleased to laugh at? I desire you to go about your
+business, and send me up Handyside. I want him to bring me
+something to drink."
+
+"Ye sanna want a drink, maister," said the fellow. "Tak a hearty
+ane, and see if it will wauken ye up something, sae that ye dinna
+ca' for ghaists through your sleep. Surely ye haena forgotten that
+Andrew Handyside has been in his grave these six months?"
+
+This was a stunning blow to me. I could not answer further, but
+sunk back on my pillow as if I had been a lump of lead, refusing
+to take a drink or anything else at the fellow's hand, who seemed
+thus mocking me with so grave a face. The man seemed sorry,
+and grieved at my being offended, but I ordered him away, and
+continued sullen and thoughtful. Could I have again been for a
+season in utter oblivion to myself. and transacting business which
+I neither approved of nor had any connection with! I tried to
+recollect something in which I might have been engaged, but
+nothing was portrayed on my mind subsequent to the parting with
+my friends at a late hour the evening before. The evening before
+it certainly was: but, if so, how came it that Andrew Handyside,
+who served at table that evening, should have been in his grave
+six months! This was a circumstance somewhat equivocal;
+therefore, being afraid to arise lest accusations of I know not what
+might come against me, I was obliged to call once more in order
+to come at what intelligence I could. The same fellow appeared to
+receive my orders as before, and I set about examining him with
+regard to particulars. He told me his name was Scrape; that I
+hired him myself; of whom I hired him; and at whose
+recommendation I smiled, and nodded so as to let the knave see I
+understood he was telling me a chain of falsehoods, but did not
+choose to begin with any violent asseverations to the contrary.
+
+"And where is my noble friend and companion?" said I. "How
+has he been engaged in the interim?"
+
+"I dinna ken him, sir," said Scrape, "but have heard it said that the
+strange mysterious person that attended you, him that the maist
+part of folks countit uncanny, had gane awa wi' a Mr. Ringan o'
+Glasko last year, and had never returned."
+
+I thanked the Lord in my heart for this intelligence, hoping that
+the illustrious stranger had returned to his own land and people,
+and that I should thenceforth be rid of his controlling and
+appalling presence. "And where is my mother?" said, I. The man's
+breath cut short, and he looked at me without returning any
+answer.--"I ask you where my mother is?" said I.
+
+"God only knows, and not I, where she is," returned he. "He
+knows where her soul is, and, as for her body, if you dinna ken
+something o' it, I suppose nae man alive does."
+
+"What do you mean, you knave?" said I. "What dark hints are
+these you are throwing out? Tell me precisely and distinctly what
+you know of my mother?"
+
+"It is unco queer o' ye to forget, or pretend to forget everything
+that gate the day, sir," said he. 'I'm sure you heard enough about it
+yestreen; an' I can tell you there are some gayan ill-faurd stories
+gaun about that business. But, as the thing is to be tried afore the
+circuit lords, it wad be far wrang to say either this or that to
+influence the public mind; it is best just to let justice tak its swee.
+I hae naething to say, sir. Ye hae been a good enough maister to
+me, and paid my wages regularly, but ye hae muckle need to be
+innocent, for there are some heavy accusations rising against
+you."
+
+"I fear no accusations of man," said I, "as long as I can justify my
+cause in the sight of Heaven; and that I can do this I am well
+aware. Go you and bring me some wine and water, and some
+other clothes than these gaudy and glaring ones."
+
+I took a cup of wine and water; put on my black clothes and
+walked out. For all the perplexity that surrounded me, I felt my
+spirits considerably buoyant. It appeared that I was rid of the two
+greatest bars to my happiness, by what agency I knew not. My
+mother, it seemed, was gone, who had become a grievous thorn in
+my side of late; and my great companion and counsellor, who
+tyrannized over every spontaneous movement of my heart, had
+likewise taken himself off. This last was an unspeakable relief;
+for I found that for a long season I had only been able to act by
+the motions of his mysterious mind and spirit. I therefore thanked
+God for my deliverance, and strode through my woods with a
+daring and heroic step; with independence in my eye, and
+freedom swinging in my right hand.
+
+At the extremity of the Colwan wood, I perceived a figure
+approaching me with slow and dignified motion. The moment
+that I beheld it, my whole frame received a shock as if the ground
+on which I walked had sunk suddenly below me. Yet, at that
+moment, I knew not who it was; it was the air and motion of
+someone that I dreaded, and from whom I would gladly have
+escaped; but this I even had not power to attempt. It came slowly
+onward, and I advanced as slowly to meet it; yet, when we came
+within speech, I still knew not who it was. It bore the figure, air,
+and features of my late brother, I thought, exactly; yet in all these
+there were traits so forbidding, so mixed with an appearance of
+misery, chagrin and despair, that I still shrunk from the view, not
+knowing in whose face I looked. But, when the being spoke, both
+my mental and bodily frame received another shock more terrible
+than the first, for it was the voice of the great personage I had so
+long denominated my friend, of whom I had deemed myself for
+ever freed, and whose presence and counsels I now dreaded more
+than Hell. It was his voice, but so altered--I shall never forget it
+till my dying day. Nay, I can scarce conceive it possible that any
+earthly sounds could be so discordant, so repulsive to every
+feeling of a human soul, as the tones of the voice that grated on
+my ear at that moment. They were the sounds of the pit, wheezed
+through a grated cranny, or seemed so to my distempered
+imagination.
+
+"So! Thou shudderest at my approach now, dost thou?" said he.
+"Is this all the gratitude that you deign for an attachment of which
+the annals of the world furnish no parallel? An attachment which
+has caused me to forego power and dominion, might, homage,
+conquest and adulation: all that I might gain one highly valued
+and sanctified spirit to my great and true, principles of
+reformation among mankind. Wherein have I offended? What
+have I done for evil, or what have I not done for your good; that
+you would thus shun my presence?"
+
+"Great and magnificent prince," said I humbly; "let me request of
+you to abandon a poor worthless wight to his own wayward
+fortune, and return to the dominion of your people. I am
+unworthy of the sacrifices you have made for my sake; and, after
+all your efforts, I do not feel that you have rendered either more
+virtuous or more happy. For the sake of that which is estimable
+in human nature, depart from me to your own home, before you
+render me a being either altogether above or below the rest of my
+fellow creatures. Let me plod on towards Heaven and happiness
+in my own way, like those that have gone before me, and I
+promise to stick fast by the great principles which you have so
+strenuously inculcated, on condition that you depart and leave me
+for ever."
+
+"Sooner shall you make the mother abandon the child of her
+bosom; nay, sooner cause the shadow to relinquish the substance,
+than separate me from your side. Our beings are amalgamated, as
+it were, and consociated in one, and never shall I depart from this
+country until I can carry you in triumph with me."
+
+I can in nowise describe the effect this appalling speech had on
+me. It was like the announcement of death to one who had of late
+deemed himself free, if not of something worse than death, and of
+longer continuance. There was I doomed to remain in misery,
+subjugated, soul and body, to one whose presence was become
+more intolerable to me than aught on earth could compensate.
+And at that moment, when he beheld the anguish of my soul, he
+could not conceal that he enjoyed it. I was troubled for an answer,
+for which he was waiting: it became incumbent on me to say
+something after such a protestation of attachment; and, in some
+degree to shake the validity of it, I asked, with great simplicity,
+where he had been all this while?
+
+"Your crimes and your extravagances forced me from your side
+for a season," said he, "but now that I hope the day of grace is
+returned, I am again drawn towards you by an affection that has
+neither bounds nor interest; an affection for which I receive not
+even the poor return of gratitude, and which seems to have its
+radical sources in fascination. I have been far, far abroad, and
+have seen much, and transacted much, since I last spoke with
+you. During that space, I grievously suspect that you have been
+guilty of great crimes and misdemeanours, crimes that would
+have sunk an unregenerated person to perdition; but as I knew it
+to be only a temporary falling off, a specimen of that liberty by
+which the chosen and elected ones are made free, I closed my
+eyes on the wilful debasement of our principles, knowing that the
+transgressions could never be accounted to your charge, and that
+in good time you would come to your senses, and throw the
+whole weight of your crimes on the shoulders that had voluntarily
+stooped to receive the load."
+
+"Certainly I will," said I, "as I and all the justified have a good
+right to do. But what crimes? What misdemeanours and
+transgressions do you talk about? For my part, I am conscious of
+none, and am utterly amazed at insinuations which I do not
+comprehend."
+
+"You have certainly been left to yourself for a season," returned
+he, "having gone on rather like a person in a delirium than a
+Christian in his sober sense. You are accused of having made
+away with your mother privately; as also of the death of a
+beautiful young lady, whose affections you had seduced."
+
+"It is an intolerable and monstrous falsehood!" cried I,
+interrupting, him. "I never laid a hand on a woman to take away
+her life, and have even shunned their society from my childhood.
+I know nothing of my mother's exit; nor of that young lady's
+whom you mention. Nothing whatever."
+
+"I hope it is so," said he. "But it seems there are some strong
+presumptuous proofs against you, and I came to warn you this
+day that a precognition is in progress, and that unless you are
+perfectly convinced, not only of your innocence but of your
+ability to prove it, it will be the safest course for you to abscond,
+and let the trial go on without you."
+
+"Never shall it be said that I shrunk from such a trial as this," said
+I. "It would give grounds for suspicions of guilt that never had
+existence, even in thought. I will go and show myself in every
+public place, that no slanderous tongue may wag against me. I
+have shed the blood of sinners, but of these deaths I am guiltless;
+therefore I will face every tribunal, and put all my accusers
+down."
+
+"Asseveration will avail you but little," answered he,
+composedly. "It is, however, justifiable in its place, although to
+me it signifies nothing, who know too well that you did commit
+both crimes, in your own person, and with your own hands. Far
+be it from me to betray you; indeed, I would rather endeavour to
+palliate the offences; for, though adverse to nature, I can prove
+them not to be so to the cause of pure Christianity, by the mode
+of which we have approved of it, and which we wish to
+promulgate."
+
+"If this that you tell me be true," said I, "then is it as true that I
+have two souls, which take possession of my bodily frame by
+turns, the one being all unconscious of what the other performs;
+for as sure as I have at this moment a spirit within me, fashioned
+and destined to eternal felicity, as sure am I utterly ignorant of the
+crimes you now lay to my charge."
+
+"Your supposition may be true in effect," said he. "We are all
+subjected to two distinct natures in the same person. I myself
+have suffered grievously in that way. The spirit that now directs
+my energies is not that with which I was endowed at my creation.
+It is changed within me, and so is my whole nature. My former
+days were those of grandeur and felicity. But, would you believe
+it? I was not then a Christian. Now I am. I have been converted to
+its truths by passing through the fire, and, since my final
+conversion, my misery has been extreme. You complain that I
+have not been able to render you more happy than you were.
+Alas! do you expect it in the difficult and exterminating career
+which you have begun? I, however, promise you this--a portion
+of the only happiness which I enjoy, sublime in its motions, and
+splendid in its attainments--I will place you on the right hand of
+my throne, and show you the grandeur of my domains, and the
+felicity of my millions of true professors."
+
+I was once more humbled before this mighty potentate, and
+promised to be ruled wholly by his directions, although at that
+moment my nature shrunk from the concessions, and my soul
+longed rather to be inclosed in the deeps of the sea, or involved
+once more in utter oblivion. I was like Daniel in the den of lions,
+without his faith in Divine support, and wholly at their mercy. I
+felt as one round whose body a deadly snake is twisted, which
+continues to hold him in its fangs, without injuring him, further
+than in moving its scaly infernal folds with exulting delight, to let
+its victim feel to whose power he has subjected himself; and thus
+did I for a space drag an existence from day to day, in utter
+weariness and helplessness; at one time worshipping with great
+fervour of spirit, and at other times so wholly left to myself as to
+work all manner of vices and follies with greediness. In these my
+enlightened friend never accompanied me, but I always observed
+that he was the first to lead me to every one of them, and then
+leave me in the lurch. The next day, after these my fallings off, he
+never failed to reprove me gently, blaming me for my venial
+transgressions; but then he had the art of reconciling all, by
+reverting to my justified and infallible state, which I found to
+prove a delightful healing salve for every sore.
+
+But, of all my troubles, this was the chief. I was every day and
+every hour assailed with accusations of deeds of which I was
+wholly ignorant; of acts of cruelty, injustice, defamation, and
+deceit; of pieces of business which I could not be made to
+comprehend; with lawsuits, details, arrestments of judgment, and
+a thousand interminable quibbles from the mouth of my
+loquacious and conceited attorney. So miserable was my life
+rendered by these continued attacks that I was often obliged to
+lock myself up for days together, never seeing any person save
+my man Samuel Scrape, who was a very honest blunt fellow, a
+staunch Cameronian, but withal very little conversant in religious
+matters. He said he came from a place called Penpunt, which I
+thought a name so ludicrous that I called him by the name of his
+native village, an appellation of which he was very proud, and
+answered everything with more civility and perspicuity when I
+denominated him Penpunt, than Samuel, his own Christian name.
+Of this peasant was I obliged to make a companion on sundry
+occasions, and strange indeed were the details which he gave me
+concerning myself, and the ideas of the country people
+concerning me. I took down a few of these in writing, to put off
+the time, and here leave them on record to show how the best and
+greatest actions are misconstrued among sinful and ignorant men:
+
+"You say, Samuel, that I hired you myself--that I have been a
+good enough master to you, and have paid you your weekly
+wages punctually. Now, how is it that you say this, knowing, as
+you do, that I never hired you, and never paid you a sixpence of
+wages in the whole course of my life, excepting this last month?"
+
+"Ye may as weel say, master, that water's no water, or that, stanes
+are no stanes. But that's just your gate, an' it's a great pity, aye to
+do a thing an profess the clean contrair. Weel then, since you
+havena paid me ony wages, an' I can prove day and date when I
+was hired, an' came hame to your service, will you be sae kind as
+to pay me now? That's the best way o' curing a man o' the mortal
+disease o' leasing-making that I ken o'."
+
+"I should think that Penpunt and Cameronian principles would
+not admit of a man taking twice payment for the same article."
+
+"In sic a case as this, sir, it disna hinge upon principles, but a
+piece o' good manners; an' I can tell you that, at sic a crisis, a
+Cameronian is a gay-an weel-bred man. He's driven to this, and
+he maun either make a breach in his friend's good name, or in his
+purse; an' oh, sir, whilk o' thae, think you, is the most precious?
+For instance, an a Galloway drover had comed to the town o'
+Penpunt, an' said to a Cameronian (the folk's a' Cameronians
+there), 'Sir, I want to buy your cow,' 'Vera weel,' says the
+Cameronian, 'I just want to sell the cow, sae gie me twanty punds
+Scots, an' take her w' ye.' It's a bargain. The drover takes away the
+cow, an' gies the Cameronian his twanty pund Scots. But after
+that, he meets him again on the white sands, amang a' the drovers
+an' dealers o' the land, an' the Gallowayman, he says to the
+Cameronian, afore a' thae witnesses, 'Come, Master Whiggam, I
+hae never paid you for yon bit useless cow that I bought. I'll pay
+her the day, but you maun mind the luck-penny; there's muckle
+need for 't'--or something to that purpose. The Cameronian then
+turns out to be a civil man, an' canna bide to make the man baith
+a feele an' liar at the same time, afore a' his associates; an'
+therefore he pits his principles aff at the side, to be kind o'
+sleepin' partner, as it war, an' brings up his good breeding to stand
+at the counter: he pockets the money, gies the Galloway drover
+time o' day, an' comes his way. An' wha's to blame? Man mind
+yoursel is the first commandment. A Cameronian's principles
+never came atween him an' his purse, nor sanna in the present
+case; for, as I canna bide to make you out a leear, I'll thank you
+for my wages."
+
+"Well, you shall have them, Samuel, if you declare to me that I
+hired you myself in this same person, and bargained with you
+with this same tongue and voice with which I speak to you just
+now."
+
+"That I do declare, unless ye hae twa persons o' the same
+appearance, and twa tongues to the same voice. But, 'od saif us,
+sir, do you ken what the auld wives o' the clachan say about
+you?"
+
+"How should I, when no one repeats it to me?"
+
+"Oo, I trow it's a' stuff--folk shouldna heed what's said by auld
+crazy kimmers. But there are some o' them weel kend for witches,
+too; an' they say, 'Lord have a care o' us!' They say the deil's often
+seen gaun sidie for sidie w' ye, whiles in ae shape, an' whiles in
+another. An' they say that he whiles takes your ain shape, or else
+enters into you, and then you turn a deil yoursel."
+
+I was so astounded at this terrible idea that had gone abroad,
+regarding my fellowship with the Prince of Darkness, that I could
+make no answer to the fellow's information, but sat like one in a
+stupor; and if it had not been for my well-founded faith, and
+conviction that I was a chosen and elected one before the world
+was made, I should at that moment have given in to the popular
+belief, and fallen into the sin of despondency; but I was preserved
+from such a fatal error by an inward and unseen supporter. Still
+the insinuation was so like what I felt myself that I was greatly
+awed and confounded.
+
+The poor fellow observed this, and tried to do away the
+impression by some further sage remarks of his own.
+
+"Hout, dear sir, it is balderdash, there's nae doubt o't. It is the
+crownhead o' absurdity to tak in the havers o' auld wives for
+gospel. I told them that my master was a peeous man, an' a
+sensible man; an', for praying, that he could ding auld Macmillan
+himsel. 'Sae could the deil,' they said, 'when he liket, either at
+preaching or praying, if these war to answer his ain ends.' 'Na,
+na,' says I, 'but he's a strick believer in a' the truths o' Christianity,
+my master.' They said, sae was Satan, for that he was the firmest
+believer in a' the truths of Christianity that was out o' Heaven; an'
+that, sin' the Revolution that the Gospel had turned sae rife, he
+had been often driven to the shift o' preaching it himsel, for the
+purpose o' getting some wrang tenets introduced into it, and
+thereby turning it into blasphemy and ridicule."
+
+I confess, to my shame, that I was so overcome by this jumble of
+nonsense that a chillness came over me, and, in spite of all my
+efforts to shake off the impression it had made, I fell into a faint.
+Samuel soon brought me to myself, and, after a deep draught of
+wine and water, I was greatly revived, and felt my spirit rise
+above the sphere of vulgar conceptions and the restrained views
+of unregenerate men. The shrewd but loquacious fellow,
+perceiving this, tried to make some amends for the pain he had
+occasioned to me by the following story, which I noted down,
+and which was brought on by a conversation to the following
+purport:
+
+"Now, Penpunt, you may tell me all that passed between you and
+the wives of the clachan. I am better of that stomach qualm, with
+which I am sometimes seized, and shall be much amused by
+hearing the sentiments of noted witches regarding myself and my
+connections."
+
+"Weel, you see, sir, I says to them, 'It will be lang afore the deil
+intermeddle wi' as serious a professor, and as fervent a prayer as
+my master, for, gin he gets the upper hand o' sickan men, wha's to
+be safe?' An', what think ye they said, sir? There was ane Lucky
+Shaw set up her lang lantern chafts, an' answered me, an' a' the
+rest shanned and noddit in assent an' approbation: 'Ye silly,
+sauchless, Cameronian cuif!' quo she, 'is that a' that ye ken about
+the wiles and doings o' the Prince o' the Air, that rules an' works
+in the bairns of disobedience? Gin ever he observes a proud
+professor, wha has mae than ordinary pretensions to a divine
+calling, and that reards and prays till the very howlets learn his
+preambles, that's the man Auld Simmie fixes on to mak a
+dishclout o'. He canna get rest in Hell, if he sees a man, or a set of
+men o' this stamp, an, when he sets fairly to work, it is seldom
+that he disna bring them round till his ain measures by hook or by
+crook. Then, Oh! it is a grand prize for him, an' a proud Deil he
+is, when he gangs hame to his ain ha', wi' a batch o' the souls o'
+sic strenuous professors on his back. Aye, I trow, auld Ingleby,
+the Liverpool packman, never came up Glasco street wi' prouder
+pomp when he had ten horse-laids afore him o' Flanders lace, an'
+Hollin lawn, an' silks an' satins frae the eastern Indians, than
+Satan wad strodge into Hell with a packlaid o' the souls o' proud
+professors on his braid shoulders. Ha, ha, ha! I think I see how
+the auld thief wad be gaun through his gizened dominions, crying
+his wares, in derision, "Wha will buy a fresh, cauler divine, a
+bouzy bishop, a fasting zealot, or a piping priest?" For a' their
+prayers an' their praises, their aumuses, an' their penances, their
+whinings, their howlings, their rantings, an' their ravings, here
+they come at last! Behold the end! Here go the rare and precious
+wares! A fat professor for a bodle, an' a lean ane for half a merk!'
+I declare I trembled at the auld hag's ravings, but the lave o' the
+kimmers applauded the sayings as sacred truths. An' then Lucky
+went on: 'There are many wolves in sheep's claithing, among us,
+my man; mony deils aneath the masks o' zealous professors,
+roaming about in kirks and meetinghouses o' the land. It was but
+the year afore the last that the people o' the town o'
+Auchtermuchty grew so rigidly righteous that the meanest hind
+among them became a shining light in ither towns an' parishes.
+There was naught to be heard, neither night nor day, but
+preaching, praying, argumentation, an' catechising in a' the
+famous town o' Auchtermuchty. The young men wooed their
+sweethearts out o' the Song o' Solomon, an' the girls returned
+answers in strings o' verses out o' the Psalms. At the lint-swinglings,
+they said questions round; and read chapters, and sang hymns at
+bridals; auld and young prayed in their dreams, an' prophesied in
+their sleep, till the deils in the farrest nooks o' Hell were alarmed,
+and moved to commotion. Gin it hadna been an auld carl, Robin
+Ruthven, Auchtermuchty wad at that time hae been ruined and
+lost for ever. But Robin was a cunning man, an' had rather mae
+wits than his ain, for he had been in the hands o' the fairies when
+he was young, an' a' kinds o' spirits were visible to his een, an'
+their language as familiar to him as his ain mother tongue. Robin
+was sitting on the side o' the West Lowmond, ae still gloomy
+night in September, when he saw a bridal o' corbie craws coming
+east the lift, just on the edge o' the gloaming. The moment that
+Robin saw them, he kenned, by their movements, that they were
+craws o' some ither warld than this; so he signed himself, and
+crap into the middle o' his bourock. The corbie craws came a' an'
+sat down round about him, an' they poukit their black sooty
+wings, an' spread them out to the breeze to cool; and Robin heard
+ae corbie speaking, an' another answering him; and the tane said
+to the tither: "Where will the ravens find a prey the night?" "On
+the lean crazy souls o' Auchtermuchty," quo the tither. "I fear
+they will be o'er weel wrappit up in the warm flannens o' faith, an
+clouted wi' the dirty duds o' repentance, for us to mak a meal o',"
+quo the first. "Whaten vile sounds are these that I hear coming
+bumming up the hill?" "Oh, these are the hymns and praises o' the
+auld wives and creeshy louns o' Auchtermuchty, wha are gaun
+crooning their way to Heaven; an', gin it warna for the shame o'
+being beat, we might let our great enemy tak them. For sic a prize
+as he will hae! Heaven, forsooth! What shall we think o' Heaven,
+if it is to be filled wi' vermin like thae, amang whom there is mair
+poverty and pollution than I can name." "No matter for that," said
+the first, "we cannot have our power set at defiance; though we
+should put them on the thief's hole, we must catch them, and
+catch them with their own bait, too. Come all to church to-
+morrow, and I'll let you hear how I'll gull the saints of
+Auchtermuchty. in the meantime, there is a feast on the Sidlaw
+hills tonight, below the hill of Macbeth--Mount, Diabolus, and
+fly." Then, with loud croaking and crowing, the bridal of corbies
+again scaled the dusky air, and left Robin Ruthven in the middle
+of his cairn.
+
+"'The next day the congregation met in the kirk of
+Auchtermuchty, but the minister made not his appearance. The
+elder ran out and in making inquiries; but they could learn
+nothing, save that the minister was missing. They ordered the
+clerk to sing a part of the 119th Psalm, until they saw if the
+minister would cast up. The clerk did as he was ordered, and, by
+the time he reached the 77th verse, a strange divine entered the
+church, by the western door, and advanced solemnly up to the
+pulpit. The eyes of all the congregation were riveted on the
+sublime stranger, who was clothed in a robe of black sackcloth,
+that flowed all around him, and trailed far behind, and they
+weened him an angel, come to exhort them, in disguise. He read
+out his text from the Prophecies of Ezekiel, which consisted of
+these singular words: "I will overturn, overturn, overturn it; and it
+shall be no more, until he come, whose right it is, and I will give
+it him."
+
+"'From these words he preached such a sermon as never was
+heard by human ears, at least never by ears of Auchtermuchty. It
+was a true, sterling, gospel sermon--it was striking, sublime, and
+awful in the extreme. He finally made out the IT, mentioned in
+the text, to mean, properly and positively, the notable town of
+Auchtermuchty. He proved all the people in it, to their perfect
+satisfaction, to be in the gall of bitterness and bond of iniquity,
+and he assured them that God would overturn them, their
+principles, and professions; and that they should be no more, until
+the Devil, the town's greatest enemy, came, and then it should be
+given unto him for a prey, for it was his right, and to him it
+belonged, if there was not forthwith a radical change made in all
+their opinions and modes of worship.
+
+"'The inhabitants of Auchtermuchty were electrified--they were
+charmed; they were actually raving mad about the grand and
+sublime truths delivered to them by this eloquent and impressive
+preacher of Christianity. "He is a prophet of the Lord," said one,
+"sent to warn us, as Jonah was sent to the Ninevites." "Oh, he is
+an angel sent from Heaven, to instruct this great city," said
+another, "for no man ever uttered truths so sublime before." The
+good people of Auchtermuchty were in perfect raptures with the
+preacher, who had thus sent them to Hell by the slump, tag-rag,
+and bobtail! Nothing in the world delights a truly religious people
+so much as consigning them to eternal damnation. They
+wandered after the preacher--they crowded together, and spoke of
+his sermon with admiration, and still, as they conversed, the
+wonder and the admiration increased; so that honest Robin
+Ruthven's words would not be listened to. It was in vain that he
+told them he heard a raven speaking, and another raven
+answering him: the people laughed him to scorn, and kicked him
+out of their assemblies, as a one who spoke evil of dignities; and
+they called him a warlock, an' a daft body, to think to mak
+language out o' the crouping o' craws.
+
+"'The sublime preacher could not be heard of, although all the
+country was sought for him, even to the minutest corner of St.
+Johnston and Dundee; but as he had announced another sermon
+on the same text, on a certain day, all the inhabitants of that
+populous country, far and near, flocked to Auchtermuchty. Cupar,
+Newburgh, and Strathmiglo, turned out men, women and
+children. Perth and Dundee gave their thousands; and, from the
+East Nook of Fife to the foot of the Grampian hills, there was
+nothing but running and riding that morning to Auchtermuchty.
+The kirk would not hold the thousandth part of them. A splendid
+tent was erected on the brae north of the town, and round that the
+countless congregation assembled. When they were all waiting
+anxiously for the great preacher, behold, Robin Ruthven set up
+his head in the tent, and warned his countrymen to beware of the
+doctrines they were about to hear, for he could prove, to their
+satisfaction, that they were all false, and tended to their
+destruction!
+
+"'The whole multitude raised a cry of indignation against Robin,
+and dragged him from the tent, the elders rebuking him, and the
+multitude threatening to resort to stronger measures; and, though
+he told them a plain and unsophisticated tale of the black corbies,
+he was only derided. The great preacher appeared once more, and
+went through his two discourses with increased energy and
+approbation. All who heard him were amazed, and many of them
+went into fits, writhing and foaming in a state of the most horrid
+agitation. Robin Ruthven sat on the outskirts of the great
+assembly, listening with the rest, and perceived what they, in the
+height of their enthusiasm, perceived not the ruinous tendency of
+the tenets so sublimely inculcated. Robin kenned the voice of his
+friend the corby-craw again, and was sure he could not be wrong:
+sae, when public worship was finished, a' the elders an' a' the
+gentry flocked about the great preacher, as he stood on the green
+brae in the sight of the hale congregation, an' a' war alike anxious
+to pay him some mark o' respect. Robin Ruthven came in amang
+the thrang, to try to effect what he had promised; and, with the
+greatest readiness and simplicity, just took baud o' the side o' the
+wide gown, and, in sight of a' present, held it aside as high as the
+preacher's knee, and, behold, there was a pair o' cloven feet! The
+auld thief was fairly catched in the very height o' his proud
+conquest, an' put down by an auld carl. He could feign nae mair,
+but, gnashing on Robin wi' his teeth, he dartit into the air like a
+fiery dragon, an' keust a reid rainbow o'er the taps o' the
+Lowmonds.
+
+"'A' the auld wives an weavers o' Auchtermuchty fell down flat
+wi' affright, an' betook them to their prayers aince again, for they
+saw the dreadfu' danger they had escapit, an' frae that day to this
+it is a hard matter to gar an Auchtermuchty man listen to a
+sermon at a', an' a harder ane still to gar him applaud ane, for he
+thinks aye that he sees the cloven foot peeping out frae aneath
+ilka sentence.
+
+"'Now, this is a true story, my man,' quo the auld wife, 'an',
+whenever you are doubtfu' of a man, take auld Robin Ruthven's
+plan, an' look for the cloven foot, for it's a thing that winna weel
+hide; an' it appears whiles where ane wadna think o't. It will keek
+out frae aneath the parson's gown, the lawyer's wig, and the
+Cameronian's blue bannet; but still there is a gouden rule
+whereby to detect it, an' that never, never fails.' The auld witch
+didna gie me the rule, an' though I hae heard tell o't often an'
+often, shame fa' me an I ken what it is! But ye will ken it well, an'
+it wad be nae the waur of a trial on some o' your friends, maybe;
+for they say there's a certain gentleman seen walking wi' you
+whiles, that, wherever he sets his foot, the grass withers as gin it
+war scoudered wi' a het ern. His presence be about us! What's the
+matter wi' you, master. Are ye gaun to take the calm o' the
+stamock again?"
+
+The truth is, that the clown's absurd story, with the still more
+ridiculous application, made me sick at heart a second time. It
+was not because I thought my illustrious friend was the Devil, or
+that I took a fool's idle tale as a counterbalance to Divine
+revelation that had assured me of my justification in the sight of
+God before the existence of time. But, in short, it gave me a view
+of my own state, at which I shuddered, as indeed I now always
+did when the image of my devoted friend and ruler presented
+itself to my mind. I often communed, with my heart on this, and
+wondered how a connection, that had the well-being of mankind
+solely in view, could be productive of fruits so bitter. I then went
+to try my works by the Saviour's golden rule, as my servant had
+put it into my head to do; and, behold, not one of them could
+stand the test. I had shed blood on a ground on which I could not
+admit that any man had a right to shed mine; and I began to doubt
+the motives of my adviser once more, not that they were
+intentionally bad, but that his was some great mind led astray by
+enthusiasm or some overpowering passion.
+
+He seemed to comprehend every one of these motions of my
+heart, for his manner towards me altered every day. It first
+became anything but agreeable, then supercilious, and, finally,
+intolerable; so that I resolved to shake him off, cost what it
+would, even though I should be reduced to beg my bread in a
+foreign land. To do it at home was impossible, as he held my life
+in his hands, to sell it whenever he had a mind; and, besides, his
+ascendancy over me was as complete as that of a huntsman over
+his dogs: I was even so weak as, the next time I met with him, to
+look steadfastly at his foot, to see if it was not cloven into two
+hoofs. It was the foot of a gentleman in every respect, so far as
+appearances went, but the form of his counsels was somewhat
+equivocal, and, if not double, they were amazingly crooked.
+
+But, if I had taken my measures to abscond and fly from my
+native place, in order to free myself of this tormenting, intolerant,
+and bloody reformer, he had likewise taken his to expel me, or
+throw me into the hands of justice. It seems that, about this time, I
+was haunted by some spies connected with my late father and
+brother, of whom the mistress of the former was one. My
+brother's death had been witnessed by two individuals; indeed, I
+always had an impression that it was witnessed by more than one,
+having some faint recollection of hearing voices and challenges
+close beside me; and this woman had searched about until she
+found these people; but, as I shrewdly suspected, not without the
+assistance of the only person in my secret--my own warm and
+devoted friend. I say this, because I found that he had them
+concealed in the neighbourhood, and then took me again and
+again where I was fully exposed to their view, without being
+aware. One time in particular, on pretence of gratifying my
+revenge on that base woman, he knew so well where she lay
+concealed that he led me to her, and left me to the mercy of two
+viragos who had very nigh taken my life. My time of residence at
+Dalcastle was wearing to a crisis. I could no longer live with my
+tyrant, who haunted me like my shadow; and, besides, it seems
+there were proofs of murder leading against me from all quarters.
+Of part of these I deemed myself quite free, but the world deemed
+otherwise; and how the matter would have gone God only knows,
+for, the case never having undergone a judicial trial, I do not. It
+perhaps, however, behoves me here to relate all that I know of it,
+and it is simply this:
+
+On the first of June,1712 (well may I remember the day), I was
+sitting locked in my secret chamber, in a state of the utmost
+despondency, revolving in my mind what I ought to do to be free
+of my persecutors, and wishing myself a worm, or a moth, that I
+might be crushed and at rest, when behold Samuel entered, with
+eyes like to start out of his head, exclaiming: "For God's sake,
+master, fly and hide yourself, for your mother's found, an' as sure
+as you're a living soul, the blame is gaun to fa' on you!"
+
+"My mother found!" said I. "And, pray, where has she been all
+this while?" In the meantime, I was terribly discomposed at the
+thoughts of her return.
+
+"Been, sir! Been? Why, she has been where ye pat her, it seems--
+lying buried in the sands o' the linn. I can tell you, ye will see her
+a frightsome figure, sic as I never wish to see again. An' the
+young lady is found too, sir: an' it is said the Devil--I beg pardon,
+sir, your friend, I mean--it is said your friend has made the
+discovery, an' the folk are away to raise officers, an' they will be
+here in an hour or two at the farthest, sir; an' sae you hae not a
+minute to lose, for there's proof, sir, strong proof, an' sworn
+proof, that ye were last seen wi' them baith; sae, unless ye can gie
+a' the better an account o' baith yoursel an' them either hide or
+flee for your bare life."
+
+"I will neither hide nor fly," said I, "for I am as guiltless of the
+blood of these women as the child unborn."
+
+"The country disna think sae, master; an' I can assure you that,
+should evidence fail, you run a risk o' being torn limb frae limb.
+They are bringing the corpse here, to gar ye touch them baith
+afore witnesses, an' plenty o' witnesses there will be!"
+
+"They shall not bring them here," cried I, shocked beyond
+measure at the experiment about to be made. "Go, instantly and
+debar them from entering my gate with their bloated and mangled
+carcases!"
+
+"The body of your own mother, sir!" said the fellow
+emphatically. I was in terrible agitation; and, being driven to my
+wits' end, I got up and strode furiously round and round the room.
+Samuel wist not what to do, but I saw by his staring he deemed
+me doubly guilty. A tap came to the chamber door: we both
+started like guilty creatures; and as for Samuel, his hairs stood all
+on end with alarm, so that, when I motioned to him, he could
+scarcely advance to open the door. He did so at length, and who
+should enter but my illustrious friend, manifestly in the utmost
+state of alarm. The moment that Samuel admitted him, the former
+made his escape by the prince's side as he entered, seemingly in a
+state of distraction. I was little better, when I saw this dreaded
+personage enter my chamber, which he had never before
+attempted; and. being unable to ask his errand, I suppose I stood
+and gazed on him like a statue.
+
+"I come with sad and tormenting tidings to you, my beloved and
+ungrateful friend," said he, "but, having only a minute left to save
+your life, I have come to attempt it. There is a mob coming
+towards you with two dead bodies, which will place you in
+circumstances disagreeable enough: but that is not the worst, for
+of that you may be able to clear yourself. At this moment there is
+a party of officers, with a justiciary warrant from Edinburgh,
+surrounding the house, and about to begin the search of it for you.
+If you fall into their hands, you are inevitably lost; for I have been
+making earnest inquiries, and find that everything is in train for
+your ruin."
+
+"Aye, and who has been the cause of all this?" said I, with great
+bitterness. But he stopped me short, adding, "There is no time for
+such reflections at present; I gave my word of honour, that your
+life should be safe from the hand of man. So it shall, if the power
+remain with me to save it. I am come to redeem my pledge, and
+to save your life by the sacrifice of my own. Here--not one word
+of expostulation, change habits with me, and you may then pass
+by the officers, and guards, and even through the approaching
+mob, with the most perfect temerity. There is a virtue in this garb,
+and, instead of offering to detain you, they shall pay you
+obeisance. Make haste, and leave this place for the present, flying
+where you best may, and, if I escape from these dangers that
+surround me, I will endeavour to find you out, and bring you
+what intelligence I am able."
+
+I put on his green frock coat, buff belt, and a sort of a turban that
+he always wore on his head, somewhat resembling a bishop's
+mitre: he drew his hand thrice across my face, and I withdrew as
+he continued to urge me. My hall door and postern gate were both
+strongly guarded, and there were sundry armed people within,
+searching the closets; but all of them made way for me, and lifted
+their caps as I passed by them. Only one superior officer accosted
+me, asking if I had seen the culprit. I knew not what answer to
+make, but chanced to say, with great truth and propriety: "He is
+safe enough." The man beckoned with a smile, as much as to say:
+"Thank you, sir, that is quite sufficient," and I walked
+deliberately away.
+
+I had not well left the gate till, hearing a great noise coming from
+the deep glen towards the east, I turned that way, deeming myself
+quite secure in this my new disguise, to see what it was, and if
+matters were as had been described to me. There I met a great
+mob, sure enough, coming with two dead bodies stretched on
+boards, and decently covered with white sheets. I would fain have
+examined their appearance, had I not perceived the apparent fury
+in the looks of the men, and judged from that how much more
+safe it was for me not to intermeddle in the affray. I cannot tell
+how it was, but I felt a strange and unwonted delight in viewing
+this scene, and a certain pride of heart in being supposed the
+perpetrator of the unnatural crimes laid to my charge. This was a
+feeling quite new to me; and if there were virtues in the robes of
+the illustrious foreigner, who had without all dispute preserved
+my life at this time: I say, if there was any inherent virtue in these
+robes of his, as he had suggested, this was one of their effects'
+that they turned my heart towards that which was evil, horrible,
+and disgustful.
+
+I mixed with the mob to hear what they were saying. Every
+tongue was engaged in loading me with the most opprobrious
+epithets! One called me a monster of nature; another an incarnate
+devil; and another a creature made to be cursed in time and
+eternity. I retired from them and, winded my way southwards,
+comforting myself with the assurance that so mankind had used
+and persecuted the greatest fathers and apostles of the Christian
+Church, and that their vile opprobrium could not alter the
+counsels of Heaven concerning me.
+
+On going over that rising ground called Dorington Moor, I could
+not help turning round and taking a look of Dalcastle. I had little
+doubt that it would be my last look, and nearly as little ambition
+that it should not. I thought how high my hopes of happiness and
+advancement had been on entering that mansion, and taking
+possession of its rich and extensive domains, and how miserably
+I had been disappointed. On the contrary, I had experienced
+nothing but chagrin, disgust, and terror; and I now consoled
+myself with the hope that I should henceforth shake myself free
+of the chains of my great tormentor, and for that privilege was I
+willing to encounter any earthly distress. I could not help
+perceiving that I was now on a path which was likely to lead me
+into a species of distress hitherto unknown, and hardly dreamed
+of by me, and that was total destitution. For all the riches I had
+been possessed of a few hours previous to this, I found that here I
+was turned out of my lordly possessions without a single merk, or
+the power of lifting and commanding the smallest sum, without
+being thereby discovered and seized. Had it been possible for me
+to have escaped in my own clothes, I had a considerable sum
+secreted in these, but, by the sudden change, I was left without a
+coin for present necessity. But I had hope in Heaven, knowing
+that the just man would not be left destitute and that, though
+many troubles surrounded him, he would at last be set free from
+them all. I was possessed of strong and brilliant parts, and a
+liberal education; and, though I had somehow unaccountably
+suffered my theological qualifications to fall into desuetude, since
+my acquaintance with the ablest and most rigid of all theologians,
+I had nevertheless hopes that, by preaching up redemption by
+grace, preordination, and eternal purpose, I should yet be enabled
+to benefit mankind in some country, and rise to high distinction.
+
+These were some of the thoughts by which I consoled myself as I
+posted on my way southwards, avoiding the towns and villages,
+and falling into the cross ways that led from each of the great
+roads passing east and west to another. I lodged the first night in
+the house of a country weaver, into which I stepped at a late hour,
+quite overcome with hunger and fatigue, having travelled not less
+than thirty miles from my late home. The man received me
+ungraciously, telling me of a gentleman's house at no great
+distance, and of an inn a little farther away; but I said I delighted
+more in the society of a man like him than that of any gentleman
+of the land, for my concerns were with the poor of this world, it
+being easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for
+a rich man to enter into the kingdom of heaven.
+
+The weaver's wife, who sat with a child on her knee, and had not
+hitherto opened her mouth, hearing me speak in that serious and
+religious style, stirred up the fire with her one hand; then,
+drawing a chair near it, she said: "Come awa, honest lad, in by
+here; sin' it be sae that you belang to Him wha gies us a' that we
+hae, it is but right that you should share a part. You are a stranger,
+it is true, but them that winna entertain a stranger will never
+entertain an angel unawares."
+
+I never was apt to be taken with the simplicity of nature; in
+general I despised it; but, owing to my circumstances at the time,
+I was deeply affected by the manner of this poor woman's
+welcome. The weaver continued in a churlish mood throughout
+the evening, apparently dissatisfied with what his wife had done
+in entertaining me, and spoke to her in a manner so crusty that I
+thought proper to rebuke him, for the woman was comely in her
+person, and virtuous in her conversation; but the weaver, her
+husband, was large of make, ill-favoured, and pestilent; therefore
+did I take him severely to task for the tenor of his conduct; but the
+man was froward, and answered me rudely with sneering and
+derision and, in the height of his caprice, he said to his wife:
+"Whan focks are sae keen of a chance o' entertaining angels,
+gude-wife, it wad maybe be worth their while to tak tent what
+kind o' angels they are. It wadna wonder me vera muckle an ye
+had entertained your friend the Deil the night, for aw thought aw
+fand a saur o' reek an' brimstane about him. He's nane o' the best
+o' angels, an focks winna hae muckle credit by entertaining him."
+
+Certainly, in the assured state I was in, I had as little reason to be
+alarmed at mention being made of the Devil as any person on
+earth: of late, however, I felt that the reverse was the case, and
+that any allusion to my great enemy moved me exceedingly. The
+weaver's speech had such an effect on me that both he and his
+wife were alarmed at my looks. The latter thought I was angry,
+and chided her husband gently for his rudeness; but the weaver
+himself rather seemed to be confirmed in his opinion that I was
+the Devil, for he looked round like a startled roe-buck, and
+immediately betook him to the family Bible.
+
+I know not whether it was on purpose to prove my identity or not,
+but I think he was going to desire me either to read a certain
+portion of Scripture that he had sought out, or to make family
+worship, had not the conversation at that instant taken another
+turn; for the weaver, not knowing how to address me, abruptly
+asked my name, as he was about to put the Bible into my hands.
+Never having considered myself in the light of a male-factor, but
+rather as a champion in the cause of truth, and finding myself
+perfectly safe under my disguise, I had never once thought of the
+utility of changing my name, and, when the man asked me, I
+hesitated; but, being compelled to say something, I said my name
+was Cowan. The man stared at me, and then at his wife, with a
+look that spoke a knowledge of something alarming or
+mysterious.
+
+"Ha! Cowan?" said he. "That's most extraordinar! Not Colwan, I
+hope?"
+
+"No: Cowan is my sirname," said I. "But why not Colwan, there
+being so little difference in the sound?"
+
+"I was feared ye might be that waratch that the Deil has taen the
+possession o', an' eggit him on to kill baith his father an' his
+mother, his only brother, an' his sweetheart," said he; "an', to say
+the truth, I'm no that sure about you yet, for I see you're gaun wi'
+arms on ye."
+
+"Not I, honest man," said I. "I carry no arms; a man conscious of
+his innocence and uprightness of heart needs not to carry arms in
+his defence now."
+
+"Aye, aye, maister," said he; "an' pray what div ye ca' this bit
+windlestrae that's appearing here?" With that he pointed to
+something on the inside of the breast of my frock-coat. I looked
+at it, and there certainly was the gilded haft of a poniard, the same
+weapon I had seen and handled before, and which I knew my
+illustrious companion carried about with him; but till that
+moment I knew not that I was in possession of it. I drew it out: a
+more dangerous or insidious-looking weapon could not be
+conceived. The weaver and his wife were both frightened, the
+latter in particular; and she being my friend, and I dependent on
+their hospitality for that night, I said: "I declare I knew not that I
+carried this small rapier, which has been in my coat by chance,
+and not by any design of mine. But, lest you should think that I
+meditate any mischief to any under this roof I give it into your
+hands, requesting of you to lock it by till tomorrow, or when I
+shall next want it."
+
+The woman seemed rather glad to get hold of it; and taking it
+from me, she went into a kind of pantry out of my sight, and
+locked the weapon up; and then the discourse went on.
+
+"There cannot be such a thing in reality," said I, "as the story you
+were mentioning just now, of a man whose name resembles
+mine."
+
+"It's likely that you ken a wee better about the story than I do,
+maister," said he, "suppose you do leave the L out of your name.
+An' yet I think sic a waratch, an' a murderer, wad hae taen a name
+wi' some gritter difference in the sound. But the story is just that
+true that there were twa o' the Queen's officers here nae mair than
+an hour ago, in pursuit o' the vagabond, for they gat some
+intelligence that he had fled this gate; yet they said he had been
+last seen wi' black claes on, an' they supposed he was clad in
+black. His ain servant is wi' them, for the purpose o' kennin the
+scoundrel, an' they're galloping through the country like madmen.
+I hope in God they'll get him, an' rack his neck for him!"
+
+I could not say Amen to the weaver's prayer, and therefore tried
+to compose myself as well as I could, and made some religious
+comment on the causes of the nation's depravity. But suspecting
+that my potent friend had betrayed my flight and disguise, to save
+his life, I was very uneasy, and gave myself up for lost. I said
+prayers in the family, with the tenor of which the wife was
+delighted, but the weaver still dissatisfied; and, after a supper of
+the most homely fare, he tried to start an argument with me,
+proving that everything for which I had interceded in my prayer
+was irrelevant to man's present state. But I, being weary and
+distressed in mind, shunned the contest, and requested a couch
+whereon to repose.
+
+I was conducted into the other end of the house, among looms,
+treadles, pirns, and confusion without end; and there, in a sort of
+box, was I shut up for my night's repose, for the weaver, as he left
+me, cautiously turned the key of my apartment, and left me to
+shift for myself among the looms, determined that I should
+escape from the house with nothing. After he and his wife and
+children were crowded into their den, I heard the two mates
+contending furiously about me in suppressed voices, the one
+maintaining the probability that I was the murderer, and the other
+proving the impossibility of it. The husband, however, said as
+much as let me understand that he had locked me up on purpose
+to bring the military, or officers of justice, to seize me. I was in
+the utmost perplexity, yet for all that, and the imminent danger I
+was in, I fell asleep, and a more troubled and tormenting sleep
+never enchained a mortal frame. I had such dreams that they will
+not bear repetition, and early in the morning I awaked, feverish,
+and parched with thirst.
+
+I went to call mine host, that he might let me out to the open air,
+but, before doing so, I thought it necessary to put on some
+clothes. In attempting to do this, a circumstance arrested my
+attention (for which I could in nowise account, which to this day I
+cannot unriddle, nor shall I ever be able to comprehend it while I
+live): the frock and turban, which had furnished my disguise on
+the preceding day, were both removed, and my own black coat
+and cocked hat laid down in their place. At first I thought I was in
+a dream, and felt the weaver's beam, web, and treadle-strings with
+my hands, to convince myself that I was awake. I was certainly
+awake; and there was the door locked firm and fast as it was the
+evening before. I carried my own black coat to the small window
+and examined it. It was my own in verity; and the sums of money
+that I had concealed in case of any emergency, remained
+untouched. I trembled with astonishment; and on my return from
+the small window went doiting in amongst the weaver's looms,
+till I entangled myself, and could not get out again without
+working great deray amongst the coarse linen threads that stood
+in warp from one end of the apartment unto the other. I had no knife
+whereby to cut the cords of this wicked man, and therefore was
+obliged to call out lustily for assistance. The weaver came half
+naked, unlocked the door, and, setting in his head and long neck,
+accosted me thus:
+
+"What now, Mr. Satan? What for art ye roaring that gate? Are
+you fawn inna little hell, instead o' the big muckil ane? Deil be in
+your reistit trams! What for have ye abscondit yoursel into ma
+leddy's wab for?"
+
+"Friend, I beg your pardon," said I. "I wanted to be at the light,
+and have somehow unfortunately involved myself in the
+intricacies of your web, from which I cannot get dear without
+doing you a great injury. Pray do lend your experienced hand to
+extricate me."
+
+"May aw the pearls o' damnation light on your silly snout, an I
+dinna estricat ye weel enough! Ye ditit donnart, deil's burd that ye
+be! What made ye gang howkin in there to be a poor man's ruin?
+Come out, ye vile rag-of-a-muffin, or I gar ye come out wi' mair
+shame and disgrace, an' fewer haill banes in your body."
+
+My feet had slipped down through the double warpings of a web,
+and not being able to reach the ground with them (there being a
+small pit below) I rode upon a number of yielding threads, and,
+there being nothing else that I could reach, to extricate myself
+was impossible. I was utterly powerless; and, besides, the yarn
+and cords hurt me very much. For all that, the destructive weaver
+seized a loom-spoke, and began a-beating me most unmercifully,
+while, entangled as I was, I could do nothing but shout aloud for
+mercy, or assistance, whichever chanced to be within hearing.
+The latter at length made its appearance in the form of the
+weaver's wife, in the same state of dishabille with himself, who
+instantly interfered, and that most strenuously, on my behalf.
+Before her arrival, however, I had made a desperate effort to
+throw myself out of the entanglement I was in; for the weaver
+continued repeating his blows and cursing me so that I
+determined to get out of his meshes at any risk. The effect made
+my case worse; for, my feet being wrapt among the nether
+threads, as I threw myself from my saddle on the upper ones, my
+feet brought the others up through these, and I hung with my head
+down and my feet as firm as they had been in a vice. The
+predicament of the web being thereby increased, the weaver's
+wrath was doubled in proportion, and he laid on without mercy.
+
+At this critical juncture the wife arrived, and without hesitation
+rushed before her offended lord, withholding his hand from
+injuring me further, although then it was uplifted along with the
+loom-spoke in overbearing ire. "Dear Johnny! I think ye be gaen
+dementit this morning. Be quiet, my dear, an' dinna begin a
+Boddel Brigg business in your ain house. What for ir ye
+persecutin' a servant o' the Lord's that gate, an' pitting the life out
+o' him wi' his head down an' his heels up?"
+
+"Had ye said a servant o' the Deil's, Nans, ye wad hae been nearer
+the nail, for gin he binna the Auld Ane himsel, he's gayan sib till
+him. There, didna I lock him in on purpose to bring the military
+on him; an' in the place o' that, hasna he keepit me in a sleep a'
+this while as deep as death? An' here do I find him abscondit like
+a speeder i' the mids o' my leddy's wab, an' me dreamin' a' the
+night that I had the Deil i' my house, an' that he was clapper-
+clawin me ayont the loom. Have at you, ye brunstane thief!" and,
+in spite of the good woman's struggles, he lent me another severe
+blow.
+
+"Now, Johnny Dods, my man! oh, Johnny Dods, think if that be
+like a Christian, and ane o' the heroes o' Boddel Brigg, to
+entertain a stranger, an' then bind him in a web wi' his head down,
+an' mell him to death! oh, Johnny Dods, think what you are
+about! Slack a pin, an' let the good honest religious lad out."
+
+The weaver was rather overcome, but still stood to his point that I
+was the Deil, though in better temper; and, as he slackened the
+web to release me, he remarked, half laughing: "Wha wad hae
+thought that John Dods should hae escapit a' the snares an'
+dangers that circumfauldit him, an' at last should hae weaved a
+net to catch the Deil."
+
+The wife released me soon, and carefully whispered me, at the
+same time, that it would be as well for me to dress and be going. I
+was not long in obeying, and dressed myself in my black clothes,
+hardly knowing what I did, what to think, or whither to betake
+myself. I was sore hurt by the blows of the desperate ruffian; and,
+what was worse, my ankle was so much strained that I could
+hardly set my foot to the ground. I was obliged to apply to the
+weaver once more, to see if I could learn anything about my
+clothes, or how the change was effected. "Sir," said I, "how comes
+it that you have robbed me of my clothes, and put these down in
+their place over night?"
+
+"Ha! thae claes? Me pit down the claes!" said he, gaping with
+astonishment, and touching the clothes with the point of his
+forefinger. "I never saw them afore, as I have death to meet wi',
+so help me God!"
+
+He strode into the work-house where I slept, to satisfy himself
+that my clothes were not there, and returned perfectly aghast with
+consternation. "The doors were baith fast lockit," said he. "I could
+hae defied a rat either to hae gotten out or in. My dream has been
+true! My dream has been true! The Lord judge between thee and
+me; but in His name, I charge you to depart out o' this house; an',
+gin it be your will, dinna tak the braidside o't w'ye, but gang
+quietly out at the door wi' your face foremost. Wife, let naught o'
+this enchanter's remain i' the house, to be a curse, an' a snare to
+us; gang an' bring him his gildit weapon, an' may the Lord protect
+a' his ain against its hellish an' deadly point!"
+
+The wife went to seek my poniard, trembling so excessively that
+she could hardly walk, and, shortly after, we heard a feeble
+scream from the pantry. The weapon had disappeared with the
+clothes, though under double lock and key; and, the terror of the
+good people having now reached a disgusting extremity, I
+thought proper to make a sudden retreat, followed by the weaver's
+anathemas.
+
+My state both of body and mind was now truly deplorable. I was
+hungry, wounded, and lame, an outcast and a vagabond in
+society; my life sought after with avidity, and all for doing that to
+which I was predestined by Him who fore-ordains whatever
+comes to pass. I knew not whither to betake me. I had purposed
+going into England and there making some use of the classical
+education I had received, but my lameness rendered this
+impracticable for the present. I was therefore obliged to turn my
+face towards Edinburgh, where I was little known--where
+concealment was more practicable than by skulking in the
+country, and where I might turn my mind to something that was
+great and good. I had a little money, both Scotch and English,
+now in my possession, but not one friend in the whole world on
+whom I could rely. One devoted friend, it is true, I had, but he
+was become my greatest terror. To escape from him, I now felt
+that I would willingly travel to the farthest corners of the world,
+and be subjected to every deprivation; but after the certainty of
+what had taken place last night, after I had travelled thirty miles
+by secret and by-ways, I saw not how escape from him was
+possible.
+
+Miserable, forlorn, and dreading every person that I saw, either
+behind or before me, I hasted on towards Edinburgh, taking all
+the by and unfrequented paths; and, the third night after I left the
+weaver's house, I reached the West Port, without meeting with
+anything remarkable. Being exceedingly fatigued and lame, I
+took lodgings in the first house I entered, and for these I was to
+pay two groats a week, and to board and sleep with a young man
+who wanted a companion to make his rent easier. I liked this;
+having found from experience that the great personage who had
+attached himself to me, and was now become my greatest terror
+among many surrounding evils, generally haunted me when I was
+alone keeping aloof from all other society.
+
+My fellow lodger came home in the evening, and was glad at my
+coming. His name was Linton, and I changed mine to Elliot. He
+was a flippant unstable being, one on whom nothing appeared a
+difficulty, in his own estimation, but who could effect very little
+after all. He was what is called by some a compositor, in the
+Queen's printing house, then conducted by a Mr. James Watson.
+In the course of our conversation that night, I told him I was a
+first-rate classical scholar, and would gladly turn my attention to
+some business wherein my education might avail me something;
+and that there was nothing would delight me so much as an
+engagement in the Queen's printing office. Linton made no
+difficulty in bringing about that arrangement. His answer was:
+"Oo, gud sir, you are the very man we want. Gud bless your
+breast and your buttons, sir! Aye, that's neither here nor there.
+That's all very well. Ha, ha, ha. A by-word in the house, sir. But,
+as I was saying, you are the very man we want. You will get any
+money you like to ask, sir. Any money you like, sir. God bless
+your buttons!--That's settled--All done--Settled, setded--I'll do it,
+I'll do it--No more about it; no more about it. Settled, settled."
+
+The next day I went with him to the office, and he presented me
+to Mr. Watson as the most wonderful genius and scholar ever
+known. His recommendation had little sway with Mr. Watson,
+who only smiled at Linton's extravagances, as one does at the
+prattle of an infant. I sauntered about the printing office for the
+space of two or three hours, during which time Watson bustled
+about with green spectacles on his nose, and took no heed of me.
+But, seeing that I still lingered, he addressed me at length, in a
+civil gentlemanly way, and inquired concerning my views. I
+satisfied him with all my answers, in particular those to his
+questions about the Latin and Greek languages; but when he
+came to ask testimonials of my character and acquirements, and
+found that I could produce none, he viewed me with a jealous
+eye, and said he dreaded I was some n'er-do-weel, run from my
+parents or guardians, and he did not choose to employ any such. I
+said my parents were both dead; and that, being thereby deprived
+of the means of following out my education, it behoved me to
+apply to some business in which my education might be of some
+use to me. He said he would take me into the office, and pay me
+according to the business I performed and the manner in which I
+deported myself; but he could take no man into Her Majesty's
+printing office upon a regular engagement who could not produce
+the most respectable references with regard to morals.
+
+I could not but despise the man in my heart who laid such a stress
+upon morals, leaving grace out of the question; and viewed it as a
+deplorable instance of human depravity and self-conceit; but, for
+all that, I was obliged to accept of his terms, for I had an inward
+thirst and longing to distinguish myself in the great cause of
+religion, and I thought, if once I could print my own works, how I
+would astonish mankind, and confound their self-wisdom and
+their esteemed morality--blow up the idea of any dependence on
+good works, and morality, forsooth! And I weened that I might
+thus get me a name even higher than if I had been made a general
+of the Czar Peter's troops against the infidels.
+
+I attended the office some hours every day, but got not much
+encouragement, though I was eager to learn everything, and could
+soon have set types considerably well. It was here that I first
+conceived the idea of writing this journal, and having it printed,
+and applied to Mr. Watson to print it for me, telling him it was a
+religious parable such as the Pilgrim's Progress. He advised me to
+print it close, and make it a pamphlet, and then, if it did not sell, it
+would not cost me much; but that religious pamphlets, especially
+if they had a shade of allegory in them, were the very rage of the
+day. I put my work to the press, and wrote early and late; and
+encouraging my companion to work at odd hours and on
+Sundays, before the press-work of the second sheet was begun,
+we had the work all in types, corrected, and a clean copy thrown
+off for further revisal. The first sheet was wrought off; and I
+never shall forget how my heart exulted when at the printing
+house this day I saw what numbers of my works were to go
+abroad among mankind, and I determined with myself that I
+would not put the Border name of Elliot, which I had assumed, to
+the work.
+
+
+
+Thus far have my History and Confessions been carried.
+
+I must now furnish my Christian readers with a key to the
+process, management, and winding up of the whole matter; which
+I propose, by the assistance of God, to limit to a very few pages.
+
+Chesters, July 27, 1712.--My hopes and prospects are a wreck.
+My precious journal is lost! consigned to the flames! My enemy
+hath found me out, and there is no hope of peace or rest for me on
+this side the grave.
+
+In the beginning of last week, my fellow lodger came home,
+running in a great panic, and told me a story of the Devil having
+appeared twice in the printing house, assisting the workmen at the
+printing of my book, and that some of them had been frightened
+out of their wits. That the story was told to Mr. Watson, who till
+that time had never paid any attention to the treatise, but who, out
+of curiosity, began and read a part of it, and thereupon flew into a
+great rage, called my work a medley of lies and blasphemy, and
+ordered the whole to be consigned to the flames, blaming his
+foreman, and all connected with the press, for letting a work go
+so far that was enough to bring down the vengeance of Heaven on
+the concern.
+
+If ever I shed tears through perfect bitterness of spirit it was at
+that time, but I hope it was more for the ignorance and folly of
+my countrymen than the overthrow of my own hopes. But my
+attention was suddenly aroused to other matters, by Linton
+mentioning that it was said by some in the office the Devil had
+inquired for me.
+
+"Surely you are not such a fool," said I, "as to believe that the
+Devil really was in the printing office?"
+
+"Oo, Gud bless you, sir! Saw him myself, gave him a nod, and
+good-day. Rather a gentlemanly personage--Green Circassian
+hunting coat and turban--Like a foreigner--Has the power of
+vanishing in one moment though--Rather a suspicious
+circumstance that. Otherwise, his appearance not much against
+him."
+
+If the former intelligence thrilled me with grief, this did so with
+terror. I perceived who the personage was that had visited the
+printing house in order to further the progress of my work; and, at
+the approach of every person to our lodgings, I from that instant
+trembled every bone, lest it should be my elevated and dreaded
+friend. I could not say I had ever received an office at his hand
+that was not friendly, yet these offices had been of a strange
+tendency; and the horror with which I now regarded him was
+unaccountable to myself. It was beyond description, conception,
+or the soul of man to bear. I took my printed sheets, the only copy
+of my unfinished work existing; and, on pretence of going
+straight to Mr. Watson's office, decamped from my lodgings at
+Portsburgh a little before the fall of evening, and took the road
+towards England.
+
+As soon as I got clear of the city, I ran with a velocity I knew not
+before I had been capable of. I flew out the way towards Dalkeith
+so swiftly that I often lost sight of the ground, and I said to
+myself, "Oh, that I had the wings of a dove, that I might fly to the
+farthest corners of the earth, to hide me from those against whom
+I have no power to stand!"
+
+I travelled all that night and the next morning, exerting myself
+beyond my power; and about noon the following day I went into
+a yeoman's house, the name of which was Ellanshaws, and
+requested of the people a couch of any sort to lie down on, for I
+was ill, and could not proceed on my journey. They showed me to
+a stable-loft where there were two beds, on one of which I laid
+me down; and, falling into a sound sleep, I did not awake till the
+evening, that other three men came from the fields to sleep in the
+same place, one of whom lay down beside me, at which I was
+exceedingly glad. They fell all sound asleep, and I was terribly
+alarmed at a conversation I overheard somewhere outside the
+stable. I could not make out a sentence, but trembled to think I
+knew one of the voices at least, and, rather than not be mistaken, I
+would that any man had run me through with a sword. I fell into a
+cold sweat, and once thought of instantly putting hand to my own
+life, as my only means of relief (may the rash and sinful thought
+be in mercy forgiven!) when I heard as it were two persons at the
+door, contending, as I thought, about their right and interest in
+me. That the one was forcibly preventing the admission of the
+other, I could hear distinctly, and their language was mixed with
+something dreadful and mysterious. In an agony of terror, I
+awakened my snoring companion with great difficulty, and asked
+him, in a low whisper, who these were at the door. The man lay
+silent and listening till fairly awake, and then asked if I heard
+anything. I said I had heard strange voices contending at the door.
+
+"Then I can tell you, lad, it has been something neither good nor
+canny," said he. "It's no for naething that our horses are snorking
+that gate."
+
+For the first time, I remarked that the animals were snorting and
+rearing as if they wished to break through the house. The man
+called to them by their names, and ordered them to be quiet; but
+they raged still the more furiously. He then roused his drowsy
+companions, who were alike alarmed at the panic of the horses,
+all of them declaring that they had never seen either Mause or
+jolly start in their lives before. My bed-fellow and another then
+ventured down the ladder, and I heard one of them then saying:
+"Lord be wi' us! What can be i' the house? The sweat's rinning off
+the poor beasts like water."
+
+They agreed to sally out together, and if possible to reach the
+kitchen and bring a light. I was glad at this, but not so much so
+when I heard the one man saying to the other, in a whisper: "I
+wish that stranger man may be canny enough."
+
+"God kens!" said the other. "It does nae look unco weel."
+
+The lad in the other bed, hearing this, set up his head in manifest
+affright as the other two departed for the kitchen; and, I believed
+he would have been glad to have been in their company. This lad
+was next the ladder, at which I was extremely glad, for, had he
+not been there, the world should not have induced me to wait the
+return of these two men. They were not well gone before I heard
+another distinctly enter the stable, and come towards the ladder.
+The lad who was sitting up in his bed, intent on the watch, called
+out: "Wha's that there? Walker, is that you? Purdie, I say is it
+you?"
+
+The darkling intruder paused for a few moments, and then came
+towards the foot of the ladder. The horses broke loose, and,
+snorting and neighing for terror, raged through the house. In all
+my life I never heard so frightful a commotion. The being that
+occasioned it all now began to mount the ladder towards our loft,
+on which the lad in the bed next the ladder sprung from his
+couch, crying out: "The L--d A--y preserve us! What can it be?"
+With that he sped across the loft and by my bed, praying lustily
+all the way; and, throwing himself from the other end of the loft
+into a manger, he darted, naked as he was, through among the
+furious horses, and, making the door that stood open, in a
+moment he vanished and left me in the lurch. Powerless with
+terror, and calling out fearfully, I tried to follow his example; but,
+not knowing the situation of the places with regard to one
+another, I missed the manger, and fell on the pavement in one of
+the stalls. I was both stunned and lamed on the knee; but, terror
+prevailing, I got up and tried to escape. It was out of my power;
+for there were divisions and cross divisions in the house, and mad
+horses smashing everything before them, so that I knew not so
+much as on what side of the house the door was. Two or three
+times was I knocked down by the animals. but all the while I
+never stinted crying out with all my power. At length, I was
+seized by the throat and hair of the head, and dragged away, I
+wist not whither. My voice was now laid, and all my powers,
+both mental and bodily, totally overcome; and I remember no
+more till I found myself lying naked on the kitchen table of the
+farm-house, and something like a horse's rug thrown over me.
+The only hint that I got from the people of the house on coming
+to myself was that my absence would be good company; and that
+they had got me in a woeful state, one which they did not choose
+to describe, or hear described.
+
+As soon as day-light appeared, I was packed about my business,
+with the hisses and execrations of the yeoman's family, who
+viewed me as a being to be shunned, ascribing to me the
+visitations of that unholy night. Again was I on my way
+southwards, as lonely, hopeless, and degraded a being as was to
+be found on life's weary round. As I limped out the way, I wept,
+thinking of what I might have been, and what I really had
+become: of my high and flourishing hopes when I set out as the
+avenger of God on the sinful children of men; of all that I had
+dared for the exaltation and progress of the truth; and it was with
+great difficulty that my faith remained unshaken, yet was I
+preserved from that sin, and comforted myself with the certainty
+that the believer's progress through life is one of warfare and
+suffering.
+
+My case was indeed a pitiable one. I was lame, hungry, fatigued,
+and my resources on the very eve of being exhausted. Yet these
+were but secondary miseries, and hardly worthy of a thought
+compared with those I suffered inwardly. I not only looked
+around me with terror at every one that approached, but I was
+become a terror to myself, or, rather, my body and soul were
+become terrors to each other; and, had it been possible, I felt as if
+they would have gone to war. I dared not look at my face in a
+glass, for I shuddered at my own image and likeness. I dreaded
+the dawning, and trembled at the approach of night, nor was there
+one thing in nature that afforded me the least delight.
+
+In this deplorable state of body and mind, was I jogging on
+towards the Tweed, by the side of the small river called Ellan,
+when, just at the narrowest part of the glen, whom should I meet
+full in the face but the very being in all the universe of God
+would the most gladly have shunned. I had no power to fly fro
+him, neither durst I, for the spirit within me, accuse him of
+falsehood and renounce his fellowship. I stood before him like a
+condemned criminal, staring him in the face, ready to be winded,
+twisted, and tormented as he pleased. He regarded me with a sad
+and solemn look. How changed was now that majestic
+countenance to one of haggard despair--changed in all save the
+extraordinary likeness to my late brother, a resemblance which
+misfortune and despair tended only to heighten. There were no
+kind greetings passed between us at meeting, like those which
+pass between the men of the world; he looked on me with eyes
+that froze the currents of my blood, but spoke not till I assumed
+as much courage as to articulate: "You here! I hope you have
+brought me tidings of comfort?"
+
+"Tidings of despair!" said he. "But such tidings as the timid and
+the ungrateful deserve, and have reason to expect. You are an
+outlaw, and a vagabond in your country, and a high reward is
+offered for your apprehension. The enraged populace have burnt
+your house, and all that is within it; and the farmers on the land
+bless themselves at being rid of you. So fare it with everyone who
+puts his hand to the great work of man's restoration to freedom,
+and draweth back, contemning the light that is within him! Your
+enormities caused me to leave you to yourself for a season, and
+you see what the issue has been. You have given some evil ones
+power over you, who long to devour you, both soul and body, and
+it has required all my power and influence to save you. Had it not
+been for my hand, you had been torn in pieces last night; but for
+once I prevailed. We must leave this land forthwith, for here there
+is neither peace, safety, nor comfort for us. Do you now and here
+pledge yourself to one who has so often saved your life and has
+put his own at stake to do so? Do you pledge yourself that you
+will henceforth be guided by my counsel, and follow me
+whithersoever I choose to lead?"
+
+"I have always been swayed by your counsel," said I, "and for
+your sake, principally, am I sorry that all our measures have
+proved abortive. But I hope still to be useful in my native isle,
+therefore let me plead that your highness will abandon a poor
+despised and outcast wretch to his fate, and betake you to your
+realms, where your presence cannot but be greatly wanted."
+
+"Would that I could do so!" said he woefully. "But to talk of that
+is to talk of an impossibility. I am wedded to you so closely that I
+feel as if I were the same person. Our essences are one, our
+bodies and spirits being united, so that I am drawn towards you as
+by magnetism, and. wherever you are, there must my presence be
+with you."
+
+Perceiving how this assurance affected me, he began to chide me
+most bitterly for my ingratitude; and then he assumed such looks
+that it was impossible for me longer to bear them; therefore I
+staggered out of the way, begging and beseeching of him to give
+me up to my fate, and hardly knowing what I said; for it struck
+me that, with all his assumed appearance of misery and
+wretchedness, there were traits of exultation in his hideous
+countenance, manifesting a secret and inward joy at my utter
+despair.
+
+It was long before I durst look over my shoulder, but, when I did
+so, I perceived this ruined and debased potentate coming slowly
+on the same path, and I prayed that the Lord would hide me in the
+bowels of the earth or depths of the sea. When I crossed the
+Tweed, I perceived him still a little behind me; and, my despair
+being then at its height, I cursed the time I first met with such a
+tormentor; though on a little recollection it occurred that it was at
+that blessed time when I was solemnly dedicated to the Lord, and
+assured of my final election, and confirmation, by an eternal
+decree never to be annulled. This being my sole and only
+comfort, I recalled my curse upon the time, and repented me o my
+rashness.
+
+After crossing the Tweed, I saw no more of my persecutor that
+day, and had hopes that he had left me for a season; but, alas,
+what hope was there of my relief after the declaration I had so
+lately heard! I took up my lodgings that night in a small miserable
+inn in the village of Ancrum, of which the people seemed alike
+poor and ignorant. Before going to bed, I asked if it was
+customary with them to have family worship of evenings. The
+man answered that they were so hard set with the world they
+often could not get time, but if I would be so kind as to officiate
+they would be much obliged to me. I accepted the invitation,
+being afraid to go to rest lest the commotions of the foregoing
+night might be renewed, and continued the worship as long as in
+decency I could. The poor people thanked me, hoped my prayers
+would be heard both on their account and my own, seemed much
+taken with my abilities, and wondered how a man of my powerful
+eloquence chanced to be wandering about in a condition so
+forlorn. I said I was a poor student of theology, on my way to
+Oxford. They stared at one another with expressions of wonder,
+disappointment, and fear. I afterwards came to learn that the term
+theology was by them quite misunderstood, and that they had
+some crude conceptions that nothing was taught at Oxford but the
+black arts, which ridiculous idea prevailed over all the south of
+Scotland. For the present I could not understand what the people
+meant, and less so when the man asked me, with deep concern:
+"If I was serious in my intentions of going to Oxford? He hoped
+not, and that I would be better guided."
+
+I said my education wanted finishing; but he remarked that the
+Oxford arts were a bad finish for a religious man's education.
+Finally, I requested him to sleep with me, or in my room all the
+night, as I wanted some serious and religious conversation with
+him, and likewise to convince him that the study of the fine arts,
+though not absolutely necessary, were not incompatible with the
+character of a Christian divine. He shook his head, and wondered
+how I could call them fine arts--hoped I did not mean to convince
+him by any ocular demonstration, and at length reluctantly
+condescended to sleep with me, and let the lass and wife sleep
+together for one night. I believe he would have declined it had it
+not been some hints from his wife, stating that it was a good
+arrangement, by which I understood there were only two beds in
+the house, and that when I was preferred to the lass's bed, she had
+one to shift for.
+
+The landlord and I accordingly retired to our homely bed, and
+conversed for some time about indifferent matters, till he fell
+sound asleep. Not so with me: I had that within which would not
+suffer me to close my eyes; and, about the dead of night, I again
+heard the same noises and contention begin outside the house as I
+had heard the night before; and again I heard it was about a
+sovereign and peculiar right in me. At one time the noise was on
+the top of the house, straight above our bed, as if the one party
+were breaking through the roof, and the other forcibly preventing
+it; at another it was at the door, and at a third time at the window;
+but still mine host lay sound by my side, and did not waken. I
+was seized with terrors indefinable, and prayed fervently, but did
+not attempt rousing my sleeping companion until I saw if no
+better could be done. The women, however, were alarmed, and,
+rushing into our apartment, exclaimed that all the devils in hell
+were besieging the house. Then, indeed, the landlord awoke, and
+it was time for him, for the tumult had increased to such a degree
+that it shook the house to its foundations, being louder and more
+furious than I could have conceived the heat of battle to be when
+the volleys of artillery are mixed with groans, shouts, and
+blasphemous cursing. It thundered and lightened; and there were
+screams, groans, laughter. and execrations, all intermingled.
+
+I lay trembling and bathed in a cold perspiration, but was soon
+obliged to bestir myself, the inmates attacking me one after the
+other.
+
+"Oh, Tam Douglas! Tam Douglas! haste ye an' rise out frayont
+that incarnal devil!" cried the wife. "Ye are in ayont the auld ane
+himsel, for our lass Tibbie saw his cloven cloots last night."
+
+"Lord forbid!" roared Tam Douglas, and darted over the bed like
+a flying fish. Then, hearing the unearthly tumult with which he
+was surrounded, he turned to the side of the bed, and addressed
+me thus, with long and fearful intervals:
+
+"If ye be the Deil, rise up, an' depart in peace out o' this house--
+afore the bedstrae take kindling about ye, an' than it'll maybe be
+the waur for ye. Get up--an' gang awa out amang your cronies,
+like a good lad. There's nae body here wishes you ony ill. D'ye
+hear me?"
+
+"Friend," said I, "no Christian would turn out a fellow creature on
+such a night as this and in the midst of such a commotion of the
+villagers."
+
+"Na, if ye be a mortal man," said he, "which I rather think, from
+the use you made of the holy book. Nane o' your practical jokes
+on strangers an' honest foks. These are some o' your Oxford
+tricks, an' I'll thank you to be ower wi' them. Gracious heaven,
+they are brikkin through the house at a' the four corners at the
+same time!"
+
+The lass Tibby, seeing the innkeeper was not going to prevail
+with me to rise, flew towards the bed in desperation, and, seizing
+me by the waist, soon landed me on the floor, saying: "Be ye deil,
+be ye chiel, ye's no lie there till baith the house an' us be
+swallowed up!"
+
+Her master and mistress applauding the deed, I was obliged to
+attempt dressing myself, a task to which my powers were quite
+inadequate in the state I was in, but I was readily assisted by
+every one of the three; and, as soon as they got my clothes thrust
+on in a loose way, they shut their eyes lest they should see what
+might drive them distracted, and thrust me out to the street,
+cursing me, and calling on the fiends to take their prey and be
+gone.
+
+The scene that ensued is neither to be described nor believed if it
+were. I was momently surrounded by a number of hideous fiends,
+who gnashed on me with their teeth, and clenched their crimson
+paws in my face; and at the same instant I was seized by the
+collar of my coat behind, by my dreaded and devoted friend, who
+pushed me on and, with his gilded rapier waving and brandishing
+around me, defended me against all their united attacks. Horrible
+as my assailants were in appearance (and they all had monstrous
+shapes) I felt that I would rather have fallen into their hands than
+be thus led away captive by my defender at his will and pleasure
+without having the right or power to say my life, or any part of
+my will, was my own. I could not even thank him for his potent
+guardianship, but hung down my head, and moved on I knew not
+whither, like a criminal led to execution and still the infernal
+combat continued till about the dawning, at which time I looked
+up, and all the fiends were expelled but one, who kept at a
+distance; and still my persecutor and defender pushed me by the
+neck before him.
+
+At length he desired me to sit down and take some rest, with
+which I complied, for I had great need of it, and wanted the
+power to withstand what he desired. There, for a whole morning
+did he detain me, tormenting me with reflections on the past, and
+pointing out the horrors of the future, until a thousand times I
+wished myself non-existent. "I have attached myself to your
+wayward fortune," said he, "and it has been my ruin as well as
+thine. Ungrateful as you are, I cannot give you up to be devoured;
+but this is a life that it is impossible to brook longer. Since our
+hopes are blasted in this world, and all our schemes of grandeur
+overthrown; and since our everlasting destiny is settled by a
+decree which no act of ours can invalidate, let us fall by our own
+hands, or by the hands of each other; die like heroes; and,
+throwing off this frame of dross and corruption, mingle with the
+pure ethereal essence of existence, from which we derived our
+being."
+
+I shuddered at a view of the dreadful alternative, yet was obliged
+to confess that in my present circumstances existence was not to
+be borne. It was in vain that I reasoned on the sinfulness of the
+deed, and on its damning nature; he made me condemn myself
+out of my own mouth, by allowing the absolute nature of
+justifying grace and the impossibility of the elect ever falling
+from the faith, or the glorious end to which they were called; and
+then he said, this granted, self-destruction was the act of a hero,
+and none but a coward would shrink from it, to suffer a hundred
+times more every day and night that passed over his head.
+
+I said I was still contented to be that coward; and all that I
+begged of him was to leave me to my fortune for a season, and to
+the just judgement of my Creator; but he said his word and
+honour were engaged on my behalf, and these, in such a case,
+were not to be violated. "If you will not pity yourself, have
+pity onme," added he. "Turn your eyes on me, and behold to
+what I am reduced."
+
+Involuntarily did I turn at the request, and caught a half glance of
+his features. May no eye destined to reflect the beauties of the
+New Jerusalem inward upon the beatific soul behold such a sight
+as mine then beheld! My immortal spirit, blood and bones, were
+all withered at the blasting sight; and I arose and withdrew, with
+groanings which the pangs of death shall never wring from me.
+
+Not daring to look behind me, I crept on my way, and that night
+reached this hamlet on the Scottish border; and being grown
+reckless of danger, and hardened to scenes of horror, I took up
+my lodging with a poor hind, who is a widower, and who could
+only accommodate me with a bed of rushes at his fireside. At
+midnight I heard some strange sounds, too much resembling
+those to which I had of late been inured; but they kept at a
+distance, and I was soon persuaded that there was a power
+protected that house superior to those that contended for or had
+the mastery over me. Overjoyed at finding such an asylum, I
+remained in the humble cot. This is the third day I have lived
+under the roof, freed of my hellish assailants, spending my time
+in prayer, and writing out this my journal, which I have fashioned
+to stick in with my printed work, and to which I intend to add
+portions while I remain in this pilgrimage state, which, I find too
+well, cannot be long.
+
+August 3, 1712.--This morning the hind has brought me word
+from Redesdale, whither he had been for coals, that a stranger
+gentleman had been traversing that country, making the most
+earnest inquiries after me, or one of the same appearance; and,
+from the description that he brought of this stranger, I could
+easily perceive who it was. Rejoicing that my tormentor has lost
+traces of me for once, I am making haste to leave my asylum, on
+pretence of following this stranger, but in reality to conceal
+myself still more completely from his search. Perhaps this may be
+the last sentence ever I am destined to write. If so, farewell,
+Christian reader! May God grant to thee a happier destiny than
+has been allotted to me here on earth, and the same assurance of
+acceptance above! Amen.
+
+Ault-Righ, August 24, 1712.--Here am I, set down on the open
+moor to add one sentence more to my woeful journal; and, then,
+farewell, all beneath the sun!
+
+On leaving the hind's cottage on the Border, I hasted to the north-
+west, because in that quarter I perceived the highest and wildest
+hills before me. As I crossed the mountains above Hawick, I
+exchanged clothes with a poor homely shepherd, whom I found
+lying on a hill-side, singing to himself some woeful love ditty. He
+was glad of the change, and proud of his saintly apparel; and I
+was no less delighted with mine, by which I now supposed
+myself completely disguised; and I found moreover that in this
+garb of a common shepherd I was made welcome in every house.
+I slept the first night in a farm-house nigh to the church of
+Roberton, without hearing or seeing aught extraordinary; yet I
+observed next morning that all the servants kept aloof from me,
+and regarded me with looks of aversion. The next night I came to
+this house, where the farmer engaged me as a shepherd; and,
+finding him a kind, worthy, and religious man, I accepted of his
+terms with great gladness. I had not, however, gone many times
+to the sheep, before all the rest of the shepherds told my master
+that I knew nothing about herding, and begged of him to dismiss
+me. He perceived too well the truth of their intelligence; but,
+being much taken with my learning and religious conversation, he
+would not put me away, but set me to herd his cattle.
+
+It was lucky for me that before I came here a report had
+prevailed, perhaps for an age, that this farm-house was haunted at
+certain seasons by a ghost. I say it was lucky for me for I had not
+been in it many days before the same appalling noises began to
+prevail around me about midnight, often continuing till near the
+dawning. Still they kept aloof, and without doors; for this
+gentleman's house, like the cottage I was in formerly, seemed to
+be a sanctuary from all demoniacal power. He appears to be a
+good man and a just, and mocks at the idea of supernatural
+agency, and he either does not hear these persecuting spirits or
+will not acknowledge it, though of late he appears much
+perturbed.
+
+The consternation of the menials has been extreme. They ascribe
+all to the ghost, and tell frightful stories of murders having been
+committed there long ago. Of late, however, they are beginning to
+suspect that it is I that am haunted; and, as I have never given
+them any satisfactory account of myself, they are whispering that
+I am a murderer, and haunted by the spirits of those I have slain.
+
+August 30.--This day I have been informed that I am to he
+banished the dwelling-house by night, and to sleep in an outhouse
+by myself, to try if the family can get any rest when freed of my
+presence. I have peremptorily refused acquiescence, on which my
+master's brother struck me, and kicked me with his foot. My body
+being quite exhausted by suffering, I am grown weak and feeble
+both in mind and bodily frame, and actually unable to resent any
+insult or injury. I am the child of earthly misery and despair, if
+ever there was one existent. My master is still my friend; but
+there are so many masters here, and everyone of them alike harsh
+to me, that I wish myself in my grave every hour of the day. If I
+am driven from the family sanctuary by night, I know I shall be
+torn in pieces before morning; and then who will deign or dare to
+gather up my mangled limbs, and give me honoured burial?
+
+My last hour is arrived: I see my tormentor once more
+approaching me in this wild. Oh, that the earth would swallow me
+up, or the hill fall and cover me! Farewell for ever!
+
+September 7, 1712.--My devoted, princely, but sanguine friend
+has been with me again and again. My time is expired and I find a
+relief beyond measure, for he has fully convinced me that no act
+of mine can mar the eternal counsel, or in the smallest degree
+alter or extenuate one event which was decreed before the
+foundations of the world were laid. He said he had watched over
+me with the greatest anxiety, but, perceiving my rooted aversion
+towards him, he had forborne troubling me with his presence. But
+now, seeing that I was certainly to be driven from my sanctuary
+that night, and that there would be a number of infernals watching
+to make a prey of my body, he came to caution me not to despair,
+for that he would protect me at all risks, if the power remained
+with him. He then repeated an ejaculatory prayer, which I was to
+pronounce, if in great extremity. I objected to the words as
+equivocal, and susceptible of being rendered in a meaning
+perfectly dreadful; but he reasoned against this, and all reasoning
+with him is to no purpose. He said he did not ask me to repeat the
+words unless greatly straitened; and that I saw his strength and
+power giving way, and when perhaps nothing else could save me.
+
+The dreaded hour of night arrived; and, as he said, I was expelled
+from the family residence, and ordered to a byre, or cow-house,
+that stood parallel with the dwelling-house behind, where, on a
+divot loft, my humble bedstead stood, and the cattle grunted and
+puffed below me. How unlike the splendid halls of Dalcastle!
+And to what I am now reduced, let the reflecting reader judge.
+Lord, thou knowest all that I have done for Thy cause on earth!
+Why then art Thou laying Thy hand so sore upon me? Why hast
+Thou set me as a butt of Thy malice? But Thy will must be done!
+Thou wilt repay me in a better world. Amen.
+
+September 8.--My first night of trial in this place is overpast!
+Would that it were the last that I should ever see in this detested
+world! If the horrors of hell are equal to those I have suffered,
+eternity will be of short duration there, for no created energy can
+support them for one single month, or week. I have been buffeted
+as never living creature was. My vitals have all been torn, and
+every faculty and feeling of my soul racked, and tormented into
+callous insensibility. I was even hung by the locks over a
+yawning chasm, to which I could perceive no bottom, and then--not
+till then, did I repeat the tremendous prayer!--I was instantly at
+liberty; and what I now am, the Almighty knows! Amen.
+
+September 18, 1712.--Still am I living, though liker to a vision
+than a human being; but this is my last day of mortal existence.
+Unable to resist any longer, I pledged myself to my devoted
+friend that on this day we should die together, and trust to the
+charity of the children of men for a grave. I am solemnly pledged;
+and, though I dared to repent, I am aware he will not be gainsaid,
+for he is raging with despair at his fallen and decayed majesty,
+and there is some miserable comfort in the idea that my tormentor
+shall fall with me. Farewell, world, with all thy miseries; for
+comforts or enjoyments hast thou none! Farewell, woman, whom
+I have despised and shunned; and man, whom I have hated;
+whom, nevertheless, I desire to leave in charity! And thou, sun,
+bright emblem of a far brighter effulgence, I bid farewell to thee
+also! I do not now take my last look of thee, for to thy glorious
+orb shall a poor suicide's last earthly look be raised. But, ah! who
+is yon that I see approaching furiously, his stern face blackened
+with horrid despair! My hour is at hand. Almighty God, what is
+this that I am about to do! The hour of repentance is past, and
+now my fate is inevitable. Amen, for ever! I will now seal up my
+little book, and conceal it; and cursed be he who trieth to alter or
+amend.
+
+
+END OF THE MEMOIR
+
+
+
+WHAT can this work be? Sure, you will say, it must be an
+allegory; or (as the writer calls it) a religious PARABLE,
+showing the dreadful danger of self-righteousness? I cannot tell.
+Attend to the sequel: which is a thing so extraordinary, so
+unprecedented, and so far out of the common course of human
+events that, if there were not hundreds of living witnesses to attest
+the truth of it, I would not bid any rational being believe it.
+
+In the first place, take the following extract from an authentic
+letter, published in Blackwood's Magazine for August, 1823.
+
+"On the top of a wild height called Cowan's-Croft, where the
+lands of three proprietors meet all at one point, there has been for
+long and many years the grave of a suicide marked out by a stone
+standing at the head and another at the feet. Often have I stood
+musing over it myself, when a shepherd on one of the farms, of
+which it formed the extreme boundary, and thinking what could
+induce a young man, who had scarcely reached the prime of life,
+to brave his Maker, and rush into His presence by an act of his
+own erring hand, and one so unnatural and preposterous. But it
+never once occurred to me, as an object of curiosity, to dig up the
+mouldering bones of the Culprit, which I considered as the most
+revolting of all objects. The thing was, however, done last month,
+and a discovery made of one of the greatest natural phenomena
+that I have heard of in this country.
+
+"The little traditionary history that remains of this unfortunate
+youth is altogether a singular one. He was not a native of the
+place, nor would he ever tell from what place he came; but he
+was remarkable for a deep, thoughtful, and sullen disposition.
+There was nothing against his character that anybody knew of
+here, and he had been a considerable time in the place. The last
+service he was in was with a Mr. Anderson, of Eltrive (Ault-Righ,
+the King's Burn), who died about 100 years ago, and who had
+hired him during the summer to herd a stock of young cattle in
+Eltrive Hope. It happened one day in the month of September that
+James Anderson, his master's son, went with this young man to
+the Hope to divert himself. The herd had his dinner along with
+him, and about one o'clock, when the boy proposed going home,
+the former pressed him very hard to stay and take share of his
+dinner; but the boy refused for fear his parents might be alarmed
+about him, and said he would go home: on which the herd said to
+him, 'Then, if ye winna stay with me, James, ye may depend on't
+I'll cut my throat afore ye come back again.'
+
+"I have heard it likewise reported, but only by one person, that
+there had been some things stolen out of his master's house a
+good while before, and that the boy had discovered a silver knife
+and fork that was a part of the stolen property, in the herd's
+possession that day, and that it was this discovery that drove him
+to despair.
+
+"The boy did not return to the Hope that afternoon; and, before
+evening, a man coming in at the pass called The Hart Loup, with
+a drove of lambs, on the way for Edinburgh, perceived something
+like a man standing in a strange frightful position at the side of
+one of Eldinhope hay-ricks. The driver's attention was riveted on
+this strange uncouth figure, and, as the drove-road passed at no
+great distance from the spot, he first called, but, receiving no
+answer, he went up to the spot, and behold it was the above-
+mentioned young man, who had hung himself in the hay rope that
+was tying down the rick.
+
+"This was accounted a great wonder; and everyone said, if the
+Devil had not assisted him, it was impossible the thing could
+have been done; for, in general, these ropes are so brittle, being
+made of green hay, that they will scarcely bear to be bound over
+the rick. And, the more to horrify the good people of this
+neighbourhood, the driver said, when he first came in view, he
+could almost give his oath that he saw two people busily engaged
+at the hay-rick going round it and round it, and he thought they
+were dressing it.
+
+"If this asseveration approximated at all to truth, it makes this
+evident at least, that the unfortunate young man had hanged
+himself after the man with the lambs came in view. He was,
+however, quite dead when he cut him down. He had fastened two
+of the old hay-ropes at the bottom of the rick on one side (indeed,
+they are all fastened so when first laid on) so that he had nothing
+to do but to loosen two of the ends on the other side. These he
+had tied in a knot round his neck, and then slackening his knees,
+and letting himself down gradually, till the hay-rope bore all his
+weight, he had contrived to put an end to his existence in that
+way. Now the fact is, that, if you try all the ropes that are thrown
+over all the out-field hay-ricks in Scotland, there is not one
+among a thousand of them will hang a colley dog; so that the
+manner of this wretch's death was rather a singular circumstance.
+
+"Early next morning, Mr. Anderson's servants went reluctantly
+away, and, taking an old blanket with them for a winding sheet,
+they rolled up the body of the deceased, first in his own plaid,
+letting the hay-rope still remain about his neck, and then, rolling
+the old blanket over all, they bore the loathed remains away to the
+distance of three miles or so, on spokes, to the top of Cowan's-
+Croft, at the very point where the Duke of Buccleuch's land, the
+Laird of Drummelzier's, and Lord Napier's meet, and there they
+buried him, with all that he had on and about him, silver knife
+and fork and altogether. Thus far went tradition, and no one ever
+disputed one jot of the disgusting oral tale.
+
+"A nephew of that Mr. Anderson's who was with the hapless
+youth that day he died says that, as far as he can gather from the
+relations of friends that he remembers, and of that same uncle in
+particular, it is one hundred and five years next month (that is
+September, 1823) since that event happened; and I think it likely
+that this gentleman's information is correct. But sundry other
+people, much older than he, whom I have consulted, pretend that
+it is six or seven years more. They say they have heard that Mr.
+James Anderson was then a boy ten years of age; that he lived to
+an old age, upwards of fourscore, and it is two and forty years
+since he died. Whichever way it may be, it was about that period
+some way: of that there is no doubt.
+
+"It so happened that two young men, William Shiel and W.
+Sword, were out on an adjoining height this summer, casting
+peats, and it came into their heads to open this grave in the
+wilderness, and see if there were any of the bones of the suicide
+of former ages and centuries remaining. They did so, but opened
+only one half of the grave, beginning at the head and about the
+middle at the same time. It was not long till they came upon the
+old blanket--I think, they said not much more than a foot from the
+surface. They tore that open, and there was the hay-rope lying
+stretched down alongst his breast, so fresh that they saw at first
+sight that it was made of risp, a sort of long sword-grass that
+grows about marshes and the sides of lakes. One of the young
+men seized the rope and pulled by it, but the old enchantment of
+the Devil remained--it would not break; and so he pulled and
+pulled at it, till behold the body came up into a sitting posture,
+with a broad blue bonnet on its head, and its plaid around it, all as
+fresh as that day it was laid in! I never heard of a preservation so
+wonderful, if it be true as was related to me, for still I have not
+had the curiosity to go and view the body myself. The features
+were all so plain that an acquaintance might easily have known
+him. One of the lads gripped the face of the corpse with his finger
+and thumb, and the cheeks felt quite soft and fleshy, but the
+dimples remained and did not spring out again. He had fine
+yellow hair, about nine inches long; but not a hair of it could they
+pull out till they cut part of it off with a knife. They also cut off
+some portions of his clothes, which were all quite fresh, and
+distributed them among their acquaintances, sending a portion to
+me, among the rest, to keep as natural curiosities. Several
+gentlemen have in a manner forced me to give them fragments of
+these enchanted garments: I have, however, retained a small
+portion for you, which I send along with this, being a piece of his
+plaid, and another of his waistcoat breast, which you will see are
+still as fresh as that day they were laid in the grave.
+
+"His broad blue bonnet was sent to Edinburgh several weeks ago,
+to the great regret of some gentlemen connected with the land,
+who wished to have it for a keep-sake. For my part, fond as I am
+of blue bonnets, and broad ones in particular, I declare I durst not
+have worn that one. There was nothing of the silver knife and
+fork discovered, that I heard of, nor was it very likely it should;
+but it would appear he had been very near run out of cash, which
+I daresay had been the cause of his utter despair; for, on searching
+his pockets, nothing was found but three old Scotch halfpennies.
+These young men meeting with another shepherd afterwards, his
+curiosity was so much excited that they went and digged up the
+curious remains a second time, which was a pity, as it is likely
+that by these exposures to the air, and the impossibility of burying
+it up again as closely as it was before, the flesh will now fall to
+dust."
+
+The letter from which the above is an extract, is signed JAMES
+HOGG, and dated from Altrive Lake, August 1st, 1823. It bears
+the stamp of authenticity in every line; yet so often had I been
+hoaxed by the ingenious fancies displayed in that Magazine, that
+when this relation met my eye I did not believe it; but, from the
+moment that I perused it, I half formed the resolution of
+investigating these wonderful remains personally, if any such
+existed; for, in the immediate vicinity of the scene, as I supposed,
+I knew of more attractive metal than the dilapidated remains of
+mouldering suicides.
+
+Accordingly, having some business in Edinburgh in September
+last, and being obliged to wait a few days for the arrival of a
+friend from London, I took that opportunity to pay a visit to my
+townsman and fellow collegian, Mr. L--t of C--d, advocate. I
+mentioned to him Hogg's letter, asking him if the statement was
+founded at all on truth. His answer was: "I suppose so. For my
+part I never doubted the thing, having been told that there has
+been a deal of talking about it up in the Forest for some time past.
+But God knows! Hogg has imposed as ingenious lies on the
+public ere now."
+
+I said, if it was within reach, I should like exceedingly to visit
+both the Shepherd and the Scotch mummy he had described. Mr.
+L--t assented on the first proposal, saying he had no objections to
+take a ride that length with me, and make the fellow produce his
+credentials. That we would have a delightful jaunt through a
+romantic and now classical country, and some good sport into the
+bargain, provided he could procure a horse for me, from his
+father-in-law, next day. He sent up to a Mr. L--w to inquire, who
+returned for answer that there was an excellent pony at my
+service, and that he himself would accompany us, being obliged
+to attend a great sheep-fair at Thirlestane; and that he was certain
+the Shepherd would be there likewise.
+
+Mr. L--t said that was the very man we wanted to make our party
+complete; and at an early hour next morning we started for the
+ewe-fair of Thirlestane, taking Blackwood's Magazine for August
+along with us. We rode through the ancient royal burgh of
+Selkirk, halted and corned our horses at a romantic village, nigh
+to some deep linns on the Ettrick, and reached the market ground
+at Thirlestane-green a little before mid-day. We soon found
+Hogg, standing near the foot of the market, as he called it, beside
+a great drove of paulies, a species of stock that I never heard of
+before. They were small sheep, striped on the backs with red
+chalk. Mr. L--t introduced me to him as a great wool-stapler,
+come to raise the price of that article; but he eyed me with
+distrust, and, turning his back on us, answered: "I hae sell'd
+mine."
+
+I followed, and, shewing him the above-quoted letter, said I was
+exceedingly curious to have a look of these singular remains he
+had so ingeniously described; but he only answered me with the
+remark that "It was a queer fancy for a wool-stapler to tak."
+
+His two friends then requested him to accompany us to the spot,
+and to take some of his shepherds with us to assist in raising the
+body; but he spurned at the idea, saying: "Od bless ye, lad! I hae
+ither matters to mind. I hae a' thae paulies to sell, an', a' yon
+Highland stotts down on the green, every ane; an' then I hae ten
+scores o' yowes to buy after, an', If I canna first sell my ain stock,
+I canna buy nae ither body's. I hae mair ado than I can manage
+the day, foreby ganging to houk up hunder-year-auld-banes."
+
+Finding that we could make nothing of him, we left him with his
+paulies, Highland stotts, grey jacket, and broad blue bonnet, to go
+in search of some other guide. L--w soon found one, for he
+seemed acquainted with every person in the fair. We got a fine
+old shepherd, named W--m B--e, a great original, and a very
+obliging and civil man, who asked no conditions but that we
+should not speak of it, because he did not wish it to come to his
+master's ears that he had been engaged in sic a profane thing. We
+promised strict secrecy; and accompanied by another farmer, Mr.
+S--t, and old B--e, we proceeded to the grave, which B--e
+described as about a mile and a half distant from the market
+ground.
+
+We went into the shepherd's cot to get a drink of milk, when I
+read to our guide Mr. Hogg's description, asking him if he
+thought it correct. He said there was hardly a bit o't correct, for
+the grave was not on the hill of Cowan's-Croft nor yet on the
+point where three lairds' lands met, but on the top of a hill called
+the Faw-Law, where there was no land that was not the Duke of
+Buccleuch's within a quarter of a mile. He added that it was a
+wonder how the poet could be mistaken there, who once herded
+the very ground where the grave is, and saw both hills from his
+own window. Mr. L--w testified great surprise at such a singular
+blunder, as also how the body came not to be buried at the
+meeting of three or four lairds' lands, which had always been
+customary in the south of Scotland. Our guide said he had always
+heard it reported that the Eltrive men, with Mr. David Anderson
+at their head, had risen before day on the Monday morning, it
+having been on the Sabbath day that the man put down himself;
+and that they set out with the intention of burying him on
+Cowan's-Croft, where the three marches met at a point. But, it
+having been an invariable rule to bury such lost sinners before the
+rising of the sun, these five men were overtaken by day-light, as
+they passed the house of Berry-Knowe; and, by the time they
+reached the top of the Faw-Law, the sun was beginning to skair
+the east. On this they laid down the body, and digged a deep
+grave with all expedition; but, when they had done, it was too
+short, and, the body being stiff, it would not go down; on which
+Mr. David Anderson, looking to the east and perceiving that the
+sun would be up on them in a few minutes, set his foot on the
+suicide's brow, and tramped down his head into the grave with his
+iron-heeled shoe, until the nose and skull crashed again, and at
+the same time uttered a terrible curse on the wretch who had
+disgraced the family and given them all this trouble. This
+anecdote, our guide said, he had heard when a boy, from the
+mouth of Robert Laidlaw, one of the five men who buried the
+body.
+
+We soon reached the spot, and I confess I felt a singular sensation
+when I saw the grey stone standing at the head, and another at the
+feet, and the one half of the grave manifestly new-digged, and
+closed up again as had been described. I could still scarcely deem
+the thing to be a reality, for the ground did not appear to be wet,
+but a kind of dry rotten moss. On looking around, we found some
+fragments of clothes, some teeth, and part of a pocket-book,
+which had not been returned into the grave when the body had
+been last raised, for it had been twice raised before this, but only
+from the loins upward.
+
+To work we fell with two spades, and soon cleared away the
+whole of the covering. The part of the grave that had been opened
+before was filled with mossy mortar, which impeded us
+exceedingly, and entirely prevented a proper investigation of the
+fore parts of the body. I will describe everything as I saw it before
+our respectable witnesses, whose names I shall publish at large if
+permitted. A number of the bones came up separately; for, with
+the constant flow of liquid stuff into the deep grave, we could not
+see to preserve them in their places. At length great loads of
+coarse clothes, blanketing, plaiding, etc. appeared; we tried to lift
+these regularly up, and, on doing so, part of a skeleton came up,
+but no flesh, save a little that was hanging in dark flitters about
+the spine, but which had no consistence; it was merely the
+appearance of flesh without the substance. The head was wanting,
+and, I being very anxious to possess the skull, the search was
+renewed among the mortar and rags. We first found a part of the
+scalp, with the long hair firm on it; which, on being cleaned, is
+neither black nor fair, but a darkish dusk, the most common of
+any other colour. Soon afterwards we found the skull, but it was
+not complete. A spade had damaged it, and one of the temple
+quarters was wanting. 1 am no phrenologist, not knowing one
+organ from another, but 1 thought the skull of that wretched man
+no study. If it was particular for anything, it was for a smooth,
+almost perfect rotundity, with only a little protuberance above the
+vent of the ear.
+
+When we came to that part of the grave that had never been
+opened before, the appearance of everything was quite different.
+There the remains lay under a close vault of moss, and within a
+vacant space; and I suppose, by the digging in the former part of
+the grave, the part had been deepened, and drawn the moisture
+away from this part, for here all was perfect. The breeches still
+suited the thigh, the stocking the leg, and the garters were wrapt
+as neatly and as firm below the knee as if they had been newly
+tied. The shoes were all open in the seams, the hemp having
+decayed, but the soles, upper leathers and wooden heels, which
+were made of birch, were all as fresh as any of those we wore.
+There was one thing I could not help remarking, that in the inside
+of one of the shoes there was a layer of cow's dung, about one-
+eighth of an inch thick, and in the hollow of the sole fully one-
+fourth of an inch. It was firm, green, and fresh; and proved that he
+had been working in a byre. His clothes were all of a singular
+ancient cut, and no less singular in their texture. Their durability
+certainly would have been prodigious; for in thickness,
+coarseness, and strength, I never saw any cloth in the smallest
+degree to equal them. His coat was a frock coat, of a yellowish
+drab colour, with wide sleeves. It is tweeled, milled, and thicker
+than a carpet. I cut off two of the skirts and brought them with
+me. His vest was of striped serge, such as I have often seen worn
+by country people. it was lined and backed with white stuff. The
+breeches were a sort of striped plaiding, which I never saw worn,
+but which our guide assured us was very common in the country
+once, though, from the old clothes which he had seen remaining
+of it, he judged that it could not be less than 200 years since it
+was in fashion. His garters were of worsted, and striped with
+black or blue; his stockings grey, and wanting the feet. I brought
+samples of all along with me. I have likewise now got possession
+of the bonnet, which puzzles me most of all. It is not conformable
+with the rest of the dress. It is neither a broad bonnet nor a Border
+bonnet; for there is an open behind, for tying, which no genuine
+Border bonnet I am told ever had. It seems to have been a
+Highland bonnet, worn in a flat way, like a scone on the crown,
+such as is sometimes still seen in the West of Scotland. All the
+limbs, from the loins to the toes, seemed perfect and entire, but
+they could not bear handling. Before we got them returned again
+into the grave they were shaken to pieces, except the thighs,
+which continued to retain a kind of flabby form.
+
+All his clothes that were sewed with linen yam were lying in
+separate portions, the thread having rotten; but such as were
+sewed with worsted remained perfectly firm and sound. Among
+such a confusion, we had hard work to find out all his pockets,
+and our guide supposed that, after all, we did not find above the
+half of them. In his vest pocket was a long clasp-knife, very
+sharp; the haft was thin, and the scales shone as if there had been
+silver inside. Mr. Sc--t took it with him, and presented it to his
+neighbour, Mr. R--n, of W--n L--e, who still has it in his
+possession. We found a comb, a gimblet, a vial, a small neat
+square board, a pair of plated knee-buckles, and several samples
+of cloth of different kinds, rolled neatly up within one another. At
+length, while we were busy on the search, Mr. L--t picked up a
+leathern case, which seemed to have been wrapped round and
+round by some ribbon, or cord, that had been rotten from it, for
+the swaddling marks still remained. Both L--w and B--e called
+out that "it was the tobacco spleuchan, and a well-filled ane too";
+but, on opening it out, we found, to our great astonishment, that it
+contained a printed pamphlet. We were all curious to see what
+sort of a pamphlet such a person would read; what it could
+contain that he seemed to have had such a care about. For the
+slough in which it was rolled was fine chamois leather; what
+colour it had been could not be known. But the pamphlet was
+wrapped so close together, and so damp, rotten, and yellow that it
+seemed one solid piece. We all concluded from some words that
+we could make out that it was a religious tract, but that it would
+be impossible to make anything of it. Mr. L--w remarked marked
+that it was a great pity if a few sentences could not be made out,
+for that it was a question what might be contained in that little
+book; and then he requested Mr. L--t to give it to me, as he had so
+many things of literature and law to attend to that he would never
+think more of it. He replied that either of us were heartily
+welcome to it, for that he had thought of returning it into the
+grave, if he could have made out but a line or two, to have seen
+what was its tendency.
+
+"Grave, man!" exclaimed L--w, who speaks excellent strong
+broad Scotch. "My truly, but ye grave weel! I wad esteem the
+contents o' that spleuchan as the most precious treasure. I'll tell
+you what it is, sir: I hae often wondered how it was that this
+man's corpse has been miraculously preserved frae decay, a
+hunder times langer than any other body's, or than ever a tanner's.
+But now I could wager a guinea it has been for the preservation o'
+that little book. And Lord kens what may be in't! It will maybe
+reveal some mystery that mankind disna ken naething about yet."
+
+"If there be any mysteries in it," returned the other, "it is not for
+your handling, my dear friend, who are too much taken up about
+mysteries already." And with these words he presented the
+mysterious pamphlet to me. With very little trouble, save that of a
+thorough drying, I unrolled it all with ease, and found the very
+tract which I have here ventured to lay before the public, part of it
+in small bad print, and the remainder in manuscript. The title
+page is written and is as follows:
+
+THE PRIVATE MEMOIRS
+AND CONFESSIONS
+OF A JUSTIFIED SINNER:
+
+WRITTEN BY HIMSELF
+
+Fideli certa merces.
+
+And, alongst the head, it is the same as given in the present
+edition of the work. I altered the title to A Self-justified Sinner,
+but my booksellers did not approve of it; and, there being a curse
+pronounced by the writer on him that should dare to alter or
+amend, I have let it stand as it is. Should it be thought to attach
+discredit to any received principle of our Church, I am blameless.
+The printed part ends at page 201 and the rest is in a fine old
+hand, extremely small and close. I have ordered the printer to
+procure a facsimile of it, to be bound in with the volume. [v.
+Frontispiece.]
+
+With regard to the work itself, I dare not venture a judgment, for I
+do not understand it. I believe no person, man or woman, will
+ever peruse it with the same attention that I have done, and yet I
+confess that I do not comprehend the writer's drift. It is certainly
+impossible that these scenes could ever have occurred that he
+describes as having himself transacted. I think it may be possible
+that he had some hand in the death of his brother, and yet I am
+disposed greatly to doubt it; and the numerous traditions, etc.
+which remain of that event may be attributable to the work
+having been printed and burnt, and of course the story known to
+all the printers, with their families and gossips. That the young
+Laird of Dalcastle came by a violent death, there remains no
+doubt; but that this wretch slew him, there is to me a good deal.
+However, allowing this to have been the case, I account all the
+rest either dreaming or madness; or, as he says to Mr. Watson, a
+religious parable, on purpose to illustrate something scarcely
+tangible, but to which he seems to have attached great weight.
+Were the relation at all consistent with reason, it corresponds so
+minutely with traditionary facts that it could scarcely have missed
+to have been received as authentic; but in this day, and with the
+present generation, it will not go down that a man should be daily
+tempted by the Devil, in the semblance of a fellow-creature; and
+at length lured to self-destruction, in the hopes that this same
+fiend and tormentor was to suffer and fall along with him. It was
+a bold theme for an allegory, and would have suited that age well
+had it been taken up by one fully qualified for the task, which this
+writer was not. In short, we must either conceive him not only the
+greatest fool, but the greatest wretch, on whom was ever stamped
+the form of humanity; or, that he was a religious maniac, who
+wrote and wrote about a deluded creature, till he arrived at that
+height of madness that he believed himself the very object whom
+he had been all along describing. And, in order to escape from an
+ideal tormentor, committed that act for which, according to the
+tenets he embraced, there was no remission, and which consigned
+his memory and his name to everlasting detestation.
+
+
+
+
+
+end of Project Gutenberg Etext Confessions of A Justified Sinner, by Hogg
+
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